QUIRK REPORTS — OFFICIAL CASE FILE
Case Number: QR-2026-49193
SHADOWS ON THE STEEL ROAD: THE FIGURES THAT TURNED BRITAIN'S MOST ORDINARY BYPASS INTO ITS MOST TERRIFYING
Classification: Shadow Entity Encounter — Multiple Witness, Law Enforcement Corroborated
Date of Primary Incident: September 1987
Location: Stocksbridge Bypass, South Yorkshire, England
Primary Witness: Derek Hollis (name changed), Security Guard
Additional Witnesses: Ray Baines (Security), PC Martin Webb, Sgt. Paul Dawson (South Yorkshire Police), multiple civilian witnesses
This report is based on documented paranormal accounts. Names and identifying details have been changed to protect those involved.
WITNESS STATEMENT
In the autumn of 1987, Derek Hollis was doing what security guards do: walking perimeters, checking fences, keeping watch over a stretch of moorland that was slowly becoming a road. The Stocksbridge Bypass project cut north through the South Yorkshire hills above the steel town of the same name, and in the small hours of a September night, it was empty, dark, and humming with the ambient electricity of a nearby pylon field. It was supposed to be dull work.
It was not dull work.
During a routine perimeter patrol, Hollis noticed a group of figures standing in the field near the pylon line. His first instinct was sensible: trespassers, perhaps teenagers, the usual nuisances of a live construction site. He called out. No response. He approached. The figures did not move. They stood in a loose cluster, dark shapes held perfectly, unnaturally still against the slightly lighter sky. Hollis closed the distance to approximately thirty yards.
They were gone. Not retreating. Not running. Simply gone.
Hollis reported the incident to his colleague Ray Baines, who offered the professional sceptic's consolation: tiredness, imagination, the tricks a dark field plays on an overworked mind. Then Baines saw one himself. His encounter featured a single figure rather than a group — dark, human in outline, standing alone at the edge of the construction zone. What unsettled Baines most was not its eventual disappearance, but what preceded it. "The way it stood," he later said. "Patient. Still in a way that living things are not still, not even when they are trying to be."
The two men filed a formal report with site management. In a development that separates the Stocksbridge case from the vast majority of construction-site ghost stories, that report was taken seriously. South Yorkshire Police dispatched two officers — PC Martin Webb and Sgt. Paul Dawson — to investigate.
The officers parked near the pylon field in the small hours and waited. For roughly an hour, nothing happened. Then, without warning, a dark male-shaped silhouette appeared in the beam of their headlights, standing motionless in the centre of the carriageway. Featureless. Not moving. Dawson reached for the radio.
The figure vanished.
Before the officers could process this, the patrol car was struck violently — rocked as though hit from the outside, accompanied by a heavy crash or thud. They exited the vehicle immediately. There was nothing there. No other vehicle. No person. No debris. Just an empty bypass, a dark moorland, and the pylons humming overhead. Both officers returned to the station and filed formal reports. Those reports remain part of the documented record of the case.
In the weeks and months that followed, civilian witnesses independently reported near-identical encounters: a woman seeing a figure run across the road and vanish into the central barrier; a lorry driver pulling over for a figure on the hard shoulder that had evaporated by the time he stopped; a group of local young people watching a dark shape track their car along an embankment for several hundred yards before stopping dead and disappearing. Hollis himself gave interviews over subsequent years that never deviated from his original account. He never embellished. He never amplified. He saw figures where no figures should have been, and they disappeared in ways that figures should not be able to disappear. That was the story, and it stayed the story.
EVIDENCE
- Formal Security Logs: Site management records from the Stocksbridge Bypass construction project documenting the initial reports by Hollis and Baines.
- Official Police Reports: Filed independently by PC Webb and Sgt. Dawson following their on-site encounter. These documents exist within the South Yorkshire Police record system and represent the most significant evidentiary pillar of the case.
- Physical Disturbance: The violent rocking of the police patrol vehicle, witnessed by both officers simultaneously, with no identifiable physical cause found upon immediate inspection.
- Photographic Anomaly: During later paranormal investigations, a researcher photographed what appeared to be a dark human form near the bypass underpass — a shape not visible to the naked eye at the time of shooting.
- Infrared Temperature Anomalies: Recorded at multiple locations along the bypass during organised overnight vigils in the early 1990s.
- Audio Recording: An unattended recording device left running overnight captured what appeared to be a human voice in an otherwise empty location. Words were not discernible.
- Video Footage: At least two television productions claimed to have captured anomalous footage, including an apparent dark figure beneath a bridge underpass appearing to move and vanish between frames.
- Historical Context: Research indicated the bypass was constructed partly over land associated with a medieval settlement and potential plague burial sites, though investigators were careful to note this as contextual rather than causal.
FOX'S ANALYSIS
Right. Let me button up my flat cap and get into this one, because the Stocksbridge Bypass is the case that keeps paranormal reporters warm at night — and not in a comfortable way.
I've covered a lot of roadside encounters in my time. Most of them unravel the moment you pull on a single thread: misidentified deer, a tired driver, a trick of headlights on a reflective post. What you rarely get — what you almost never get — is serving police officers filing formal reports about it. PC Webb and Sgt. Dawson didn't call a ghost hunter. They didn't post on a forum. They went back to the station and wrote it down, in official language, on official forms, and submitted it through official channels. That's not the behaviour of people who want to tell a ghost story. That's the behaviour of people who experienced something they felt professionally obligated to document. Police officers, in my experience, will do almost anything to avoid looking credulous. These two had their patrol car physically struck by an invisible force while watching a figure vanish from a lit roadway. You'd file a report too.
Then there's Derek Hollis. I have a lot of time for Derek Hollis. In decades of follow-up interviews, he told the same story. The same distances, the same details, the same flat precision of a man who has decided that the truth is more important than being believed. He never gave you the dramatic extras. No growling. No glowing eyes. No supernatural threats. Just figures that stood wrong and disappeared fast. That kind of consistent, unembellished testimony is rarer than physical evidence in this field, and in my book, it counts for more than a blurry photograph.
Now, do I have alternative theories? Of course I do — I'm a reporter, not a believer-for-hire. The human brain is magnificently terrible at processing isolated dark shapes, especially in conditions of mild sleep deprivation, low light, and elevated alertness. The pylon field creates an electromagnetic environment that some researchers associate with induced anxiety and visual anomalies. And once a location gets a reputation, subsequent witnesses arrive primed to see something, which is a form of confirmation bias wearing a very convincing costume. I'd be remiss not to flag all of that.
But here's the thing that won't let me go: the consistency. Not one witness described glowing eyes or whispered their name or experienced anything that sounded borrowed from horror films. They all described the same specific, limited thing — a dark figure, human in shape, standing with an unnatural stillness, disappearing without movement. That's a remarkably narrow and uniform hallucination to have independently, in the same location, over an extended period of time. You might say the witnesses were really on the same page. Or the same bypass.
I'll see myself out for that one. But I'll see myself back in for this: the Stocksbridge case doesn't lean on atmosphere or suggestion. It leans on documented accounts from multiple witnesses who had no reason to collaborate and every professional reason to stay quiet. Whatever was standing on that road in September 1987, it had the decency to be consistently witnessed. I respect the commitment to the bit. I just wish it had been a little more forthcoming with the explanations. Then again, you could say the whole case left investigators completely in the dark.
I'm done. Mostly.
One genuine note: the physical disturbance to the police vehicle is the element I cannot explain away and cannot dismiss. Two officers. One car. Simultaneous experience. No cause found. That's the detail that keeps this case on my desk and not in the closed file drawer.
CREDIBILITY RATING
Rating: 8.5 / 10
Reasoning:
- Multiple independent witnesses: Four primary witnesses with no confirmed connection and no apparent motive to collaborate.
- Law enforcement involvement: Two serving police officers filed formal, official reports. This is the single most significant credibility marker in the entire case.
- Physical corroboration: The unexplained rocking of the patrol vehicle, noted simultaneously by both officers and supported by their formal statements, constitutes a physical event without a resolved explanation.
- Witness consistency: Derek Hollis gave identical accounts across decades without embellishment or escalation — a strong indicator of authentic experience rather than manufactured narrative.
- Account specificity: All witnesses described the same narrow set of characteristics. The absence of dramatic supernatural flourishes adds credibility rather than subtracting it.
- Deductions: No physical trace of the figures themselves. Photographic and video evidence remains ambiguous. Historical land-use context is circumstantial. Possibility of environmental factors (electromagnetic fields, suggestion bias) cannot be entirely ruled out.
CLASSIFICATION
Primary Classification: Shadow Entity Encounter
Sub-Classifications:
- Roadside Apparition
- Multiple Independent Witness Event
- Law Enforcement Corroborated Incident
- Physical Disturbance Associated
- Persistent Location Phenomenon (Recurring Sightings, Extended Period)
CASE STATUS
Status: OPEN
Recommended Follow-Up Actions:
- Formal Freedom of Information request for original South Yorkshire Police incident reports filed by Webb and Dawson, September 1987.
- Retrieval and independent analysis of original site security logs held by the construction management company or its successors.
- Controlled overnight investigation of the pylon field perimeter using modern infrared and electromagnetic field monitoring equipment, with peer-reviewed methodology.