Hydesville, The Story of the Rochester Knockings Chapter 6/8

CHAPTER VI. Amongst the investigators introduced to the household was a Mr. William Deusler, of Arcadia, an immediate neighbour of the Fox family at this time, and from his testimony we gather a great many interesting facts as to the evidence offered by the injured spirit in order that its identity could be clearly established. Mr. Deusler had formerly lived with his father in this house, and the message that the spirit had received an injury, prompted him to ask if either he or his father had been the cause…

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Hydesville, The Story of the Rochester Knockings Chapter 5/8

CHAPTER V. Happily for the momentous work which the spiritual telegraphers had undertaken to initiate in this humble dwelling, the first manifestations did not appeal to the high and learned of the earth, but to the plain common-sense of an honest farmer’s wife, and suggested that whatever could see, hear, and intelligently respond to relevant queries, must have in it something in common with humanity; and thus Mrs. Fox continued her investigations. Addressing the viewless rapper she said “count ten;” the raps obeyed. “How old is my daughter Margaret?” then…

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Hydesville, The Story of the Rochester Knockings Chapter 4/8

CHAPTER IV. The day had been cold and stormy, with snow on the ground. In the course of the afternoon, David, a son of Mr. and Mrs. Fox, came to visit his parents from his farm about three miles distant. Mrs. Fox then first recounted to him the particulars of the annoyances they had endured; for until now they had been little disposed to communicate these to any one. He listened to her with a smiling face. “Well mother,” he said, “I advise you not to say a word about…

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Hydesville, The Story of the Rochester Knockings Chapter 3/8

CHAPTER III. “Know well my soul, God’s hand controls Whate’er thou fearest.” From the time the Fox family entered the house at Hydesville, about December, 1847, they were incessantly disturbed by similar noises to those heard by Lucretia Pulver and the Weekmans. During the next month however (January, 1848) the noises began to assume the character of slight knockings heard at night in the bedroom; sometimes appearing to sound from the cellar beneath. At first Mrs. Fox sought to persuade herself this might be the hammering of a shoemaker in…

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Hydesville, The Story of the Rochester Knockings Chapter 2/8

CHAPTER II. A few months after these events happened the Bells left the neighbourhood, and the house became tenanted by a Mr. and Mrs. Weekman, who lived there about eighteen months, and left in the year 1847. Mr. Weekman’s statement respecting the noises he heard was to the effect that one evening when he was about to retire for the night, he heard a rapping on the outside door, and, what was rather unusual for him, instead of familiarly bidding them “come in,” stepped to the door and opened it.…

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Hydesville, The Story of the Rochester Knockings Chapter 1/8

Chapter 1 CHAPTER I. The birth-places of the greatest of the world’s social, political, and religious reformations have generally been of insignificant and lowly aspect, and apparently under the most inauspicious circumstances for producing any great effect upon mankind. The Babe of the lowly manger becomes the Spiritual King of millions of human hearts and souls, and the “Wood Hut” becomes the gateway through which Holy Ministers of Light, from their world of Truth and Beauty, send the evidence of man’s immortality, through the instrumentality of a child, to the…

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