Frances Ann Conant
Frances Ann Conant (1831–1875), also known as J. H. Conant, was an American spiritualist medium.
Conant was born in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, on April 28, 1831. Luther Colby, editor of the spiritualist newspaper the Banner of Light, gave Conant free public séances for seventeen years in Boston which were reported in the newspaper.[1] Spiritualists claimed that Conant made contact with the spirit of a deceased Boston physician who was alleged to have made diagnoses of disease and made treatments.[2] The Boston Courier criticized the reports, and Professor Cornelius Conway Felton claimed that Conant was known for making fanatical and wild statements.[3]
The impresario P. T. Barnum included an exposure of Conant in his 1865 book The Humbugs of the World. He suggested that Conant had impersonated the spirits and found information about her sitters by looking at obituary notices from newspapers.[4]
References
- ↑ Braude, Ann. (2001). Radical Spirits: Spiritualism and Women's Rights in Nineteenth-Century America. Indiana University Press. p. 148. ISBN 978-0253215024
- ↑ Anderson, Rodger. (2006). Psychics, Sensitives and Somnambules: A Biographical Dictionary with Bibliographies. McFarland & Company. p. 30. ISBN 978-0-7864-2770-3
- ↑ Morris, Dee. (2014). Boston in the Golden Age of Spiritualism: Séances, Mediums & Immortality. The History Press. p. 26. ISBN 978-1626195875
- ↑ Barnum, P. T. (1866). The Humbugs of the World: An Account of Humbugs, Delusions, Impositions, Quackeries, Deceits and Deceivers Generally, in All Ages. New York, Carleton. pp. 124-125
Further reading
- Theodore Parker. (1873). Biography of Mrs. J. H. Conant, the World's Medium of the Nineteenth Century: Being a History of Her Mediumship from Childhood to the Present Time. Boston: William White and Company.