Anna Eva Fay

{{Short description|American spiritual medium}}

{{Infobox person

| name = Anna Eva Fay (Ann Eliza Heathman)

| image = Anna Eva Fay.jpg

|birth_date = March 31, 1851

|death_date = May 12, 1927

|occupation = Stage mentalist, medium}}

File:AnnaEvaFay1907.tif

Anna Eva Fay Pingree (March 31, 1851 – May 12, 1927) was a famous medium and stage mentalist of the twentieth century.

Biography

Fay was born Ann Eliza Heathman in Southington, Ohio. She married Henry Melville Cummings, a medium, who went by the name Henry Melville Fay. She adopted the stage name of Annie Fay and began to perform as a stage medium. She became famous for her vaudeville and stage performances in the 1880s and 1890s,Will Rogers, Steven K. Gragert, M. Jane Johansson. (2005). The Papers of Will Rogers. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 110. {{ISBN|978-0806137049}} where she was billed as "The Indescribable Phenomenon".{{Cite book |last=Randi |first=James |title=An encyclopedia of claims, frauds, and hoaxes of the occult and supernatural: decidedly sceptical definitions of alternative realities |date=1995 |publisher=St. Martin's Griffin |isbn=978-0-312-15119-5 |location=New York, NY|author-link=James Randi}}

Through her career, Fay was exposed as a fraudulent medium.Kerry Segrave. (2007). Women Swindlers in America, 1860-1920. McFarland & Company. p. 14. {{ISBN|978-0786430390}} Fay was known for employing assistants including several who would dig up information about séance sitters in the towns that she visited.Maurice Zolotow. (1952). It Takes All Kinds. Random House. p. 60

In the early 1870s the American stage mentalist Washington Irving Bishop was the manager of Fay's spiritualist acts, but in 1876 exposed her trick methods to the media.Simon During. (2004). Modern Enchantments: The Cultural Power of Secular Magic. Harvard University Press. p. 161. {{ISBN|978-0674013711}} In 1883 the ex-medium John W. Truesdell revealed her method of freeing her hands from cotton bandages.John W. Truesdell. (1883). The Bottom Facts Concerning the Science of Spiritualism: Derived from Careful Investigations Covering a Period of Twenty-Five Years. G. W. Carlton: New York. pp. 272-273

Her first husband died on May 29, 1889.San Luis Obisbo Tribune Volume V, Number 9 May 30, 1889, p. 1 Her second husband was stage manager David H. Pingree, who died in 1932.Anthony J. Pagano. (1998). Melrose. Arcadia Publishing. p. 58. {{ISBN|978-0738564487}} Her son John Fay also a magician, married to Anna Norman committed suicide in 1908.Frank Cullen. (2006). Vaudeville Old & New: An Encyclopedia of Variety Performances in America. Routledge. p. 369. {{ISBN|978-0415938532}}Massimo Polidoro. (2003). Secrets of the Psychics: Investigating Paranormal Claims. Prometheus Books. p. 103. {{ISBN|1-59102-086-7}} "Her son, John T. Fay, married Anna Norman, one of the assistants in Eva's show, then left home and set up on his own with his wife, calling themselves "The Fays." When John died in 1908, his widow set up her own show and billed herself as "Mrs. Eva Fay, The High Priestess of Mysticism." Obviously, Annie resented her using a stage name so similar to her own, but never took legal action to stop her." Fay applied for a membership to The Magic Circle and in 1913 during a tour in Britain, she was elected the first Honorary Lady Associate of The Magic Circle in London.Milbourne Christopher. (1975). Mediums, Mystics & the Occult. Thomas Y. Crowell. p. 178. {{ISBN|978-0690004762}} Fay died on May 20, 1927. She is buried at Wyoming Cemetery in Melrose Massachusetts.

In 1942, Harry Price of the National Laboratory of Psychical Research exposed the 'mechanical stool' trick of Fay.Harry Price. (1942). Search for Truth: My Life for Psychical Research. Collins. p. 48Paul Tabori. (1966). Harry Price: The Biography of a Ghosthunter. Living Books. p. 36. "He described the simple yet ingenious mechanism of the Anna Eva Fay mechanical stool, which had an automatic catch to release the right arm of the medium, enabling anyone to produce a large variety of phenomena— provided the sitters were gullible enough."

Crookes experiment

In a series of experiments in London at the house of William Crookes in February 1875, Fay managed to fool Crookes into believing she had genuine psychic powers.Massimo Polidoro. (2000). Anna Eva Fay: The Mentalist Who Baffled Sir William Crookes. Skeptical Inquirer 24: 36-38. Crookes had Fay hold two electrodes in an electrical circuit connected with a galvanometer in an adjoining room. Movement of objects occurred in the room and a music instrument was played. Crookes was convinced that the electrical control had not been broken. Psychical researchers pointed out that Fay could have used other parts of her body or a resistance coil to maintain the electric current intact whilst her hands could be free to produce the phenomena during the experiment.Sherrie Lynne Lyons. (2010). Species, Serpents, Spirits, and Skulls: Science at the Margins in the Victorian Age. State University of New York Press. p. 101. {{ISBN|978-1438427980}} Frank Podmore described the experiment in detail.Frank Podmore. (1897). [https://archive.org/stream/studiesinpsychic00podm#page/62/mode/2up Studies in Psychical Research]. G. P. Putnam's Sons. p. 62. "In February, 1875, Mr. Crookes, assisted by Dr. Huggins and others, held a séance with another medium, Mrs. Fay. The medium was seated in Mr. Crookes library, and her hands grasped two wires attached to a battery, her body being this made to complete an electric circuit. A galvanometer, which flashed light on to a graduated scale, was placed in the adjoining room, in a position where the scale was clearly visible to the circle of experimenters. Under these conditions, whilst the light remained steady on the scale, showing, that the resistance was practically uniform, a bell was rung and a musical box was wound up in the library; a hand was shown at the curtain which hung over the doorway; and a book and a library ladder were pushed through the opening. Finally there was a slight noise, the circuit was broken, and the medium was discovered in a fainting condition."

Fay used magic tricks to accomplish her mediumship feats. She confessed in 1913 to Eric Dingwall that she had duped Crookes and other scientists.William Hodson Brock. (2008). William Crookes (1832-1919) and the Commercialization of Science. Ashgate. p. 199. {{ISBN|978-0754663225}} She was investigated by the magician Harry Houdini, to whom after her retirement in 1924 she confessed fraud and revealed the tricks that she had used.Burton Gates Brown. (1972). Spiritualism in Nineteenth-Century America. Boston University. p. 231 Fay told Houdini the trick she had used on the Crookes galvanometer test: she gripped one handle of the battery beneath her knee joint, keeping the circuit unbroken, leaving one hand free.Massimo Polidoro. (2001). Final Séance: The Strange Friendship Between Houdini and Conan Doyle. Prometheus Books. p. 177. {{ISBN|978-1573928960}} "She told him how she had tricked Crookes at the electric test: she had simply gripped one handle of the battery beneath her knee joint, keeping the circuit unbroken but leaving one hand free. Annie Eva Fay's revelation to Houdini of the way she had gulled Crookes was confirmed years later when psychical researcher Colin Brookes-Smith found at the Science Museum in London one of the galvanometers used by Crookes. The machine was repaired and brought to working order. Brookes-Smith reports that "there was no difficulty at all in sliding one wrist and forearm along over one handle and grasping the other handle, thereby keeping the circuit closed through the forearm, and then releasing the other hand without producing any large movement of the galvanometer spot." Magic historian Barry Wiley suggested that Fay had beaten the galvanometer tests by working with a secret accomplice Charles Henry Gimingham (1853–90), an assistant of Crookes who had built the experimental apparatus.Barry H. Wiley. (2012). The Thought Reader Craze: Victorian Science at the Enchanted Boundary. McFarland. p. 190. {{ISBN|978-0786464708}}

References

{{Reflist}}

Further reading

{{commons category|Anna Eva Fay}}

  • Hereward Carrington. (1907). [https://archive.org/stream/physicalphenomen00carr#page/149/mode/2up The Physical Phenomena of Spiritualism]. Herbert B. Turner & Co. pp. 149–152 reveals the "Cotton Bandage Test" trick that Fay used.
  • Harry Houdini. (2011). A Magician Among the Spirits. Cambridge University Press. {{ISBN|978-1108027489}}
  • William Henry James Shaw. (1896). [https://archive.org/stream/magicuptodateors00shawrich#page/65/mode/2up The Annie Eva Fay Cotton Bandage Test]. In Magic up to Date, or, Shaw's Magical Instuctor. Chicago. pp. 65–70
  • Barry H. Wiley. (2005). The Indescribable Phenomenon: The Life and Mysteries of Anna Eva Fay. Hermetic Press.

{{Spiritism and Spiritualism}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Fay, Anna Eva}}

Category:1851 births

Category:1927 deaths

Category:American fraudsters

Category:American spiritual mediums

Category:People from Trumbull County, Ohio

Category:Mentalists