In another post the story of
the British Spirit Photographer, William Hope is told here.
Mumler photo showing Fanny Conant with the ghost of her deceased brother. |
William Mumler was an
American Spirit Photographer. He was a jeweler in Boston and an amateur
photographer. One day as he was developing a self-portrait he spotted the
shadowy figure of a young girl floating behind his image.
Mumler at first thought it
was an accident, it was just a trace of an earlier negative made on the same
plate. But he changed his mind when friends and family told him the young girl
looked like his deceased cousin.
This photo came to the
attention of the American spiritualist community and was proclaimed the first
photo ever taken of a spirit.
Mumler didn’t disagree. Instead
he became the world’s first spirit photographer. Expert photographers in Boston
stated they believed these photos were not tampered with.
Mumler’s new business became
a success, in part because it was just after the Civil War and many people were
seeking proof their deceased relatives still existed in some form.
So Mumler’s was basically
preying on their desperation.
His British counterpart William Hope acquired photos by telling his clients he needed them to communicate
with the dead during his séances. In contrast, Mumler would just break into people’s homes
to obtain them.
Later, his girlfriend, a medium, was able to acquire them for him.
Mumler became wealthy and
moved to New York to continue his business. The spiritualist community
supported him wholeheartedly while his critics accused him of fraud.
Once in New York it was
discovered that several ghosts in Mumler’s photographs were actually people who
were still living. In 1869, the New York police sent an undercover agent to
investigate him. They then charged him with fraud.
At his trial expert witnesses
were brought in to testified that Mumler had created his photos with the use
of double exposures. The notorious showman P.T. Barnum even testified against
him.
A photo taken of P.T. Barnum
with the ghostly image of Abraham Lincoln floating in the background was
introduced as evidence to show how easy it was to create fake photos.
Faked photo of P.T. Barnum and ghost of Lincoln used as evidence in trial. |
Despite the condemning
evidence presented, Mumler was acquitted. His defense team was able to bring in
a large number of witnesses that stated the images in the photographs
given to them by Mumler were real.
Mumler moved back to Boston
and continued producing spirit photos. But his business was no longer
lucrative. In 1871, a lady using the name “Mrs. Lindall” visited him.
Photo of Mary Todd Lincoln with the ghost of Abe Lincoln that was widely circulated. |
She was actually Mary Todd
Lincoln and Mumler took the now famous photo of her with Abraham Lincoln
floating over her left shoulder. Mumler stated afterwards that he had no idea
that Mrs. Lindall was the former first lady and wife of Lincoln.
Mumler’s faked photo is the
last one taken of Mary Todd Lincoln before she died in 1882.
Mumler wrote an autobiography
in 1875 but his career was in ruins by this time. He stopped producing spirit
photos in 1879 and according to most accounts he died penniless.
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