Patience Worth: Author From the Great Beyond
Pearl Curran, a St. Louis housewife, channeled a 17th-century spirit to the heights of 20th-century literary stardom
- By Gioia Diliberto
- Photographs by Douglas Smith
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2010, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 6)
She cultivated an air of mystery. Except for giving two possible dates for her birth—1649 and 1694—Patience refused to locate herself in time other than in the “here.” Her reticence extended to other questions about her life on earth. After suggesting that she’d been killed by an Indian, she was asked what tribe her killer belonged to. “Would ye with a blade at thy throat seek the [affiliation] of thine assassin?” she replied.
Over time, however, she let slip some key personal details. Patience hinted that she’d come from Portesham in Dorsetshire, England, near where Thomas Hardy was born in 1840. She never mentioned her father but said her mother had worked as a seamstress for a nobleman’s family. She indicated that she had been buried on Nantucket and that a tree had grown out of her dust.
Sometimes, Pearl said, she had sharp visions of Patience. In one, she saw Patience as a slight, pretty woman dressed in a flowing gray cape as she galloped on horseback with other riders toward a huge three-masted ship docked at a landing. When the riders reached the dock, Patience pushed back her hood, and, Pearl said, showed her face: she was about 30, much younger than Pearl had thought, with large brown eyes, a determined mouth and masses of deep red hair that tumbled around her shoulders in lustrous waves.
Occasionally, Patience’s recollections of her girlhood were so vivid they seemed to have been lifted from the diary of a 17th-century English maid. “Well I remember a certain church,” she once dictated, “with its wee windows and its prim walls, with its sanctity and meekness, with its aloofness and chilling godliness. Well I remember the Sabbath and its quietude of uneasiness, wherein the creaking of the wood was an infernalism, the droning and scuffing of the menfolk’s shoes and the rustle of the clothes of the dames and maids, the squeaking of the benches, and the drowsy humming of some busy bee who broke the Sabbath’s law. Aye, well I remember the heat that foretold the wrath of God, making the Good Man [the parson] sweat. Aye, and Heaven seemed far, far.”
So alive was Patience’s language that many of those who sat with Pearl at the Ouija board felt they could see the gestures and facial expressions accompanying her words. “Patience Worth is arch and coquettish with a mind of no small power and altogether loveable,” wrote William Marion Reedy, editor of the Mirror, one of the nation’s leading journals of opinion and literary criticism. The overweight editor started out a skeptic, but quickly fell in thrall to this glib, hyper-literate personality, who affectionately called him “Fatawide.” He had “learned to love her as a person more real than many whose hands I grasp,” he confessed in the Mirror.
Before Patience, Pearl Curran’s life had the feel of a tightly laced corset, one that over the years had narrowed and grown more constrained. Born in Mound City, Illinois, in 1883, she was the only child of George Pollard, an itinerant railroad employee and newspaperman, and his high-strung, ambitious wife, Mary. The Pollards moved a great deal—from Illinois to southern Missouri to Texas—as Pollard sought better-paying jobs. Pearl’s mother was extremely distressed by her husband’s inability to provide a stable living and, after she had a nervous breakdown when Pearl was 4, sent her daughter to live for a while with the child’s grandmother in St. Louis.
Though not a good student, Pearl was remembered by a childhood friend as a great talker who “loved to tell jokes or funny stories about people.” What’s more, she had a good memory, and the letters she wrote were full of lively descriptions. From an early age Pearl showed an interest in music, which her mother encouraged. The family’s meager resources were poured into Pearl’s piano, singing, acting and elocution lessons. Pearl went along with it, she said, because she wanted “to lift myself out of a hopeless future.” But at 13, she had what was termed a nervous collapse and dropped out of school.
Throughout this troubled girlhood, Pearl’s only known connection to spiritualism came when she went to live briefly in Chicago with an uncle who was the minister of a storefront spiritualist church, and, according to one family member, “an arch faker.” Pearl played piano in the church, where services revolved around attempts to contact the dead, but she “didn’t like the crowd that came, and the whole thing was repulsive to me,” she would recall later.
Desperate to become a singer, Pearl worked at shops in Chicago and then at Marshall Field’s department store to pay for voice lessons. She kept them up until at 24 she married John Curran, a widowed immigration official and sometime businessman 12 years her senior. In 1908 the newlyweds moved to St. Louis, which was pulsing with prosperity. The nation’s top producer of beer and a manufacturing center for leather goods, St. Louis boasted four daily newspapers, sumptuous mansions and beautiful parks.
Not since the Civil War had there been such interest in spiritualism, which had been born in the United States in 1848 when two sisters, Kate and Margaret Fox, claimed to have contacted a dead peddler through telegraphic rapping in their upstate New York farmhouse. Soon, scores of self-anointed mediums (including their sister Leah) burst on the scene, most of them women, whose passivity and purity, it was believed, made them ideal vessels to receive news from the Other Side.
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Related topics: American Writers Early 20th Century
Additional Sources
Patience Worth: A Psychic Mystery, by Casper S. Yost, Henry Holt & Co., 1916. Available on Google Books
The Sorry Tale, by Patience Worth, Henry Holt & Co., 1917 Available on Google Books
The Patience Worth Record: Volume 1, edited by Keith Ringcamp, Lulu.com, 2008 Available on Google Books









Comments (38)
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Eileen Curran Norstrand Kleymeyer died in 1982 in New Orleans, Lousiana. A photograph of her at age 29 in Ralph (Ted) Kleymeyer Jr.'s book of settlers of the Evansville Indiana Area, show her to be a quite beautiful blond woman, with little resemblance ot either Pearl or John Curran.
Posted by Amos Oliver doyle on December 11,2012 | 10:09 PM
According to Daniel B. Shea, author of his recent "The Patience of Pearl" Eileen Curran's second husband was Ralph Kleymeyer. Shea also provides second-hand information that Eileen may not have been the legitamate daughter of John Curran. (John Curren died 6 months before Eileen was born.) He also relates that Patience "Wee" Curran had a daughter with Gerald Peters, her first husband whom she called "Hope" after the main character in Patience Worth's novel "Hope Trueblood"
Posted by Amos Oliver Doyle on November 15,2012 | 12:35 PM
i was just watching weird or what, and now i'm interested her story..
Posted by mike on November 12,2012 | 04:29 PM
I see in the 1940 census that Patience (Worth Curran?) Behr was married to Max Behr . At that time she was listed as 24 years old and Max Behr was 53 years old. They were listed as husband and wife. Eilene Behr (Curran?), 17 years old, was listed as their daughter. (Must have been adopted by Max Behr.)
Posted by Amos Oliver Doyle on August 3,2012 | 05:33 PM
The book you are after is called "The Sorry Tale". If you look up "Patience Worth" on Wikipedia there is a link at the bottom of the page to a pdf file of the book.
Posted by Marc on May 14,2011 | 07:25 AM
Both books, "The Sorry Tale" and "Hope Trueblood" are available from amazon.com.
Posted by Amos Oliver Doyle on January 22,2011 | 06:21 PM
WHERE CAN I GET A COPY OF THE FIRST BOOK SHE DICTATED I THINK IT WAS CALLED "A STORY OF THE TIME OF CHRIST" ALSO A BOOK WITH "HOPE" IN THE TITLE ?
Posted by dale hobday on January 19,2011 | 10:46 PM
I have an obituary for Patience Worth Behr giving a birth date of 8 Oct 1916 and a death date of 23 Nov 1943. She died in Los Angeles California. Her mother's maiden name was Pollard and her father's surname was Curran. I think this is probably "Patience Wee" .
Posted by Amos Oliver Doyle on December 19,2010 | 06:53 PM
Very interesting. Thanks, Amos!
Posted by Michelle on December 4,2010 | 04:15 PM
Pearl Curran raised three girls; Eileen Curran, her biological daughter born December 1922, Patience Worth Curran("Patience Wee")her adopted daughter born October 1916 and Julia Curran, her step-daughter probably born around 1906. Patience Wee married Gerald Peters on April 15, 1934 in California and became Patricia W. Peters. ( I have a non-verified personal note that she may also have remarried becoming Patience Worth Behr. Reportedly she died in 1947, ten years after Pearl.) Julia Curan married to become Julia Maupin. I have record of a Julia Maupin, born September 3, 1906 who died in January 1973. I have no information concerning what happened to Eileen Curran. If she is alive today she would be 88 years old.
Posted by Amos Oliver Doyle on November 25,2010 | 11:02 AM
Pearl Gildersleeve Curran (1875-1941) apparently is not the same person as Pearl Lenore Curran nee Pollard (1883-1937).
Posted by Amos Oliver Doyle on November 25,2010 | 10:34 AM
Another question: does anyone know what became of Pearl's daughters?
Posted by Michelle on November 20,2010 | 11:19 PM
Does anyone know if Patience Worth's Pearl Curran bears any relation to the Pearl G. Curran who wrote many popular and sacred songs in the early 20th Century? Since Patience Worth's Pearl Curran is a trained singer and pianist it seems possible, but none of the Patience Worth material I've read makes mention of Pearl composing or publishing music.
Posted by Michelle on November 20,2010 | 11:17 PM
Great story. The only one who may have proved this act to be a fraud would have been Harry Houdini. And as he never had a part in the story and is now gone, we shall never know the whole truth.
Posted by George Winters on October 31,2010 | 09:35 PM
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