Posted on 05/01/2009 8:52:06 PM PDT by JoeProBono
Hans Holzer, whose investigations into the paranormal took him to haunted houses all over the world, most notably the Long Island house that inspired The Amityville Horror, died on Sunday at his home in Manhattan. He was 89.
The death was confirmed by his daughter Alexandra Holzer.
Mr. Holzer who wrote more than 140 books on ghosts, the afterlife, witchcraft, extraterrestrial beings and other phenomena associated with the realm he called the other side carried out his most famous investigation with the medium Ethel Johnson-Meyers in 1977. Together they roamed the house in Amityville, in which a young man, Ronald DeFeo Jr., had murdered his parents and four siblings in 1974.
The house had become notorious after its next owners claimed to have been tormented by a series of spine-chilling noises and eerie visitations, set forth in the best-selling 1977 book The Amityville Horror: A True Story, written by Jay Anson.
After Ms. Johnson-Meyers channeled the spirit of a Shinnecock Indian chief, who said that the house stood on an ancient Indian burial ground, Mr. Holzer took photographs of bullet holes from the 1974 murders in which mysterious halos appeared.
Mr. Holzer went on to write a nonfiction book about the house, Murder in Amityville (1979), which formed the basis for the 1982 film Amityville II: The Possession; he also wrote two novels, The Amityville Curse (1981) and The Secret of Amityville (1985).
Hans Holzer was born in Vienna and developed an interest in the supernatural when his uncle Henry told him stories about ghosts and fairies. He studied archaeology, ancient history and numismatics at the University of Vienna but left Austria for New York with his family in 1938, just before the Nazi takeover.
After studying Japanese at Columbia University, Mr. Holzer indulged an infatuation with the theater in the 1950s. He wrote sketches for the short-lived revue Safari! and the book and music for Hotel Excelsior, about a group of young Americans in Paris, which opened in Provincetown, Mass., and proceeded no farther. He also wrote theater reviews for The London Sporting Review.
He earned a masters degree in comparative religion and a doctorate in parapsychology at the London College of Applied Science. He went on to teach parapsychology at the New York Institute of Technology.
In 1962 he married the Countess Catherine Genevieve Buxhoeveden. The marriage ended in divorce. In addition to his daughter Alexandra, of Chester, N.Y., he is survived by another daughter, Nadine Widener of Manhattan, and five grandchildren.
In pursuit of ghosts, Mr. Holzer began investigating haunted houses and recording the testimony of subjects who believed that they had had paranormal experiences. This field research, usually conducted with a medium and a Polaroid camera, provided the material for dozens of books, beginning with Ghost Hunter (1963).
Mr. Holzer called himself a scientific investigator of the paranormal. He disliked the word supernatural, since it implied phenomena beyond the reach of science, and did not believe in the word belief, which suggests an irrational adherence to ideas not supported by fact. Nevertheless, he held in contempt electronic gadgetry for detecting cold spots, magnetic anomalies and the like, preferring direct communication through a medium.
He did believe in reincarnation and past lives (he vividly recalled the Battle of Glencoe in 1692 in one of his Scottish lifetimes) and was a Wiccan high priest, as well as a vegan.
He felt completely at ease with ghosts. In all my years of ghost hunting I have never been afraid, he told Leonard Nimoy on the television series In Search Of (for which he was a consultant). After all, a ghost is only a fellow human being in trouble. Specifically, a human who has died in traumatic circumstances, does not realize he or she is dead and is, as he told the Web site OfSpirit.com in 2003, confused as to their real status.
His continuing ghost quest yielded books like Ghosts Ive Met (1965), Yankee Ghosts (1966), The Great British Ghost Hunt (1975) and Hans Holzers Travel Guide to Haunted Houses (1998). But he had a wide-ranging interest in paranormal phenomena and the occult, reflected in books as varied as Beyond Medicine (1973), Inside Witchcraft (1980) and Love Beyond the Grave (1992).
Mr. Holzer saw life on the other side in sharp detail. As he described it to the Web site ghostvillage.com in 2005, it is strangely like this side, and bureaucratic to boot. The dead who become restless and wish to return to Earth for another go-round must fall in line and register with a clerk.
Hans Holzer, Ghost Hunter, Dies at 89 Ping
oh gee... a legend. Tanks for the PING!
RIP.
Somewhere I have a book of his, “Psychic Archaeology”. I’d need a psychic to find it right now, probably...
Ghost Ping!! Thanks to LucyT for this one!
This portrait of "The Brown Lady" ghost is arguably the most famous and well-regarded ghost photograph ever taken. The ghost is thought to be that of Lady Dorothy Townshend, wife of Charles Townshend, 2nd Viscount of Raynham, residents of Raynham Hall in Norfolk, England in the early 1700s. It was rumored that Dorothy, before her marriage to Charles, had been the mistress of Lord Wharton. Charles suspected Dorothy of infidelity. Although according to legal records she died and was buried in 1726, it was suspected that the funeral was a sham and that Charles had locked his wife away in a remote corner of the house until her death many years later.
Dorothy's ghost is said to haunt the oak staircase and other areas of Raynham Hall. In the early 1800s, King George IV, while staying at Raynham, saw the figure of a woman in a brown dress standing beside his bed. She was seen again standing in the hall in 1835 by Colonel Loftus, who was visiting for the Christmas holidays. He saw her again a week later and described her as wearing a brown satin dress, her skin glowing with a pale luminescence. It also seemed to him that her eyes had been gouged out. A few years later, Captain Frederick Marryat and two friends saw "the Brown Lady" gliding along an upstairs hallway, carrying a lantern. As she passed, Marryat said, she grinned at the men in a "diabolical manner." Marryat fired a pistol at the apparition, but the bullet simply passed through.
This famous photo was taken in September, 1936 by Captain Provand and Indre Shira, two photographers who were assigned to photograph Raynham Hall for Country Life magazine. This is what happened, according to Shira:
"Captain Provand took one photograph while I flashed the light. He was focusing for another exposure; I was standing by his side just behind the camera with the flashlight pistol in my hand, looking directly up the staircase. All at once I detected an ethereal veiled form coming slowly down the stairs. Rather excitedly, I called out sharply: 'Quick, quick, there's something.' I pressed the trigger of the flashlight pistol. After the flash and on closing the shutter, Captain Provand removed the focusing cloth from his head and turning to me said: 'What's all the excitement about?'"
Upon developing the film, the image of The Brown Lady ghost was seen for the first time. It was published in the December 16, 1936 issue of Country Life. The ghost has been seen occasionally since.
http://paranormal.about.com/od/ghostphotos/ig/Best-Ghost-Photos/The-Brown-Lady.htm
Me too. Back around 1965 or 1966, I was in the small deli across from where I worked. They sold paperback books on a turnstill. I picked up one of Holzer's books for the first time, and became an avid fan after that. I bought all of his books on ghosts over the years. I made the mistake of loaning them out to the sister of my then boyfriend, and never got them back. Years later I found his huge volume of Ghosts, and bought it. I believe it contains all of the cases he featured in his previous books.
Since that first book, I've been captivated by the subject of ghosts and hauntings. Although I've never seen a ghost myself, or experienced anything that I believe is paranormal, I still believe.
RIP Mr. Holzer. You turned a lot of people onto the paranormal. Thank you for many hours of enjoyable reading.
I believe her name was Sybil Leek, and she was British I think. It's amazing the things that stick in your mind. I can't remember what I had for lunch yesterday.
No, it's because there's just too many incidents that cannot be explained away to natural causes. Who am I to say others haven't experienced them? Ghost sightings have been recorded for centuries. I've never seen Jesus or the Holy Mother either, yet I still believe in them.
You make a very good point!
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