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Douglas Blackburn: Difference between revisions
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'''Douglas Blackburn''', the editor of The Brightonian, performed a [[Second Sight]] act with [[G. A. Smith]], who would later become a British filmmaker. | '''Douglas Blackburn''' (1857-1929), the editor of The Brightonian, performed a [[Second Sight]] act with [[G. A. Smith]], who would later become a British filmmaker. | ||
== Biography == | |||
From 1882, Blackburn assisted smith in a second sight act. Smith would claim that genuine telepathy was practiced, though Blackburn would later admit that the act was a hoax. | From 1882, Blackburn assisted smith in a second sight act. Smith would claim that genuine telepathy was practiced, though Blackburn would later admit that the act was a hoax. | ||
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{{References}} | {{References}} | ||
[[de:Douglas Blackburn]] | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Blackburn,Douglas}} | {{DEFAULTSORT:Blackburn,Douglas}} | ||
Latest revision as of 11:26, 25 May 2021
| Douglas Blackburn | |
| Born | August 6, 1857 Southwark, England |
|---|---|
| Died | March 28, 1929 (age 71) Tonbridge, England |
Douglas Blackburn (1857-1929), the editor of The Brightonian, performed a Second Sight act with G. A. Smith, who would later become a British filmmaker.
Biography
From 1882, Blackburn assisted smith in a second sight act. Smith would claim that genuine telepathy was practiced, though Blackburn would later admit that the act was a hoax.
Blackburn went on to South Africa and wrote six novels on African life. [1]
Books
- Thought-reading, or, Modern mysteries explained: being chapters on thought-reading, occultism, mesmerism, &c., forming a key to the psychological puzzles of the day, (1884)
References
- ↑ ESP, Seers & Psychics By Milbourne Christopher (1970)