De Brath, Stanley (1854-1937)

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De Brath, Stanley (1854-1937)

British psychical researcher, author, and translator. De Brath was born in October 1854. He was trained as a civil engineer and spent 20 years in government service in India before becoming headmaster of a preparatory school in England. In 1890 he attended a séance by Cecil Husk (later exposed as a fraud ) and thereafter became intensely interested in psychical research and Spiritualism. His own contributions centered upon his writing, editing, and translating work. His early books include Psychic Philosophy (under the pseudonym "C. Desertis") (1909), The Mysteries of Life (1915), and The Science of Peace (1916).

In 1918 he began spending time in Paris, collaborating with the French researcher Gustave Geley at the Institut Métapsychique International. During this period he was responsible for the English translation of Geley's From the Unconscious to the Conscious (1920), as well as Supernormal Faculties in Man (1923), by Eugèn Osty, and Thirty Years of Psychical Research (1923) by Charles Richet.

In 1924 he assumed editorship of the journal Psychic Science, published by the British College of Psychic Science, London. De Brath's books include Psychical Research, Science and Religion (1925), Religion of the Spirit (1927), and The Drama of Europe (1930). He died December 20, 1937, at Kew, London.

Sources:

Pleasants, Helene, ed. Biographical Dictionary of Parapsychology. New York: Helix Press, 1964.

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De Brath, Stanley (1854-1937)

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