Journeying to Foreign Lands
Gerald Brosseau Gardner, who played such an important and central role in the modern revival of witchcraft, remains very much an enigma. A mercurial character as befitted his Gemini star sign, he has variously been described by his friends, critics, and enemies as a brilliant scholar, a lovable rogue, a charlatan, a compulsive liar, and a sexual pervert. Over forty years after his death, controversy still rages as to whether he created Wicca from an eclectic combination of material drawn from esoteric sources, or was the rightful heir to a genuine historical witchcraft tradition.
Gardner was born on June 13, 1884, into a wealthy middle-class family living at Blundellsands in Lancashire, a Victorian housing development on the coast a few miles north of Liverpool. In those days the city was a busy port and the Gardner family had obtained their wealth from the timber trade. Gardner’s father was a partner in the family business of Joseph Gardner and Sons, which had been founded in the eighteenth century. This background meant that Gardner inherited money in later life and did not have to worry about an income when he retired. The Gardners claimed to have had Scottish ancestry, something that obviously caught Gerald Gardner’s imagination as there are several photographs showing him wearing full Highland regalia, including a kilt. In his will he left to his relatives a dirk (a traditional Scottish ceremonial dagger) that had been passed down through the family.
In an interview that Gardner gave to the Scottish newspaper the Daily Record, he actually said that he was a Scot and that his parental home was in North Berwick, a place that was coincidentally associated with a famous sixteenth-century witch trial. He also mentioned that his grandfather had lived there and was a witch. This claim was based on a story Gardner had been told by distant relatives that his grandfather Joseph, the founder of the family business, had married a woman who was involved in witchcraft. Allegedly, she had led Joseph Gardner into “wicked ways” by taking him “up into the hills [where] secret meetings and horrible rites were held.” This was regarded as a great scandal in the family and nobody talked about it. (Bracelin 1960: 114–115.) Years later, when Gardner met a coven of witches in the New Forest, he told them he also had a Scottish ancestor called Grizell Gardner who had been burnt at the stake in Newburgh as a witch in 1640. However there is no evidence linking her with Gardner’s branch of the family.
Despite this, Gardner continued to cultivate his Scottish connections, possibly for romantic reasons, and in the 1950s he initiated Charles Clark, who lived at Saltcoats in the west of Scotland, and Monique Wilson, who lived in Perth. Although Clark gave up his activities in the Craft, Wilson became recognized as the High Priestess of Gardnerian Wicca in the late 1950s and early 1960s. When Gardner died in February 1964, she inherited his witchcraft museum on the Isle of Man, but lost her position as Wicca’s chief witch.
In fact, the Gardner family legitimately traced its descent from Simon le Gardiner, who lived in the fourteenth century. Another illustrious ancestor was Alan Gardner, who served in the Royal Navy in the eighteenth century, was promoted to Vice Admiral, became a Member of the British Parliament, and was finally given the title of Baron Uttoexeter. In 1807, he was appointed as the commander-in-chief of the Channel Fleet and in that position had the task of defending England from invasion by Napoleon and his French army. Several forebears of Gardner served the monarch and country in the Navy or the Customs Service, as did Gerald Gardner later in his life when he lived in the Far East.
As well as his alleged family connections with Scotland, Gardner also claimed more colorful and exotic links with India and the British Raj. A nephew of Baron Uttoexeter belonged to Gardner’s Horse Regiment, an irregular cavalry unit set up by the East India Company, and he also served in a military role for the Maharaja Holkar of Manratta. He married an Indian princess who was supposed to have been descended from Genghis Khan. Unfortunately the Maharaja did not approve of the match and accused the British officer of treachery. He only escaped execution by leaping off a forty-foot cliff into a stream and then disguising himself as a native to reach a British Army camp.
As a child Gardner suffered from asthma, which has been described as “the occultist’s disease.” His childhood was dominated by the presence of nursemaids who looked after him, and the last of these, an Irish woman named Josephine “Com” McCombie, was to have a major influence on his life. Gardner’s education as a child was elementary and, helped by Com, he taught himself to read using back issues of the Strand magazine. In later years, Gardner used the title of Doctor, and told journalists he had received his doctorate from Singapore University. He said it had been given to him in 1934 and he also had a doctorate in literature from the University of Toulouse in France. When he joined the Folklore Society in 1939, he added a master of arts degree to his educational credentials. Doreen Valiente investigated these claims and has said that the University of Singapore did not exist in 1934 and the University of Toulouse had never heard of Gardner. Valiente suggests, jokingly, that the M.A. may have stood for “Magical Adept” (1989: 41–42).
At the time that Gardner claimed he received his doctorate in Singapore, he was contributing articles to the Malayan edition of the Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, and in 1936 his influential book Kris and Other Malay Weapons was published. Doreen Valiente suggested that the publisher might not have wanted to take the book because Gardner did not have a suitable academic background. Therefore he invented the Singapore doctorate to give himself some local credibility (letter from DV to Dr. Alan Greenfield, November 29, 1993, in the Museum of Witchcraft archive at Boscastle, Cornwall).
Because of Gardner’s ongoing health problems, Com persuaded his parents that short trips to foreign climates would be beneficial for their young son. From 1888 to 1898, the nurse and her charge took a series of holidays together in Nice, the Canary Islands, Madeira, and Accra in West Africa. It was in Madeira that Com met David Elkington, a young man who was en route to South Africa. Elkington fell in love with the Irish nurse and this was to change both her life and Gerald Gardner’s. The young man asked Com to marry him and live on a tea plantation in Ceylon (modern Sri Lanka) that he owned. Somehow Com persuaded Gardner’s parents that a tropical climate would be a cure for his asthma. Elkington offered him a job on the plantation and in 1900 the three of them moved to the tea estate on the island. Interestingly enough, it has been claimed that in that year the English occultists Allan Bennett and Aleister Crowley were also staying at a bungalow nearby. In 1902, Gardner and Elkington had a row and he took a new job on a rubber plantation. He also joined the local militia known as the Planter’s Rifle Corp, which probably triggered his lifelong interest in weaponry.
The biography of Gerald Gardner, written by the Sufi master Idries Shah, but credited to Jack Bracelin, states that Gardner became a Freemason while he was working in Ceylon (1960: 32–33). The date given is 1908, but according to the archives of the Grand Lodge at Freemasons’ Hall in London, he was initiated into the first degree as an Entered Apprentice in the Sphinx Lodge in Colombo on May 23, 1910. He was then raised to the second degree on June 20, 1910, and became a Master Mason a week later on June 27. According to the lodge’s records, he resigned shortly afterwards.
When Gardner met Aleister Crowley in 1947, he told him that he held the high degree of a Royal Arch Mason. It is also possible that he was also a Co-Mason and the Bracelin biography says he “had a soft spot for the [Masonic] Craft, and nowadays feels that there are close similarities in the craft of the Witches; in fact he goes so far as to say that Witchcraft is the original lodge” (Ibid., 33). Of course Gardner’s critics merely said that he was influenced by Freemasonry when he created the three degrees of initiation into Wicca.
In 1908, Gardner answered an advertisement in a local newspaper seeking planters to work in Borneo. He instantly became interested in the local fauna and flora and also managed to get acquainted with a local tribe of headhunters called the Dyaks who usually shunned Europeans. He was particularly interested in their religious beliefs, and was given the rare privilege (for a white man) to be allowed to attend some of their rituals. Gardner became friendly with the family of one of the tribe’s female mediums, and the pawong, or witch-doctor to whom she was related. We can surmise that this was Gardner’s first encounter with the supernatural and the spirit world. Through his experiences with the Dyaks, he said he had “learned to adopt their belief in the naturalness of the occult” (Ibid., 49).
Gardner left Borneo in 1911 and traveled to Singapore to catch a boat to Ceylon, where he was hoping to find suitable work. Instead he was offered a new position on a rubber plantation in central Malaya. There he met an American called Cornwall, who was responsible for building railway lines and factories in the jungle. Cornwall had lived in the country for many years and had gone native. He wore the ethnic costume, had converted to Islam, and married several Malay women. Even more interesting, as far as Gardner was concerned, the American knew a lot about the local magical practices and voodoo. Gardner told him the story about his witch grandfather, and they spent long evenings discussing the native religious beliefs and the practice of the occult in Europe and the United States.
In the next few years Gardner worked on several rubber plantations before he returned to England on leave in 1916. He wanted to join the Army fighting in France but failed the physical test. This was partly due to his asthma and also because he had suffered from blackwater fever and malaria while in Malaya. Instead he became an orderly in a hospital in Liverpool where he helped to treat survivors of the Battle of the Somme. At the end of World War I in 1918, Gardner went back to Malaya, but discovered that in his absence the price of rubber had fallen. When he returned in 1920, after another period of leave, he was made redundant. He took up a new job as a plantation inspector, and then in 1923 became a Customs officer, checking on the rubber dealers and hunting down opium smugglers. Bracelin’s biography features a photograph of Gardner standing on his Customs motor launch with a revolver in a holster strapped to his belt.
While he was a Customs officer, Gardner continued to study the local magical beliefs of the Malay people, especially those of the Sakis, a little-known tribe of small people who lived deep in the jungle. The Chinese Malay feared them as wild people who used spears of fire-hardened bamboo and blowpipes that shot arrows tipped with a deadly poison from a local tree. Gardner managed to locate the tribe and learned their magical techniques. These involved their women dancing around a fire, throwing narcotic plants on the flames, and working themselves into an orgiastic frenzy. The Sakis believed that illnesses and diseases were caused by demons possessing the sick person, and these spirits could only be driven out by the use of spells and rites of exorcism.
Gardner had also become fascinated by the kris or keris—a curved Malay dagger with a wavy blade that was sometimes used in rituals and for magical purposes. He discovered that the keris featured in a cursing rite that was similar to the “pointing of the bone” ritual practiced by the Australian aborigines. The Malay magicians believed that every keris was inhabited by a spirit or spirit force and this could be used against an enemy. The daggers were believed to protect their owners against physical harm, and allegedly made them invulnerable to bullets. Gardner became an expert on the keris and, as we have seen, wrote a book on the subject that is still regarded as the classic reference work.
In the 1930s, Gardner became interested in archaeology. He took part in several excavations in Malaya, Egypt, Jordan, Palestine (modern Israel), France, Cyprus, and China. During visits back to England he also participated in digs in Devon and Wiltshire. In January 1936, Gardner worked on an archeological site about twenty-five miles from Jerusalem. This expedition revealed the existence of an ancient temple dedicated to both the Hebrew tribal god, Yahweh, and the Canaanite fertility goddess, Astaroth. She was worshipped as the “Queen of the Heaven,” with sacrificial offerings of incense and cakes at stone altars set up in sacred groves on the hills around Jerusalem. This was at a time when the Hebrews were supposed to be monotheists. This important find revolutionized Middle Eastern history, as it indicated that after their exodus from Egypt the children of Israel had adopted the worship of native deities in Canaan—the so-called “Promised Land” of Moses—in addition to their worship of the one God.
Gardner had returned to England from the Far East on leave from the Customs Service in 1927. While visiting relatives in Liverpool, out of curiosity he attended the local Spiritualist church. After a short Christian service, a medium took the stage, went into a trance and began to communicate messages from the spirits on the “other side” to the audience. Gardner was not impressed by the quality of the messages, however his interest in psychic matters continued, and he was told that the best mediums could be found working in London. His former nurse Com and her husband David Elkington were now living in retirement in Hereford, and Gardner spent two days with them before traveling on to the capital city.
Once there, Gardner made appointments to see several well-known mediums, but again he was disappointed with the results. Then he visited one who used automatic writing to contact the spirits. She correctly described the house he had been born in and gave him the names of his brothers, their wives and children, and his first nurse as a child. However, despite this factual evidence, Gardner was not convinced that spirits were actually giving the woman messages. He dismissed the reading as telepathy, in itself evidence of the use of psychic powers.
When Gardner visited the Spiritualist Alliance headquarters in London, the medium he saw gave him evidence about his family that convinced him she was genuine A spirit spoke through the medium, claiming to be Gardner’s cousin, and he felt her as a tangible presence in the room. She told him that something nice would happen to him shortly, and that as a result his return to Malaya would be delayed. A few days later Gardner was introduced to a vicar’s daughter, Dorothea Frances Rosedale, known to everyone as Donna, who worked as a nursing sister at St. Thomas’ Hospital. Shortly afterwards they were married by the bishop of London, and Gardner was given permission to extend his leave for two months for a honeymoon in France and Spain.
In 1936, at the age of fifty-two, Gerald Gardner took early retirement from the Customs Service and returned to England permanently. He and Donna took an apartment on the Charing Cross Road, a Central London street renowned for its many secondhand and antiquarian bookshops. Unfortunately, the cold British weather affected Gardner’s fragile health and he caught a cold that he could not get rid of. When he had been on leave in 1932, a doctor had recommended the healthy benefits of naturism, as it exposed the naked body to sunshine. Gardner inquired about the existence of naturist clubs, and in 1936 finally was able to find one in Finchley, North London. It was situated in a large house with a gymnasium, a ballroom, and a clubroom, and was run under the auspices of the Sub Bathing Society (Heselton 2000: 25). It was at this club that Gardner met people who “had a faint occult interest” in fortunetelling, astrology, palmistry, and Spiritualism, as well as naturism (Bracelin 1960: 142).
In March 1939, Gardner applied to join the Folklore Society where he met the Egyptologist and anthropologist Dr. Margaret Murray (1863–1963). She was the author of two books on witchcraft, The Witch Cult in Western Europe (1921) and The God of the Witches (1931). In her ground-breaking books, Dr. Murray put forward the controversial theory that historical witchcraft was the survival of a prehistoric fertility cult. This meeting may have been significant to the development of Gardner’s later ideas about witchcraft. The two stayed in contact, and in 1954 Dr. Murray wrote an introduction to Gardner’s first nonfiction book, Witchcraft Today.
Gardner’s relationship with the Folklore Society was apparently a very difficult one and is still remembered. One leading member of the Society, the folklorist Christina Hole, described Gardner as having a “curious personality.” He did not inspire confidence in the other members who also had an interest in witchcraft, and his theories on the subject were generally regarded as “somewhat peculiar.” Writing in the Folklore Society News (July 1992), Jacqueline Simpson, a former president of the FLS, said that Gardner was seen as “flamboyant and sinister.” At one meeting, the ruling council even discussed whether his membership was advantageous to the Society and if he should be asked to resign. When Witchcraft Today was published and Gardner publicly came out of the broom closet as a witch, the FLS distanced itself from him. In fact, when he died, an obituary was significantly not published in the Folklore journal.
In June 1939, Gardner contributed an article to the journal about a wooden box he had obtained that allegedly contained items once belonging to the infamous seventeenth-century “Witch-finder General” Matthew Hopkins. In the same issue was an article by Lady Raglan in which she first used the term “Green Man” to describe the foliate masks found in pre-Reformation churches. The objects in the box as described by Gardner in his article had been given to him by an unknown benefactor who must have been aware of his interest in witchcraft. The box had a nineteenth-century label on it that read: “This talisman [sic] made and sold by Matthew Hopkins … was given to my father, Joseph Carter of Home Farm, Hill Top, nr Marlborough [Wiltshire] and contains the finger of Mary Holt, the notorious Wiltshire witch. [signed] S. Carter.”
The objects in the box included some dried flowers, a twig shaped like a cockerel’s claw, some pieces of tree bark, a hawthorn twig covered in moss, a (human?) bone with skin attached, an unidentified bird claw, a scrap of parchment with the words “Matthew Hopkins talisman against all witch-crafts” written on it in modern lettering, a small wax head with hair attached and affixed with a rusty pin, a Seal of Solomon (six-pointed star) made from lead, and a human finger bone that presumably belonged to the aforementioned Wiltshire witch.
Gardner had also acquired several other objects that he said were connected with the practice of witchcraft. These objects included a small baton or wand measuring twelve and a half inches in length and surmounted by a cross made of (human?) bone. Attached to it was a tattered label stating that the object was “Matthew Hopkins’ scepter or tutti stick,” and it had been used by the witch-hunter “during his travels in the south of England, finding and exposing witches.” Although the article said that the objects had been examined by Dr. Margaret Murray and Gardner’s friend Father Ward of the Abbey Park Folk Museum, who believed they were genuine, there was no evidence that they ever belonged to Hopkins. In fact it is difficult to see how anyone could have verified they were authentic. It is possible that Hopkins confiscated them from the witches he had persecuted and, although he was supposed to have died from consumption, there is a legend that he was swam as a witch himself and drowned. In some cases cunning men or folk magicians acted as witch-finders—it is possible Hopkins was one of these and had a profitable sideline in anti-witchcraft charms.
Another strange object associated with witchcraft that was in Gardner’s possession at the time was also mentioned in the article. This was described as a “Witches’ Moon Dial,” and resembled a standard sundial, except it was carved with what looked like some kind of runic letters. The piece of paper that accompanied it stated it was a “Witches Moon Dial used by them at midnight. Made of human bone with only seven sections, the seven hours of dread. Found near Wayland the Smith’s cave on the borders of Wiltshire and Berkshire.” The cave referred to is actually a prehistoric burial mound on the Ridgeway near the White Horse hill figure at Uffington. Philip Heselton has speculated that Gardner may have been involved in the excavation of this site during one of his visits to England in 1932 (2000: 27).
Through his visits to Cyprus, Gardner had met Father John Sebastian Marlow Ward. Gardner visited the island in 1938, and went to the museum in Nicosia. He got into a conversation with the curator about how the Bronze Age inhabitants had manufactured their swords. The museum authorities could not work out how it was done and Gardner borrowed an ancient sword blade, took it away, and managed to fix a haft or handle to it. From this experience and dreams he had about Cyprus before he visited it, Gardner became convinced he had been incarnated there in ancient times as a sword maker. He even recognized some of the places he visited from his dreams. As a result he wrote his first novel, A Goddess Arrives, which is set on the island in pagan times.
On a return visit to Cyprus in 1939, Gardner met Father Ward and purchased a piece of land that he owned on the island. It was one of the many places that Gardner claimed he had seen in his dreams. His plan was to build a holiday home on it for his winter visits, but World War II intervened and he had to abandon the plan. Cecil Williamson told me that Gardner’s original idea was to erect a temple dedicated to Aphrodite, the goddess of love. Unfortunately the locals objected and the Cyprian government refused to grant planning permission.
Bracelin’s biography is unclear as to whether Gardner and Father Ward knew each other before their meeting in 1939. Certainly Ward worked in Burma as a Customs officer, and the two men shared common interests. Ward was a senior Freemason and wrote books about its history and esoteric symbolism, linking it to the ancient mystery cults of paganism. He was also an expert on Chinese secret societies such as the Triads, and co-authored a book on the subject that was used as a standard reference work by police forces all over the world fighting organized crime.
In Burma, Ward also worked as the headmaster of a Church of England school and from 1918 to 1930 was the director of the intelligence unit of the Federation of British Industries. On his return to England in 1929, Ward and his second wife began to experience visions telling them to prepare for the imminent Second Coming of Christ. Guided by their visions and a guardian angel, the Wards bought a large piece of land at New Barnet in Hertfordshire and founded a group called the Confraternity of Christ the King. Its members gave up their previous lives when they joined the community, changed their names and swore vows of poverty, obedience, and self-sacrifice.
A fifteenth-century half-timbered tithe barn was purchased and re-erected on the site to serve as the sect’s chapel. The building was consecrated on St. Valentine’s Day, 1931, by the Anglo-Catholic bishop of the nearby town of St. Albans (named after the first Christian martyr), and the bishop appointed a vicar to act as the chaplain to the new community. A school called St. Michael’s College was also founded, teaching such unorthodox subjects as reincarnation, the feminine nature of the Holy Spirit, and that Christ was the son of God, the Father, and God, the Mother. When news of this reached the bishop he refused to approve the renewal of the license for the community’s chaplain. Father Ward, as he was now calling himself, responded by launching a verbal attack questioning the validity and authority of the Anglican bishops and the priesthood.
In 1935, Ward severed his connection completely with the Anglican Church and instead he and his wife were ordained in the Orthodox Catholic Church or the Orthodox Keltic Church, a heterodoxical anti-papal Christian sect. The Bracelin biography also says that Ward approached a friend of his who was the patriarch of Antioch and became a priest and a bishop in the Greek Orthodox Church. At first Gardner was dismissive of these pseudo-clerical activities by the Wards and rather ironically said: “I do not doubt for a moment their sincerity but it did seem to me that they fancied themselves as the Abbot and Lady Abbess. Ward wanted a secret society, and liked to indulge his hobbies” (Bracelin 1960: 143).
Despite his opinion of the Wards, in 1946 Gardner himself was ordained into the Ancient British Church. Philip Heselton refers to a diploma found among the books in Gardner’s library after his death that says he was made a priest of the Church, which was also known as the Fellowship of the Holy Grail (2003: 140–141). There is a story that Gardner was a regular visitor to Ward’s Abbey, and frequently appeared wearing a clerical collar. When Gardner legally registered his covenstead at Brickett Wood as a place for worship, he used the name of the Ancient British Church as a cover to give it some respectability. Heselton thinks that Gardner was only ordained as a status symbol, perhaps compensating for his lack of academic qualifications. He does not believe he ever took an active part in either Ward’s Orthodox Catholic Church or the Ancient British Church.
Dr. Joanne Pearson believes that Gardner’s membership in these heretical Christian sects was in keeping with his “predilections for joining little-known secret societies.” Gardner was also a member of the Ancient Druid Order and as there were links between the Ancient British Church and neo-druidism this may have been part of its attraction (2007: 55). Like many occultists of his generation, even professed pagan ones, Gardner always made a distinction between Celtic Christianity, as promoted by the Ancient British Church, and Roman Catholicism. He even suggested that the historical witches had been sympathetic to the Celtic Christians, who allegedly had adopted Celtic pagan beliefs and practices, but disliked the Roman Church introduced into Anglo-Saxon England by the missionary St. Augustine in the early seventh century CE. Unlike most modern Wiccans, Gardner had a liberal view of Christianity and, while a narrow-minded Christian could not belong to the Craft, he believed a person could be a witch and also follow any other religion. This was because the mystical nature of Wicca transcended the superficialities of ordinary religious worship.
When Gardner referred to Ward liking “to indulge his hobbies,” he was talking about the extension of the religious community in the New Forest into the Abbey Folk Park. Gardner said that when Ward heard “that the local council was going to tear down some nice old building he would rush up with motor-lorries and a gang of monks. They had rescued some marvelous examples of ancient buildings for the Folk Park” (Bracelin 1960: 143). In fact, Ward had built up “an extensive collection of remarkable objects illustrating the history of this country for countless generations” (Ibid.).
Ward created the Abbey Folk Park as an educational open-air museum, to show the everyday life of ordinary people through the ages, and in that respect it was far ahead of its time. It included many historic buildings that had been rescued from demolition, dismantled and then re-erected on the New Barnet site. Unfortunately, in 1945 Ward was accused of enticing a young girl away from her family to join his community at the Abbey. Her father took Ward to court and he was found guilty. The judge issued an injunction against Ward and his wife, forbidding them to contact the girl. He was also fined five hundred pounds sterling in damages that had to be paid to the family. As a result of the case, Ward was declared bankrupt and the Abbey and its contents had to be sold to pay the fine.
Disillusioned and penniless, Ward wanted to leave England and emigrate to Canada, but the current immigration restrictions prevented him from taking this action. He then decided that as a member of the Greek Orthodox Church he would instead try to go to Cyprus. Gardner decided to help him achieve this aim by gifting the piece of land he owned there to his friend. This gave him the legal right to live on the island, as he owned property there (Bracelin 1960: 144). Ward died in 1949, and his wife, calling herself the Reverend Mother Ward, kept the community going until the Cypriot government began to cause problems for it. Eventually the community re-located to Queensland in Australia where its elderly survivors still lived until the 1970s. Items from the Abbey Folk Park had been retained by the Australian community, and in 1986 the Abbey Museum of Art and Archeology was opened as an educational center (Heselton 2003: 152).