
Oddlet: William Lyttle ยท 1 min read
Apr 6, 2026
The Man Who Found a Taste for Digging
When the council rehoused him on the top floor of a tower block, it was specifically to discourage tunnelling.
William Lyttle listed his occupation as civil engineer, though no evidence exists that he was qualified or had ever worked as one. He arrived in London from Ireland in the mid-1960s, inherited a pair of Victorian terraced houses in Hackney, and knocked them into one.
Then he dug a wine cellar and found, as he put it, "a taste for the thing."
He kept digging for forty years. His tunnels ran in every direction, some stretching sixty feet, others reaching down to the water table. He reinforced them with whatever he could find โ sections of cars, broken deep-freeze units, wooden beams, scavenged debris. He placed books in small alcoves carved into the tunnel walls, including At the Earth's Core. The clay he excavated had to go somewhere, so he dumped it in the rooms above, meaning that as his tunnels expanded downward, his house slowly filled with earth. He was trading living space for void space.
Neighbours noticed only when sinkholes opened in the pavement, a 450-volt cable was severed, and the local pub began worrying its cellar would drop into one of his excavations. The council evicted him, filled his tunnels with two thousand tonnes of concrete, and rehoused him on the top floor of a tower block.
To discourage tunnelling.
When Lyttle was found dead in his flat a few months later, he had knocked several holes in the walls and removed a large section between the kitchen and the living room.
He could not stop.
Know someone whoโd love this?
- Wikipedia โ William Lyttle โ Well-cited article; primary reference for dates, costs, and structural details. Cross-checked against multiple sources.
- Londonist โ "Great London Eccentrics: The Mole Man of Hackney" โ Reliable London culture publication; useful for quotes and neighbourhood context.
- Wallpaper* โ "Step inside David Adjaye and Sue Webster's Mole House" โ Authoritative design press; direct quotes from Adjaye and Webster on the renovation.
- Homebuilding & Renovating โ "The Incredible Story of the Hackney 'Mole Man'" โ Trade publication; reliable on structural and property details.
- AnOther Magazine โ "Frieze 2014 Special: Tim Noble & Sue Webster's New House" โ Direct quotes from Noble and Webster; reliable arts press.
- Abandoned Spaces

The Nun Who Signed in Blood
She chose a convent over marriage โ not for God, but for the library.

The Woman Who Wrote From Inside a Wall
A bishop sealed her inside a stone room, and she stayed for forty years โ then T.S. Eliot quoted her during the Blitz.

The Woman Who Rewrote French Opera With a Sword at Her Hip
She broke a woman out of a convent by stealing a dead nun's body, and then went back to singing.
Wonder, delivered.
A fresh Oddlet in your inbox every morning, a full day before everyone else. True, strange and under aย minute.
Free forever. Unsubscribe anytime.