Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Kansas Physician Confirms Howard Report

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Originally posted by TradeName View Post
    The Academy, Volume 35, April 6, 1889, Pages 233-234

    New Novels

    [...]

    A Fatal Affinity. By Stuart Cumberland.
    (Spencer Blackett.)

    [...]

    Mr. Stuart Cumberland's latest work claims to be "a weird story," and such it undoubtedly is. Nine mysterious murders have startled and horrified the London world; all the victims have been young women of unblemished reputation, and are said to have resembled one another in personal appearance, though not in social position; further, each has been assassinated on her birthday, the deed has heen committed with precisely the same sort of instrument in every case, and up to the present time not the slightest trace of the murderer has been discovered. Eventually it appears that the whole series of crimes has been perpetrated by diabolical agency, an emissary of the powers of darkness, residing in human shape in London, having been appointed to the task. It is scarcely possible to criticise seriously productions of this kind. "When the story arrives at a point where an English cavalry officer of high rank dons a sorcerer's long flowing robe of white, and, drawing with an ebony rod a magic circle on the floor, succeeds in conjuring up a hideous apparition, the adult reader will at once appraise the value of the work before him, and compose his mind to the same sort of attitude he would assume before perusing the tale of the Second Calender, restored to man's shape by that king's daughter, whose enchantments, conducted in similar fashion, caused the appearance of "the genie, the son of the daughter of Eblis, in the shape of a very large and terrible lion." But to younger readers A Fatal Affinity may have the unwholesome effect of imparting hideous terrors in regard to the possibility of their being despatched on the occasion of their next birthday by the "astral body" of some reputedly inoffensive Hindu student at present located in suburban lodgings. It is difficult to see what other purpose can be achieved by the story. As for the scheme—-half Brahministic, half Zoroastrian—-of the government of the universe, the operation of which is outlined in the course of the narrative, it is needless to enquire whether it accords with any actually existing system of human belief.

    [...]



    The Literary World, Volume 39, April 5, 1889, Page 317

    New Novels

    [...]

    A Fatal Affinity, by Stuart Cumberland, is a romance suggested by the East-end murders. In the novel, the young girls who are the victims of the assassin's knife are snatched from the upper and middle classes as well as from the daughters of the people. The connecting link between them is a striking similarity of personal appearance, and this clue at length leads to the discovery of the murderer by an English officer, an adept in Eastern occultism. The assassin is a member of the 'Brotherhood of Darkness,' the initiatory rite to which diabolic fraternity is the slaughter of thirteen maidens, one at the period of each full moon during the year of probation. The 'weird story,' as the author calls it, is related in thrilling style, and has in it the elements of popularity among lovers of sensational literature.

    [...]
    Thank you very much for the variety of items and links that you gave TradeName. I really appreciate the background information on Cumberland.

    Jeff

    Comment


    • Hi Jeff,
      in answer to your earlier question, I think Cumberland is possibly mentioned in one of the diary books.

      This story varies quite a great deal from Lees.

      Tradename,
      re Less lapses out and into spiritualism, he is said to have rennounced it in the 1870s feeling what he had been expeirincing could be explained by science. But later on he stated something else happened that meant he no longer could see that as the case.

      Those cynics among us may be intersted to note this seems to coincide with the birth of several of his many children, his move to London and a period of financial difficulty, but that would only be cynics.

      It is interesting about this Cumberland, he seems to have a different experience to Lees in terms of -its clear Lees hasnt simply copies what he said. But I do think it is interesting to note in relation to Lees that his going to the police seems to correspond exactly with the reward being offered after the double event.

      Jenni
      “be just and fear not”

      Comment


      • Evening World's Profile of Cumberland

        You're welcome, Jeff.

        Jenni, I'm not quite sure what to make of Lees.

        Here's a profile of Cumberland published by the New York Evening World to promote the serialization of Cumberland's story, "Marked for a Victim", which was later published in book form as A Fatal Affinity.
        I can't vouch for the accuracy of this profile.

        The Evening World, March 13, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

        Stuart Cumberland

        Something About the Author of "Marked for a Victim"

        He is "Thought Reader" to Europe's Crowned Heads

        His Theory of Whitechapel's Mystery Expressed in Fiction

        Mr. Stuart Cumberland, whose new and
        dramatic story, "Marked for a Victim," begins
        in The Evening World possesses
        a world-wild repute as on occultist, a
        mystic and a "thought-reader" to the Upper
        Ten Thousand. A man of wealth, he has devoted
        himself to the study of occult subjects
        as a hobby, and claims to have been engaged
        to read the thoughts of the crowned heads
        and almost everybody of prominence in Europe.

        In "Marked for a Victim" Mr. Cumberland
        has woven a story of much dramatic interest.
        Though founded on the Whltechapel
        mysteries and expressing his theory of those
        atrocities, the story avoids the objectional
        and gruesome details. It is several degrees
        more thrilling than the conventional novel,
        and, what with love, mystery and occultism,
        it is intensely interesting from the first line
        to the last.

        Though the author of several other works,
        Mr. Stuart Cumberland is best known to the
        public as a "thought-reader."

        "Thought-reading" is a phase of the modern
        spirit of physical [sic] research which brings
        psychological action and phenomena into the
        sphere of scientific research. The "London
        Society of Psychical Research" makes this
        sort of vital energy the object of its special
        endeavor, and the soul falls Into its place as
        a thing to be studied, just as naturally as
        electricity.

        It is an opinion of several thousand years'
        standing that no human being could read
        another human being's thoughts, if that other
        human being could keep his thoughts fonted [?]
        up in his thinking cells. Modern Thought
        Reading, its exponents think, is rather
        knocking out that idea.

        Stuart Cumberland is one of the most
        brilliant exponents of this fascinating practice.
        It can be deservedly styled a practice
        with him, because he has adopted it as a profession,
        and reads thoughts as lawyers study
        briefs, or as doctors diagnose and give clinics.

        Stuart Cumberland is a man of about thirty-five
        years of age. He comes of a fine old
        English family which has that surest claim to
        respectability in Albion that it owns real
        estate.

        He had an assured income from his own
        fortune, and has devoted himself to this peculiar
        field because he was too brainy a fellow
        to bo simply a dawdling society man. He is
        quite a fine-looking man, of good physique
        and polished manners.

        Mr. Cumberland is a great traveller, and a
        student in many lines of knowledge. The
        occult and subtler branches of science are
        the ones that appeal to him most.

        He was in the United States five years ago,
        and travelled all over the country, as well as
        South America.

        He also went from East to West through
        the British possessions on the Canadian
        Pacific. The impressions and information
        which he gathered from this trip, through
        some of the most striking places on the
        Western Continent, he embodied in a book
        which he called "The Queen's Highway,"
        This work has received the most flattering
        encomiums from the press. Lord Lausdowne,
        the present Governor-General of the Dominion
        of Canada; tho Marquis of Lorne, his
        predecessor in that position: Lord Dufferin,
        once an Incumbent of the same, and Sir John
        Macdonald, the Canadian premier, wrote him
        hearty congratulations on the thoroughness
        and value of his production. They certainly
        were admirably qualified to rightly estimate
        his success in this undertaking.

        Mr, Cumberland has also published a weird
        book, "The Rabbi's Spell.' He is a Fellow
        of the Royal Geographical Society. One of
        the latest works from his pen is styled "A
        Thought-Reader's Thoughts."

        He claims nothing preternatural in the accomplishment,
        nor is be a Splrltualist. On
        the other hand, while he claims that he will
        do anything that any mind-reader can perform,
        and achieves results which are unique
        with itself, he does not say that it is trickery.

        Irving Bishop's feats were duplicated by
        Mr. Cumberland when he was here in New
        York. He moved in society and had the
        entree among the Four Hundred.

        Mr. Cumberland has psychologically analyzed
        some of the most distinguished personages
        on the continent, and also many of
        our American celebrities, among whom may
        be mentioned the late Henry Ward Beecher,
        Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, the poet John
        G. Whittier, and many others with a good
        deal of mind to read.

        Among the other notables whose minds
        Mr, Cumberland has perused are the Imperial
        families of Austria aud Russia, the late
        Emperor of Germany, Prince Bismarck, the
        Khedive. the Nyzam of Hyderabad, the King
        nf the Sandwich Island, those wily diplomats,
        De Giero and Andrassy; Rubinstein. Coquelin,
        Mme. Adam. Mr. Gladstone, Fred Burnaby,
        Henry Stanley, tho artist Munkacsy,
        the Earl of Aberdeen, the Earl of Derby,
        Princess Metternich and scores of others of
        like prominence and mental excellence.

        He has been claimed by the Spiritualists as
        a "medium," by the Psychical Research
        people as a conductor of brain waves and example
        of telepathy, and by Mme. Blavatsky
        and the Theosophists as the possessor of an
        "astral body."

        All of these distinctions Mr. Cumberland
        declines with thanks, and will have none of
        them. He professes to read thoughts in a
        subject by interpreting tho physical indications
        conveyed to him by the subject. Unless,
        a subject is able to concentrate his mind
        upon the thing sufficiently to give the necessary
        muscular indications Mr. Cumberland frankly
        admits that it is morally impossible
        for him to tell what is in the subject's mind.

        But it is not with weak aud nervous people
        that he has the most success, as might be
        supposed. Experiments with this class are
        more frequently failures than with any
        others. The man of iron will, who can concentrate
        his thoughts strongly on a determined
        thing, is the one whose mind is most
        easily read by Mr. Cumberland. Mr. Gladstone
        was an excellent subject, as was also
        the late Kaiser.

        A thought reader has greater power with
        artists than with musicians. Gounod gave
        Mr. Cumberland the greatest trouble, though
        Rubinstein was a very sympathetic one.
        Clergymen, ior drawing-room experiments,
        are absolutely perfect.

        To conclude, Mr. Cumberland makes his
        whole confession of faith when he says that
        thought reading is body reading. He says it
        is exceedingly exhaustive work. Mr. Cumberland
        has abandoned it himself to devote
        his energies to some more permanent efforts.

        His new story is tolerably certain to attract
        attention, and that is why The Evening
        World has secured the exclusive right of
        presenting it to the New York public.

        Comment


        • Serialization of Cumberland's "Marked for a Victim"

          The plot is pretty much the same as described in the reviews of A Fatal Affinity posted earlier. The story has more exposition (and waiting for exposition) than action. I don't know if there's any occultic significance in the way the chapters have been (mis)numbered.

          Click image for larger version

Name:	jtr-locWorld18890314P3-MFAV-Title.jpg
Views:	1
Size:	117.8 KB
ID:	664925

          The Evening World, March 14, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

          Prologue.

          A Shadow over a Birthday

          Chapter I.

          The series of Tragedies that Excited London

          The Evening World, March 15, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

          Chapter II.

          Wherein the "Charing Cross Gazette" Prints the Terrible Catalogue of the Mysterious Tragedies

          The Evening World, March 16, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

          Chapter III.

          Wherein the Police Offer a Pardon to Any Accomplice and a Remarkable Discussion is Held at the Globe Trotter's Club

          The Evening World, March 18, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

          Chapter IV.

          An Extraordinary Story of Parisian Tragedies Resulting from Hypnotic Influences, Cited as a Parallel to the London Mysteries

          The Evening World, March 19, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

          Chapter V.

          Wherein the Lover of the Beautiful Miss Hardcastle Makes a Terrible Discovery

          The Evening World, March 20, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

          Chapter VI.

          Col. Mansfield Presents Evelyn Hardcastle a Talisman of Safety

          The Evening World, March 21, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

          Chapter VI.--(Continued)

          Miss Hardcastle Promises to Wear the Locket Near Her Heart

          Chapter VII.

          An Emissary of Darkness

          Click image for larger version

Name:	jtr-locWorld18890321P3-MFAV-Rite.jpg
Views:	1
Size:	73.0 KB
ID:	664926

          The Evening World, March 22, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

          Chapter VII.--(Continued)

          An Emissary of Darkness

          Chapter VI. [sic]

          The Shadow of the Dagger

          Click image for larger version

Name:	jtr-locWorld18890322P3-MFAV-Figure.jpg
Views:	1
Size:	43.9 KB
ID:	664927

          Click image for larger version

Name:	jtr-locWorld18890322P3-MFAV-Felt-Dagger.jpg
Views:	1
Size:	114.5 KB
ID:	664928

          The Evening World, March 23, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

          Chapter IX.

          Further Mysteries Touching Col. Mansfield.

          The Evening World, March 25, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

          Chapter X.

          MansField's Strange Trance

          Chapter XI.

          A Mysterious Affair

          The Evening World, March 26, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

          Chapter XI.

          The Police and the Public Much Mystified over the Extraordinary State of Affairs

          The Evening World, March 27, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

          Chapter XII.

          The Remarkable Proceedings before the Coroner

          Click image for larger version

Name:	jtr-locWorld18890327P3-MFAV-Peculiar-Dagger.jpg
Views:	1
Size:	38.8 KB
ID:	664929

          The Evening World, March 28, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

          Chapter XII.--(Continued)

          "I am the Slave of the Master"

          Chapter XIV. [sic]

          "It is He!" She Said

          The Evening World, March 29, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

          Chapter XIII. [sic]

          The Curse of Ram Dass

          Chapter XIV.

          Col. Mansfield's Strange Manuscript

          The Evening World, March 30, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

          Chapter XIV.

          Col. Mansfield's Strange Manuscript Continued

          The Evening World, April 1, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

          Chapter XVI.

          Mansfield Awakes from his Trance

          Chapter XIv. [sic]

          What became of the Dagger

          Comment


          • Here's a link to a post at JTR Forums by Simon Wood about the Dr. Rubie that Cumberland mentioned in his account of his "prophetic dream." He was still alive in 1889 when Cumberland's account was published.

            An article about muscle reading which mentions Cumberland:


            The Virginia Enterprise. (Virginia, St. Louis County, Minn.), January 24, 1908, Page 7

            Facts
            Fads
            Fallacies

            Dealing vilk Personal Magnetism. Telepathy, Psychology,
            Suggestion, Hypnotism, aod Splritualism

            by Edward B. Warman, A.M.
            Eminent Psychologist and Hygienist

            Muscle Reading

            "Muscle reading" is not reading the
            muscle but reading the mind by means
            of unconscious muscular action. When
            this is called "mind-reading"—-in the
            sense in which it is generally understood—-
            the term "mind-reading" is a
            misnomer and is, in consequence, misleading.

            Its History.

            So-called "mind-reading" had its initiative
            in Chicago in 1873, and was
            first demonstrated by one J. Randall
            Brown, a newspaper reporter.

            In 1877, while Brown was giving exhibitions
            in Chickering hall, New York
            city, a young man whose fame afterward
            eclipsed that of Brown and every
            other so-called "mind-reader," made
            himself known to Brown, and desired
            to be his assistant, claiming he had
            like powers.

            This was none other than the great
            Washington Irving Bishop, who saw
            the opportunity of gathering in the
            sheckels from a gullible public.

            In conversation with Mr. Bishop in
            Chicago (1887), after he had made an
            international reputation, he admitted
            to me the trickery whereby all "mind
            (?) readers" performed their various
            feats, and strongly indorsed the
            memorable words of P. T. Barnum,
            "The American people like to be humbugged."

            I especially remember his remark in
            regard to the use of the wire which he
            touched to his forehead in order to
            read the mind of the one at the other
            end of the wire. He said: "The more
            mysterious you make the affair, the
            less likely are they (the public) to unravel
            it."

            When in England, Bishop secured
            the services of one Charles Garner as
            an assistant. As Bishop left Brown,
            so Garner left Bishop as soon as the
            trick was discovered. As Bishop had
            invaded British territory, Garner sallied
            forth "to do" the Americans, but
            unlike Bishop, he did not care to put
            his label upon his work. He came to
            this country as "Stuart Cumberland,
            the Great Mind-reader of London, England."

            I was an invited guest at a private
            seance (his initial performance) held
            In the parlors of the Russell house,
            Detroit, Mich. I give herewith, as
            briefly as possible, not only what was
            done, in a general way, but the HOW.

            A dozen or more prominent citizens,
            including ministers, lawyers, reporters,
            actors, etc., were present by special request.

            When "Cumberland" arrived he announced
            that his tests of "mind-reading"
            would consist of finding hidden
            objects; giving names, dates of birth,
            places of birth, etc., etc., of those present.
            He did all that he agreed to do
            —-and did it well—-under the guise of
            "mind-reading." He failed in one instance
            only (of this I will hereinafter
            speak), and that failure was undeniable
            proof that results depend more
            largely upon the subject than upon the
            "mind-reader" and wholly, in this case,
            upon the physical contact.

            Before leaving the room and being
            blindfolded he took each of us by the
            hand, for an instant only. Why? The
            more expert the "mind-reader" (muscle
            reader) the more sensitive to the
            touch, even to so fine and delicate a
            sense as may be rightly termed supersensitive.
            He said: "I do this to ascertain
            the best subject for the severest,
            or most difficult test, viz., the
            finding of three objects in quick succession."

            Not only his touch but his sight
            guided him in his choice. He would
            not choose one of a phlegmatic temperament
            or one of a-sluggish circulation.
            I, being of a nervous, sanguine temperament,
            sensitive to a marked degree,
            was chosen for the test.

            How It Was Done.

            First, the blindfold. This is an assistance
            rather than a hindrance. Inasmuch
            as it shuts out all exterior distractions
            from the operator's mind it
            makes him more passive to the involuntary
            muscular action of his subject;
            besides, it appears to render the work
            of the "mind-reader" more difficult.

            In nearly every case the operator
            produces a black 'kerchief (to add to
            the deception) which he places over
            the eyes and asks you to draw it tightly.
            Yes, the tighter the better. Why?
            Because he contracts the brows and
            even if you put on an additional 'kerchief
            and fold kid gloves over the eyes
            (as did Paul Alexander Johnstone) the
            strain of the 'kerchief falls upon the
            part of the gloves resting against the
            contracted brows. When he desires to
            see he raises his brows—-a very simple
            thing, indeed.

            This is a very great aid and is especially
            deceptive when describing a
            young lady in the audience to whom a
            book or bouquet is to be given. She
            was plainly visible to the operator
            (from underneath the fold) when he [something missing?]
            muscular action of the subject.


            This blindfold is also used to prove
            (?) that his experiments are not due
            to physical contact when he does not
            touch the subject, but, instead, extends
            his hands, one above the other, about
            a foot or more apart, and directs the
            subject to put one of his hands between
            and equidistant from his own.

            Were they placed on the level of his
            eyes he could not do the trick. Why?
            Because he could not see the action or
            movement of the subject's hand. This
            is essential to success because when
            the operator moves his hands in the
            wrong direction the subject's hand follows
            tardily, thereby indicating, unconsciously
            and unintentionally, to the
            operator that he is moving in the
            wrong direction. But when the operator
            is on the right track, the hand of
            the subject responds readily and retains
            its relative position.

            This blindfold trick is also resorted
            to in the "driving test" through the
            crowded thoroughfares of a city. However,
            In the case of Johnstone a hood
            was worn, the out cover being mohair,
            the inner part of heavy broadcloth.
            Surely he could not see below this?
            No, he had no need to do so; he could
            see through it by means of a neat little
            contrivance. The strings that fastened
            the hood about the neck had a sort of
            double back-action, i. e., they opened a
            seam in the front of the broadcloth
            hood that was not distinguishable
            through the mohair,--not distinguishable
            to the casual observer, but enabled
            the "mind-reader" to. distinguish
            objects very clearly. So much for the
            blindfold and the part it plays in reading
            minds.

            Once more to Mr. "Cumberland."
            When he re-entered the room, after
            having been blindfolded, he took the
            hand of one of the group who had hidden
            an object and he found the object
            quickly. He did this many times and
            accurately. He failed but once. There
            was a reason. One of the reporters desired
            a test. Unfortunately (for Mr.
            "Cumberland") the reporter had been
            imbibing rather freely, too freely to
            concentrate his mind on the hidden
            object. The reporter's hand "was as
            limp, so to speak, as was hla mind;
            therefore as the operator depended entirely
            upon muscular action to indicate
            direction he was wholly at sea—-a ship
            without a rudder—-and he was obliged
            to give it up.

            In the triple test with myself as
            guide he succeeded admirably. I held
            my thought intently on each separate
            article—-individually, not collectively;
            held each one for the time being at
            the exclusion of the two others.

            Mind-Reading or Muscle Residing. Which?

            Undoubtedly and undeniably muscle
            reading. In order to do justice to the
            operator my mind was fixed on the
            hidden object, each In its turn; so intent
            was I that I was not aware of a
            muscular movement on my part that
            was directing him to the object.

            Mind is indivisible. It is impossible
            for the mind to be in two places at the
            same time. The hand of the operator
            is guided, unmistakably guided by the
            hand of the subject as soon as the
            physical contact is established, as he
            fully surrenders himself to the involuntary
            muscular leading of his subject.

            'Tis true, the operator is usually in
            advance, hence it may be said that the
            subject cannot lead, but the subject
            can push as well as pull; the better
            word, however, is direct.

            When the operator, in his rush
            (which is done for effect) passes the
            point or place in the subject's mind,
            he is very quickly made aware of it
            by an involuntary movement on the
            part of the subject that arrests his attention
            and directs his action.

            In the giving of names, dates, etc.,
            Mr. "Cumberland" had all the letters
            of the alphabet and the numerals (up
            to ten) arranged in regular order.
            Again he was blindfolded and seated
            at a table. He took the hand of the
            subject and told him to think intently
            on the first letter of his name. He
            then passed the subject's hand slowly
            over the letters. When the right letter
            was reached the supersensitive "mind-reader"
            felt a slight involuntary movement
            on the part of the subject. Instantly
            the operator's hand darted
            down on the correct letter like a hawk
            on a chicken.

            In this slow and tedious way he gave
            names, dates, etc., and called it mind-reading.

            If you want additional and self-evident
            proof of involuntary muscular action,
            you may find it in your own personal
            experience if you are a bicyclist.

            Recall the time you learned to ride.
            Do you recollect that death-like grip
            with which you clung to the handlebars?
            You saw an object in the street.
            There was ample room on either side
            of it, but you steered straight for it
            and then wondered why you hit it.
            Why did you? Because mind is indivisible
            and cannot be in two places at
            the same time. Your mind was on the
            object in the street, hence you were
            wholly unconscious of the muscular action
            that guided the wheel.

            You may remember the experience
            of the man who was learning to ride a
            wheel and had much difficulty in consequence
            of a telegraph pole in front
            of his house. The pole was on the side
            of the road, not in the road, but it always
            seemed to be in evidence.

            No matter where he started that
            pole seemed to be his objective point.
            He aimed straight for it (unintentionally)
            and his aim was good. One day
            he started with his back to the pole.
            Although he was a novice he discovered
            he was a trick rider; his wheel
            made a complete circuit and struck the
            pole. Why? Because he could not
            have his mind on the pole and on the
            wheel at the same time. Besides, he
            feared the pole; and what one fears,
            he gets.

            The "muscle reader" and his subject
            hold exactly the same relation to each
            other as do the novice wheelman and
            his wheel—-directed by unconscious
            muscular action.

            Comment


            • Hi Tradename,

              Check (if you are interested) into "Sir" Washington Irving Bishop. He died in 1889 under circumstances that are a trifle murky and frightening. Bishop had a history of epilepsy, and while in a trance had some form of attack (or so it was said) in front of an audience of theater people and professional people. One of the doctors present felt his pulse and was sure (or said he was sure) that Bishop was dead. However, in the past Bishop was known to snap out of these situations. His body was taken to a hospital and the doctors began to do a post-mortem examination, including removing the top of his skull. They finished the post-mortem, and declared his death related to the epilepsy. But it has never been satisfactorily disproven that the post-mortem was not the actual cause of death while Bishop was unconcious.

              Jeff

              Comment


              • Jeff, here are a couple accounts of Bishop's death and autopsy and the trial of the doctors. Thanks for pointing this out.

                Scientific American, Volume 60, May 25, 1889 Pages 320-321

                W. IRVING BISHOP, "MIND READER."

                W. Irving Bishop, whose feats in what is called "mind reading" have made him widely known in this country and in Europe, died at a New York City club house in the early morning of May 13, under extraordinary circumstances. There were present many men of some prominence in New York society, and the evening had been passed until a late hour in the social intercourse usual among club men, when Bishop, who was an invited guest, was asked to give an exhibition of his powers, He commenced with what he called an ordinary trick. On his leaving the room, one of the club members took a small dagger and made the motion of stabbing another member, after which the dagger was hidden. Bishop was brought in blindfolded, and, with the hand of the man who had hidden the dagger upon his own hand, quickly searched out the dagger, and made a similar motion of stabbing the same man in the way it had been done when he was out of the room.

                Bishop then made light of the difficulty of this trick, and proposed to do something more astonishing. He asked the secretary of the club to think of some word in the club's books of account or record. The secretary, with Dr. J. A. Irwin, of this city, who was an acquaintance of Bishop, went down stairs where the books are kept, and selected the name of Margaret Townsend, found in some records, both fixing the word "Townsend"' in their mind, and noting just where it appeared; they hid the book and went back up stairs. Bishop, blindfolded, had the secretary's hand placed upon his own, and then led the party down stairs. He found the book without difficulty, turned over the pages rapidly till he came to the page where the name appeared, then, skimming his fingers over it, gradually settled upon the word itself, although he was not then told what the word was. All this had been done while be was blindfolded, and Bishop had been getting into a very excited state.

                On being led back up stairs, he proposed to tell what the word was in a manner which would demonstrate that "muscle reading," as it is called, had nothing to do with the performance. He asked all to stand back, and, insisting that the secretary should think intently of the word, stood apparently in a state of half consciousness, the bandage covering his eyes and other parts of his face. Soon he said, "I think it is a name." After further apparently intense mental effort, he exclaimed nervously, "Give me something to write with." Being handed pencil and paper, without an instant's hesitation he wrote, "Townsend," not in natural form, but as the word would appear written on paper and reflected in a mirror. "That is it," he exclaimed, and, as the persons about burst into applause, Bishop stiffened out and sank back unconscious.

                Dr. Irwin assured the others that it was only one of the cataleptic fits to which Bishop was frequently subject, and was not dangerous. Bishop was stretched on the floor, and soon, under the care of the doctor, began to show signs of returning consciousness. When he was able to sit up, though apparently only half conscious, the doctor was explaining something of the physical features of the case to those present, stating that the peculiar backward fashion in which the name was written might be accounted for by the fact that the original reflection of everything seen by the eye is inverted as in a mirror, and is reversed by the optic lens on the way to the brain. Bishop, who had apparently heard everything, interrupted the doctor and asked him to make it clear that what was written on the scrap of paper was the exact copy of what appeared in his eye, and was written by him without conscious intervention of the brain.

                Bishop was now so excited that the doctor ordered him to be taken to an upstairs room. His pulse was frightfully high, but he so strenuously insisted on doing the trick over again that the doctor finally consented, as affording the best means of quieting him. The book was brought, and Bishop, blindfolded, set out to find the word again. He wandered over the book with great difficulty, but finally hit the right page, found the word, and indicated it by a savage stroke of the pencil across it.

                The "mind reader" was now more exhausted and excited than ever, and Dr. Irwin, fearing a nervous collapse, sent for Dr. C. C. Lee to help him. Bishop had frequent spasms, and it was with difficulty that he could be held still. About 4 o'clock in the morning he had another violent cataleptic fit, and went from it into a state of coma, from which he had only moments of half consciousness for two hours, but not a clearly conscious moment from 6 o'clock in the morning until a few minutes past noon, when his pulse and breathing ceased, and he was apparently dead. For fear that it might be only a cataleptic trance, powerful electric currents were applied, and for half an hour some semblance of life was maintained, but at last the current ceased to have any effect, and the doctor said Bishop was unmistakably dead. The body was removed to an undertaking establishment, where, in the afternoon, an autopsy was made by Dr. Irwin and Dr. Ferguson, the pathologist of the New York Hospital.

                The suddenness with which this autopsy was made, in the absence of authority from the friends or relatives of the deceased or from the coroner, has caused great feeling in the community. This is heightened by the fact that Bishop, his wife, and his mother, were opposed to any autopsy, and especially desired that in the event of his supposed death at any time the body should be kept as long as possible, for he had frequently been in a state of almost seeming death for a good many hours, as a consequence of these cataleptic tits, as had also his mother.

                The autopsy is said to have shown nothing to indicate any cause of death, except the result of the great nervous strain to which Bishop had subjected himself. The brain was a little larger than usual for a man of his size, weighing 40 ounces. The gray matter was unusually dark in color, but there was no malformation or other physical indication that the brain was other than that of an ordinary man. The case is one, however, that is sure to attract wide attention in the medical fraternity, and the controversies about it commenced on the very day the " mind reader " died.

                Bishop was born in Boston in 1856, and early obtained a reputation as a "mind reader." Some ten years ago, in England, he attracted much attention by what he did to expose the alleged tricks of Slade and other spiritualists, and did some surprising feats in telling the numbers upon bank notes which he had not seen. About three years ago, in Boston, he successfully discovered a hidden article, to get at which it was necessary for him, blindfolded, to drive a team of horses to a carriage a considerable distance through crowded streets—a trick he afterward duplicated in New York City.

                To accomplish these feats he always had to be in physical touch of some sort with the person whose mind he pretended to read. Others have pretended to be able to perform the same feats, but it is not known that any feat similar to the one herein described has ever before been performed. Dr. Irwin says he thinks the feat cannot be accounted for upon any theory of known science or medicine.


                The Medical Times, Volume 20, August, 1889, Pages 139-140

                THE BISHOP AUTOPSY.

                The death of Washington Irving Bishop, the mind reader, and the subsequent autopsy, have resulted in the trial of the physicians engaged in it, on the charge of having illegally dissected the body.

                It appears that Bishop died at the Lamb’s Club, in New York City, about five hours before the autopsy was performed. On the night before he had been giving an exhibition of his powers to a party of about one hundred gentlemen, when he was seized with a hystero-epileptic fit, in which he fell to the floor. Dr. John Arthur Irwin, who was present, examined him and cautioned him not to go on with the exhibition. But upon growing stronger he persisted in going on and a recurrence of the fit resulted. He was not considered in any danger, but at four o’clock in the morning he began to sink, and after that he never became conscious.

                Great curiosity was aroused among his acquaintances and-medical men generally, to know what peculiar brain he possessed to enable him to perform his tricks. He had frequently said that he didn’t know himself and that nothing but an autopsy would reveal it. Some of his friends advised an autopsy and it was accordingly performed, but his mother who had not been consulted insisted that her son had not been dead when his brain was removed, and even went so far as to charge the doctors with having murdered him. She alleged that he was subject to cataleptic fits or trances, and that he was in one of these when the scalpel was used.

                Dr. Irwin was tried on the above charge at General Sessions, before Judge Fitzgerald. If convicted, the defendant might be sent to the penitentiary and fined.

                The prosecution alleged that Dr. Irwin, Dr. Frank Ferguson and Irwin H. Hance, on May 13, 1889, performed an autopsy on Bishop’s body without having obtained the consent of_his relatives, as they had been ordered to do by the coroner. It was also insisted that there had been no necessity for the autopsy as the cause of death was well known.

                Dr. Frank Ferguson, who was called as a witness for the prosecution, testified that he is connected with the New York Hospital, and had performed over four thousand autopsies. That he examined Bishop’s body with the greatest possible care, and was very emphatic in declaring that there was no room for doubt that the man was dead. That he took away portions of the liver, kidneys, lungs, heart and brain, and submitted them to a microscopic examination. He swore that the autopsy was made for the sole purpose of ascertaining the cause of death. It was not such a dissection as would be made for an anatomical demonstration.

                Dr. Charles C. Lee, of Madison avenue, testified that he was called by Dr. Irwin for consultation on the morning of Mr. Bishop’s death. He approved of the treatment Dr. Irwin was giving the patient and helped continue it. After the patient’s death, Dr. Irwin told him that on account of the manner of death and the state of Bishop’s mind he was anxious to have an autopsy, and said that he was going to telegraph to the family in Philadelphia for their consent.

                Here the prosecution rested, and Mr. Moran, for the defense, moved to dismiss the case. This motion was overruled, and Mr. Moran told the jury that he expected to prove for the defense, that the autopsy was held for the sole purpose of determining the cause of death and that the defendant did nothing more. And, further, that Bishop had requested Dr. Irwin to perform an autopsy. The request, he claimed, was made a few hours before Bishop’s death and fully justified the autopsy.

                Dr. Irwin then took the witness-stand in his own behalf, and said that he went to the Lamb’s Club of which he is a member, at midnight, and found Bishop entertaining the members. Bishop asked him to feel his pulse. He did so, and advised him to discontinue the performance. Bishop persisted, however, and fell in a hystero-cataleptic flt. He had the patient carried up stairs, where he revived and discussed the case with witness and told him of other physicians who had treated him. Witness told him he must stop as certain changes were then taking place in his brain owing to a disease he had previously contracted, and that death would ensue if he kept up his work. Bishop retorted, “ Oh, you will find that out at the autopsy.”

                On cross-examination, the doctor said that he had ordered the autopsy in order to determine the cause of death. He was now prepared to say that the immediate cause of death was hemorrhage caused by hystero-catalepsy, but that the latter was caused by another disease, the nature of which witness would not reveal.

                Four reputable witnesses succeeded Dr. Irwin, all of whom swore that Bishop had frequently said, on being questioned about his mysterious powers, that “ the reason of it will only be revealed when I am dead.”

                The testimony did not show that the autopsy had disclosed the cause of Bishop’s remarkable powers.

                The jury failed to agree, and it is doubtful whether a second trial will be had.

                Comment


                • I noticed that after Cumberland's "Marked for a Victim", the New York Evening World ran a series of three sort of okay fictional crime stories by George R. Sims:

                  The Evening World, April 02, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

                  A Very Clever Scheme
                  by George R. Sims

                  Chapter I.

                  Whereon Detective Ellerton Gets a Peculiar Case.


                  The Evening World, April 03, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

                  Chapter II.

                  Wherein the Private Detective Meets wuth a Remarkable Adventure


                  The Evening World, April 04, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

                  Chapter III.

                  A Narrow Escape for the Ex-Scotland Yard Man

                  --

                  The Evening World, April 05, 1889, EXTRA MORRILL SOLD, Page 3

                  A Tragic Riddle
                  by George R. Sims

                  Chapter I.

                  The Mystery of Bloomsbury Square


                  The Evening World, April 06, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

                  Chapter II.

                  Wherein the Evidence Bears Strongly Against the Husband and He is Arrested


                  The Evening World, April 08, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

                  Chapter III.

                  The Solicitor Follows up a Promising Clue


                  The Evening World, April 09, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

                  Chapter IV.

                  Wherein the Solicitor Thinks He is on the Right Track


                  The Evening World, April 10, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

                  Chapter V.

                  Wherein the Italian, Moroni, is Arrested


                  The Evening World, April 11, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

                  Chapter VI.

                  A New Name is Found in the Tangled Web


                  The Evening World, April 12, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

                  Chapter VII.

                  A Vain Search for the Missing Margherita


                  The Evening World, April 13, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

                  Chapter VIII.

                  Jealousy at the Bottom of the Crime, But Whose Jealousy?


                  The Evening World, April 15, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

                  Chapter IX.

                  The Story of the Italian Girl


                  The Evening World, April 16, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

                  Chapter X.

                  The Tragic Riddle Solved at Last

                  --

                  The Evening World, April 17, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

                  The Earl's Wife
                  by George R. Sims

                  Chapter I.

                  The Countess of Dashton Receives a Startling Letter


                  The Evening World, April 18, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

                  Chapter II.

                  The Earl's Wife Has an Interview with Her First Husband


                  The Evening World, April 19, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 5

                  Chapter II. [sic]

                  The Countess of Dashton Tells Her Titled Husband the Facts


                  The Evening World, April 20, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

                  Chapter III. [sic]

                  Wherein the Plot Approaches its Climax


                  The Evening World, April 22, 1889, LAST EDITION, Page 3

                  Chapter VI. [sic]

                  Wherein All Ends Happily

                  Comment


                  • An account, which originated in the PMG, of Irving Bishop's attempt to meet a challenge set by Henry Labouchere in 1883. There's a mention of a Mr. Lees, but I don't know if this is our Mr. Lees. I wonder if the Colonel Trench who came up with the fiver is the Colonel The Hon. W. Le P. Trench who contested Whitechapel in the elections of 1886 and 1892.

                    The Daily Graphic (NY), June 30, 1883, Page 860

                    How Bishop Did It

                    The Labouchere -Bishop Bet--Thought Reading and Its Vindication

                    Betting and thought-reading do not go well together.
                    Such at least is the conclusion arrived at
                    by most of those who "assisted" at the demonstration
                    given by Mr. Bishop in Si. James's Hall
                    last night in acceptance of Mr. Labouchere's bet
                    of 10 to 1, taken in hundreds, that the number of
                    a bank note, known only to one independent and
                    intelligent man, could not possibly be discovered
                    in two guesses by a blindfolded thought-reader.
                    The proceedings lasted three hours, and this is the
                    way in which the time was disposed of: Exposure
                    of spiritualistic phenomena, three-quarters of an
                    hour; thought-reading, fifteen minutes; quarrelling
                    about the bet and its conditions,
                    two hours. The prolonged wrangle
                    between Mr. Bishop and Mr. Labouchere's supporters
                    was the reverse of edifying; but when a
                    similar controversy was got up between Mr. Bishop
                    and an inebriated member of the audience, and
                    then between Mr. Bishop and the friends of Mr.
                    Charles Russell and Professor Ray Lankester, the
                    proceedings savored more of the betting-ring on a
                    race course when welshers are about than of the
                    conduct of a curious investigation in the obscure
                    corners of psychological research. The betting
                    spoiled the thought-reading, and transferred the
                    interest from the experiment to the wager. The
                    experiment was signally successful, but the
                    squabble about the stakes was dreary to the last
                    degree.

                    Mr. Bishop began last night by inviting the audience
                    to elect a committee of investigation to
                    surround him on the platform and subject all his
                    experiments to the closest investigation. Several
                    names were banded up, read out to the meeting
                    and approved. No one was rejected. The names
                    of Mr. George Augustus Sala, Mr. Passmore Edwards,
                    Mr. Charles Russell, Mr. Waddy, Colonel
                    Statham, Dr. Pope, the Rev. H. R. Haweis, Mr.
                    Lane Fox and the Rev. Dr. Wilberforce were
                    loudly cheered; but several of these named, if
                    they were present, remained in the hall. Ultimately
                    a dozen gentlemen were secured, including
                    Mr. Waddy, Mr. Passmore Edwards, Mr. Haweis,
                    Colonel Statham, Mr. Lane Fox, the Rev. Dr.
                    Tremlett and the Chief Constable of Northampton,
                    who undertook to conduct the Investigation
                    on behalf of the audience. Of the first part of the
                    performance little need be said. Mr. Bisbop
                    showed how little reliance should be placed
                    on the sense of touch by convincing the
                    Rev. Dr. Tremlett when blindfolded that he
                    was firmly grasping both his (Mr. Bishop's)
                    hands, while be only held one, and then followed
                    that up with an illustration of the fallaciousness
                    of hearing by convincing the Rev. Mr. Haweis,
                    who was also blindfolded, that a coin clinked
                    close to the tip of his nose was in reality clinked
                    at some distance to the right or left of his head.
                    Mr. Bishop then extricated one of his wrists from
                    a handcuff said to be sent with a police officer from
                    Scotland Yard, and performed several other experiments,
                    culminating with an exposure of the
                    Davenport trick in the dark seance. He was
                    tightly tied In the presence of the audience by
                    the Chief Constable of Northampton with surgical
                    bandages at the wrists and at the ankles.
                    His hands were tied behind his back, and then the
                    bandages were knotted tightly to a wooden stake
                    in the dark cabinet. The bandages round his
                    ankles were nailed to the ground and
                    another bandage was tied tightly round
                    his neck. The Chief Constable of Northampton
                    then entered the cabinet, grasped Mr.
                    Bishop's hands, and pressed firmly his shoulders.
                    The cabinet was then closed. In a few
                    seconds the banjo was flung about, hands were
                    applied to various parts of the Chief Constable's
                    person, a hammer was vigorously wielded, and
                    the watch of the Chief Constable was transferred
                    from his pocket to that of Mr. Bishop. The cabinet
                    was then suddenly thrown open, and Mr.
                    Bishop and the Chief Constable were discovered
                    as they were, with the knots tightly tied, and no
                    apparent change in the position of the pair.
                    After this exhibition the audience began to clamor
                    for thought reading. A young man apparently
                    respectable, but obviously Intoxicated, insisted
                    upon staking "a fiver" which he had brought in
                    an envelope that Mr. Bishop could not tell him
                    the number of it. After a scene of tedious turmoil,
                    during which he insisted upon speaking, Mr.
                    Waddv was elected chairman and the man
                    with the fiver was Induced to mount the
                    platform. He looked ineffably silly a" he first brandished
                    his envelope and then laid it on the ground,
                    crying, "That is all I've got to say. Here is a fiver:
                    tell me the number," until at last, (he audience losing
                    all patience, Mr. Waddy ordered him down, and
                    the first experiment in thought reading began. Mr.
                    Lane Fox, the well known electrician, took a pin—-
                    so small that it was quite Invisible to the audience—-
                    and when Mr. Bishop was absent from the hall concealed
                    it in the lining of an opera hat in the midst of
                    the hall. When Mr. Bishop returned he requested
                    Mr. Lane Fox to fix his mind steadily upon the spot
                    where the pin was hidden, forming a mental picture
                    of the place, the object in which it was placed,
                    &c. Then taking Mr. Fox's arm he dragged
                    him rapidly down the left aisle of the, hall
                    (the pin was hidden In the central aisle), then
                    crossed as rapidly to the centre, passed the hiding place
                    of the pin, and then returned, as if finding
                    the scent, to the immediate neighborhood where
                    the pin was concealed. There Mr. Bishop—-who,
                    by the by, was blindfolded—-began a very eager
                    search for the pin. He repeatedly asked Mr. Fox
                    to form In his mind a clear, definite picture of the
                    object in which the pin was placed. His fingers
                    quivered, he seemed in great nervous excitement
                    and once or twice appealed for patience. The,
                    audience, most of whom were, standing up, watched
                    with curious incredulity as Mr. Bishop was diving
                    here and.there in unavailing efforts to find the
                    pin, and suddenly with an air of triumph he produced
                    the tiny object of his search, and was
                    escorted back to the platform amid immense
                    cheering.

                    The critical test of the evening was now to
                    come. The easy chair set apart for Mr. Labouchere
                    was unoccupied. The £1,000 promised was
                    not tabled. But the experiment could be tried in
                    Mr. Labouchere's absence, and Mr. Bishop was
                    willing to stake his £100 with no other set-off
                    than the promise, willingly given, that the audience
                    would demand that if he guessed the number
                    aright Mr. Labouchere should hand over the
                    £1,000 to the Victoria Hospital for Children. Mr.
                    Charles Russell here introduced a diversion
                    which kept the meeting in an uproar for nearly an
                    hour. He sent word from the body of the hall—-
                    for he had refused to join the committee—-that he
                    had enclosed a £5 note in an envelope, and given
                    it into the keeping of Professor Ray Lankester,
                    who was also in the audience, and who alone
                    knew its number. He challenged Mr.
                    Bishop to read in the. mind of Mr.
                    Ray Lankester the number of that note.
                    If successful, the note should go to
                    the hospital. Mr. Waddy asked Mr. Bishop if he
                    accepted the challenge. Mr. Bishop demurred.
                    He had experimented before with Professor
                    Lankester and found him a hard subject. The
                    chances, he evidently seemed to think, were ten
                    to one against his success with Mr. Lankester.
                    To give him a fair chance he thought be ought to
                    try with some one with whom he had not experimental
                    before. He had, for instance, experimented
                    with Mr. Waddy, and if he were selected
                    as medium the chances were ten to one thai he
                    would be successful. It would he fairer to reject
                    all whose capacity for being read had been tested
                    beforehand and confine the experiment to a new
                    subject, to be freely selected by the audience.
                    Professor Lankester did not deny
                    the reasonable nature of this suggestion, but
                    a large proportion of the audience roared
                    their disapproval. A heated and violent wrangle
                    ensued, in the course of which Mr. bishop was
                    freely denounced as a shuffler. At last an old
                    gentleman with stentorian lungs proposed that
                    the chairman should nominate a medium. Mr
                    Lane Fox was suggested and negatived. A Mr.
                    Lees was also rejected; and at last, amid great
                    cheering. Colonel Statham of the Twentieth Lancashire
                    Rifle Volunteers consented to the experiment.
                    A fruitless attempt was made to induce
                    Dr. Lankester to impart the number of Mr. Russell's
                    note to Colonel Statham for the purpose of
                    the experiment; and then Colonel Trench, to
                    whose high character the Hon. Edward Stanhope
                    bore emphatic testimony, and who declared that
                    he bad never seen either Mr. Bishop or Colonel
                    Statham before, produced a £5 note, the
                    number of which be did not know, and
                    handed it to the chairman. A large blackboard
                    was then introduced, on which Mr.
                    Bishop was to write the as yet unknown number
                    of the note. In presence of all the audience,
                    closely scrutinized by the committee and the chairman,
                    while standing at some yards' distance from
                    Mr. Bishop, Colonel Statham unfolded the note
                    far enough to master its number. No one else
                    could see it, nor did any one else in the hall know
                    it but himself. Mr. Bishop then took his stand
                    beside Colonel Statham and drew on the blackboard
                    a parallelogram, which he divided Into five
                    spaces, one for each number of the note. He
                    then blindfolded himself, and grasping a piece of
                    chalk began to "read" the mind of his companion.
                    He shook all over, his right hand raised
                    above his head quivered violently; he slightly
                    touched Colonel Statham once for a second with
                    the tip of his finger, and then, without more than
                    a few seconds' delay, he began to chalk on the
                    board as follows:

                    6 | 6 | 8 | 9 | 4.

                    When he reached the last figure he hesitated for
                    a moment, clutched Colonel Statham's hand, and
                    then wrote down four. No one who saw the impassive
                    countenance of the volunteer colonel could tell
                    whether Mr. Bishop had succeeded or failed. "I
                    have two guesses," he said, " by the terms of Mr.
                    Labouhere's challenge. Have I read the number
                    rightly" Colonel Statham opened the note,
                    glanced at it, and then handed it to the chairman.
                    Mr. Bishop had won his wager. The numbers
                    were light, and the meeting burst out into a
                    roar of enthusiastic cheering, which was again
                    and again renewed. Outside a great crowd was
                    waiting to see the balloon ascent which was
                    to announce the success or failure of the test.
                    As it mounted in the air, displaying not the "lurid
                    red" color of failure but the bright white light
                    typical of success, the crowd cheered lustily. Inside
                    the hall, when a moment's silence had been
                    secured, Mr. Bishop said: "I appeal to tnis audience
                    of 3,000 Englishmen to demand of Mr.
                    Henry Laboucbere that he shall hand over to the
                    Victoria Hospital at Chelsea the £1,000 he offered
                    to stake that I could not read the note. I have
                    met his challenge on every point. Will you demand
                    the money?" A great shout of assent, followed
                    by long and continued cheering, mingled
                    with a few cries of "No," brought the meeting to
                    a close.

                    On questioning Colonel Statham afterwards, he
                    said that when Mr. Bishop had reached the last
                    figure be (Colonel Statham) forgot whether it was
                    4 or 0. It was when he was trying to recall the
                    figure that Mr. Bishop hesitated and grasped his
                    hand. He then decided for the 4, which Mr.
                    Bishop then wrote down. Mr. Bishop was very
                    exultant. Mr. Waddy for some time after the
                    meeting closed was surrounded by an eager crowd
                    of questioners, to whom he explained how it was
                    utterly impossible for Colonel Statham, even if he
                    bad been inclined, to have communicated to Mr.
                    Bishop the number of the note.—Pall Mall Gazette,
                    June 13.

                    --end

                    An 1884 interview of Stuart Cumberland by Labouchere which touches upon Bishop.

                    The Mineral Argus (Maiden, Montana), July 31, 1884, Page 6

                    Exposure of Mind Reading

                    lhe Subject of Mind-reading is attracting
                    considerable attention in London,
                    and Mr. Labouchere, the editor of
                    London Truth, has been publicly exposing
                    the tricks of the readers and
                    bitterly denouncing the imposition in
                    his journal. So savagely has he attacked
                    Irving Bishop, a noted performer, that
                    he was sued last week for libel and the
                    damages are laid at a large amount.
                    The following is the interview Mr. Labouchere
                    had with Stuart Cumberland,
                    a rival performer, which led to the suit:

                    Mr. Stuart Cumberland called upon
                    me one day last week to explain to me
                    how he succeeds in finding pins in [sic] other
                    such "manifestations." If a person
                    will concentrate his thoughts upon an
                    object, and if any one--whose perceptive
                    faculties are properly trained--takes
                    his hand, the operator will be,
                    Mr. Cumberland explained, inevitably
                    drawn to the spot where the object is.
                    "Thought-reading then, I said, "is
                    muscle reading." "To a certain extent,"
                    he replied, "but not absolutely.
                    You have to watch for other indications;
                    for instance, if I find myself close to the
                    article thought of, the hand of some subjects
                    gets hot, in others the pulse quickens.
                    You must watch these indications
                    as well as the muscles." "But, surely
                    you must have had a confederate when
                    you tied yourself to a man by a
                    string, and found an object
                    concealed by him." "No," he said:
                    "I could feel the string dragging one
                    way, and I followed the indication.
                    When I came near the object the string
                    trembled. This is the simple explanation
                    of the mystery." "And do you
                    mean to say that you can take hold of a
                    person's hand with one of your hands,
                    and with the other write a series of
                    numbers that he is to think of?"
                    "Certainly not." he replied; "the person's
                    hand must grasp the hand with
                    which I write; my hand remains almost
                    passive, and he without knowing
                    it, himself writes the numbers." "Well,"
                    I said, "I will think of something in
                    this room, and we will see if you can
                    discover it." I thought of a little card
                    case that was lying on the table. Mr
                    Cumberland blind-folded himself.
                    "Why do you do that?" I said.
                    "That my own thoughts should not be
                    diverted from what I am doing." He
                    took my hand; in a minute or two he
                    approached, the table, hovered over the
                    various articles upon it, and finally
                    placed my hand upon the card case. I
                    had thought all the while of this article
                    and I could feel my hand involuntarily
                    drawing him towards it. It would take
                    a person a long time to acquire Mr.
                    Cumberland's powers of preception [sic]; but
                    any one can realise how the trick--if I
                    may call it so--is done, by thinking of
                    some object on a table, and getting a
                    friend to grasp his hand and try to discover
                    it. He has only to concentrate
                    his thoughts upon the object and
                    the exact place where it is, in order
                    to find that his hand resists when
                    ever it is sought to divert it
                    from the direction towards the object
                    which it, apparently of itself, strives
                    to approach. In fact, the thought acts
                    upon the muscles much in the same way
                    as the desire to grasp something causes
                    the hand to grasp it. In both cases the
                    muscles involuntarily obey the brain.
                    "And how did Irving Bishop read the
                    number of a bank note that was enclosed
                    in an envelope without contact
                    with the only person who knew it?" I
                    asked. "To do so by what he terms
                    'thought reading.'" Mr. Cumberland
                    answered, "is absolutely impossible.
                    Without contact you can obtain no indication
                    of what is passing in the brain
                    of another person, as you may perceive
                    yourself if you have understood my explanation.

                    "Then the thing was a swindle." I
                    said. Mr. Cumberland smiled. "And
                    the mental picture which he professes
                    to see?" Mr. Cumberland smiled again.

                    Comment


                    • Lees/Cumberland

                      Still (tenuously) hanging on ....seriously, thanks

                      All the best

                      Dave

                      Comment


                      • I feel encouraged, Dave.

                        Here's an item from 1883 about a Mr. R. J. Lees (and his wife) working with a temperance group in Peckham. I'm not 100% sure if this is our Lees.

                        The Blue Ribbon Official Gazette and Gospel Temperance Herald, January 18, 1883, Page 16

                        Blue Ribbon Gospel Army

                        [...]

                        Peckham.—The campaign was opened at the lecturehall, Belgrave-terrace, Peckham Park-road, on New Year's Eve, by Mr. R. J. Lees, who was assisted during the week by Mr. W. R. Bradlaugh, Mr. Samma, Mrs. Lees, and others. The streets are processioned nightly, and the inhabitants are being made to feel tho advent of the Army in the district, and the meetings are nightly increasing in interest and attendance. In two nights nearly 50 pledges were taken and over 60 Blue Ribbons were put on. It has been difficult to start the ball, but, now it is rolling, Peckham will not be behind many of our other stations.

                        Comment


                        • I'll use the mention of Ray Lankester in the article about Bishop and Labouchere to post these items about his appearance in a police court in 1895.

                          The Saturday Review, October 19, 1895, Page 495

                          When Candide and Pangloss approached the Turkish philosopher with the innocent inquiry, "Master, we are come to beg you to tell us why so strange an animal as man has been created?" they were met with the reply, "De quoi te mêles-tu? est-ce là ton affaire?" "But what is to be done about all this misery?" pursued Pangloss. "Hold your tongue," answered the dervish. And so says Mr. Newton to the unfortunate persons who come to Marlborough Police Court hoping for justice. He is one of those magistrates who make matters easy for themselves and very uncomfortable for the public, by always supporting the police. The streets over which he presides are, in one respect at least, admittedly the most disgraceful in Europe, and their state is due in part at least to the connivance of the police. A man cannot walk along Piccadilly or turn the corners into Regent Street after eleven o'clock at night without being accosted, and often pulled about, by unfortunates. If he appeals to the police for protection, he is told to move on, and if he insists he stands no little danger of being "run in" and charged with being disorderly, or even drunk.

                          This is almost exactly what happened to Professor Ray Lankester a few nights ago. He had asked a woman some innocent question in regard to a disturbance which was going on near by. He was forthwith "moved on" by a zealous policeman, and when he objected to being treated as a loafer, he was promptly "run in." Next morning he appeared with his solicitor, Sir George Lewis, before Mr. Newton. A policeman swore that Professor Lankester seemed to be drunk. Sir George Lewis wanted this curious statement noted; but Mr. Newton told Sir George Lewis he would not be bluffed, turned a deaf ear to everything urged by the defence, and completed his parody of justice by binding over Professor Ray Lankester, a man of European reputation, to keep the peace in his own recognizances of £10, just as if he were a rowdy corner boy.

                          This must not be regarded as an exceptional case. Mr. Newton's rudeness and injustice have passed into a proverb. We have received many complaints on the subject, and a distinguished correspondent has written to us declaring that "an association for the protection of the public against the police is necessary." This, however, it seems to us, is treating the matter too seriously. The unfortunate irritability and partisanship of one magistrate do not afford sufficienc reason for the formation of such a society. Besides, Mr. Newton has gone a little too far this time. He has opened all eyes by his treatment of Professor Ray Lankester, and it will probably be some time before he dares to appear again in his favourite rdle of the Turkish philosopher who was the butt of Voltaire's wit.


                          November 9, 1895, Page 607

                          It would really seem as if the London police were determined to teach every one how little their evidence is worth. The other day they accused Professor Ray Lankester of causing an obstruction in Piccadilly, and the magistrate, Mr. Newton, stultified himself by binding over a man of European reputation to keep the peace in his own recognizances of £10. Now we have again the same co-workers, a policeman and an unfortunate, attempting to prove that Mr. George Alexander, the actor, was guilty of gross misconduct in the street within a few yards of his own house. Constable 286 B gave positive and circumstantial evidence that showed long training in such accusations. The female prisoner, who, we are told, "was of very commonplace appearance, wretchedly dressed, and in evident bad health," corroborated her master, the constable, as was to be expected. Mr. De Rutzen, however, said that though "the police had given their evidence in a most satisfactory way, he would give Mr. Alexander the benefit of the doubt and discharge him."That is, the magistrate took it upon himself to insult a man of position and character on the evidence of a policeman and a streetwalker. We can only congratulate Mr. Alexander that he followed instead of preceding Professor Ray Lankester. The eyes of the public are being opened, and distrust of police testimony is growing, thanks to the efforts of the Press. A Bishop or a Cabinet Minister will be arrested one of these days on a charge of "drunk and disorderly," and then Mr. Newton or De Rutzen, as the case may be, will perhaps refrain from complimenting the police.

                          Already these magistrates can study the effect of their decisions. Mr. Newton will doubtless be interested in hearing that Professor Ray Lankester has been recommended for election into the Council of the Royal Society, and Mr. De Rutzen will be equally delighted to learn that the audience at the St. James's Theatre on Thursday evening welcomed Mr. Alexander's appearance with rounds of enthusiastic cheering.

                          Comment


                          • Lees and the National Social Union

                            An account by W. T. Stead of the organizing meeting of an idealistic undertaking called the National Student Union. R. J. Lees of Peckham is listed among a group of people nominated to communicate with a provisional committee. Not sure why the Webbs of the Fabian Society are mixed up with this.

                            The Review of Reviews, Volume 10, November 1, 1894, Page 498

                            III.—THE QUEEN'S HALL CONFERENCE.

                            The proposal to establish a National Social Union was submitted for the first time to a public meeting on London Reform Sunday, October 28th. London Reform Sunday is a new institution which is due to the public spirit and energy of the London Reform Union, a body which has Mr. Passmore Edwards as its president, and Mr. Thomas Lough as Chairman of its Executive Committee. Under its auspices more than 300 churches out of the 3000 in the City of London devoted special attention to the question of civic religion. Each preacher of each church was left to deal with the subject in his own way, but the general tendency of all those who responded to the invitation, was decidedly in favour of a more active participation of religions men and women in civic work. In this connection it may be noted as a very good sign, that the London Pleasant Sunday Afternoon Associations took part very generally in London Reform Sunday, and the following resolution was submitted to, and adopted by, many of those influential bodies of adults which assemble regularly every Sunday afternoon in connection with various places of worship:—

                            We, citizens of London, resolve to do all in our power to make our great city the city of God. By seeing—(a) That all our public officials are free from corruption, and that the press is freed from the patronage of gamblers and immoral men. (b) That all children shall have an efficient education. (c) That there shall be work for all willing workers. (d) That all charitable funds shall be properly appropriated, (e) That our criminals shall be treated with justice and mercy. (f) That all amusements shall be moral in their influence; and (g) That the liquor traffic, so long a bane of this city, shall be restricted. We also pledge ourselves in every way to Btrive to realise our Heavenly Father's will in our personal and public life.

                            The suggestion having been made to me by the secretary of the London Reform Union that I should take one of those pleasant Sunday afternoon services on London Reform Sunday, I at first refused, but subsequently, seeing that there was to be no general central meeting apart from the services in their different churches, I decided to utilise the opportunity for the purpose of submitting the project of the National Social Union to a large representative public meeting.

                            Bearing in mind the excellent results that had followed a similar action in Chicago, I summoned a public Conference at the Queen's Hall for Sunday afternoon, under the title of "If Christ Came to London, what would He have us do in view of the approaching elections?" Invitations were sent to all the clergy, ministers of religion, and all the members of the various public bodies who were charged with the administration of the forces of London, whether judicial, municipal, educational or otherwise. In order to secure the representative character of the audience admission was by ticket only, and several hundreds were turned away from the door. Proceedings at the Conference, which was presided over by Mr. James Branch of the London County Council and President of the P.S.A. Association, were extremely hearty and unanimous.

                            The general idea of the National Social Union, based as it is on the "Union of all who Love in the Service of all who Suffer," was set forth before those present with special reference to the coming School Board elections, and at the close of a sitting, which lasted two and a half hours, the following resolution moved by Mr. Stead, seconded by the Rev. Dr. Clifford, and supported by Mrs. Ormiston Chant and Mr. Macnamara of the Schoolmaster and Secretary of the London School Board Teachers Association, Mr. B. F. Costelloe of the London County Council, who is also a Roman Catholic, and Mr. Fletcher of the Daily Chronicle, was carried unanimously.

                            That in order to promote the Union of all who Love for the Service of all who Suffer, this meeting approves the formation of a National Social Union with affiliated Unions in every constituency, to act as a common centre for the co-operation of all the moral, religious, social, industrial and philanthropic forces of the community in attaining those objects which (ili good citizens desire, irrespective of distinctions of sect or sei, party or class.

                            And that in order to give effect to this Resolution, the meeting nominates the following persons—-Mr. James Branch. L.C.C. (Chairman), Mr. Fletcher (Daily Chronicle), Mr. John Burns. M.P., L.G.C., Mr. Macnamara (Schoolmaster), Mr. B. F. Costelloe, L.C.C., Mr. Ashcroft Noble, Mr. R. J. Lees (Peckham), Mrs. Sidney Webb, Mr. H. A. Day—-to communicate with the provisional committee of the National Social Union for the purpose of discussing whether any practical steps can be taken in this direction at the coming elections.
                            The following are the names of the provisional committee of the National Social Union, with whom the above parsons were appointed to confer:—

                            Mr. Sidney Webb, L.C.A., Fabian Society.

                            The Rev. Dr. Clifford.

                            Lady Henry Somerset, British Women's Temperance Association.
                            Sir John Gorst.
                            The Earl of Month.
                            The Earl of Winchilsea.
                            Rev. Hugh Price Hughes.

                            Miss James, Organiser of Women's Trade Unions.
                            Mr. Vivian, of London Co-operative Society.
                            The Chief Rabbi, or his representative
                            Mr. Percy Alden, Mansfield House Settlement.
                            Mrs. Haweis, Pioneer Club.
                            Rev. P. Dearmer, Christian Social Union.
                            A Representative of the Ethical Society.
                            Mr. Ben Tillett.

                            The object is to ascertain whether something could not be done to secure a common agreement among good citizens of all parties, sects, and classes as to certain clear and well defined objects to be placed before the electors which might contribute something to securing tho election of an ideal School Board, ideal Vestries, and ideal Boards of Guardians.

                            There are certain general principles governing the selection of candidates for any position of public trust and as to the mode of conducting elections on which all good citizens agree, but which are unfortunately too often forgotten.

                            Each of the pending elections has, however, its own set of questions on which it may be possible to make some approximation to an agreement, independent of either party.

                            Comment


                            • As i was going to St. Ives...

                              The Cornishman, April 26, 1896, Page 4, Column 2

                              Occasional Notes

                              [...]

                              Mr. Lees, who has nearly quashed the license of the
                              Porthminster hotel, clearly is known to the staff of the
                              South London Mail. Its Saturday issue tells us that
                              "Robert James Lees, the founder of the Peckham People's
                              League, is not dead yet; in fact he is more alive and kicking
                              than ever. When Mr. Lees left Peckham through the
                              breaking down of his health, he went to St. Ives in Cornwall,
                              but his spirit would not rest there quietly. He
                              preaches nearly every Sunday in the Primitive-methodist
                              chapel at St. Ives, Cornwall, and during the past winter
                              he has lectured a good deal in aid of local charities.
                              Although he has been breathing the bracing air of St.
                              Ives for some months, he is still far from strong. He is,
                              however, strong enough to go for anything which he thinks
                              is 'not 18 carat.' He looked about and began to notice
                              things. He found there were only some half dozen beings
                              in the town who were Somebody, the rest being Anybody
                              or Nobody. Those who were Somebody did 'just what
                              they darn well pleased,' to use a vulgarism, and those
                              who were Nobody were allowed to keep their mouths shut
                              and look on. He has just thrown a bomb right into the
                              centre of a local institution, which used to be of the
                              Temperance order, but which through a somewhat strange
                              proceeding, bloomed out as a fully-licensed establishment.
                              That bomb has exploded with terrible violence, and the
                              result is that the license has been blown-up." Then the
                              paper tells the story of the Porthminster license.

                              Comment


                              • Horace Avory, who in 1895 defended Robert James Lees in police court on a charge of offering concerts without a certificate, was also involved in the 1876 Vance/Snee trial:

                                Annual Register (London: Rivington's, 1877), Pages 53-54

                                JUNE [1876].

                                1. "Conspiring To Murder."—-An extraordinary charge which has been tried at the Old Bailey, before Mr. Justice Mellor, was brought to a conclusion this day. The prisoners, William Kimpton [sic] Vance, aged twenty-four, medical student, and Ellen Snee, aged twenty-nine, a married woman, were jointly charged with conspiring together to murder Ellen Snee, and also with conspiring to murder some person unknown. Mrs. Snee, who is the wife of a commercial traveller now absent on business, with whom she appears to have lived on affectionate terms, some time since inserted in the Daily Telegraph an advertisement addressed to medical men, or persons conversant with chemistry, stating that a person engaged in "an interesting experiment" was willing to pay for assistance. The prisoner Vance answered the advertisement, and Mrs. Snee then replied that she was desirious of committing suicide, because her death would be of advantage to some other person. A number of letters passed between the prisoners, and an arrangement appeared to have been entered into by which Vance undertook to supply some deadly poison to Mrs. Snee, he advising her at the same time to give it out amongst her friends that she was in the habit of taking chloral to induce sleep, so that when death ensued it might appear that the poisoning was accidental. The letters passed under initials, Mrs. Snee writing as if she were "William Quarll," and were addressed to different post-offices. The affair was discovered through one of the letters not being sent for: it was opened by the Post-office authorities, who upon discovering its contents handed it over to the police. Both prisoners were easily traced and taken into custody. The defence was, that there was no real intention on the part of Mrs. Snee to commit suicide, and that Vance never really intended to assist in causing the death of any person, but intended to get the money that was offered. Mr. Justice Mellor decided that the count charging the prisoners with conspiring to cause the death of one of them could not be supported; but on the other charge they were convicted, the jury recommending them both to mercy, Vance on the ground of the high character he had received, and Snee on account of her illness and the frequent absence of her husband. Vance was accordingly sentenced to eighteen months' imprisonment, and Mrs. Snee to six months

                                --end

                                From the Old Bailey Online:

                                WILLIAM KINGSTON VANCE, ELLEN SNEE, Breaking Peace > wounding, 29th May 1876.

                                Reference Number: t18760529-408
                                Offence: Breaking Peace > wounding
                                Verdict: Guilty > with recommendation; Guilty > with recommendation
                                Punishment: Imprisonment > no_subcategory; Imprisonment > no_subcategory


                                408. WILLIAM KINGSTON VANCE (24), and ELLEN SNEE (29), were indicted for unlawfully conspiring to kill and murder the said Ellen Snee. Second Count—To murder a person unknown. Other Counts vary. ing the form of charging the conspiracy.

                                THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL, The Solicitor-General, with Messrs. Poland and BOWEN conducted the Prosecution; MESSRS. COLLINS and McCALL appeared for Vance; and MR. FRANCIS, with MR. HORACE AVORY for Snee.


                                [...]


                                VANCE— GUILTY — Eighteen Months' Imprisonment.

                                SNEE— GUILTY — Six Months' Imprisonment.

                                The Jury recommended both prisoners to mercy, Vance on account of his good character, and Snee on account of her frequent illness and the absence of her husband.

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X