Joanna Southcott Explained

Joanna Southcott[1]
Birth Date:April 1750
Birth Place:Taleford, Devon, England
Death Place:London, England
Occupation:religious prophet

Joanna Southcott (or Southcote; April 1750 – 26 December 1814) was a British self-described religious prophetess from Devon. A "Southcottian" movement continued in various forms after her death; its eighth prophet, Mabel Barltrop, died in 1934.

Early life

Joanna Southcott was born in the hamlet of Taleford, Devonshire, baptised at Ottery St Mary, and raised in the village of Gittisham. Her father, William Southcott (died 1802), ran a small farm. She did dairy work as a girl, and after the death of her mother, Hannah, she went into service, first as a shop-girl in Honiton, then for a considerable time as a domestic servant in Exeter. She was eventually dismissed because a footman whose attentions she rejected claimed that she was "growing mad".[2]

Self-revelation

Originally in the Church of England, she joined the Wesleyans in Exeter in about 1792.[3] She became persuaded that she had supernatural gifts and wrote and dictated prophecies in rhyme. She then announced herself as the Woman of the Apocalypse, spoken of in a prophetic passage of the Revelation (12:1–6).

Southcott came to London at the request of William Sharp, an engraver, and began selling paper "seals of the Lord" at prices varying from twelve shillings to a guinea.[4] The seals were supposed to ensure a holder's place among the 144,000 people ostensibly elected to eternal life.

The new Messiah and death

At the age of 64, Southcott claimed she was pregnant with the new Messiah, the Shiloh of Genesis (49:10). 19 October 1814 was the planned delivery date, but Shiloh failed to appear, and it was given out that she was in a trance. Southcott had a disorder that made her appear pregnant and this fuelled her followers, who numbered about 100,000 by 1814, mainly in the London area.[5]

Southcott died not long after this. Her official date of death was given as 27 December 1814, but it is likely that she died the previous day, as her followers retained her body for some time in the belief that she would be raised from the dead. They agreed to her burial only after the corpse began to decay. She was buried at the Chapel of Ease at St John's Wood in January 1815.[6]

Legacy

The "Southcottian" movement did not end with her death in 1814, although her followers had declined greatly in number by the end of that century. In 1844 one Ann Essam left large sums of money for "printing, publishing and propagation of the sacred writings of Joanna Southcott".[7] [8] The will was disputed in 1861 by her niece on grounds that the writings were blasphemous and the bequest was contrary to the Statutes of Mortmain: the Court of Chancery refused to find the writings blasphemous but voided the bequest, acknowledging that it broke the Statutes of Mortmain.[9] [10]

In 1881 there was an enclave of her followers living in the Chatham area, east of London, who were distinguished by their long beards and good manners.[11] Southcott left a sealed wooden casket of prophecies, usually known as Joanna Southcott's Box, with instructions to open it only at a time of national crisis and in the presence of all 24 current bishops of the Church of England, who were to spend a fixed period beforehand studying her prophecies. Attempts were made to persuade the episcopate to open it in the Crimean War and again in the First World War. In 1927, the psychic researcher Harry Price claimed to have come into possession of the box and arranged to have it opened in the presence of one reluctant prelate, the suffragan Bishop of Grantham. It was found to contain only a few oddments and unimportant papers, among them a lottery ticket and a horse-pistol. Price's claims to have had the true box were disputed by historians and by Southcott followers.[12]

Southcottians who denied the authenticity of the box that was opened in 1927 continued to press for the true box to be opened.[13] A campaign on billboards and in national newspapers such as the Sunday Express was run in the 1960s and 1970s by a prominent group of Southcottians, the Panacea Society in Bedford (formed in 1920), to try to persuade the 24 bishops to have the box opened, claiming: "War, disease, crime and banditry, distress of nations and perplexity will increase until the Bishops open Joanna Southcott's box." The Society claims to hold this true box at a secret location for safekeeping, with its whereabouts to be disclosed only when a bishops' meeting has been arranged. Southcott prophesied that the Day of Judgement would come in the year 2004, and her followers stated that if the contents of the box had not been studied beforehand, the world would have had to meet it unprepared.

Charles Dickens refers to Southcott in a description of the year 1775 at the beginning of A Tale of Two Cities.[14]

Her religious teaching is still practised today by two groups: the Christian Israelite Church and the House of David.

Works

Among her 60 publications may be mentioned:

See also

References

Past finding out, the tragic story of Joanna Southcott and her successors. London: S.P.C.K., 1956

Nathaniel Brassey Halhed, his association with Joanna Southcott. Poona (India): B.O.R. Institute, 1979.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Portrait drawn and engraved by William Sharp, 1812.
  2. Dictionary of National Biography, 1885–1900, vol. 53, p. 277.
  3. Women Writers IV. Novelists, Essayists and Poets – R–Z (London: Jarndyce Antiquarian Booksellers, Summer 2012).
  4. Web site: Remarks on the Writings and Prophecies of Joanna Southcott: being an attempt to prove her assertions inconsistent with the will of God as revealed in the scriptures of eternal truth . Dean&Munday . 1815 . 16 December 2015 . Denham, G . 23.
  5. Robert Chamber's Book of Days, vol. 2, p. 775.
  6. Robert Chamber's Book of Days, vol. 2, p. 775.
  7. Book: Select cases and other authorities on the law of trusts . Law school casebook series . Austin Wakeman Scott . 5th . Little, Brown . 1966 . 682 .
  8. Book: Obstruction of justice by religion: a treatise on religious barbarities of the common law, and a review of judicial oppressions of the non-religious in the United States . Civil liberties in American history . Frank Swancara . Da Capo Press . 1971 . 171 .
  9. Thornton v. Howe, 54 Eng. Rep. 1042 (Ch. 1862).
  10. Book: Report of cases in Chancery: argued and determined in the Rolls court during the time of the Rt Hon. John Romilly, Kt, Master of the rolls, Volume XXXI, 1862 . 14 . Charles Beavan . Charles Beavan . Saunders and Benning . 1863.
  11. Robert Chambers, Book of Days, vol 2, p. 776.
  12. Book: Search for Harry Price . Trevor H. Hall . Duckworth . 0-7156-1143-7 . 1978 . 154–160.
  13. News: Time Magazine . Religion: Servant Woman's Box. https://web.archive.org/web/20081214204109/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,761230,00.html . dead . 14 December 2008 . 8 May 1939 .
  14. Book: Charles Dickens . Charles Dickens . . Spiritual revelations were conceded to England at that favoured period, as at this. She had recently reached her "five-and-twentieth blessed birthday", of whom a prophetic private in the Life Guards had heralded the sublime appearance by announcing that arrangements had been made to swallow up London and Westminster..