David Duguid (medium)

David Duguid (February 10, 1832 – March 14, 1907) was a Scottish spiritualist medium and Glasgow cabinet-maker by trade.[1][2]

David Duguid

Career

Duguid was born in Dunfermline. He worked as a cabinet-maker as a young man. He began his interest in spiritualism in 1866 by attending table-turning experiments. He later took up mediumship and spirit photography. He was also known for his automatic drawings and paintings, which impressed the psychical researcher Edward Trusted Bennett.[3] However, in 1878, Frank Podmore attended a séance of Duguid and strongly suspected that he had cheated by using a card that had already been painted.[4]

In 1892, Duguid was tested in Glasgow and London by John Traill Taylor, editor of the British Journal of Photography. Extra figures appeared on the camera plates. Taylor noted that the figures were "vile" looking but offered no explanation for their origin.[5][6][7] His spirit photography was exposed when it was revealed he had used paper with chemically bleached-out images on them, and during his séances would secretly press the paper against a blotter dampened with a developing solution.[8] Harry Price wrote that Duguid "was caught cheating over and over again. One of his 'extras', a 'Cyprian priestess', was found to be a facsimile of a German picture."[9]

In 1905, Duguid was exposed in Manchester when he was searched and small oil paintings were found in his trousers.[10][11]

Publications

gollark: It's generally cleaner to just *return* the new version of something.
gollark: I would generally recommend against global variable use.
gollark: If you get money by making an existing thing better or cheaper that is also good for people.
gollark: If you obtain money by making some sort of innovative product/service, you're improving things for everyone who wants the product.
gollark: > one could argue that you can't be wealthy without it being at *someone's* expenseOne would be wrong, lots of things are positive sum.

See also

References

  1. Anderson, Rodger. (2006). Psychics, Sensitives and Somnambules: A Biographical Dictionary with Bibliographies. McFarland & Company. p. 45. ISBN 978-0786427703
  2. "David Duguids Photographic Mediumship". www.spiritualismlink.com.
  3. Bennett, Edward T. (1908). The Direct Phenomena of Spiritualism: Speaking, Writing, Drawing, Music, & Painting: A Study. William Rider & Son. pp. 7-9
  4. Podmore, Frank. (1902). Modern Spiritualism: A History and a Criticism. London: Methuen. pp. 130-133. ISBN 978-1108072571
  5. Taylor, John Traill. (1893). Spirit Photography with Remarks on Fluorescence. British Journal of Photography 40 (1715): 167-169.
  6. Krauss, Rolf H. (1995). Beyond Light and Shadow. Nazraeli Press. pp. 145-146
  7. Tucker, Jennifer. (1996). Science Illustrated: Photographic Evidence a Social Practice in England, 1870-1920. Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 51-52
  8. Nickell, Joe. (2001). Real-Life X-Files: Investigating the Paranormal. University Press of Kentucky. pp. 260-261. ISBN 978-0813122106
  9. Price, Harry. (1936). Confessions of a Ghost-Hunter. Putnam. p. 168. ISBN 978-0883560310
  10. Price, Harry. (1939). Chapter The Phenomena Investigated. In Fifty Years of Psychical Research. Longmans, Green & Co.
  11. Tabori, Paul. (1966). Harry Price: The Biography of a Ghost-Hunter. Living Books. p. 27
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