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Charlotte Anne Moberly and Eleanor Jourdain


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The Case of Charlotte Anne Moberly and Eleanor Jourdain

 

What exactly happened to Charlotte Anne Moberly and Eleanor Jourdain in a garden on August 10, 1901?

 

On this day, the women took a trip by train to the Palace of Versaille. After the tour of the palace, they decided to walk through the garden to see Petit Trianon, a small chateau where Marie Antionette used to frequent. On their way, the ladies became lost. After wandering, they found a deserted, old farm house with an old plough outside of it. They were growing very tired, but finally saw some men that appeared to be gardeners. One man told them to keep walking straight. At this point, they felt an atmosphere change as they came across another cottage with a woman in the doorway handing a jug to a girl. The women described the experience as seeming artificial like a wax museum. Something didn't feel quite right. There was no breeze, no shading, no twinkling of light coming off any object. It was very strange, indeed. They came across another man wearing a very large, sombrero type hat, and they described him as being extremely homely and rough. He brought them to the Petit Trianon. So, the women crossed a bridge and came upon a woman in an old fashioned dress sketching in the grass.

 

The women eventually had tea and went home, comparing notes on the incident a week later. The women agreed that the palace grounds were haunted. They decided to return one day and could not find the path they previously walked upon. It disappeared. Later, the ladies published a book about the incident called An Adventure (1911), under the pseudonyms of Elizabeth Morison and Frances Lamont. In the book, they claimed that they saw Marie Antionette.

 

So, what really happened to these ladies one fine day in 1901? Were they simply tired and disoriented? Were the grounds haunted, or did the ladies experience some sort of time slip or worm hole? You can read about some of the explanations here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moberly–Jourdain_incident. There are many possibilities that could lean towards the incident not being paranormal, but what do you think? Were these ladies accidental time travel tourists?

 

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How amazing would it have been if they did manage to travel time! But my best guess would be that they were fatigued, not imagining what they both experienced, but just misinterpreted it. On the other hand, I believe our physical world is susceptible to the human soul, and we each leave sort of an imprint, and sometimes our actions are mysteriously replayed, even after we're gone, like a movie replaying. So it

 

 

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Amy Allan, from the Dead Files, mentioned a tweaked energy doorway of sorts that living people can ( although rare ) sometimes pass through, so maybe the two did just that. Don't know if I'd want to accidentally travel to be with Marie Antoinette though, bad timing could cause one to lose their head. o_O

 

 

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  • 4 months later...

Had the two ladies been the only witnesses to time slips at Versailles, it might be possible to dismiss theirs as an isolated oddity, but in fact many other people have had similar experiences there. See Andrew MacKenzies' Adventures in Time. And there are now many similar reports on record from other locations, especially Liverpool, UK.

 

 

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Had the two ladies been the only witnesses to time slips at Versailles, it might be possible to dismiss theirs as an isolated oddity, but in fact many other people have had similar experiences there. See Andrew MacKenzies' Adventures in Time. And there are now many similar reports on record from other locations, especially Liverpool, UK.

I wasn't aware that other people had experiences. Maybe someone should go investigate. Interesting.

 

 

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Not in my opinion. I've come across very few cases that suggest anything other than genuine bewilderment about what happened. Odd temporal distortions don't have the same clout as alien abductions or alleged UFO crashes, and get virtually no publicity, so there would be little motive for hoaxers. In the small country area I have studied I estimate that only a small fraction of witnesses have come forward; some have not even told family or friends. Now that it is becoming more acceptable to report such events the numbers of reports are increasing.

 

 

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I don't know anybody who has studied that case who seriously regards it as a hoax. Some have argued that they were simply mistaken, but in view of the numerous other accounts from that location I discount that. Some areas do generate more time slip cases than others. The book generated no money for them, in fact publication was subsidised by a supporter for many years.

 

 

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They didn't generate money from their book? Unsuccessful hoax then.

 

Which are the places, which generate more time slip cases? Are there tourists, who go there? Do the majority of the tourists have these experiences? Are these places hoax to attract tourists?

 

 

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Most incidents occur in and around Bold Street, near the central station, but some have been reported further out. Over the last few years over 100 cases are said to have occurred, some going back to the 1960s. People were afraid to report them until a policeman witnessed one, and the report was given out on a radio show. Some go back to the 19th Century but most go back to the 50s, 60s, and a few much shorter periods. Many cases report full integration of the witness and interaction with people. Liverpool is now world famous for this and I know of two American researchers who are planning to visit there this year. Obviously the chance of you or anyone else having such an experience on a single visit is pretty small. In the area I researched cases are less frequent (20 reported over a 150 year period).

 

 

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  • 5 months later...

Talking about Liverpool there was a case about 1945 involving children playing around a bombed building. They found a wide iron pipe sealed at both ends but the seal starting to come away from one end and they saw part of a skull. The case never got thoroughly imvestigated butinside the pipe were the remains of a man clad in Victorian clothes. His effects included an invoice from a Liverpool Paint store and some investigation showed that the owner of the store, Thomas Cregeen Williams had vanished in the 1850's. Sounds like a hoax but the case is mentioned in contemporary newspapers and now on some genealogy websites.

 

 

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