of
Banner of Light. Her Brother, Charles H. Crowell. The ghostly image of the medium's brother appears behind her in this Albumen print carte de visite. The
Banner of Light began as a general
literary magazine with some mentions of spiritualism and a page titled
The Messenger covering Mrs. Conant's seances. The first issue proclaimed that it had, "FORTY COLUMNS OF ATTRACTIVE READING, comprising Capital Original Stories; Off-hand Sketches of Life; Historical Pictures; thrilling Adventures; Home Circle; Ladies' and Children's Department; Agricultural Facts, Mechanical Inventions, Art, Science, Wit, Wisdom, the Beauties of Poetry, and a General Summary of Political and Social News." In the third issue the publishers said that due to readers' response the journal would place greater emphasis on spiritualism, with at least two pages covering the movement. From then the
Banner of Light was "An Exponent of the Spiritual Philosophy of the Nineteenth Century."
Banner of Light held free seances in its spirit room three times per week. It advertised: The short messages "from the departed to their friends in earth-life" received in these seances were published in
The Messenger, later
The Message Page, of each issue. The Message Department was "a page of Spirit-Messages from the departed to their friends in earth-life, given through the mediumship of Mrs. J. H. Conant, providing direct spirit-intercourse between the Mundane and Super-Mundane Worlds." Fanny Conant was the regular medium for the first eighteen years, then Jennie S. Rudd for three years and Mary Theresa Longley for 14 years.
The Banner published letters from readers who recognized that communicating spirit was authentic. It did not discuss messages that were not authenticated. The feature was highly successful and was copied by other spiritualist journals. The
Banner of Light provides a valuable resource for understanding the history of the spiritualist movement in the US, and counted among its employees or contributors all the main members of this movement. The journal published the sermons of
Henry Ward Beecher and other well-known ministers, and essays on spiritualism and reform. There were lengthy book reviews. The journal advertised lectures and debates and had a column that tracked the movements of lecturers and mediums. There were news items on development of spiritualism around the country, and many letters discussing controversies in the movement. The journal avoided criticism of even the most obviously fraudulent mediums, and also failed to oppose the "free love" or radical spiritualists. The journal also serialized "original novelettes of reformatory tendencies," often running several at the same time. Historian
Drew Gilpin Faust searched in the database of the National Park Services, which contains the records of 6.3 million soldiers, three names of supposed dead soldiers that appear in the pages of
Banner of Light: Caleb Wilkins of Indiana, Gilbert Thompson of Alabama and Leander Bolton of Pennsylvania. None of those names match any names in that database. ==References==