Eileen Garrett

Eileen J. Garrett (1893-1970) was an Irish parapsychologist, medium, and pseudoscience promoter.

Putting the psycho in
Parapsychology
Men who stare at goats
By the powers of tinfoil
v - t - e

As a child and into her youth, Garrett showed symptoms of a dissociative identity disorder and she reported to have heard voices that were not real.[1] She also experienced delusional fantasies and hallucinations.[2]

Garrett did not believe in life after death and attributed her supposed spirit controls in her séances to the product of her own subconscious.[3]

The R101 airship and séances

Garrett was most famous for the alleged R101 séances that took place in 1930. In these séances, it was claimed by spiritualists that Garrett had channeled secret information from the spirit of Lieutenant Herbert Carmichael Irwin who had died in the R101 airship crash a few days before the séance and have claimed there was no possible naturalistic explanation for knowing such information. Skeptics have debunked the absurd paranormal or spiritualist claims regarding the R101 séances. The entire thing had been fabricated by spiritualists.

Garrett's notes and writings show she followed the building of the R101 and that she had friends in high places. The magician John Booth speculated that aircraft blueprints could have easily been passed to her by a technician from the airdrome.[4] However, whilst skeptics are in agreement with Booth that Garrett was a fraud, he did not personally examine the séance material regarding R101, no secret accomplice was needed.

Paranormal debunker Melvin Harris went back to the primary sources and read over the R101 séance material and discovered that the whole thing was a hoax, the entire thing had been fabricated by spiritualists, as the alleged communications themselves contained no secret information about the R101 airship. Archie Jarman also researched the R101 airship and compared the information to Garrett's and wrote an 80,000-word report on the topic concluding that the séance information was valueless and that we should "best forget the psychic side of R-101; it's a dead duck — absolutely!"[5]

Unfortunately spiritualists such as Michael Prescott and Michael E. Tymn who have not researched the topic in depth continue to spread the myth that Garrett communicated with spirits from the R101 airship.[6]

Garrett founded the Parapsychology Foundation in New York City in 1951 which has been known to promote pseudoscience.

gollark: I would do a line as three blitable strings.
gollark: But if you want to iterate through, say, everything with depth 4, in order?
gollark: Isn't this harder to iterate through?
gollark: I feel like it's much less hassle to just assume they/them, as it's gender-neutral, for everyone on the internet.
gollark: https://medium.com/@rakeshkrish/ssh-bitcoin-wallet-demystifying-another-crypto-scam-afee7ad37f35

References

  1. Jenny Hazelgrove. (2000). Spiritualism and British Society Between the Wars. Manchester University Press. pp. 127-128
  2. John Booth. (1986). Psychic Paradoxes. Prometheus Books. p. 193
  3. Rosemary Guiley. (1994). The Guinness Encyclopedia of Ghosts and Spirits. Guinness World Records Limited. pp. 132-133
  4. John Booth. (1986). Psychic Paradoxes. Prometheus Books. p. 164-165
  5. Melvin Harris. (2003). Investigating the Unexplained: Psychic Detectives, the Amityville Horror-mongers, Jack the Ripper, and Other Mysteries of the Paranormal. Prometheus Books. pp. 171-182
  6. Michael E. Tymn's nonsensical beliefs about Eileen Garrett and R101
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