Monday, 17 November 2014

The Best Accredited Ghost Stories (Strand Magazine. 1908)

Beckles Willson was a noted Canadian historian. He was the author of 'Occultism and Common-Sense' which you can read or download from the Internet Archive.


 

 






Wednesday, 29 October 2014

A Map of Precious Stones (Strand Magazine, 1902)

Nothing succeeds like excess, said Mr Wilde; and when you're a Czar, excess comes cheap. Let's hear it for the most impressive bijou of them all.




Friday, 24 October 2014

The Monster of Partridge Creek (Strand Magazine, 1908)

This is probably the most unlikely story ever to appear in The Strand. Originally published in a French magazine called 'Je Sais Tout' (I Know All) in April 1908, it was picked up around the world. The shaggy dinosaur, sadly, was never reported again. However, a thought occurs to me. One of the Strand's most popular contributors was Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, whose tales of Sherlock Holmes and Brigadier Gerard were mainstays of the magazine. Could this yarn of a dinosaur surviving in a remote corner of the world have served as the inspiration for  Conan Doyle's 'The Lost World' which was published four years later?











Monday, 20 October 2014

A Metal Balloon (Strand Magazine, 1898)

Here is an episode from aeronautical history of which I, for one, was totally unaware. I have been unable to discover whether there were any further developments in this direction. Interesting too, to read that Jagels saved his life 'by jumping out of the car just before it reached the earth'. I thought only Bugs Bunny could do that!






Wednesday, 15 October 2014

Cunning Murrell - A Wizard of Yesterday (Strand Magazine, 1900)

'Cunning' Murrell was the last of what, once upon a time, must have been a fairly populous breed - that of the village wise man. Arthur Morrison, who wrote this article, found out enough about Murrell to publish a full-length book about him, which is now available again through the modern magic of Print On Demand. Murrell relied to a great extent on the ancient divinatory art of geomancy, which the modern new age crowd seems to have forgotten completely. Check it out on Wikipedia.


Monday, 22 September 2014

Haschich Hallucinations (Strand Magazine, 1905)

An account of some early 'trips', illustrated by that master of fantastic art, Sidney H. Sime.


Tuesday, 16 September 2014

Phantasms (Strand Magazine, 1906)

An interesting essay - I believe the story of the girl with the scratched cheek was looked into by the American Society for Psychical Research.









Thursday, 11 September 2014

Ghosts in Art (1904)

How the Victorians visualised their phantoms - and what they expected of their artists.