Very little has been written concerning the mediumship of Hunter
Selkirk; for this reason, I would acknowledge the important
contribution of Harry Emerson's book, Listen My Son, in which the
writer describes some of his experiences with the medium.
Hunter was born in County Durham in 1900. When both his father,
and later, his stepfather died, he bore the responsibility of
being head of his family of eight, most of which were
young children. Growing up as a miner in the years of the
Depression, he faced extreme poverty: despite this, he occupied
himself by working for, and supporting the children of
Craghead, where he lived, in the periods of severe hardship that
afflicted the area.
Hunter's first awareness of his own mediumship occurred when he
saw and spoke with his father who had died a week earlier in a mine
explosion along with nearly two hundred other men and boys. As so
often happened in similar cases, when Hunter told his mother of
what he had experienced, she simply said that he had been
dreaming. The local priest then became involved and decided that
Hunter should be monitored; the young medium then became a member
of the local church choir, but this only increased his awareness
as he saw spirit-beings in the church and also became conscious
of other mediumistic abilities that he possessed.
Although other phenomena took place, when Hunter and a friend attended
a Spiritualist meeting in his twenties, the reality was, as Emerson
related, that they 'went to the "spookies" for a "bit
of fun"'. Nonetheless, Hunter was impressed by the philosophy
expounded; he was told that he would be a great medium, but he
interpreted this as something that was said to everyone to encourage
them to return. However, he met a Sam Barker at the meetings who
suggested that he should join a home circle. This he did, and
demonstrating the patience of those involved, some seven years
elapsed before the first materialization joined the circle.
Hunter's mediumship developed to where an eye-witness could say,
'In a seance, I have seen the spirit form and the medium side by
side'; furthermore, after Hunter left the cabinet, his facial
appearance, having been altered by ectoplasm, was 'so finely
moulded that recognition was instantaneous'. In the case of
direct voice, the communicator 'was recognised immediately by a
near relative', and the voice was 'entirely free from any trace
of the medium's voice or personality'.
Hunter's mediumship was not limited to his immediate locality, i.e. he
demonstrated his abilities before many hundreds of people in
various places: reports of these events being published,
e.g. Two Worlds (14 October 1938).
Emerson detailed the events of the first seance that he
attended; this was in 1938 and conducted by Hunter, who had been
working in the mine less than two hours earlier. After Emerson
examined the seance room and the cabinet, this being constructed
of two curtains hung across the corner of the room, the
seance commenced. After hymns and a prayer, a light appeared
close to the ceiling: 'transparent blue and particularly bright and
twinkling'. The light then moved down and passed through the
cabinet curtain, and one of Hunter's controls spoke and greeted
the ten sitters present. This was followed by another light
manifesting, that Emerson described as a very large opal. The
light moved around the sitters and Emerson related that he could see a
woman's face: 'the eyes were blue and had depth and
expression'. On going to a sitter who was next to him, the
visitor was recognized as a guide who had been seen on an earlier
occasion. Subsequently, there was direct voice and Emerson then
recorded that 'two small lights came out of the cabinet and
moved across the room towards where I was sitting'. They hovered
above his head and then 'from out of the air, fully six
feet away from the medium', a voice spoke to Emerson and
introduced herself. It was Emerson's wife; she spoke in a whisper
that he said, 'I recognised immediately'. After further
phenomena, Emerson left the seance room, understandably
overwhelmed. He reported: 'I had seen; I had
heard; I had felt; I had spoken to people who had lived
upon the earth as I was doing now'. This resulted in him suddenly
realizing that in the subject of the afterlife, 'The
Christian religion, as I understood it, was confounded. It was
incomplete. It had shrivelled to a vague, indefinite theology'.
Emerson described a number of seances that he attended in which
the truly amazing limits of Hunter's mediumship were
manifested: in one, after some spectacular light phenomena, he
detailed how, 'A small light appeared low down near the floor
and... it rose to the height of an average sized man'. When
the visitor approached, Emerson saw that he was a man who looked no
more than thirty years of age. At this point, the visitor
spoke and described what had occurred during the initial stages
following death. At the point of transition, he said,
'It all seemed to happen so quickly and so naturally. I was
conscious of my surroundings and I felt wonderfully
refreshed'. Noteworthy is the fact that it is in such instances
that the nature of the next life is revealed; this is
salient as it invalidates the charge often made that physical
mediumship provides little knowledge or enlightenment concerning the
subject of post-mortem survival. The communicator also
confirmed that he had been assisted, and he believed the physical life
served as an education and preparation, adding that 'You are born
to live with each other and to be of use to each other'.
Emerson also referred to the more humorous instances that occurred
during Hunter's seances. On one occasion when the sitters were
seated very close to the wall, he felt someone touch him:
following this, his own chair and that of the person next to
him 'were tilted forward and we heard someone behind us
laughing'. He identified this as being like 'one of
Bob's tricks'.
This was Bob Ellis, a war-time fatality, who often visited the seances
and introduced some amusement into the proceedings whenever possible,
e.g. he would produce music and once removed a carpet on which four
of the sitters were sitting, and lifted an eleven stone man into
the air; during these episodes, there was indisputable evidence that
Hunter was in the cabinet.
Hunter's mediumship not only produced physical phenomena but
unmistakable evidence for the survival of physical death:
Emerson detailed how in one seance, with a blue light being used,
Hunter's controls made themselves known, with one materializing for the
benefit of the circle, and the sitters were asked to look inside
the cabinet. Emerson did so, and saw a light that looked
'almost as if the moon had come down into the room'; this
was followed by a visitor materializing and standing in front of
him. He was unable to see the facial features and the visitor
walked across the seance room to Emerson's daughter who immediately
recognized him as her uncle. He then walked back to Emerson who
recorded that on being able to see him clearly, 'It was indeed my
brother Lincoln who died in 1923'. Afterwards, two sitters attending
their first seance were reunited with their mother who spoke to them,
and also carried an infant in her arms. This was followed by
Hunter's stepfather materializing and then, Emerson's wife. He
related how, 'I saw her face as clearly as I had ever done in my
life'. She was 'alive and smiling' and on being asked
whether she was happy, she replied 'Yes'.
Following the traditional Spiritualist practice, a special seance was
held at Christmas for the children who were able to return and
participate in the festivities. Emerson recorded how, 'It
seemed strange to be sitting in a room decorated for a children's party
with not a child to be seen': but he went on to note how,
'after the door was shut and the light was put out, they did come, and
made no mistake about making their presence known'. In fact,
although the light was extinguished, bright moonlight entered the room
and some visibility was available. Despite being for the
children, the first next-world visitor was Bob Ellis. Emerson
noted how the event became lively when Bob began trying to force an
inflated balloon inside the clothing of the sitters, that
promptly burst on each attempt. Shortly afterwards, Emerson
recorded how, 'we heard the sound of little feet',
and after four children ran out into the room from the cabinet,
'we lost count', although 'we could just see the small
forms flitting past'. After a while, calm ensued and each child
spoke and introduced him/herself while the sitters could hear
Hunter's breathing from the cabinet. Noteworthy was the fact that
despite their premature deaths, the children all demonstrated a
noticeable degree of maturity and wisdom.
In the same manner that many mediums had worked in the First World War,
Hunter was able to enable victims of the Second War War to
demonstrate their survival to those who mourned their passing.
Many of these described how they had died and been met by friends
and relatives who had passed at an earlier time. One feature that
emerged from what was said was the value of having knowledge
of the subject. One soldier explained that he had read
books about the survival of death, including Sir Oliver Lodge's
Raymond, and said his reading 'has been a great help to me.
It is a great advantage to have this knowledge'.
Demonstrating the worth of being able to adapt to the new mode
of existence, the soldier was not only able to communicate
effectively, but bring other soldiers to the seances who communicated
through Hunter's trance mediumship, direct voice and even
materialization.
One R.A.F. officer spoke about his passing, and described the
frustrations that arise in trying to communicate: he explained
that it was necessary to look for 'that tell-tale light that
indicates psychic power, either in an individual, home circle, or
Spiritualist meeting'. He went on to add, 'There are so
many of us and so few mediums' and drolly commented on how he
thought of one Prime Minister's words that, 'Never was so
much owed by so many to so few', and 'We have to queue and
wait, and many are disappointed'.
Hunter's mediumship also followed the style of a number of
mediums in making it possible for animals to materialize during the
seances . In the seance on the last day of 1941, Hunter was
outside the cabinet and joined in with the singing and talking of
the circle members. He was then levitated and, 'soon the
materialised form of a dove emerged from the cabinet and flew
around the room'. The materializations made possible were
unmistakable: in the same seance, several next-world visitors
joined the circle, including a boy: 'A halo of light
encompassed the full form. Every feature was perfect, hair, eyes,
nose, ears, and the little teeth, when he smiled, could be clearly
seen, and made an unforgettable picture'.
A frequent occurrence during the seances was the presence of
materialized lights that Emerson said, 'varied in size, shape and
colour and behaved sometimes in the most extraordinary way'. On
occasions, up to eight of them would appear, originating from
different places in the seance room. He described how some,
'shot across the room like a comet, up to six inches in length. I
have seen one of these lights weave behind and in front of
alternate sitters at amazing speed'. In one instance, a Mr
Bulmer, who had been president of the local Spiritualist church,
and had died in 1938, appeared and carried one of the lights :
'the most beautiful blue, flecked with white'. From the glow that
the light produced, the sitters recognized him while he spoke to them
about the church. In addition to the phenomenon of lights, the
seances also enjoyed the materialization of flowers and the room
would be filled with their perfume. Hunter's mediumship also
included healing, and Emerson related several cases of people
either seriously or even terminally ill, healed by one of
Hunter's controls, aptly named 'the doctor'. The fact that
Hunter was independent from the voices was further demonstrated by the
occasions when he suffered from a cold, and while his coughing could be
heard from the cabinet, the voices continued to speak, simultaneously,
and without any interruption.
In addition to the lighter moments, there was also the more serious
aspect to what was facilitated through Hunter's mediumship. In
one seance, lights appeared above the cabinet, and one of
Hunter's controls spoke and said that he would bring Hunter out
of the cabinet which he duly did. Each sitter was then
summoned to the cabinet and in the light that was present, they
saw 'the materialised form of a baby lying cradled in the
light'. The control told the sitters that the infant was the
child of John, Hunter's brother: the child had died only half an
hour after being born.
Multiple - materializations also occurred: Emerson mentioned how
a Mrs Storey had been rescued from her burning home in the district,
but had rushed back inside to save her three children.
Tragically, they had all died in the inferno. In one seance, with
some light present, 'the form of a woman with a child in
her arms stepped out from the cabinet, then a child came out and stood
at her side. In a few seconds a younger child came out and stood
on the other side'. The group moved closer to the light and were
recognized by the sitters as Mrs Storey and her children: 'one of
the sitters exclaimed immediately, "Its Mrs Storey and her three
bairns". Zuru [one of Hunter's controls] from the cabinet
responded: "That is correct"'.
In the light of what he experienced with Hunter Selkirk, Emerson
referred to the many who manifested themselves to assure the sitters
of their continuing existence, and communicated in voices,
'clear and distinct'. He went on to make the significant
observation that when critics argue that by communicating with the
departed, 'Spiritualists disturb the dead', the reply to be
made is very simple: 'The dead started it first'.