Grant Wallace

Grant Wallace (February 10, 1867 - August 12, 1954) was an American journalist, war correspondent (active during the Russo-Japanese War and the Second American Occupation of Cuba), writer, cartoonist, and artist. Following his retirement from journalism, Wallace became a noted resident of Carmel-by-the-Sea, California, where he lived in a self-designed cabin and conducted experiments in "sublimated telepathy," whereby he believed he had contacted beings from other worlds (including "Mars, the moons of Jupiter and Uranus, [...] Zingomar (a planet of the star Altair), [and] planets near the Pleiades star cluster") and spirits of the departed dead.

Experiments in Sublimated Telepathy

 * Received messages from the deceased, including: Harriet Martineau; Thomas Jefferson; Charles Dickens; Thomas Paine; Per Zimia; Yeolyr; Hippocrates; as well as messages from beings of other star systems, including: F.O.M. of Andromeda; Atalanta; Zu La Zule.
 * Received various alphabets, including: Mercurian; Vulcan; Braqh, "a low sphere of Venus"; Uilieu, "a celestial sphere of Venus"; Martian; Jupiterian; Saturnian; Ruzo (Titania), the largest moon of Uranus; Neptunian; Issi; Raxu, of the ninth planet Azoth; Kybelean, a language of heavenly nomads; Uzzu of the Pleiades; Zingomar of Altair.
 * Received information that Charles Darwin and Alfred Russell Wallace had joined a group of discarnate intelligences that were working on methods of communication with the living world.
 * Received information that the Great Sphinx was "the monument of the golden-haired Izdu-bastis of Iran and Akkad, first of the mighty Shepherd Queens."

New Thought
Wallace wrote and lectured on New Thought and related schools of metaphysics, including turns in magazines such as George W. Payne's Psychic World and Alexander J. McIvor-Tyndall's Swastika Magazine.