~ Voodoo Priestess Estate ~ ©

3" Natural Rainbow, Cat's Eye, Quartz Crystal Ball on Cold Painted Bronze Assistant Stand Stage Prop of The Man That Knows

circa 1930

A Séance Spirit Reading Room Find 


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It has now been nearly twenty-three years ago since we were called to do an estate that had been closed up for seventeen years! 

The Voodoo Estate!

This type of call usually gets us excited as they are a treasure trove.  Located here in Florida, there was no electricity or running water so we rigged our own lighting and in we went.  If you have ever seen the Adams Family you will have some idea as to what we were greeted with!  Then the attorney handling the liquidation gave us some background.  The estate had belonged to an alleged powerful Voodoo Priestess/JooJoo Exorcist, grand daughter of a Marie Laveau, and favored daughter of a Marie Glapion.

These names meant nothing to us, but the late night talk of Voodoo and exorcism in the old mansion was enough to make us decide to spend the night in a hotel and return in the morning to assess the estate.  The rest is history.

Our research has shown that this woman was what she claimed and was indeed descended from a long line of well known Vodoun family originating in New Orleans in the early 1800's.

We were pretty unnerved by this until we discovered they were also devout Catholics!  Although I have to admit this was unlike any Catholic home we have ever been in and some of the items found inside were a little more than disturbing.

There was no feeling of dread or unwelcome in the mansion, however there was quite a bit of contraband and other items we can or will not sell here.

This is one of a few lots from this estate we will be listing this week, so check our other postings.

We will, upon the new guardian's request, issue a named Letter of Authenticity with each lot from this estate, complying with the terms set forth to us by the estate's attorney.

Some Back Story

This crystal ball and unusual cold painted bronze assistant stand was found and recovered from a portable shrine dedicated to Claude Alexander Conlin in her main séance and reading room.  These rooms were a commercial endeavor that had a wealthy following and it is where many of the major séances of this estate were conducted.  Many, if not all of her associates worked this room, conducting séances, card readings and numerous forms of divination for their clientele.  Apparently this was a lucrative endeavor, as it remained active for over six decades.

Her journals list a host of well known psychics, mediums and other celebrities, Conlin among them, that would make guest appearances and that these events were booked to capacity well in advance.  They also tell us this sphere and its stand were used by Conlin in his stage act before relegating it to the reading rooms of this estate where it was used in allowing contact with the dearly departed.  It makes its first appearance in their journals and inventory on May 17th., 1930.

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"The Man That Knows"

Her journals tell us the Conlin brothers were long time friends to those associated with this estate and especially Aunt Vouivre with whom he was wed, being one of his many wives.  Both brothers are said to have performed in the reading rooms but C.A.'s involvement with this estate was more complicated as it involved him with love, Sex Magic, revenge violence and criminal activity.

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Aunt Vouivre
 
 Aunt Vouivre was a blood relation that had been, "taken into the fold as a young initiate" by her mother, Marie Glapion.  Chronological investigation revealed her to be, "of Romanian and French descent, who had been secreted out of the country to the United States to avoid police questioning in the murder by poison of an elderly man in 1878.  Revenge for sexual assault being her motive."
 
Their mother's apparently did have a marital connection that made Aunt Vouivre a third great aunt.  Her journals indicate they were three years apart in age, Aunt Vouivre being the elder.  They also show a forty year history as a part time live-in, full time practitioner follower whose specialty was toxins.  Allegedly she had the ability to communicate with reptiles, often seeking out specific species for their fluids for use in her poisons.
 
Her journals note of Aunt Vouivre's murder in France, February of 1936.
 
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She also notes of wearing Aunt Vouivre's jewelry in her reptile and potion making ceremonies, and we quote this entry from her journals, "these soothing energies allow one to connect with the serpent world on it's psychic level, giving them the peace needed to harvest their fluids.  It will warm with a dull green shine when death approaches."

Real or imagined, we understand why she and her associates were as feared and respected as they were.

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Alexander (magician)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, for the most part... 

Claude Alexander Conlin (June 30, 1880 – August 5, 1954), also known as Alexander, C. Alexander, Alexander the Crystal Seer, and Alexander the Man Who Knows, was an American spiritual author, a vaudeville magician who specialized in mentalism and psychic reading acts who dressed in Oriental style robes and a feathered turban, and often used a crystal ball as a prop.  In addition to performing, he also worked privately for clients, giving readings.  He was the author of several pitch books, New Thought pamphlets, and psychology books, as well as texts for stage performers.  His stage name was "Alexander," and as an author he wrote under the name "C. Alexander."

Life and Stage Career

Alexander was born on June 30, 1880 in Alexandria, South Dakota, the son of Berthold Michael James Conlin and Martha Michaels.  Within the family Claude Alexander was known as "C. A." and his brother Clarence Berthold Conlin was known as "C. B."  Clarence B. had a successful career as an attorney and he also worked as a stage mentalist, although his fame never equaled that of Claude Alexander.

Between 1915 and 1924, Conlin, under the stage name "Alexander, The Man Who Knows," was a popular and highly paid stage mentalist.  Alexander promoted his psychic act as a form of mental telepathy or mind reading.  Audience members gave him sealed questions, which he answered from the stage.  His techniques were not revealed during his lifetime.  He is credited as the inventor and/or popular developer of a number of electrical stage effects which were the forerunners of modern electronic stage effects.  All of Alexander's biographers, Darryl Beckmann, David Charvet, and Alexander's biographer of the 1940s, Robert A. Nelson, have said that Alexander was the highest-paid mentalist in the world at the height of his career, during the 1920s.  Both sources state that he earned multiple millions of dollars during his career on stage and that during his lifetime he may have been the highest paid entertainer in the field of magic.

 Alexander retired from the stage in 1927, at the age of 47.  He remained part of the social circles of entertainment personalities in Southern California, counting among his friends stars like Marion Davies, Margaret Sullavan, Jackie Coogan, Harold Lloyd, and Clara Bow.

Death

He died on August 5, 1954 at the age of 74 due to complications from an operation for stomach ulcers.  He was survived by two sons and a daughter.  He was buried in Seattle, Washington.

Alexander's career and personal life have long been shrouded in mystery, but due to interviews with his son and the scrap books of the Nartel twins much information was related to Darryl Beckmann.  Also Lon Mandrake had materials on Alexanders life.  In the late 20th century, Clarence's granddaughter Cathy Stevenson inherited scrap book material on the careers of both her grandfather "C. B." and great-uncle "C. A." which allowed Chavet to take a closer look at the life of Alexander the Crystal Seer and his family.

New Thought and Spiritualism Beliefs

"Alexander, crystal seer sees your life from the cradle to the grave"

With respect to the question of psychic phenomena, magic, spiritualism, and the occult, Alexander led a sort of double life, especially after he retired from the stage.

On the one hand, in 1921 he wrote and published The Life And Mysteries Of The Celebrated Dr. Q (also known as The Dr. Q. Book), which was later re-published by Nelson Enterprises of Columbus, Ohio for the stage magic trade.  In this book, Alexander exposed the techniques used by fraudulent spiritualist mediums to dupe their clients, provided blueprints for the manufacture of psychic act stage props, and even revealed the famous "Zancig Code" pioneered by the mentalists Julius and Agnes Zancig.

On the other hand, like the Zancigs, he never completely discounted the possibility that Spiritualism might contain elements of truth, and from 1919 onward he also operated a publishing house, the C. Alexander Publishing Company in Los Angeles, California, which released his own astrological, pro-Spiritualist, and New Thought material, including a 5-volume series called The Inner Secrets of Psychology and a booklet for his students titled Personal Lessons, Codes, and Instructions for Members of the Crystal Silence League.  The latter is a manual that explains the technique of affirmative prayer, and presents methods for the development of Spiritualistic mediumship, and divination through crystal ball scrying.  The back cover displays Alexander's connection to the New Thought movement, for it lists an extensive array of titles that Alexander offered for sale at his book shop, including works written and published by the New Thought author William Walker Atkinson under his own name and also under the pseudonyms Theron Q. Dumont, Yogi Ramacharaka, and Swami Panchadasi; as well as a book by Atkinson's sometime co-author, the occultist L. W. de Laurence.

Controversy

The biographer David Charvet, who interviewed surviving members of Alexander's family, wrote that Alexander had "seven marriages (sometimes to more than one woman at once)."  The biographer Darryl Beckmann wrote that Alexander was "married eleven times."  In a later interview with Charvet in 2006, Conlin's then-89-year-old son, John, claimed that Alexander was actually married 14 times.

Charvet recounts in his biography that Alexander spent time in local jails (including a jail break in Oklahoma in 1906) and federal prison in Washington state, went on trial for attempting to extort $50,000 from oilman millionaire G. Allan Hancock, made a failed attempt to outrun the authorities in a high-powered speedboat loaded with bootlegged liquor in the Queen Charlotte Strait between Canada and the U.S., and admitted killing four men.  Alexander himself claimed that he was involved in the shooting of Alaska gold rush con-man, Jefferson "Soapy" Smith, although no evidence exists nor is he mentioned in the context of Smith's death in the thorough historical biography on Smith's life and death.

 According to Beckmann, Alexander was a "con-man" as well as a stage performer.  A newspaper account in which it was stated that Alexander shot and killed a street mugger who attacked him, and was let off on the grounds of self-defense, was cited by Charvet.

Legacy

Alexander invested a great deal of money into the production and printing of beautiful chromolithograph posters for his stage show.  When he retired from the stage, he kept these in storage and eventually sold the unused posters and all of his stage equipment and props to a magic dealer, Robert Nelson, in Ohio  in 1944.  Nelson in turn sold portions of the stage show and many of the posters to another magician, Leon Mandrake, who toured in the Pacific Northwest during the 1950s under Alexander's name in order to make use of the large supply of full-color posters.  Thus, those who saw a show by "Alexander" in the 1950s actually were witnessing a recreation performance by Mandrake.

Alexander was mentioned by name in a 1950s episode of the NBC television production Playhouse 90 called "The Great Sebastians," starring Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne as a pair of stage magicians who resembled his old friends The Zancigs.

Bibliography

"Alexander - The Man Who Knows," (Revised, second edition) David Charvet. Mike Caveney's Magic Words, Pasadena, CA. 2007.

"Alexander The Man Who Knows," A Personal Scrapbook, Rolling Bay Press, Rollingbay WA 1994.

Alexander Wednesday, May 15 at 5 p.m.: The Man Who Knows, C. Alexander Publishing Co., Los Angeles, California, n.d. (c. 1913-1920).

Personal Lessons, Codes, and Instructions for Members of the Crystal Silence League, C. Alexander Publishing Co., Los Angeles, California, n.d. (c. 1913). Reprinted by Missionary Independent Spiritual Church, 2011.

Crystal Gazing: Lessons and Instructions in Silent Influence With the Crystal, Written Especially for and Dedicated to Members of The Crystal Silence League, C. Alexander Publishing Co., Los Angeles, California. (c. 1919). Reprinted by Missionary Independent Spiritual Church, 2012.

Alexander's Book of Extensive Astrological Readings, C. Alexander Publishing Co., Los Angeles, California, 1919.

Alexander's Book of Mystery, C. Alexander Publishing Co., Los Angeles, California, 1919.

The Life And Mysteries Of The Celebrated Dr. Q, C. Alexander Publishing Co., Los Angeles, California, 1921 [also known as The Dr. Q. Book]. (Reprinted by Robert Nelson Enterprises, Columbus, Ohio, c. 1948).

Alexander's Book of Mystery: Astrological Forecasts, Crystal Gazing, Practical and Advanced Psychology, Etc., C. Alexander Publishing Co. 1923.

The Projective Branch of Crystal Gazing, Written Especially for and Dedicated to Members of The Crystal Silence League, C. Alexander Publishing Co., Los Angeles, California. n.d. (c. 1923).

The Inner Secrets of Psychology Volumes 1 - 5, C. Alexander Publishing Co., Los Angeles, California,1924.

Secrets of the Crystal Silence League: Crystal Ball Gazing, The Master Key to Silent Influence, Missionary Independent Spiritual Church, 2019. ISBN 978-0-9960523-5-1 (An edited posthumous collection consisting of Personal Lessons, Codes, and Instructions and Crystal Gazing: Lessons and Instructions in Silent Influence compiled into one volume).

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It is obvious that much, but not all of their journal entries concerning Claude Alexander Conlin had been destroyed.  In our humble opinion, this was done because of their criminal activity.   

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But Back to the Sphere and Assistant Stand
 
 According to journal entries dated in 1931, this bronze was made in Vienna in the early 1920's by an unnamed student of Franz Bergman art.  It was Aunt Vouivre who suggested using it as a stand for his crystal balls and Conlin took it a step further and modified it to be wired and used in his performances.  But it is not until this sphere and stand duo made its way to the estate that we are given some idea as to how it was used.

Her journals go on to tell us the stand and sphere were used in his public performances and later in the reading rooms conducting private sessions to allow clients communication with deceased loved ones, find missing treasures and answer what was and what will be questions. 

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Examination reveals a nicely made cold painted bronze in the manner of Bergman as they describe. It is certainly not a Bergman but similar to those coming out of Austria and Vienna in the early 20th. century being a fairly popular design motif of the day.

Unmarked, with no maker or foundry marks, it measures approximately 7 3/4" in height x 4 7/8" in length x 7 15/16" in width and weighing 4 lbs., 5 oz.

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The Sphere

 It is once again, as the title implies, a Natural Rainbow, Cat's Eye, Quartz Crystal Ball measuring approximately 3" in diameter and weighing 1 lb., 1 oz.  There is no record of how or where Conlin got his balls, but it is apparent he had them, pun intended.

The sphere is loaded with heat sensitive Rainbow or Aurora Borealis inclusions that appear by simply holding it in your hands for a few moments.

These inclusions are caused by refracted light and the prismatic effect of a crack or inclusion, are often temperature sensitive.

Their journals tell us "it has a powerful direct focused energy emission."

The Cat's Eye is best viewed under single sourced light.  The chatoyant or cat's-eye effect is caused by the presence of the fibrous mineral asbestiform (fibrous) inclusions or tubelike cavities in parallel orientation within the sphere.  These reflect light as a well-defined bright band which moves across the surface as it is turned.

These inclusions were nearly impossible for the photographer to capture, despite a second photo session, but they are there and your satisfaction is guaranteed.

She attributes the Conlin artifacts with entries that read, "use in the research of occult knowledge."

She also tells us, "they have proven
useful protection against spells and a ward against negative energies."

“We have long been associated with the occult, black and white magic as it is in tune with the energies along which run, sorcery, necromancy and the most obscure and mysterious aspects of their magic."

"Used with onyx when officiating the transition of life to death, use it to invoke friendly spirits to accompany and guide the soul of the dying.”

"Petition the ancestral spirits and recall visionary memories of lives past.”

It is certainly a nicely aged and unusual antique, cold painted bronze with a remarkable crystal ball with an extraordinary provenance that is much nicer than the photographs are able to depict.
 
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We have been contacted and visited by a number of people who were interested in the items from this estate since our first batch was listed.  Among the buyers have been known psychics and practitioners.  More than one, after adorning themselves or handling their purchase, stated "this is a woman of power!"  Many of our clients, after receiving items from this estate have reported dream contacts and other unexplained phenomenon.

Unusual, authentic Voodoo Priestess Estate piece and at a bargain price!

This is truly a rare opportunity to own anything with attributes to this estate.  The majority of this estate is now gone.  Most of what we had left, and it was considerable, has been split up and sold to a couple of private, foreign collector practitioners and will never be available to the public again.  We made the decision to do this as we have had some pretty strange visits from even stranger individuals and there have been enough unexplained phenomenon going on in the warehouse where her things were kept that many of our employees refused to go in there.

The pieces offered and sold here are some of the few remaining pieces that will ever be offered to the public.

Nice addition to any collection, altar or decor, displays really well.

Really doesn't get any better than this.

There are 20 photographs below to tell the rest of this tale.

Buyer to pay $22.85 for Insured Shipping with Tracking, handling and lagniappe.

Rest assured your order will be carefully packed to withstand the onslaught of the most deranged of package carriers.

We Combine Shipping.

 

International Buyer's, Please email us for a Shipping Quote.

Payment is due at listing end.  Check our other listings, and sign up for our newsletter as new items are usually listed daily. 

©Text and Photos Copyright 2001-2024 bushidobuce, all rights reserved. 

Props are not part of the deal, but you knew that already.

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