1 00:00:10,640 --> 00:00:15,280 Speaker 1: Welcome to Unexplained Extra with me Richard mcclained smith. For 2 00:00:15,280 --> 00:00:17,680 Speaker 1: the weeks in between episodes, we look at the stories that, 3 00:00:17,720 --> 00:00:19,800 Speaker 1: for one reason or other, didn't make it into the show. 4 00:00:20,520 --> 00:00:23,800 Speaker 1: In this week's episode, where Darkness Plays, we touched briefly 5 00:00:23,840 --> 00:00:26,840 Speaker 1: on the supernatural theories of the eminent Sir William Barrett. 6 00:00:28,320 --> 00:00:31,920 Speaker 1: Sir William passed away in nineteen twenty five, roughly forty 7 00:00:32,000 --> 00:00:34,600 Speaker 1: years previously, however, he had been a founding member of 8 00:00:34,640 --> 00:00:38,440 Speaker 1: a fascinating collective known as the Society for Psychical Research, 9 00:00:39,800 --> 00:00:42,880 Speaker 1: counting among its early members such luminary figures as Arthur 10 00:00:42,920 --> 00:00:46,559 Speaker 1: Conan Doyle, Alfred Lord Tennyson, and John Ruskin. The Society 11 00:00:46,600 --> 00:00:49,839 Speaker 1: had been established in an attempt to legitimize the investigation 12 00:00:50,040 --> 00:00:56,480 Speaker 1: of paranormal phenomena. Rather than dismiss reports of strange occurrencies 13 00:00:56,560 --> 00:00:59,400 Speaker 1: that might not tally with conventional wisdom, the Society made 14 00:00:59,440 --> 00:01:02,880 Speaker 1: it their mission to approach each case impartially adopting a 15 00:01:02,920 --> 00:01:07,200 Speaker 1: strict scientific method with each investigation. You might say they 16 00:01:07,200 --> 00:01:18,560 Speaker 1: were nothing less than the original Ghostbusters. The Society for 17 00:01:18,640 --> 00:01:21,840 Speaker 1: Psychical Research had been established in response to a peculiar 18 00:01:21,880 --> 00:01:25,039 Speaker 1: craze that was sweeping the Western world, a craze that 19 00:01:25,120 --> 00:01:27,240 Speaker 1: had its origins in a small wooden house in the 20 00:01:27,280 --> 00:01:31,960 Speaker 1: hamlet of Hydesville, New York. In eighteen forty eight, two 21 00:01:32,000 --> 00:01:35,039 Speaker 1: sisters named Kate Margaret Fox claimed to have made contact 22 00:01:35,080 --> 00:01:38,240 Speaker 1: with the spirit of a dead man. The sisters alleged 23 00:01:38,319 --> 00:01:40,840 Speaker 1: that the spirit had communicated with them through a series 24 00:01:40,880 --> 00:01:43,880 Speaker 1: of knocks and bangs. In short, they professed to have 25 00:01:43,920 --> 00:01:47,440 Speaker 1: made contact with a poltergeist, and in so doing inadvertently 26 00:01:47,520 --> 00:01:54,120 Speaker 1: created a movement that would come to be known as spiritualism. 27 00:01:54,160 --> 00:01:57,200 Speaker 1: As news of the Fox sisters incredible claims spread, it 28 00:01:57,240 --> 00:02:00,320 Speaker 1: wasn't long before everybody, from the Romanovs to Queen Victoria 29 00:02:00,440 --> 00:02:03,400 Speaker 1: were conducting seances in an attempt to replicate the apparent 30 00:02:03,440 --> 00:02:08,280 Speaker 1: communications with the dead. Inevitably, as the movement's popularity increased, 31 00:02:08,480 --> 00:02:11,760 Speaker 1: so did the number of bogus mediums, psychics and clairvoyance, 32 00:02:11,919 --> 00:02:15,240 Speaker 1: ever ready to take advantage of a gullible public. For 33 00:02:15,320 --> 00:02:18,480 Speaker 1: the Society of Psychical Research, it was these charlatans that 34 00:02:18,560 --> 00:02:20,760 Speaker 1: posed the biggest threat to what they believed was an 35 00:02:20,760 --> 00:02:25,680 Speaker 1: otherwise perfectly legitimate area of study. It wasn't until eighteen 36 00:02:25,760 --> 00:02:29,000 Speaker 1: eighty six that the society established itself with the publication 37 00:02:29,040 --> 00:02:31,520 Speaker 1: of what is now considered the first classic text of 38 00:02:31,560 --> 00:02:35,560 Speaker 1: Paris psychology, titled Phantasms of the Living. The book was 39 00:02:35,560 --> 00:02:39,000 Speaker 1: the work of three Oxbridge graduates, the psychologist Edmund Gurney, 40 00:02:39,160 --> 00:02:41,800 Speaker 1: the poet Frederick Myers, and author and founder of the 41 00:02:41,800 --> 00:02:46,160 Speaker 1: Fabian Society, Frank Podmore. The fascinating book, which can be 42 00:02:46,160 --> 00:02:49,760 Speaker 1: found online, provides an exhaustive study of the paranormal taking 43 00:02:49,800 --> 00:02:54,840 Speaker 1: in witchcraft, dreams, hallucinations, telepathy, and of course, the Poltgeist phenomena. 44 00:02:56,360 --> 00:02:59,480 Speaker 1: In conclusion, the authors believed that rather than describing the 45 00:02:59,520 --> 00:03:02,800 Speaker 1: workings of the spirits of the dead or paranormal phenomena 46 00:03:02,960 --> 00:03:06,680 Speaker 1: was merely the result of extrasensory perception, or, as Frederick 47 00:03:06,760 --> 00:03:09,760 Speaker 1: Meyer's notes, instead of describing a ghost as a dead 48 00:03:09,800 --> 00:03:12,840 Speaker 1: person permitted to communicate with the living, let us define 49 00:03:12,840 --> 00:03:20,079 Speaker 1: it as a manifestation of persistent personal energy. The trio, 50 00:03:20,200 --> 00:03:23,280 Speaker 1: who also went by the brilliantly titled Committee of Apparitions 51 00:03:23,280 --> 00:03:26,919 Speaker 1: and Haunted Houses, soon caught the attention of controversial newspaper 52 00:03:27,040 --> 00:03:32,120 Speaker 1: editor William Thomas Stead. Stead, a pioneer of investigative journalism, 53 00:03:32,400 --> 00:03:34,680 Speaker 1: is perhaps most well known for a series of articles 54 00:03:34,720 --> 00:03:37,760 Speaker 1: published in the Palmar Gazette exposing the dark underbelly of 55 00:03:37,840 --> 00:03:44,360 Speaker 1: Victorian society and its proclivity for child prostitution. The articles 56 00:03:44,440 --> 00:03:46,440 Speaker 1: not only helped to raise the age of consent from 57 00:03:46,440 --> 00:03:49,480 Speaker 1: thirteen to sixteen, but are also considered to mark the birth, 58 00:03:49,640 --> 00:03:52,400 Speaker 1: for better or worse, of something we now take completely 59 00:03:52,400 --> 00:03:55,880 Speaker 1: for granted, the power of the media to influence public opinion. 60 00:03:58,120 --> 00:04:01,600 Speaker 1: As a commentator on popular culture, Stead had grown increasingly 61 00:04:01,640 --> 00:04:04,280 Speaker 1: interested in the spiritualist movement, and so it was to 62 00:04:04,360 --> 00:04:07,760 Speaker 1: him that the society turned for their next extraordinary venture. 63 00:04:11,440 --> 00:04:14,240 Speaker 1: Are you always taking care of your family? Do you 64 00:04:14,280 --> 00:04:17,360 Speaker 1: often take care of others and not yourself? 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Teledoc is committed to facilitating great therapeutic matches, 75 00:04:55,360 --> 00:04:57,960 Speaker 1: so they make it easy to change counselors if needed. 76 00:04:58,160 --> 00:05:02,320 Speaker 1: For free. Tele Adoc therapy is available through most insurance 77 00:05:02,400 --> 00:05:07,000 Speaker 1: or employers. Download the app or visittelldoc dot com Forward 78 00:05:07,000 --> 00:05:13,520 Speaker 1: slash Unexplained podcast today to get started. That's teladoc dot 79 00:05:13,560 --> 00:05:21,920 Speaker 1: com slash Unexplained podcast. This time a team consisting of 80 00:05:21,920 --> 00:05:25,839 Speaker 1: Frederick Myers, Frank Podmore, Eleanor Sedgwick, and Alice Johnson, the 81 00:05:25,960 --> 00:05:29,200 Speaker 1: Society Secretary set about compiling the data for what would 82 00:05:29,240 --> 00:05:33,520 Speaker 1: become known as the Census of Hallucination. Just as an 83 00:05:33,560 --> 00:05:36,560 Speaker 1: aside as was regrettably standard for the time and in 84 00:05:36,600 --> 00:05:39,760 Speaker 1: many cases still is, the contribution of women was often 85 00:05:39,760 --> 00:05:42,800 Speaker 1: criminally undervalued, but this was certainly not the case in 86 00:05:42,839 --> 00:05:46,560 Speaker 1: the Society for Psychical Research. Eleanor Sedgwick in particular, was 87 00:05:46,600 --> 00:05:49,120 Speaker 1: a very highly regarded member of the Society and would 88 00:05:49,160 --> 00:05:52,120 Speaker 1: later be elected its first female president in nineteen o eight. 89 00:05:55,960 --> 00:05:58,800 Speaker 1: After six years of hard work, the Census of Hallucination 90 00:05:58,920 --> 00:06:01,559 Speaker 1: was finally completed and the results were published in eighteen 91 00:06:01,600 --> 00:06:04,159 Speaker 1: ninety five by William Stead in the pall Maw Gazette. 92 00:06:04,680 --> 00:06:09,119 Speaker 1: What the data revealed was nothing short of astounding. After 93 00:06:09,160 --> 00:06:12,840 Speaker 1: collating the responses of over seventeen thousand participants, they found 94 00:06:13,000 --> 00:06:15,920 Speaker 1: that as many as ten percent of respondents had experienced 95 00:06:16,040 --> 00:06:20,640 Speaker 1: some form of waking hallucination. After further cross checking and verification, 96 00:06:20,920 --> 00:06:24,160 Speaker 1: the team concluded that of the seventeen hundred reports that remained, 97 00:06:24,320 --> 00:06:27,200 Speaker 1: at least two percent claimed to have experienced a hallucination 98 00:06:27,400 --> 00:06:33,720 Speaker 1: that revealed information they were highly unlikely to have known before. Furthermore, 99 00:06:33,880 --> 00:06:36,760 Speaker 1: many of the people who claimed such experiences had recently 100 00:06:36,800 --> 00:06:40,320 Speaker 1: suffered a profound moment of crisis, suggesting that such occurrences 101 00:06:40,440 --> 00:06:43,240 Speaker 1: may make the mind more receptive to such an experience. 102 00:06:46,240 --> 00:06:48,719 Speaker 1: Although of course the validity of the research is wide 103 00:06:48,720 --> 00:06:56,240 Speaker 1: open for debate, it remains a fascinating document. The Society 104 00:06:56,240 --> 00:06:59,720 Speaker 1: for Psychical Research continues its work today, as ever, employing 105 00:06:59,760 --> 00:07:03,560 Speaker 1: the because of science in its tireless investigation of paranormal phenomena. 106 00:07:05,160 --> 00:07:09,320 Speaker 1: For the original Committee of Apparitions and Haunted Houses, their fates, however, 107 00:07:09,400 --> 00:07:25,280 Speaker 1: were somewhat more tragic. Edmund Gurney had stated much of 108 00:07:25,320 --> 00:07:28,800 Speaker 1: his reputation on his investigations into the existence of telepathy. 109 00:07:29,360 --> 00:07:32,200 Speaker 1: In the spring of eighteen eighty eight, he discovered his assistant, 110 00:07:32,240 --> 00:07:35,000 Speaker 1: George Albert Smith, had in fact faked many of his 111 00:07:35,080 --> 00:07:40,800 Speaker 1: successful results. Broken hearted by the deception, Gurneus believed to 112 00:07:40,840 --> 00:07:43,080 Speaker 1: have taken his own life in the June of that year. 113 00:07:45,760 --> 00:07:48,760 Speaker 1: In nineteen o seven, Frank Podmore was forced to resign 114 00:07:48,800 --> 00:07:51,000 Speaker 1: from a senior position in the Post Office due in 115 00:07:51,120 --> 00:07:54,200 Speaker 1: large part to the revelation that he was gay. Shunned 116 00:07:54,200 --> 00:07:56,760 Speaker 1: by his family and friends, Podmore later drowned in the 117 00:07:56,800 --> 00:08:00,360 Speaker 1: town of Malvern in nineteen ten. Neither his family or 118 00:08:00,400 --> 00:08:02,760 Speaker 1: any members of the society are believed to have attended 119 00:08:02,800 --> 00:08:08,240 Speaker 1: his funeral. For William Thomas Stead, his fate was sealed 120 00:08:08,280 --> 00:08:10,280 Speaker 1: as one of the two thousand, two hundred and twenty 121 00:08:10,280 --> 00:08:13,760 Speaker 1: four passengers of the maiden voyage of the Titanic, sinking 122 00:08:13,760 --> 00:08:16,320 Speaker 1: beneath the freezing waters of the North Atlantic Ocean on 123 00:08:16,360 --> 00:08:21,560 Speaker 1: the morning of April fifteenth, nineteen twelve. And as for 124 00:08:21,600 --> 00:08:25,080 Speaker 1: Frederic Myers, he died a peaceful death in Rome in 125 00:08:25,200 --> 00:08:31,480 Speaker 1: nineteen oh one, or so was thought. Surely before his death, 126 00:08:31,600 --> 00:08:34,599 Speaker 1: the classicist Myers had informed his friends of his intentions 127 00:08:34,679 --> 00:08:37,480 Speaker 1: to prove the existence of life after death by contacting 128 00:08:37,559 --> 00:08:41,320 Speaker 1: them from beyond the grave. One such friend was the 129 00:08:41,320 --> 00:08:45,439 Speaker 1: world renowned physicist Sir Oliver Lodge. Not long after Myers 130 00:08:45,520 --> 00:08:48,960 Speaker 1: passed away, Sir Oliver was contacted by a medium. She 131 00:08:49,040 --> 00:08:51,720 Speaker 1: had a message for him. She said, it's from a 132 00:08:51,760 --> 00:08:57,560 Speaker 1: man called Frederic Myers. What ensued over the course of 133 00:08:57,600 --> 00:09:00,120 Speaker 1: several years was a series of messages of supposed that 134 00:09:00,240 --> 00:09:02,560 Speaker 1: be relaid to mediums all over the world, none of 135 00:09:02,559 --> 00:09:06,960 Speaker 1: whom had previously met. The obscure, highbrow illusions and snippets 136 00:09:07,000 --> 00:09:09,680 Speaker 1: of Latin verse contained in the messages meant little on 137 00:09:09,720 --> 00:09:12,000 Speaker 1: their own, but when piece together were found to form 138 00:09:12,040 --> 00:09:16,480 Speaker 1: a cohesive set of communications, known as the Cross Correspondences, 139 00:09:16,720 --> 00:09:19,800 Speaker 1: it is considered by many a compelling proof of life 140 00:09:19,880 --> 00:09:29,360 Speaker 1: after death. All elements of Unexplained are produced by me 141 00:09:29,600 --> 00:09:33,000 Speaker 1: Richard McClain smith. Please subscribe and rate the show on iTunes. 142 00:09:33,200 --> 00:09:35,160 Speaker 1: Feel free to get in touch with any thoughts or 143 00:09:35,240 --> 00:09:38,440 Speaker 1: ideas regarding the stories you've heard on the show. Perhaps 144 00:09:38,480 --> 00:09:40,559 Speaker 1: you have an explanation of your own you'd like to share. 145 00:09:41,320 --> 00:09:44,040 Speaker 1: You can reach us online at Unexplained podcast dot com 146 00:09:44,160 --> 00:09:56,800 Speaker 1: or on Twitter at Unexplained Pod. Now it's time to 147 00:09:56,880 --> 00:10:01,160 Speaker 1: take care of yourself to make time for you. Teledoc 148 00:10:01,240 --> 00:10:04,240 Speaker 1: gives you access to a licensed therapist to help you 149 00:10:04,280 --> 00:10:07,640 Speaker 1: get back to feeling your best. Speak to a licensed 150 00:10:07,679 --> 00:10:11,520 Speaker 1: therapist by phone or video any time between seven a m. 151 00:10:11,640 --> 00:10:14,480 Speaker 1: To nine p m Local time, seven days a week. 152 00:10:15,080 --> 00:10:19,920 Speaker 1: Teledoc Therapy is available through most insurance or employers. Download 153 00:10:19,920 --> 00:10:23,640 Speaker 1: the app, or visit teledoc dot com Forward slash Unexplained 154 00:10:23,640 --> 00:10:27,599 Speaker 1: podcast Today to get started. That's t e l a 155 00:10:28,000 --> 00:10:31,319 Speaker 1: d oc dot com slash Unexplained podcast