ELLIOTT O’DONNELL

[RADIO-APPEARANCES]

In the mid-Twenties Britain’s most reknown “ghost hunter” made sporadic

appearances on the BBC. His reputation was already well-established at the time

that he made his first broadcast, and he was the published author of over twenty

books on the subject of the supernatural and spectral phenomena, starting with

Bona-fide Adventures with Ghostsin 1908 and includingHaunted Houses of

London(1909),Werwolves(1912),Twenty Years’ Experience as a Ghost Hunter

(1916),The Banshee(1920), andStrange SeaMysteries(1926).

In appearance, writes Grant Sinclair, “O’Donnell looked every inch the

academic professor, being tall, thin, austere and white haired with a pince nez

always balanced on his hawklike nose. He also had a penchant for cloaks and

canes; and those who encountered him claimed he had an ethereal, other worldly

air about him…” In fact, in 1934 columnist George Tucker remarked, “He even

looks a little like a ghost himself.”

“One of the most prolific authors on the subject of ghosts and hauntings of the

early 20th century, Elliott O'Donnell investigated numerous hauntings, claiming

to have visited thousands of localities and been eyewitness to hundreds of ghosts

and various paranormal phenomena. Also an enthusiastic collector of ghost

photographs, O'Donnell became one of the first authors to routinely include

photographs of an allegedly paranormal nature in his works, which included

countless stories and articles submitted to a wide variety of magazines and

newspapers. His books include such titles asSome Haunted Houses inEngland

and Wales(1908),Twenty YearsExperiences of a Ghost Hunter(1917),The

Banshee(1928),Haunted Britain(1948),Dangerous Ghosts(1954) and many

more. Although born in Bristol, England, O'Donnell was descended of an old

Irish family and claimed that they were haunted by their own familial banshee,

which prompted his interest in the supernatural.”

During the course of his career O’Donnell had his share of detractors as well. M.

R. James, one of the acknowledged masters of the antiquarian ghost story, wrote

that “Mr. Elliott O'Donnell's multitudinous volumes I do not know whether to

class as narratives of fact or exercises in fiction. I hope they may be of the latter

sort, for life in a world managed by his gods and infested by his demons seems a

risky business.”

[Research Kev Demant, who has written about O’Donnell.]

[Punch, January 21, 1914] “My flesh declined to creep an inch from the first

page to the last ofAnimal Ghosts… Not one of these stories is convincing. Mr.

O'Donnell taps you on the chest and whispers hoarsely, ‘As I stood there my

blood congealed, I could scarcely breathe. My scalp bristled;’ and you, if you are

like me, hide a yawn and say, ‘No, really?’”

[PROGRAM INFORMATION]
ORIGINATION:

2LO, London (BBC).

DURATION:

February 13, 1926-May 17, 1927 (six appearances inclusive within

these dates).

PERSONNEL:

Elliott O’Donnell (storyteller).

EXTANT RECORDINGS:

None.

[PROGRAM LOG]
ELLIOTT O’DONNELL (2LO, LONDON)
[Saturday—10:00-10:30 PM]

February 13, 1926Some Queer Happenings

[“…Time (Greenwich) ; Weather ; News ; Mr. Elliott

O’Donnell…”]

[Wednesday—7:40-8:00 PM]

June 23, 1926“St. John’s Eve”

[Thursday—7:00-7:25 PM]

July 22, 1926“Sea Mysteries”

[Tuesday—7:40-8:00 PM]

August 31, 1926“Strange Cases of Mistaken Identity”

[Thursday—7:40-8:00 PM]

December 2, 1926“Old London Inns”

[Tuesday—7:00-7:15 PM]

May 17, 1927A Night in an American Forest

[SOURCES]

PERIODICALS:The Times

[London].