THE PHYSICAL MEDIUMSHIP OF
GEORGE VALIANTINE
The mediumship of George Valiantine, from
Williamsport, New York, is an occasion of dispute and uncertainty.
Valiantine did not become aware of his mediumship until he was forty-three.
After hearing noises for which he could not account, he spoke to a Spiritualist
who invited him to participate in a seance; he did so and raps were made that
stated his brother-in-law was communicating. Valiantine then developed his
mediumship, and although having a number of guides, the principal one was his
brother-in-law. Although Valiantine was able to produce a materialization of his
guide, he principally became known as a direct voice physical medium in America
during the 1920s. He travelled to Britain several times (1924, 1925, 1927, 1929
and 1931), and other countries in Europe, to give sittings.
One of the principal figures in the
reporting of Valiantine's mediumship was H. Dennis Bradley who met the medium in
America in 1923. Unfortunately, he heaped vitriol on any person who chose to
have a different opinion from his own, and his lengthy record in Towards the
Stars has many irrelevancies and often lacks important detail. His
subsequent book, The Wisdom of the Gods, is much the same. Nonetheless,
they contain valuable information concerning Valiantine's mediumship despite the
shortcomings.
His record of the first seance related how after luminous bands were placed
around Valiantine's wrists to monitor any movement, 'the phenomenal happened'.
He sensed another person in the room who called out to him and said that she was
his sister (who had died ten years earlier). At this point he said that, 'we
talked, not in whispers, but in clear, audible tones...Every word was heard by
the other three men in the room'. Bradley asserted that the other sitters could
not have known of his sister, or the family matters that were discussed with her
for some fifteen minutes.
He also observed that, 'she said sayings in her own characteristic manner. Every
syllable was perfectly enunciated and every little peculiarity of intonation was
reproduced'. After his sister departed, five more communicators spoke to those
present, and 'each spirit was distinct and each spoke with an accent unlike the
other'. Bradley also witnessed how the trumpet 'floated in the air and careered
around the room'. In later sittings, he confirmed that he heard the voices of
communicators and Valiantine simultaneously: 'Valiantine, the medium, often
speaks and can be spoken to at the same moment that the spirits are speaking'.
During these seances, sitters were touched and there were
partial-materializations: 'A...hand rested for a second on my right hand...it
was surrounded by astral light'. Bradley also recorded how 'luminous lights
floated about the room'.(1)
In addition to sittings with Valiantine,
Bradley had sittings with the medium, Mrs Gladys Leonard that were, not
surprisingly, evidential. Most interesting, was that Bradley' sister,
communicating through Mrs Leonard, confirmed that she had communicated at the
Valiantine seances and also referred to what had been said during these. In view
of the sittings with Mrs Leonard and another medium, and the references to the
sittings with Valiantine, Bradley believed that he had obtained 'incontestable
proof of the triple link'.(2) It is an interesting point that Feda, Mrs
Leonard's control, also communicated through Valiantine on numerous occasions;
Bradley stated that he had 'a remarkable accumulation of cross evidence' that it
was the same personality who communicated through the two mediums, in addition
to others who had obtained cross- evidence confirming this view.(3)
In one Valiantine seance, Bradley noted that 'some brilliant silvery stars
appeared near the ceiling; later similar lights appeared in other parts of the
room', and the trumpet 'moved around the room and touched each of the sitters'.
Although the seance was to be held in darkness, light did penetrate the room and
Valiantine was seen to be in a trance, and at the same time the sitters 'saw a
trumpet suspended without visible support...in mid-air'. Furthermore, after the
seance ended, Valiantine was found to be covered in ectoplasm.(4) Bradley also
recorded the many instances of not only when he, but other sitters, including
those of a sceptical persuasion, were supplied with evidence. One sitter was
addressed by an aunt who gave personal details and family names relating to his
mother, even though he had referred to her by forename rather than 'mother' to
avoid giving information.(5)
At the beginning of 1924, Bradley attended
a seance at the British College of Psychic Science, with Valiantine as the
medium, and nine other persons, five of whom Valiantine had never seen before.
One of these was spoken to by her son who referred to his own children for whom
the sitter was caring. Another sitter heard from someone who had been a close
friend before he had died, and an Austrian sitter heard from her mother who
spoke to her in German.
In respect of this seance, Bradley made the important point that further
information would have been forthcoming if the sitters had been more able to
hold a purposeful and engaging conversation rather than simply asking for 'a
message', as conversation does assist the communicators in their activity.(6)
Another seance, held less than a week later, included Mrs Gladys Leonard, her
husband, and Hannen Swaffer as sitters; this was a further occasion of
evidential communications being received when personal information was supplied
by next-world visitors. In a seance at a later date, Raymond, the son of Sir
Oliver Lodge communicated with his father; after Raymond had called to his
father, 'the luminous trumpet was lifted, and taken close to Sir Oliver, who was
touched on the head and on the body. A conversation ensued between Sir Oliver
and Raymond on family matters...Names were volunteered by the spirit'.(7)
Although it has been argued that
communications in foreign languages were piecemeal, thereby diminishing the
evidential quality of Valiantine's mediumship, it is difficult to envisage the
medium being wholly responsible for all such instances. During a seance on 27
February 1924, the novelist Caradoc Evans, one of the sitters, heard the voice
of his father that he 'described as struggling through the floor and coming up
between his feet'. After the introduction, Evans said that if the communicator
was his father, he should speak in his own (Cardiganshire Welsh) language, which
he then did, including such statements as 'Uch ben yr avon. Mae steps - lower
lawn - rhwng y ty ar rheol. Pa beth yr ydych yn gofyn? Y chwi yn mynd i weled a
ty bob tro yr rydych yn y dre' (this being the father's reply to Evans' question
about the family home, which he described).(8) It is up to the reader to decide
what would be involved in being able to speak in such a way, and in the case
just cited, not knowing what questions would be asked, with of course, the
necessary pronunciations; this is apart from the production of the other
different languages (e.g. Russian, Spanish, German, Italian) spoken in various
Valiantine seances, if these did not arise from genuine communicators.
In the preface to his book, Northcliffe's Return, Hannen Swaffer records
how, at a seance with Valiantine on 25 February 1925, one sitter, a Chinese
Countess heard from her father; this was followed by Lord Northcliffe
communicating and telling Swaffer what the intended book should be called.
Swaffer confirms: 'I have heard Northcliffe's voice speak to me on, at least,
eight occasions at Valiantine sittings. Once he spoke to me in daylight, in a
way which precluded any chance of fraud or trickery'.(9)
One of the more unusual instances of Valiantine's mediumship occurred in 1927. A
sitter possessed an ancient Chinese shell that was used as a horn, although none
of the sitters could produce any note from it, no matter how hard they tried.
However, in the seance when the shell was brought along, it was heard to be
blown from high up, and furthermore, the notes produced were in the appropriate
Chinese mode.
An article by Mrs W. H. Salter was included
in the SPR's Proceedings in 1932, in which there was a negative appraisal
of George Valiantine. After mentioning the unsatisfactory testing of Valiantine
by The Scientific American in 1923, she referred to Bradley's later
charges of fraud being carried out by Valiantine.
Bradley had already made reference in Towards the Stars to the suspicions
of Dr Wyckoff about direct writing produced, although Wyckoff admitted that he
was not convinced that Valiantine was a fraud and believed, 'that unquestionably
he has mediumistic powers'. But, 'perhaps not all the time or at will'.(10)
Nonetheless, Bradley subsequently changed his opinion about Valiantine, and
recorded this in his book, And After: his change of opinion is startling,
particularly in view of his positive reports and the vociferous criticisms of
those who challenged Valiantine. Bradley recorded that when imprints of
spirit-hands in wax and smoked paper were obtained, he believed these to be
fraudulent; nonetheless, he was careful to disconnect this from the occurrence
of spirit voices that he believed were genuine. Mrs Salter made the interesting
observation that when the book was reviewed on 22 October 1931, by the Times
Literary Supplement (hardly a publication known for a pro-Spiritualist
stance), the reviewer believed there was 'evidence of Valiantine's supernormal
faculties which no sceptic, as it seems to us, can reasonably call in
question'.(11) Indeed, by virtue of the testimony of sitters, there really could
be little doubt about Valiantine's mediumistic abilities.
When dealing with Valiantine's mediumship
in her report, Mrs Salter referred to a number of different seances when events
indicated fraud, and suspicious features were noted by sitters, some of whom who
were certainly not of a sceptical persuasion. Despite what is included in Mrs
Salter's writing, the reader is often confronted by the common custom of raising
objections simply through certain details not being supplied, or possibilities
that are really only conjecture, when the phenomena are not easily explained
away. For example, in one seance when Valiantine was tied to his chair and the
sitters were tied to each other, a complete list of whom the sitters were was
not available and by virtue of this, Mrs Salter raised the question of whether
the sitters might have colluded. When foreign languages were heard, she believed
that the sitter's own expectations may have influenced what they believed they
had heard. In a seance during which Italian was spoken, she suggested that it
was possible a sitter may have pretended to have been the communicator, although
she admitted that she had no grounds for doubting the integrity of the sitters
present. When a communicator spoke to one sitter, and gave good evidence, Mrs
Salter said this only 'constitutes a case for further enquiry and nothing
more'.(12) It is difficult not to gain the impression that Mrs Salter sought to
give any explanation to account for the phenomena, no matter how
unsubstantiated, if it would preclude genuine mediumistic phenomena.
It was the instance of archaic Chinese
being spoken to Dr Neville Whymant, a highly qualified Oriental scholar,
involved in the translation of languages, that seems to have caused Mrs Salter
some difficulty. It is this case where she suggested that the explanation might
lay in the sitter's suggestibility. To arrive at a conclusion about this
particular matter, the reader can review Whymant's own record of his experiences
in Psychic Adventures in New York. At a Valiantine seance, a communicator
spoke in Chinese mandarin 'correct in intonation and pronunciation', despite the
immense difficulty of which Whymant was only too aware through his own teaching
of the language.
The communicator said that he was Confucius, and Whymant asked him various
questions, e.g. about the meaning of certain Chinese words and an item of
textual criticism that had prevailed for many centuries; the communicator then
supplied Whymant with two renderings, including the one which was correct, as
the communicator knew and pointed out.(13) Despite her critical stance, Mrs
Salter obviously had difficulties in attributing fraud or a this-worldly
explanation for all of Valiantine's mediumship; when suggestions, often lacking
substantiation would not suffice, she had to agree that there were events that
could not be accounted for, e.g. in the case of Valiantine being found to be
covered in ectoplasm, she said that without further data, 'this incident is
likely to remain unexplained'.(14)
Other examples of Valiantine's mediumship can be easily found: when Dr Vivian
was present, 'while two voices were speaking, Valiantine was simultaneously
heard to draw the attention of the sitters to the two voices'. When Amiral Nimmo
had daylight sittings, 'the voice which he heard to come distinctly from within
the trumpet gave intelligent and evidential communication.'(15)
A report by Lord Hope concerning his
sittings with Valiantine, in the same Proceedings, essentially follows
the overall style of Mrs Salter, offering telepathy or the medium possibly
overhearing casual mention of certain facts beforehand as possible explanations.
However, he related the positive instances that were witnessed together with
those that were debateable. He referred to the lack of evidential material by
communicators, apart from supposed communications from people who were in fact
still alive, others who were fictitious and suggested by sitters in desperation
to stimulate activity, and information given in earlier sittings being given
back in later ones. Nonetheless, this was not always the case, e.g. Valiantine
gave him the names of guides, two of which had been given at sittings with other
mediums, and on one occasion, a communicator referred to a girl that Lord Hope
knew, and correctly relayed specific information about her.
Another sitter, unknown to the medium, was given the full name of 'a likely
communicator' and Hope admitted 'there seemed no likely normal means by which
the medium could have learnt this name'.(16) One communicator said that he was
Martin Luther, the Protestant reformer, and Hope agreed 'the accent showed no
trace of American [Valiantine's accent], and was indeed quite unlike the
medium's ordinary voice and also unlike the guide "voices"'. Hope
asked the communicator to speak in German, the language of Martin Luther, and he
did so; one sitter confirmed that 'it was good German of an old- fashioned
type'. A Japanese sitter was spoken to by a communicator and 'was undoubtedly
favourably impressed with what he had heard'.(17)
Of trumpet movement, Hope said this was sometimes 'very impressive', and on one
occasion a trumpet appeared to rise very high and strike something sounding like
the ceiling, that was over eleven feet from the floor. Furthermore, two trumpets
were sometimes in the air at the same time. In the case of the movement of other
objects in the seance room, Hope noted that gramophone slowed down several times
when it was 'a considerable distance from the medium's chair' and the table
moved from 'where it would have been very difficult for the medium to have
reached it'.(18)
In the case of direct writing, on the
occasion when Oriental characters were supplied, Hope suggested how Valiantine
could have produced this fraudulently, but nevertheless conceded that the
characters 'were probably written in complete darkness during the sitting'. On
asking an expert about the writing, Hope recorded how he 'told me he did not
think he could have done it himself in the dark'.(19)
In addition to Bradley's record, Mrs Salter referred to seances in 1925, when
Lady Troubridge and Miss Radclyffe Hall, representing the SPR, were present, and
how their report was 'refreshingly free from the obscurity and superficiality of
most reports on Valiantine'.(20) In their report, supplied by Dr V. J. Woolley,
they raised a number of justified questions together with criticisms concerning
some aspects of Valiantine's mediumship and the communications provided through
him. However, they noted that Valiantine 'asked no questions that could be
interpreted as fishing for information', and while they believed that it was
impossible to arrive at any definite opinions, they felt that in the first
seance, 'that the total phenomena produced at this sitting were beyond what
could have been obtained by the fraudulent efforts of the medium unaided'.(21)
In the first seance on 13 March, there was
trumpet movement, and Miss Radclyffe-Hall heard from a communicator who was
recognized as someone who had died eighteen years earlier, and on being asked to
supply the name of a mutual acquaintance, did so, with this being audible to all
present. Later, a communicator gave a name to the same sitter that was
recognized and complied when requested to supply a further name that was
relevant: this being an unusual forename. Further evidence was supplied, to the
sitter again, when her father communicated. He gave his name as 'Radclyffe' and
Valiantine said that he probably did not have sufficient power to add '-Hall' to
his surname; in fact, her father was actually called Radclyffe Radclyffe-Hall.
This was obviously evidential as a father would hardly introduce himself by his
surname, but the medium was unaware of the duplicate name. In the record of the
second seance on 16 March, the two researchers noted their reservations and
concerns about the content of some of the communications, but agreed that the
behaviour of one communicator was 'characteristic of him and his manner'. The
report also said there was 'some opportunity of ascertaining that the
medium...remained seated in his chair when voices were wandering round the
circle', and that the voice of a guide was heard at the same time that
Valiantine was speaking.(22)
The third seance on 21 March was not
evidential, and had to be prematurely concluded due to the events, and the
disruptive behaviour of Bradley who was present. These seances were followed by
a daylight sitting on 23 March; in this, taps were heard inside the trumpet and
Lady Troubridge and another sitter 'were satisfied that the medium's hands made
no movement'. Later that day, a seance was held in a red light; Lady Troubridge
carefully monitored the medium and said that she 'could easily discern every
feature and movement of his face...I could also also see with absolute certainty
whether or not his mouth was closed'. She then went on to say that taps were
heard in the trumpet, and one at the far end of the room, furthest from
Valiantine, followed by a a voice giving his name and greeting the sitter who
had her 'eyes fixed on the medium's mouth' which was closed; this was followed
by other voices speaking to her.(23)
In Miss Radclyffe-Hall's daylight sitting on the same day, taps and a voice were
heard in the trumpet, and she reported that she 'could not detect the least
suspicious movement' by Valiantine, and 'during the whole time that the voice
was going on, his mouth remained closed' and his lips 'remained without
movement'. The communicator said that he was her father and named his wife,
asking that she be told that he was 'all right'.(24) After the seance, both Lady
Troubridge and Miss Radclyffe-Hall attempted to reproduce the taps and speech by
normal means, but were unsuccessful.
When considering Valiantine's mediumship, I
believe it is fair to argue that it unfortunate that Lady Troubridge and Miss
Radclyffe-Hall did not have more opportunity to attend seances with Valiantine.
A reading of the available material certainly suggests that far more information
about Valiantine's mediumship would have been forthcoming from them as they were
clearly concerned with evidence of survival with an objective approach.
Regrettably, Bradley occupies a prominent role and the value of his contribution
is highly questionable; as Inglis noted of him, 'He had put in a great deal of
work... investigating mediums, and had little positive to show for it'.(25)
The full status of George Valiantine's mediumship is really one of some
uncertainty; in view of the events that took place, I would suggest that
Stewart's view cited at the beginning concerning 'a grey area', is the most
appropriate in Valiantine's case. Nonetheless, some light is shed on the matter
in view of those who attended Valiantine's seances, holding very diverse
opinions, and were unable to account for what was witnessed, or believed they
had obtained evidence of survival. Even in his book, And After, when
Bradley modified his opinion concerning Valiantine, he admitted: 'He is
semi-illiterate. He possesses no scholastic education whatsoever...I mention
these facts because many of the communications which have be in direct voice
under his mediumship have been brilliant in their expression and culture'.(26)
References
(1)H. D. Bradley, Towards the Stars (London: Werner Laurie, 1924),
pp.8,9,10,14,15,179,187,208.
(2)Towards the Stars, p.105.
(3)H. D. Bradley, The Wisdom of the Gods (London: Werner Laurie, 1925),
p.311.
(4)Towards the Stars, pp.168,169.
(5)Towards the Stars, pp.187-188.
(6)Towards the Stars, pp.192-193.
(7)The Wisdom of the Gods, p.226.
(8)Towards the Stars, pp.209-210.
(9)H. Swaffer, Northcliffe's Return (London: Psychic Book Club, 1925),
pp.vii,viii.
(10)Towards the Stars, pp.111-113.
(11)Mrs W. H. Salter, 'The History of George Valiantine', PSPR, 40
(1932), pp.389-390.
(12)Salter, Ibid., p.408.
(13)H. Boddington, The University of Spiritualism (London: Spiritualist
Press, 1947), pp.377-379.
(14)Salter, Op. Cit., p.398.
(15)N. Fodor, Encyclopaedia of Psychic Science, (London: Arthurs Press,
1934), p.399.
(16)Lord Hope, 'Report on Some Sittings with Valiantine and Phoenix in 1927', PSPR,
40 (1932), p.413.
(17)Hope, Ibid., p.415.
(18)Hope, Op. Cit., p.416.
(19)Hope, Op. Cit., p.418.
(20)Salter, Op. Cit., p.397.
(21)V. J. Woolley, 'Sittings with George Valiantine, PSPR, 36 (1928),
pp.55,56.
(22)Woolley, Ibid., p.61.
(23)Woolley, Op. Cit., pp.67,69,70.
(24)Woolley, Op. Cit., p.73.
(25)B. Inglis, Science and Parascience (London: Hodder and Stoughton,
1984), p.243.
(26)Ct., Fodor, Op. Cit., p.399.
NB. This article appeared in the February and March 1996
NAS Newsletter.