Mabel Barltrop Explained

Mabel Barltrop
Birth Name:Mabel Andrews
Birth Date:11 January 1866
Birth Place:Peckham, London, United Kingdom
Death Place:Bedford, Bedfordshire, United Kingdom
Other Names:Octavia
Known For:Founder of religious movement and prophet
Spouse:Arthur Henry Barltrop

Mabel Barltrop (Andrews; 11 January 1866 – 16 October 1934), later known as Octavia Barltrop, was the British founder of the Panacea Society. She founded a community in Bedford where she was "God the daughter". Her group campaigned to have Joanna Southcott's box opened, but this required the attendance of 24 bishops.

Life

Barltrop was born in Peckham, London. One of her godparents was Coventry Patmore who married her father's sister Emily and they were both writers. In 1875 her father, Augustus Charles Andrews, died and she and her invalid mother, Katherine Ann Andrews (Buxton), moved to Croydon to live with Mabel's aunt, Fanny Waldron, who was a widow.[1] Her mother was high church, her aunt was low church and her father's father had been a Congregational minister.[1]

When she was eighteen she began a long engagement with Arthur Henry Barltrop who was training to be a Church of England clergyman at a training college in Chichester. The engagement was partially occupied with getting to know her godparent and other relatives. Another of her father's siblings was Eliza, who had been a governess to Elizabeth Barrett Browning. Eliza had married Charles Orme[1] and they had a daughter also named Eliza Orme, who became the first woman to gain a UK law degree.[2]

Her fiancé completed theological college in 1888; he took up a position as a curate in Dover the following year, and the couple married in London on 1 June 1889. They had four children between 1890 and 1898. Her husband continued to work as a curate until 1902, in Maidstone and then Croydon; he never became a vicar. In 1902, he became ill and the family later went to live in Bedford. He died in 1906 and Barltrop was treated residentially for melancholia. She took work as an editor and her aunt, Fanny Barltrop, joined her household.[1]

Barltrop heard of Joanna Southcott via a leaflet written by Alice Seymour.[3] She was inspired by the teachings of the Devonshire prophetess, who had died aged 64 claiming to be pregnant with a messiah.[4] Seymour arranged for the publication of Southcott's works and a magazine, but it was Barltrop who was to lead the larger Southcottian group. Seymour objected to Barltrop but they never fell out as Seymour wanted to be present when Barltrop's group organised a reopening of Southcott's box. One of Seymour's followers, Ellen Oliver, joined Barltrop's emerging group.[5]

The daughter of God

Barltrop and twelve apostles founded the Society which they called the Community of the Holy Ghost.[6] It was founded in 1919 at 12 Albany Road, Bedford, and it was believed to be the site of the Garden of Eden. Barltrop declared herself the "daughter of God",[7] took the name "Octavia" and believed herself to be the Shiloh mentioned in Southcott's prophecies. This was not her original idea as it was suggested by Ellen Oliver on 14 February 1919 and supported by Rachel Fox who decided that Barltrop was the eighth Southcottian prophet and should therefore be called "Octavia". The Christian Trinity was rethought to include, God the Father, God the Mother (the Holy Spirit), Jesus the Son, and Octavia the Daughter. Once identified, she appeared to be born to it and she would set aside a time every day, 5:30, to use automatic writing to create a daily "Writing of the Holy Ghost". These writings were typed and discussed.[8] When published as "The Writings of the Holy Ghost" these messages ran to sixteen volumes.[9] The Society campaigned to persuade 24 Anglican bishops to open a sealed box of prophecies that had been left with instructions by Joanna Southcott. Advertisements were placed in newspapers and in the late 1920s and early 1930s, the Society generated over 100,000 petitions for the box to be opened.[10]

In 1921 Emily Goodwin joined Barltrop's household to look after her aged aunt Fanny. Emily also joined the Panacea community. In 1923 it was discovered that one of the community's members was leading a group of gay males and that he was trying to join the community's leadership. They ejected Edgar Peissart from the community and he returned to America, where Emily Goodwin predicted he would die. When they heard that he had died the same year, Emily's position was elevated and she declared herself "The Divine Mother".[1] thumb|Joanna Southcott's Box is today in The Panacea Museum in BedfordThe society was anticipating the second coming of Christ, but in 1923 Barltrop decided that her late husband had been Jesus and they were therefore waiting for the third coming of Christ.

Barltrop died in Bedford of diabetes,[1] but her followers were in denial for three days. They kept her body warm expecting her to resurrect. Her body was only confined to a coffin when this failed to happen.[11] She was buried in Bedford with her name recorded as "M.B." and with the message "I am the Resurrection and the Life". She is buried in the Foster Hill Road Cemetery together with over a hundred of her supporters.[12]

Legacy

After her death, the movement continued to thrive.[1] In 2011, Jane Shaw published Octavia, Daughter of God: The Story of a Female Messiah and her Followers which described her life and work. The book was criticised by Frances Stonor Saunders for not exposing Barltrop's delusions. Shaw was at the time a trustee of the Panacea charity.[13] The last member of the Panacea community died in 2012. In 2019 the resulting charity was worth £34m. A play was performed in Bedford based on Panacea and her life in 2019.[14] The local museum had a gallery for famous people from Bedford and the women included suffragist Amy Walmsley, Barltrop and deaconess Fanny Eagles.[15]

Notes and References

  1. Barltrop, Mabel [name in religion Octavia] (1866–1934), prophet and founder of the Panacea Society]. 17 November 2021. 2012. en. 10.1093/ref:odnb/93402. 978-0-19-861412-8. Shaw. Jane.
  2. Web site: Eliza Orme First 100 Years. 17 November 2021. first100years.org.uk.
  3. Book: The History of a Modern Millennial Movement: The Southcottians. Shaw. Jane. Lockley. Philip. 30 May 2017. I.B.Tauris. 9781786721907. en.
  4. News: The woman who said Jesus would return – to Bedford. Alex. Pope. BBC News. 17 November 2019. 17 November 2021.
  5. Seymour, Alice (1857–1947), schoolteacher and expositor and publisher of the writings of Joanna Southcott. 2004. Oxford. 10.1093/ref:odnb/93403. 978-0-19-861411-1. 18 November 2021.
  6. Web site: Octavia, the founder of the Panacea Society. Panacea Charitable Trust and Museum. 24 January 2017. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20170130010424/http://panaceatrust.org/history-of-the-panacea-society/octavia/. 30 January 2017.
  7. Web site: Private lives made public. www.churchtimes.co.uk.
  8. Book: Rowland, Christopher. Radical Prophet: The Mystics, Subversives and Visionaries Who Foretold the End of the World. 30 August 2017. Bloomsbury Publishing. 978-1-78673-238-5. en. 55.
  9. Book: Shaw, Jane. Octavia, Daughter of God. 335. 29 February 2012. Random House. 978-1-4464-8427-2. en.
  10. Web site: Panacea Society. Panacea Charitable Trust and Museum. 24 January 2017. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20170130005211/http://panaceatrust.org/history-of-the-panacea-society/. 30 January 2017.
  11. Web site: Mohammed. Sagal. 9 June 2019. Mabel Barltrop: Polite society's least likely cult leader. 17 November 2021. YOU Magazine. en-US.
  12. Web site: Bean. Adrian. 23 August 2021. Mabel Barltrop and the Panacea Society Graves. 18 November 2021. Foster Hill Road Cemetery. en-GB.
  13. Web site: Saunders. Frances Stonor. 30 June 2011. Octavia, Daughter of God by Jane Shaw – review. 18 November 2021. The Guardian. en.
  14. Web site: Roffe. Erica. 11 October 2019. Panacea play coincides with centenary of Bedford's secretive sect. 17 November 2021. Bedford Independent. en-GB.
  15. Web site: Galleries . 12 February 2023 . www.thehigginsbedford.org.uk.