During her lifetime, Garrett gave her own birthday as March 17 (
St Patrick's Day), 1893. However, census records show that she was actually born March 14, 1892, and that her birth name was Emily Jane Savage. Garrett published three major autobiographies and many other statements which contradict each other on basic details of her early life. She described an early childhood on a bucolic country estate in Ireland. Research published in 2024 and 2025 showed that this was mostly likely a description of an estate where her uncle worked as a gardener. She also claimed to have been married three times and to have run a teashop and a hostel for wounded soldiers, but there is no evidence that any of this was true; she was employed as a domestic servant and had a child out of wedlock, and for some time had an informal relationship with a man named James Garrett. Garrett began attending meetings of the London Spiritual Alliance around 1920-1921, using the name "Mrs. Garrett" although she was unmarried. Following a breakup with her domestic partner, her commitment to the Alliance became more serious, although Garrett's account of this period remains confused. In 1930, she claimed to channel the words of
Arthur Conan Doyle and the crew of the
R101, which significantly raised her profile. Garrett was not a proponent of the
spiritualist hypothesis and attributed her
mediumship not to spirits but to the activity of a "magnetic field". Garrett wrote "In all my years' professional mediumship I have had no "sign", "test" or slightest evidence to make me believe I have contacted another world." She considered that her trance controls were personalities from her
subconscious and admitted to the parapsychologist
Peter Underwood, "I do not believe in individual survival after death". The main trance controls of Garrett were known as "Abdul Latif" and "Uvani". In 1934 Garrett voluntarily submitted herself to an analysis by the psychologist
William Brown and by word-association tests by the psychical researcher
Whately Carington. The tests had proven that her controls were secondary personalities from her subconscious, organised around repressed material. The psychical researcher
Hereward Carrington with his colleagues also examined the trance controls in many séance sittings. They utilised instruments to measure everything from
galvanic skin response to blood pressure and concluded from the results that the controls were nothing more than secondary personalities of Garrett and there was no spirits or
telepathy involved. Garrett regarded her trance controls as "principles of the subconscious" formed by her own inner needs. Garrett founded the Creative Age Press publishing house, which she later sold to
Farrar, Straus and Young. She also edited
Tomorrow magazine. Garrett died after a long illness on 15 September 1970, in
Nice, France. == Clairvoyance tests ==