THE BIRTH PLACE OF SPIRITUALISM
In 1847 John D. Fox moved his family to the little community of Hydesville in west-central New York, about 35 miles east of Rochester. John and his wife Margaret had two daughters, Margaret, and Kate who were 14 and 11, respectively when the family settled down in Hydesville.
Interestingly enough their new home was rumored to be haunted. The previous occupants of the home had described how they had encountered a variety of strange phenomena. The list included strange noises which sounded like rapping or tapping on the walls. Margaret and Kate were initially terrified when they encountered this phenomena for themselves. Their bedclothes were pulled off their beds and furniture was moved around the room, all seemingly executed by invisible hands.
Over time the girls mustered up enough gumption to dismiss their fears and began to explore the cause behind the strange happenings in their home, especially the rappings. They eventually developed a code which they used to communicate with the unseen rapper and modern spiritualism was born.
They conducted seances in their home and communicated with the rapper who claimed to be a peddler who had died in the house and had taken up residence there on a permanent basis. The girls soon began to function as mediums who communicated with the spirit of the pedlar and also other spirits.
Many people dismissed the Hydesville rappings and seances as a hoax while others believed the phenomena to have a supernatural origin. In March of 1849, Ellen White was given a vision regarding the Hydesville rappings. She was shown that the rappings were not the result of “human trickery or cunning, but the direct work of evil angels, who thus introduced one of the most successful of soul-destroying delusions”
The Hydesville rappings established an almost universal belief in the immortality of the human soul and the possibility that the dead were able to communicate with the living. However, the Biblical truth regarding the state of man in death was also widely broadcast around the same time, especially by Sabbatarian Adventists.