It may be fairly argued that all evidential seances are naturally
memorable, and undoubtedly they are, and certainly so for those who
actually gain the evidence forthcoming. Nonetheless, in modern
Spiritualism's short history, there have been a number of seances
providing outstanding evidence with which few could remain
unimpressed. One such occasion was a seance with Estelle Roberts,
details of which were given by Maurice Barbanell in his book, This is
Spiritualism. Despite the very considerable extent of his
encounters with quality evidence, he referred to this as a 'most
moving experience'.
Barbanell related how, halfway through the seance, Red Cloud, the guide
of Estelle Roberts, advised him there was a girl who wished to
communicate with regard to her mother. Barbanell asked whether he
knew her, and Red Cloud simply replied 'No... but you can help
her'. The trumpet then moved towards Barbanell and he could hear
a young girl speaking; aware that encouragement often assisted
communicators, he asked her to talk to him. Whereupon she
'very slowly, but distinctly' said that her name was Bessy
Manning, and she had died during the previous easter from
tuberculosis. She then added that Tommy, her brother, was with
her; he had been killed in a road accident. She went on to
explain that her mother, having read some of the accounts written
by Barbanell, was praying that Red Cloud would bring her daughter to
one of Estelle's seances. Bessy then told Barbanell:
'Tell mother that I still have my two long plaits. I am
twenty-two, and I have got blue eyes. Tell her I want her to come
here. Could you bring her?', adding 'She is poor'.
Barbanell assured Bessy that he would do his best and she thanked him
and stressed how important it was, as her mother was very distressed
having lost two of her children. Barbanell asked for the
address where the mother could be contacted, and Bessy advised him this
would be at '14 Canterbury Street, Blackburn'. He then
discussed the matter with Red Cloud and it was clear that the mother
was to be contacted and invited to the next seance.
Without delay or hesitation, in view of his absolute confidence
in Red Cloud, Barbanell sent a telegram to a Mrs Manning at the address
given saying: 'Your daughter, Bessy, spoke to us at Red Cloud's
circle last night'. However, there was no reply to the telegram,
and Barbanell therefore despatched a further one. A few days
later, Barbanell received two letters from Mrs Manning; the first
expressing her absolute joy on having received the first telegram
saying, 'I laughed and cried all at once' and that the
telegram, telling her of Bessy's communication, was worth 'more
to me than untold gold'. In the second letter, she apologized
that Barbanell had needed to send a second telegram but she explained
that she lacked the funds to reply by anything other than letter
(in fact she had other children and her husband was unemployed).
Once again, she expressed her joy and said the telegrams were beyond
value. She further explained that Bessy had died the previous
easter and her son had been killed nine years earlier, and if she had
not been helped by a Spiritualist family, 'I would have gone
raving mad'.
At this stage, Barbanell viewed Bessy's seance communication: 'as
flawless evidence for the after-life. No theories of
telepathy or the subconscious mind can explain it away... Mrs
Manning had never met Estelle Roberts, or corresponded with her or any
member of her family'.
Barbanell arranged for Mrs Manning to travel to London and took her to
where the seance was to be held. It was not long before Bessy was
speaking with her mother, with the trumpet on one occasion falling to
the ground with the excitement. After Bessy had told her mother
that Tommy was with her, Mrs Manning asked whether she ever returned
home. Bessy replied that she did and commented on how she saw her
mother pick up her photograph and she would speak to, and kiss it.
Barbanell reported that Mrs Manning later told him this was absolutely
correct. Bessy continued by telling her mother that she had seen her
talking with her father that same morning and referred to the subject
of their conversation; this was followed by yet further evidence,
all of which was correct.
Before Mrs Manning returned to Blackburn, Estelle Roberts gave her
another sitting, when, once again, Bessy 'continued to prove her
identity with detail after detail, none of which the medium could
have known'. Only a matter of days later, Mrs Manning wrote
to Barbanell thanking him for his involvement and supplying him with a
statement that he could use: in this she detailed all that had
occurred and confirmed that, 'I heard my own daughter speak in
me, in the same old loving way, and with the self-same peculiarities
of speech. She spoke of incidents that I know for a
positive fact no other person could know'. Barbanell added a note
that after some years had elapsed, he attended another seance with
Estelle Roberts and after Red Cloud announced that he had a visitor,
Barbanell heard someone attempting to speak through the trumpet.
After some encouragement, he heard: 'You helped me very much by
enabling me to talk to my daughter'. Barbanell recognized the
communicator as Mrs Manning who continued by saying, 'I have got
Bessy and Tommy here. Can you tell my family?'. Barbanell
wrote to the old Blackburn address but the letter was returned.
However, he then received a letter from Mrs Smith, one of Mrs
Manning's married daughters who had been told by someone about an
article written by Barbanell regarding Mrs Manning's return. The
daughter confirmed that her mother had suffered a seizure while alone,
and by the time her children reached her, she was unable to speak
before she died. The daughter said that her mother's passing
was 'a cruel blow' but went on to express her joy on
receiving news about her survival and successful communication.
Estelle Roberts added an amusing footnote to the account in her own
book. She explained that Barbanell would recount the incident
of Bessy Manning's return 'in the scores of lectures
up and down the country' because of its remarkable evidential
value. Eventually, he decided that he should no longer mention it
as he had referred to it so often, and he realized that he would have
to use later evidence. On the first occasion that he gave a lecture,
this being in Blackburn, and omitted the account, 'he was
approached by a woman whose face seemed vaguely familiar'. He
suddenly realized that it was Mrs Manning who gently chided him
saying, 'I thought you would have told them about my
Bessy'. Despite the omission in his later lectures, as the
account is recorded in his book, Maurice Barbanell in fact continues to
tell the world about the evidence of survival for Bessy Manning.