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In The Mediumship of Florence Cook, Arthur Conan Doyle revisits the life and séances of one of Victorian England's most controversial spirit mediums. He offers a compelling defense of Cook's authenticity, citing testimonies, photographs, and his personal convictions. This piece provides valuable context to the spiritualist movement and showcases Doyle's continued advocacy for what he saw as misunderstood truth.
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The Mediumship of Florence Cook
INDEPENDENT TESTIMONY AS TO THE MEDIUMSHIP OF FLORENCE COOK
INDEPENDENT TESTIMONY AS TO THE MEDIUMSHIP OF FLORENCE COOK
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THE most connected account of the mediumship of Miss Florence Cook, apart from that of Professor Crookes, is to be found in Miss Florence Marryat’s “There is No Death,” a most interesting book of practical experiences, which is now published in a very cheap edition (Rider & Co.). From it I make the following extracts. Miss Marryat, it should be added, was an excellent witness, all of whose statements have stood the test of time. At the time when Miss Marryat (Mrs. Ross-Church) met the medium, the latter had become Mrs. Elgie Corner.
“The first time,” she writes, “that I ever met Florence Cook was in Mr. Dunphy’s private house, when my little daughter appeared through her.