Category: Historical Figures

  • The Death of Thomas Henry Moray

    Thomas Henry Moray was a Salt Lake City inventor associated with early twentieth-century claims that electrical energy could be drawn from the environment through a “radiant energy” receiver. He spent decades demonstrating unusual apparatus, seeking recognition, and arguing that his work had been obstructed or misunderstood. Moray died in Salt Lake City on May 18, 1974. Unlike some later “inventor death” narratives, the publicly accessible record on Moray’s final death event is comparatively thin; the conspiracy treatment of his case usually grows out of the longer story of alleged sabotage, patent frustration, and suppression surrounding his work rather than from a well-documented suspicious death investigation.

  • The Count of Saint Germain

    A mysterious eighteenth-century nobleman, alchemist, diplomat, and occult figure whose uncertain origins and legendary longevity transformed him from a historical adventurer into one of the most enduring immortals of esoteric and conspiracy tradition.

  • Aleister Crowley

    The infamous English occultist, mystic, and founder of Thelema who has been portrayed by believers as far more than a controversial magician — a hidden architect of modern occultism, elite ritual culture, and twentieth-century esoteric influence.