Showing posts with label 1897. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1897. Show all posts

Saturday, July 25, 2020

Spiritualistic Christening

Detroit Free Press, March 28, 1898
Rev. Nellie S. Baade was a different kind of preacher. As a longstanding member of the First Spiritual Philosophical Society of Detroit, along with her husband Charles, a prominent businessman, she believed in ghosts and reincarnation along with some of the more standard tenants of religion. In this case baptism or a spiritualistic christening. Though instead of dousing the children in water she presented them with bouquets of nosegay.

Her and husband Charles are buried at Woodmere Cemetery.

Evansville Press, August 5, 1907 (enlarge)
St. Louis Post Dispatch, October 10, 1897 (enlarge)

Monday, May 11, 2020

Ghosts of the Twentieth Century...

Plymouth Mail, March 19, 1897
Ghosts of the Twentieth Century...

To all Political, Literary, Dramatic, Artistic and Historic Ghosts, and to the Spirits of Events, Ideas, Customs, and Things belonging to this Century.

FELLOW GHOSTS You are summoned to Penniman Hall, Plymouh, Mich., on Tuesday evening, the 22nd of October, at four hours before midnight. Appear in costume appropriate to the occasion. Old-time apparitions are politely requested to absent themselves.

Assemble at the foot of the stairs and then rise.

Spook march at 9:00 o'clock. Come prepared to participate in the mysteries and rites of HALLOWE'EN.

Lady spooks, free. Gentlemen sppoks are expected to donate 55 cents to this ghostly gathering. Spirit of the Occasion,

Underwood Dancing Academy

Monday, March 23, 2020

Ernest Vegesack: Expert Occultist

Detroit Free Press, December 26, 1897
When the time finally comes for me to write a book it will be under the nom de plume of Ernest Vegesack (pronounced veggie-sack) because Ernie Meatsack sounds profane and unseemly for such an upstanding voice as my own.

Vegesack was an expert occultist, gave correct life readings according to the art of palmistry, did horoscopes, advice on everyday affairs and phrenology.

He held court at both 200 Woodward Avenue and 158 Lafayette Avenue.

Detroit Free Press, February 11, 1898