Blog
Classic Past Life | The Pollock Twins
Classic Past Life | The Pollock Twins
In 1957, two little girls were killed on their way to church in Hexham, England. Joanna was eleven. Jacqueline, just six. A car mounted the pavement and struck them, ending their lives instantly. The tragedy sent shockwaves through the community, but inside their home, the grief took on a strange and unexplainable life of its own. Because within a year, their parents had twins. And the twins began remembering things they couldn’t possibly know.
A Family Shattered
Florence and John Pollock were devout Catholics. They’d met young, married early, and raised their daughters with a quiet steadiness. Joanna, the eldest, was protective and kind. Jacqueline, the baby of the family, had a small birthmark on her forehead and a scar across her nose from a bicycle accident.
After the girls died, Florence fell into a depression. John clung to his faith, not just in God, but in something more controversial: reincarnation. He became convinced that his daughters would return to him. That this wasn’t the end.
Florence disagreed. Catholic doctrine didn’t leave much room for rebirth. But then, in 1958, she found herself pregnant. And when she gave birth to identical twin girls, everything changed.
The Twins Who Remembered
They named them Gillian and Jennifer. From the outside, they were like any other twins, happy, healthy, and deeply bonded. But as soon as they began to talk, strange things started to surface.
They recognised their older sisters’ toys. Not just in a vague “child plays with toy” way, they named them. Asked for them specifically. Corrected their parents if they got it wrong.
They pointed out landmarks in Hexham they’d never visited before. Identified the local school and church. Recalled details about the park where their sisters used to play. And then came the car fears. Panic when vehicles passed. Mentions of “the car coming to get us.”
Jennifer, the younger twin, had a birthmark on her forehead, in the same place Jacqueline had a scar. She also had a mark on her waist that matched Jacqueline’s documented birthmark. The family had moved away from Hexham by this point, and the twins were never told about the accident, at least not knowingly. Yet they spoke with familiarity, even certainty, about events and places they had no way of remembering.
John believed more than ever. Florence began to doubt her own doubt.
The Psychiatrist Who Paid Attention
Most people, when hearing stories like this, nod politely and change the subject.
Dr Ian Stevenson didn’t.
A psychiatrist and professor at the University of Virginia, Stevenson spent decades researching cases of children who claimed to remember past lives. He was rigorous, methodical, and famously difficult to impress. Yet he found the Pollock case “particularly compelling.”
He noted the verified birthmarks, the behavioural parallels, and the precise knowledge the twins displayed, all documented before the girls had any direct exposure to Hexham. He didn’t declare it proof. But he did list it among the strongest reincarnation cases he’d encountered out of thousands.
One of Stevenson’s core principles was this: “The strength of the case increases when the children forget the memories by adolescence.” That’s exactly what happened here.
By the time Gillian and Jennifer were older, the memories, if that’s what they were, had faded. They grew into ordinary teenagers. No dreams of past lives. No flashbacks. No obsession with toys or towns. Just quiet amnesia.
As if the past had packed its suitcase and left.
But Could There Be Another Explanation?
Of course. There usually is. Sceptics have raised a few compelling points over the years:
- Parental projection: Could John and Florence, consciously or not, have influenced the girls? Children absorb information from overheard conversations, photographs, even facial expressions. If the parents believed they were reincarnations, might the children simply reflect those expectations?
- Cryptomnesia: The phenomenon of forgotten memories surfacing in altered forms. What if the girls had, at some point, seen the toys, the house, the photos, but had no conscious memory of it?
- Grief psychology: This was a traumatised family clinging to hope. Is it possible that the desire to believe shaped the narrative?
Even within the family, not everyone was convinced. Some relatives thought the story had been unintentionally embellished over time. Others said John’s fascination with reincarnation coloured the whole affair.
But then again… the details. The knowledge. The birthmarks. It remains a case that resists easy explanation.
And Then… Silence
By adulthood, Gillian and Jennifer no longer remembered anything of Joanna and Jacqueline. They weren’t haunted or disturbed by it. They just… didn’t remember.
When asked in later interviews, they acknowledged the stories but felt detached from them. Like something they’d once heard about someone else.
And perhaps that’s the most haunting detail of all, not what they said, but what they forgot.
Want to Dig Deeper?
If you’re fascinated by the blurred lines between memory, identity, and spirit, you’re not alone. Reincarnation research has a surprisingly solid academic underbelly. Here are some paths worth following:
- Dr Ian Stevenson & UVA’s Division of Perceptual Studies :The OG of reincarnation research. Stevenson documented 2,500+ child memory cases. His work lives on at DOPS
- Dr Jim B. Tucker: Successor to Stevenson, specialising in American cases. He’s written accessible books and continues to investigate cases with scientific rigor.
- Society for Psychical Research (SPR): Established in 1882, the SPR still publishes peer-reviewed research into consciousness, survival, and psi phenomena.
- Parapsychology Foundation: More academic than it sounds. Think less crystal ball, more neuroscience-meets-consciousness-studies.
- IARRT – International Association for Regression Research & Therapies: Focused on ethical, evidence-informed past-life regression, ideal if you’re considering exploring this field yourself.
Frequently Asked Questions
What happened to the Pollock twins, Joanna and Jacqueline?
In 1957, sisters Joanna, aged 11, and Jacqueline, aged 6, were tragically killed in a car accident while walking to church in Hexham, England. A car swerved off the road and hit them. Their parents, Florence and John Pollock, were heartbroken by their sudden loss.
Who were Gillian and Jennifer Pollock?
Gillian and Jennifer were twin girls born to Florence and John Pollock less than a year after their elder sisters, Joanna and Jacqueline, died. The twins were born in 1958. Their arrival brought a mix of hope and bewilderment to the grieving parents.
What made the case of Gillian and Jennifer so unusual?
From a young age, Gillian and Jennifer displayed remarkable similarities to their deceased sisters. They recognised toys that had belonged to Joanna and Jacqueline, even though they had never seen them before. More strikingly, they seemed to know places in Hexham, like the school and church, despite having lived elsewhere for most of their early lives.
Did the twins show any signs of trauma from the accident?
Yes, the twins developed a strong fear of cars, which was unusual as they had no direct memory of the accident. They would become distressed by passing vehicles and sometimes spoke of ‘the car coming to get us’, echoing the circumstances of their sisters’ deaths.
What did researchers like Dr. Ian Stevenson think?
Dr. Ian Stevenson, a psychiatrist who studied cases of children claiming past-life memories, considered the Pollock twins’ story to be one of the most compelling he had encountered. He noted verified details, such as birthmarks on Jennifer that matched injuries on Jacqueline, and behaviours that mirrored the deceased sisters, suggesting a possible reincarnation.
Are there other explanations besides reincarnation?
Sceptics suggest that the twins’ memories could be explained by coincidence, parental influence (where parents might unintentionally pass on information), or psychological factors like suggestibility. Some family members have also questioned the accuracy of the story, suggesting it might have been influenced by their father’s strong beliefs.
-
Therapist and Fitness PractitionerPhD Candidate, MSc, BA (Hons), Accredited Hypnotherapist (DHP Acc.Hyp, DPLT), NASM Certified Personal Trainer (CPT), CIMSPA, AMACCPH.
UTHERAPY
I bring together traditional psychology, alternative therapies, hypnotherapy, and physical training to support wellbeing across mind, body, and spirit. My focus is on practical behavioural change and self-discovery, shaped by an interest in how stories, heritage, and health connect.
View all posts
Share This Post
Reading Time: 5 minutes
Popular Posts
-
WyldWell Wellness Platform: Mind, Body, and Spirit
-
Meditation Garden
-
Classic Past Life | J. A. Flowerdew
-
Classic Past Life | The Pollock Twins
-
Past Life Regression Case Study | Susan
-
What is Hypnotherapy?
-
What is your sensory Language?
Leave a Reply