Meade Layne

Newton Hathaway Meade Layne, Sr. (September 8, 1882 - May 12, 1961) was an American parapsychologist and ufologist. His early efforts to study the UFO phenomenon, produced in collaboration with medium Mark Probert, predated the Kenneth Arnold sightings, and laid the ground for an interdimensional hypothesis of the flying saucers.

Background
Born at Viroqua, Newton Meade Layne lived his first ten years in Wisconsin before moving with his family to San Diego, the city where he would spend much of his life. After completing his secondary education, Layne studied English (Comp. Lit.) at the University of Southern California, attaining his masters in 1911, and later engaged himself in graduate study of Philosophy at the University of Oregon, Eugene. Though he worked in a variety of fields, Layne's primary career was as an educator, teaching at schools all across the United States, including brief postings at Illinois Wesleyan University and Florida Southern College as an English instructor, and serving as a principal of Paisley High School (Paisley, Oregon).

As he entered into more esoteric scholarship, Layne became a student of a variety of Western occult disciplines, including Qabala, and was mentored for a time by Frater Achad (Charles Stansfeld Jones), in addition to working with Israel Regardie and Frater Damon (William Wallace Webb). It has been indicated he was a member of Dion Fortune's "Society of Inner Light", and his choice to publish a private newsletter called "Flying Rolls" hints at an involvement in studies of the Golden Dawn.

The synthesis of Meade Layne's literary interests and occult understandings were on full display in correspondence, articles, and publications that he produced through the thirties to the end of his life. He wrote extensively on psychic research, spiritualism, Theosophy, and Qabala, publishing in the ASPR Journal and other esoteric circulars; and, in 1945, began publishing his own mimeographed newsletter, the "Round Robin".

For the next fourteen years of his life, Layne would serve as editor-in-chief and lead writer on the Round Robin, collaborating extensively with a growing body of "research associates". The success of his newsletter prompted Layne to expand his publishing domain to include a number of books and research papers, including the Mark Probert seance reports and a series of texts on the Flying Saucer phenomena; and, in addition to his own publications, Layne maintained an extensive archive of strange and occult materials that he worked to keep in circulation.

In June 1959, Meade Layne retired from his editorial positions with the Round Robin, handing the directorship mantle to Riley Crabb. He quietly withdrew from active research efforts, and passed away May 12, 1961 while in a rest home at San Diego.

Borderland Sciences
The success of Layne's Round Robin inspired his founding of the Borderland Sciences Research Associates, the goal of the group being to "liberally study, review, and report on the discarded or uncommon strands of science and occultism, often relying on unconventional means and sources of data" &mdash; meaning, in particular, mediums and occult interpretations.

Etheria and the Inner Circle

 * Ether Ship Mystery

The Ufology Nexus
Layne corresponded and engaged with a great swath of the growing saucerian movement beginning in the fities, both through his journal and privately. Though he remained a low-key presence, not enjoying the kind of press attention lavished on Space Brothers contactees, Layne's name was nonetheless frequently raised as an authority on the matter of the saucers within the movement.

Selected Bibliography

 * "The Ether-ship Mystery and Its Solution: A Booklet for Public Information" (1950)
 * "The Ether of Space: The Concept of the Ether(s) and Its Relation to the Phenomena of the Aeroforms, a Compendium" (1953)
 * "The Coming of the Guardians: An Interpretation of the Flying Saucers as Given from the Other Side of Life" (1954)

Resources

 * Meade Layne and the Borderland Sciences Research Associates (borderlands.com) &mdash; brief profiles of early BSRA