The Society's inspiration was the teachings of the Devonshire prophetess
Joanna Southcott (1750–1814). It was founded by
Mabel Barltrop in 1919 at 12 Albany Road, Bedford. A clergyman's widow, Barltrop declared herself the 'daughter of God', took the name
Octavia and believed herself to be the Shiloh of Southcott's prophecies. Barltrop had originally heard of Southcott via a leaflet written by
Alice Seymour. She and 12 apostles founded the Society, originally called the
Community of the Holy Ghost. A central purpose of the Society was to persuade 24
Anglican bishops to open Southcott's sealed box of prophecies and, to this end, advertisements were placed in newspapers, both national and local. In the late 1920s and early 1930s the Society generated over 100,000 petitions for the box to be opened. The Society claimed to be in possession of the original box which they had obtained their box on 27 May 1957 from the widow of Cecil Kaye Jowett. The Panaceans also believed that the one that was opened in 1927 and found to contain a broken
horse pistol and a lottery ticket, was not the genuine box. In 1929 the society purchased castleside, a large house next to their base, that was being used as a boarding house for schoolboys. In the 2000s the surviving members of the society decided that the bishops would be better accommodated in the local hotels. During the 1930s the membership began to dwindle as did Alice Seymour's smaller rival group. Despite this, the group continued placing advertisements in newspapers calling for action from the Church of England. In the 1970s, the Society rented billboards which proclaimed "War, disease, crime and banditry, distress of nations and perplexity will increase until the Bishops open Joanna Southcott's box." Another main activity of the Panacea Society was to offer healing of all diseases, including cancer, to those who would write to its headquarters in Bedford and receive a piece of linen blessed by Octavia. They were instructed to put the linen in a jug of water, pray, and drink this "Water A" four times a day. Water A could then be diluted with additional water, producing "Water B," which should be applied to the body as bath water or through sponges. From 1924 to 2012, some 130,000 applicants received the pieces of linen for free, and were only asked to write back and report on the results of the cure. The correspondence, coming from all over the world, is still conserved in the Bedford Panacea Museum, and has been studied in 2019 in a book by British scholar Alastair Lockhart. . ==Premises==