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Lodema Beaver

Birth
Death
19 Jan 1945 (aged 94–95)
Bedford, Bedford Borough, Bedfordshire, England
Burial
Bedford, Bedford Borough, Bedfordshire, England Add to Map
Plot
I-493
Memorial ID
View Source
Lodema was a member of the Panacea Society. See the Panacea Society's virtual cemetery:
https://www.findagrave.com/virtual-cemetery/1558614

She died at the age of 95 and was buried on 23 Jan 1945.

Lodema Beaver was a member of Bedford's Panacea Society, a millenarian community founded in 1919 by Mabel Barltrop, also known as Octavia. The Society was active for 80 years until the last member died in 2012. They were known internationally for their Healing Mission and campaigns to open Joanna Southcott's Box of Prophecies.
The most comprehensive account of the Society is "Octavia, Daughter of God" by Jane Shaw. "Imagining Eden" by Adrian Bean is also worth reading. Both books are sold at the Panacea Museum.
Follow this link to read more about the Society
www.fosterhillroadcemetery.co.uk/mabel-barltrop-and-the-panacea-society-graves/
For an analysis of the Panacea graves, go to
www.fosterhillroadcemetery.co.uk/in-sure-and-certain-hope-of-a-better-resurrection/
Follow this link to the Panacea Museum website
http://panaceamuseum.org/
Little is known about Lodema Beaver's activities and contribution when a member of the Panacea Society. At the time of her death, her address is given as 14 Albany Rd, next door to Mabel Barltrop's house, and where much of the Society's administration was carried out. She was one of the first to be buried in the Society "plot" in section I of the cemetery. Thirteen years after her burial another member, Edith Elizabeth Broad was put in the same grave. It isn't known who made this decision, or why.
Lodema was a member of the Panacea Society. See the Panacea Society's virtual cemetery:
https://www.findagrave.com/virtual-cemetery/1558614

She died at the age of 95 and was buried on 23 Jan 1945.

Lodema Beaver was a member of Bedford's Panacea Society, a millenarian community founded in 1919 by Mabel Barltrop, also known as Octavia. The Society was active for 80 years until the last member died in 2012. They were known internationally for their Healing Mission and campaigns to open Joanna Southcott's Box of Prophecies.
The most comprehensive account of the Society is "Octavia, Daughter of God" by Jane Shaw. "Imagining Eden" by Adrian Bean is also worth reading. Both books are sold at the Panacea Museum.
Follow this link to read more about the Society
www.fosterhillroadcemetery.co.uk/mabel-barltrop-and-the-panacea-society-graves/
For an analysis of the Panacea graves, go to
www.fosterhillroadcemetery.co.uk/in-sure-and-certain-hope-of-a-better-resurrection/
Follow this link to the Panacea Museum website
http://panaceamuseum.org/
Little is known about Lodema Beaver's activities and contribution when a member of the Panacea Society. At the time of her death, her address is given as 14 Albany Rd, next door to Mabel Barltrop's house, and where much of the Society's administration was carried out. She was one of the first to be buried in the Society "plot" in section I of the cemetery. Thirteen years after her burial another member, Edith Elizabeth Broad was put in the same grave. It isn't known who made this decision, or why.

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