Calls
to pardon 'UK's last witch'
BBC
News
The
family of the last person in the UK to be prosecuted under the Witchcraft Act
will mark the 50th anniversary of her death by calling for her pardon.
Medium
Helen Duncan, who was born in Callander, Perthshire, was imprisoned using the
law during World War II.
She
was targeted by the government after revealing to a séance audience that
a warship had sunk before the news had been released to the public.
Her
grand-daughter is particularly angry at the accusations of treason.
Mary
Martin, of Edinburgh, said Mrs Duncan had been accused of being a traitor.
Spiritualist
churches
"When
she first came back home after prison she was never the same.
"She
always had a bit of a glow about her but she seemed to have lost that.
"Some
people said it was treason. My grandmother had two sons and two son in laws in
the forces ... and there is no way she would have given anybody information."
Mrs
Duncan became one of the most famous mediums of her time, heading a network of
spiritualist churches.
During
the war she lived in Portsmouth, the home of the Royal Navy.
She
has put us on the right side of the law by bringing in the 1952 act
Mary Armour
Medium
At
a séance in 1943 it was claimed that the spirit of a sailor from the HMS
Barham appeared.
The
vessel was only officially declared lost several months later.
She
was arrested in 1944 and sentenced to nine months in prison at the Old Bailey
for crimes under the Witchcraft Act of 1735.
While
in prison she was visited by Winston Churchill.
When
he was re-elected in 1951 the Witchcraft Act was repealed and three years later
spiritualism was officially recognised as a religion.
Campaigners
to pardon Mrs Duncan have set up an online petition.
The
campaign is backed by the British Society of Paranormal Studies.
Medium
Mary Armour, who wrote her biography, said: "She has put us on the right
side of the law by bringing in the 1952 act."