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Transition Time

The Jupiter-Saturn conjunction on the winter solstice of 2020 ushered in a new era as the planetary pair moved into Aquarius.  The conjunctions set the stage for 20+ year developments, and have a long history with the U.S. government and presidency, as I wrote about in my book Tecumseh’s Curse.

Since early 2023, Pluto has likewise been moving back and forth between the last degrees of Capricorn and the first degrees of Aquarius, bringing its own momentous changes, at a much slower pace.  But this is especially so as it’s been crossing the Jupiter-Saturn conjunction degree over a 2-year period.

These transits have provoked contentious issues and some extremism in government and elsewhere.  We might metaphysically see it as growing pains, but there are many challenges ahead.  We are at a turning point with the presidential elections now less than a year away.

Many events are developing which resonate with Pluto changing signs and the Capricorn old guard transforming into something new and different.  We seem to be turning a page, as old authorities, organizations and associations face a changing landscape, and the past falls away.  Some of these notable events include:

Rosalyn Carter’s death on November 19, 2023 and her husband Jimmy, 99, in hospice care, symbolic of a generation passing.

Court Voting Rights Act decisions are set to empower Black and Native American minorities in Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi and North Dakota, with other redistricting suits developing elsewhere.  The slim minorities in both the House and Senate could easily be reversed in 2024.

Various court rulings have been made in Colorado, Minnesota and Michigan as judges consider removing former president Trump from 2024 ballots in violation of the Insurrection clause of the Constitution.  Some will certainly progress to the Supreme Court.  Trump of course also has several ongoing legal battles, with trial dates set for the spring and summer of 2024 (see my overview forecast from August 2022)

As many question the age and wisdom of leading presidential candidates Biden and Trump, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. is polling with greater support than any independent candidate before.  And the No Labels party of more moderate values may put Joe Manchin or another forward as a 2024 presidential candidate.

These are striking developments taken individually, but altogether show a major transition.  Things will change and move forward.  Pluto will station within half a degree of its return to the U.S. July 4, 1776 chart in October, moving into Aquarius for the final time in mid-November of 2024.

It’s no coincidence that this occurs right at the time of the next presidential election cycle.  We can expect a re-set somehow, with the U.S.A. in a very different place by 2025.  Unfortunately, it looks like the transition will be slow and messy.  But that’s the nature of Pluto, who drags things out before moving on.

Kevin McCarthy’s Ouster

Speaker Kevin McCarthy is in the news with his ouster from the House on October 3, 2023 after only 9 months in office.  It reminded me of a class with Bob Zoller nearly 30 years ago.  He was stressing that nothing will manifest that’s not promised in the birth chart.  We all accept that, but he had a more deterministic view.  Certainly, I argued, sometimes things work out better than astrologers might expect.  He agreed, but went on to say that if that’s the case, the success will be either partial or short-lived. 

We often find Saturn in the 10th house in people with visible positions of authority.  But sometimes, depending on the essential dignity and aspects, they’ll face challenges or experience a loss of position for one reason or another.  Think about Herbert Hoover, who had an illustrious career but only served one term as President due to the Great Depression.  He had Saturn in Aquarius in the 10th opposite his Moon, Mars and Uranus.  Woodrow Wilson had Saturn in Cancer conjunct the MC and opposite his Sun, and had to address World War I and a severe stroke that left him disabled.  He never realized his hope for a League of Nations.

Saturn in McCarthy’s chart is different in that it’s closely square the Moon in Sagittarius conjunct the 7th house cusp.  There’s no dignity for Saturn in Pisces or the Moon in Sagittarius, and the mutable signs are not as forceful as the fixed (Hoover) or as tenacious as cardinal (Wilson).  But like the others, he is in a sense the victim of circumstances.  He’d do better if he had a solid majority to back him.  But his horoscope doesn’t suggest that.

The Moon may represent his constituents, the public, his general audience or his open enemies.  Ruled by Jupiter in Taurus in the 12th which squares his MC, his partnerships and position (since Saturn is also ruled by Jupiter) are somewhat at the mercy of others, and might be undermined by hidden enemies (the 12th) who are more determined than he is (Taurus).  And with his angular Moon so closely square Saturn, the timing has not been right.

McCarthy’s horoscope has some good aspects but no essential dignity.  So despite being a member of Congress for over 16 years, as Zoller said, his greatest success was both contentious and short-lived… so far.   I don’t think we’ve heard the last of him.

British journalist Martin Bashir, who controversially interviewed Princess Diana, has some similarities in his chart with Saturn in the 10th square his Moon, though his Saturn in Aquarius is stronger and the Moon is weaker.

All the Beauty in the World

The 12th house is one of the most difficult to understand.  But when we experience 12th house issues, we can connect with them directly.  Patrick Bringley’s book All the Beauty in the World: the Metropolitan Museum of Art and Me seems to share such a 12th house journey in a compelling way.

Horary practitioners relate the 12th house to disappointments, sorrow, affliction, even imprisonment.  Planets here may show a focus on the wounded, hospitalized or withdrawn.  Al H. Morrison related the 12th to people who retreat from society to meditate, who turn inward or connect with inner guidance.

Patrick Bringley’s book chronicles his experiences following the death of his brother.  He could no longer tolerate a somewhat superficial job that required him to spend his days in front of a computer.  He had found meaning in art and instead became a security guard at the Museum of Modern Art in Manhattan.  At this 12th house institution, his co-workers joked they had “nothing to do and all day to do it.”  Bringley added that “Guards are nothing but secret selves in dark blue suits.”   He worked at the museum for 10 years, recovering from the loss of his brother and becoming a husband and father along the way.

The experience of loss, his low profile position and his escape from the achievement-oriented world are all 12th house affairs.  So is suffering, which many of the artists experienced as well.  Their works capture the sublime and ineffable, and transcend time and place.  They celebrate “the making of anything worthwhile in a world that so often resists our efforts.”  The author shares that, “Artists create records of transitory moments, appearing to stop their clocks.”  “Such moments provide solace; they are heartwarming; they are pure.”  “They help us believe that some things aren’t transitory at all but rather remain beautiful, true, majestic, sad and joyful over many lifetimes – and here is the proof.”

Bringley shares his impressions of a Michelangelo sketch, done while painting the Sistine Chapel, with a note saying, “I am not in a good place and I am no painter.”  The artist begged to be released but the Pope refused him.  In his 70s he was similarly assigned as the architect to complete St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome, “to his intense dismay and completely against his will.”

Fra Angelico’s Crucifixion “reminds us again of the obvious:  that we’re mortal, that we suffer, that bravery in suffering is beautiful, that loss inspires love and lamentation.”  The best art puts us “in touch with something we know intimately yet remains beyond our comprehension.”  All 12th house.

Bringley shares his musings on many other works, old and new, from around the globe.  We learn of his experiences with his warm co-workers and the patrons of the museum.  Like the artists he’s come to know, Patrick Bringley connects us with something transcendental and metaphysical.  I am definitely not a fine arts person, but I loved this book.  It illuminates the 12th house, not as a long, dark journey of the soul but a celebration of the cycles of life.  I found the print and audiobook are equally well done.

Find All the Beauty in the World at Amazon.

W.H. Chaney (1821-1903)

19th century astrologer William H. Chaney was from Bangor, Maine, practiced law in West Virginia, may have become a District Attorney in Iowa, and finally studied astrology with Dr. Luke D. Broughton in Manhattan.  He practiced astrology for the rest of his life, moving to the west coast, then St. Louis.  Chaney finally ended up in Chicago, married six times along the way, enlightened many students, wrote some books and published, including his own calculation of an American ephemeris.  He admitted to being a difficult personality.

Al H. Morrison believed he was the reincarnation of Chaney, feeling that the two lives and personalities had many parallels.  Chaney is known today as the father of the author Jack London, and Al even felt that London’s chart was similar to his own son’s.

San Francisco astrologer Joseph Silveira deMello (1925-2004) researched Chaney’s life, and his profile of Chaney from The Mercury Hour was published on the Astrologer’s Memorial.  Since that website is no longer easily accessible, I’m reposting it here.

W.H. Chaney by Joseph Silveira deMello

I first lectured on America’s first-born astrologer (b. 1821 in backwoods Maine) at UAC in Washington, D.C. Chaney was editing newspapers, writing, practicing law in Ohio when he encountered astrology. He moved to NYC for special tutoring by Dr. Luke Broughton. Chaney and Broughton were persecuted and jailed for practicing astrology, but Broughton was recognized as a proper gentleman, since he headed the NY Medical Society, and was released. Chaney, a self-styled curmudgeon and very contentious, languished without trial in the Ludlow Street jail for over six months. When Chaney set up his own practice, advertising that he had been a student of Broughton, Broughton felt that Chaney was trading on Broughton’s name and was very much out of joint about it.

But Chaney did not linger in New York. He moved west to practice in San Jose and San Francisco and in Portland. In San Francisco he lived in the same boarding house as did a lady from Ohio whom he had met at the home of a Mayor of Seattle who was his client. This lady found herself pregnant, and of the men around her chose Chaney as the father. Chaney denied this all his life, saying he was physically incapable of fathering offspring. She tried to commit suicide, publicly blamed Chaney for insisting she have an abortion and for disassociating himself from her. Chaney was exonerated by local authorities, but the story was picked up by Abigale Dunniway, pioneer newspaper publisher in Oregon, who refused to acknowledge that Chaney had been exonerated.

The child, however, turns out to be Jack London who wrote Call of the Wild and is an acclaimed American literary figure. London was born on the day before Chaney’s 55th birthday, and the two charts are worth study, the similarities are quite patent. After his problem in San Francisco he moved to Salem and Portland, Oregon, where for ten years he was suing and countersuing Dunniway who was not as peerless a character as she insisted other people be.

Eventually he moved back to St. Louis where he had previously lived, published a Primer of Astrology which came out in small pamphlet lessons, and moved to Chicago where records show that he operated an astrology school at two locations prior to his death in the early 1900’s. At the time of his death he was toothless, blind and deaf. As an astrologer, he was a very public figure, available always to lecture on any topic at any symposium, an early environmentalist and conservationalist, even in the 1880’s looking to the immediate onset of the Age of Aquarius. He made a great hobby of sending off for publicly advertised horoscopes and then taking astrologers to task for the mistakes they made in delineating his chart. He had a long running feud with Raphael’s stemming from a book order for which he paid and the fact that they would not give him a refund for part of the order they never filled, and he took Raphael’s to task for continually predicting the death of Queen Victoria in the face of her continued life.

I have enjoyed studying Chaney’s Primer as much as Broughton’s Elements of Astrology. Indeed, he is a marvelous precursor of Al H. Morrison.  For your further study, Chaney’s data is January 13, 1821, 11:31 PM LMT, Chesterville, Maine, 44N33, 70W06. This is the birth data Chaney used for himself. (Chaney’s chart on Astrodatabank)  Jack London, January 12, 1876, 2:00 PM LMT, San Francisco, California, 37N47, 122W26.

Sources include A Pictorial Life of Jack London by Russ Kingman who explores the origins of London and his parents, and Dr. Luke D. Broughton’s Elements of Astrology.

Originally published in Mercury Hour, April 1999 (100th Edition)

Joe deMello’s chart on Astrodatabank

DeMello’s tribute on the Astrologer’s Memorial at the Internet Archive

Some more on Dr. Broughton and Chaney’s legal problems in New York City

I collected the work of Al H. Morrison and he talks a bit about Chaney in The Best of Al H. Morrison 

Many have researched Chaney’s life due to his connection with Jack London.  He was a fascinating character, and here are some links to more about his life:

Sonoma State University:  Jack London Online — William Chaney

Encyclopedia.com:  William Henry Chaney

StrangeNewEngland.com:  William Henry Chaney — the Strange Journey of Jack London’s Father

Father Cassidy

Another tribute I wrote for the Astrologers’ Memorial was for Laurence L. Cassidy, Ph.D., S.J.  A practicing astrologer, he was a Jesuit for 57 years and a Catholic priest for 45.  He had a classical background and was knowledgeable of Church history, yet he never felt a conflict between his religious and astrological beliefs.  I knew him as a long-time friend, student and colleague of Al H. Morrison, and remember a modest and soft-spoken man with a strong intellect.  As one of the notable astrologers I met when Uranus conjoined my Sun, his work influenced my thinking.

A Gemini with a Cancer Moon and Aries rising, Cassidy was probably born in 1929, but I haven’t confirmed his birth date.  He died on June 29, 2006 at the age of 77.  Fr. Cassidy taught philosophy at St. Peter’s College in New Jersey beginning in 1969 and served as chairman of the department for a time.  The New York Times  covered his metaphysical class in 1972 as “Occult Interests Jersey City Priest.”  His dissertation was on Nicholas Cusa, a 15th century cardinal, who was also interested in astrology, alchemy and the occult.  For Cassidy, he was simply “a learned medieval man.”  His class, “Magic, Mysticism and Metaphysics,” open to 90 students, was often over-booked.  He said, “I like to return to the time when the truth was pursued in all aspects of human experience.  This has been abandoned over the last few centuries with adoption of Aristotle’s view that only that is true that can be proven through our senses.”

The Jersey City Journal also reported on his Rotary Club lunchtime address on Russian psychic experiments to a somewhat skeptical group in February of 1972.  Fr. Cassidy shared that occult and metaphysical topics are part of “the tradition of wisdom” and did not conflict with his other beliefs:  “Whatever happens to man is a reflection of the universe, which is created by God.”

He wrote two books on the transcendental philosophy of St. Thomas Aquinas and was the author of The Thinking Self (1992), a text of Socratic dialogues that he used in the classroom.  (He’d probably be dismayed to see second-hand copies currently selling for $50 and up.)

Cassidy was a contributor to CEO TIMES, Kosmos and other astrological publications.  His popular article, “The Believing Christian as a Dedicated Astrologer” (1978) was reprinted many times.  In it, he maintains that astrology and Christianity are compatible as long as we believe in free will, and says, “I have taught some astrology here at St. Peter’s College and no one has ventured to suggest that I am putting any soul in peril for so doing.  Of course, most think my mind has become enfeebled, but that that is another story… We really are a free community of scholars.”  His article, “Old Astrology and the New Catechism” was originally published in Realtà, the Irish Astrological Association journal, in 1994.  Fr. Cassidy’s writing is lucid, rigorous and uplifting and we’re fortunate to be able to find copies of it online.

Cassidy spoke for the Irish Astrological Association and addressed various conferences and groups in the U.S.  Colleagues and students at St. Peter’s fondly recalled his sermons at their chapel on Sundays, his dedication to “the good and the true,” his love of teaching and his keen interest in his students and their families.

His letter to the editors of National Jesuit News is reprinted in Crisis online and takes an impassioned stance against pacifism in the face of nuclear war.   Below is some artwork from St. Aedan’s Church, now managed by St. Peters’, which resembles a horoscope wheel. 

Ed Dearborn

Since the Astrologer’s Memorial is no longer being maintained, I wanted to post some of the tributes I wrote for it.  First up is on Ed Dearborn, who founded the Declinations SIG and spent most of his life studying astrology.

Astrological historian, writer and advocate Edward L. Dearborn was born on May 3, 1922 at 5:27 AM in Meadville, Pennsylvania and passed over on August 18, 2012.  He was a school guidance counselor and devoted to his wife and family.  A lifetime student of astrology, he chose to pursue it as a sideline until his retirement in 1985, when he had more time for research and writing.  Ed was an incredibly supportive friend and colleague, and astrologers across the country and around the world benefited from his dedication and commitment to astrology.

With both the Moon in Cancer and Neptune in Leo in his fourth house, he had an unusual upbringing.  Ed met his future wife (a neighbor) when he was only five or six years old and in exemplary Taurean fashion was true to her throughout his life.  His six-year-old brother died in 1930 and his parents divorced the following year.  Yet since both of his parents eventually remarried twice, he never lacked close family members nearby, sometimes living on the same block.

Ed Dearborn began studying astrology before he turned 17.  He never mentioned any personal tutoring and I always assumed he was self-taught.  He was a voracious reader who collected an extensive astrological library and subscribed to most astrological periodicals in the U.S. and several abroad as well.

After high school, Ed enrolled at local Allegheny College, but was put on probation for poor grades.  He also had difficulty paying the $250 a semester tuition.  He decided, instead, to enlist in the Marines in 1941.  Ed felt that he “cheated” to get in as he’d nearly broken both feet in jumping off a four-foot wooden horse at the age of eight and thereafter had regular issues with his feet.  However he managed to pass the physical and was careful throughout World War II.

Ed was assigned to a Northern California home guard unit and served as a communications officer in the Signal Corps, where he was primarily responsible for radio equipment and repairs.  He was called to duty in the Aleutian Islands conflict in August of 1943 on Kiska Island, Alaska, and also spent time in Hawaii, the Marshall Islands and Guam.  He said that he carried a 1939 edition of Llewellyn George’s A to Z Horoscope Maker and Delineator across the Pacific theater.  In his last years, Ed returned again and again to memories of his war years, and participated in a Federal oral history project to preserve them.

After the war, Dearborn went back to Pennsylvania and worked in a wire factory, taking a vacation in 1946 to attend the AFA convention in Columbus, Ohio.  Ed was enthralled by the numerous astrologers he joined there, many of whom were nationally prominent or had written books and articles he’d read.

At the banquet Ed sat with the New York delegation, including Marion Meyer Drew (1889-1974), the first editor of Horoscope magazine.  A Sagittarius, she’d been married to Sidney K. Bennett (Wynn) and was then writing a daily column for the New York Daily News.  Fellow Taurus Elizabeth Aldrich (1875-1948), once publisher of the New York Astrologer and a prominent mundane astrologer, was also there, as were Marc Edmund Jones (working on his Ph.D. in theology at Columbia University), and Mabel Leslie Fleisher, President of the Astrologer’s Guild of America, who also held a law degree, unusual for a woman at that time.  Ed Dearborn had, at the age of 24, found his way to some of the most accomplished astrologers in the country.

Marion Meyer Drew needed help around her house in Cold Spring, New York, and talked Ed into staying with her and returning to college.  In August of 1946 he quit his job in Meadville and moved to Cold Spring.  In exchange for room and board, Ed served as driver, gardener and handyman as well as an assistant for Marion’s newspaper column.  He drove her to the city to attend Guild meetings, and afterwards a dozen or so from the group would head to Schraft’s restaurant for refreshments and further discussions.

Ed took psychology classes on the G.I. Bill at Washington Square College (NYU) for the two years he remained in New York.  He was able to focus on his studies and did much better than before.  He explored Weiser’s bookstore downtown, stocked with older authors that he’d never seen before, like Dr. Luke D. Broughton, A.J. Pearce and W.J. Simmonite.

He also became better acquainted with Elizabeth Aldrich, a close friend of Marion’s.  Aldrich had been diagnosed with cancer and was ill by Christmas of 1947, and Ed visited her many times in the hospital before she died in early 1948.  Aldrich had made Ed the executor of her will and he cleaned out her office and living space in her Carnegie Hall loft, saving most of her notes and correspondence while taking his college exams.  In the fall of 1948 he returned to Pennsylvania and continued his studies.

Ed was finally able to marry Mary Jane Watkins on August 17, 1948 and they had two daughters.  Jane was a double Gemini with Scorpio rising, but despite her Jupiter in Cancer, had what Ed described as a “no clutter” attitude – quite at odds with his own instincts to hold onto anything astrological that came his way.  To hear Ed tell it, though, this appeared to be the only meaningful conflict in their 62 years together!  He described her as “an angel on earth.”

Dearborn received an AB from Allegheny College and his Master’s degree from Ohio State University in 1956.  His Jupiter and Saturn in Libra in his 6th house suited him well for intellectual service.  Over the course of a long and varied career, he taught American history and science to many school grades.  Ed served as the principal of a correctional school for girls, in work-release programs, and was involved as a vocational/technical liaison counselor in a cooperative educational program where students spent half a day at school and half on the job.  Ed also taught a few beginning astrology classes over the years.  He eventually reached his original goal of becoming a high school guidance counselor in 1961, and settled in Norwood, Pennsylvania in 1965.

Ed’s personal experience, as well as his years of teaching and counseling, led him to fervently believe that education was a key ingredient in reaching one’s goals.  Having worked in the wire factory for over three years, he could see how factory workers typically became boxed into a corner with financial commitments to families, cars and homes.  He anticipated the real estate crisis and mortgage defaults by at least six years, if not astrologically then certainly through his good sense as well as a keen ability to foresee the results of actions and events (Sun and Mercury rising in Taurus; Saturn exalted in Libra in an out-of-sign square to Mars).  Ed saw no good in folks with few options outside their factory jobs getting mortgages with less than 5% down, and he was right.

I first met Ed in 1993 when he wrote to request what he called “Astro-Morsels” from me – basically a personal history and experiences in the world of astrology.  Countless other astrologers initially encountered him in just the same way.  He had a wide correspondence and was determined to put together the history of astrology in the U.S., piece by piece.  And he was persistent.  My mom, who considered it a chore to write anything down, received repeated queries from him until in exasperation she finally wrote her own astrological story for Ed (which was much more substantive than the fragments she’d shared with me before).

Ed was a wonderful correspondent.  In the ‘90s he used to send photocopies of cartoons and gags from newspapers (often poking fun at scientists and politicians), accompanied by neatly handwritten letters in which he answered questions and shared the books and articles he’d recently read, the lectures he’d seen and his most recent research – a typically Libran give-and-take.  By the time I knew him, he had accumulated so much data on index cards that he could quickly provide information about most any astrologer in the last century – their publications, location, teachers and areas of expertise.  His thousands of Astro-Morsels had indeed added up to a monumental collection that was extraordinary in its scope.  Ed created histories of astrological groups and continued collecting astrology periodicals and books, often buying a second copy to lend to friends.  In 1995, at the age of 73, he took typing and computer classes, bought himself a computer and determined to transfer all of the information to disk.  Ed took the advice that he’d shared with students: “The skills you are being pressed to learn are some you are going to need before long.  If you approach them enthusiastically you will be amply rewarded.”

Ed had a tremendous vitality well into his senior years.  He kept in touch with many astrologers, was quite involved with his extended family (including aged step-parents and great-grandchildren), was an active member of his local NCGR Greater Delaware Valley astrological group, and took care of his home.  With Venus rising in Gemini, he had many talents, and his abilities in a wide variety of areas could be astonishing.  He once told me about making improvements to a vacation home, and it soon became apparent that he had not only installed much of the electrics, new plumbing and a complete septic system, but also handled the carpentry of major structural changes, all on his own.

Despite this he was always modest about his abilities.  In his later years when his hearing had deteriorated, he’d apologize for “running on” on the phone.  He never considered himself a professional or full-time astrologer and in fact never appeared to have charged a fee for a chart reading; he did not feel confident at interpretation.  Although he kept his astrology and work lives separate, I always assumed that he’d used astrology to counsel several generations of children and young adults to find their true paths in life.  His conviction in the usefulness of astrology was admirable; I’ve known few others who utilized it as such an integral part of their lives over such a long period of time.

With the Sun rising and the Moon in the 4th house, Ed Dearborn studied his own chart throughout his life and would share how astrological aspects impacted him personally.  He was a regular contributor to the Mercury Hour and AFA’s Today’s Astrologer, and was published in astrology journals in the U.S. and overseas.  He tirelessly worked and reworked his articles, most recently those on quincunxes and yods; the springboard for these pieces were yods in his own birth chart.  His interest in the new body Sedna was due to its discovery within a day of the birth of his fifth great-grandchild.

Ed’s interest in declination was sparked by consideration of Mars in Sagittarius in his 8th house placed Out of Bounds, which he felt left him lacking an ordinary sense of fear (something which concerned him and forced him toward greater self-control).  He was influenced by Kt Boehrer’s book, Declination: The Other Dimension (1994), and went on to organize and found the NCGR’s Declination SIG in 1996.  Ed received NCGR’s Sisyphus award in 1998 for this accomplishment.  What a marvelous metaphor for someone who’d worked so hard for so long toward all of his achievements!

Ed felt that astrology was more tangible and reliable than other occult arts and shared his belief that, “Relying on clairvoyance seems to me like walking on thin ice – just how thick is it?”  He had a strong mind but was not overtly opinionated; he just kept learning and retained a good sense of humor.

Ed’s other interests included political astrology, cycles, horary, the asteroids and new bodies.  He enjoyed gardening, traveling and music.  In his later years he became more interested in spirituality.  During one notable class on angels, the instructor suffered a heart attack yet survived, due, they all concluded, to the intercession of the course’s subject!

Ed Dearborn was a gentle soul with a tremendous spirit.  He was a true Venusian, yet he could be tough as well.  I called him one day and teased him as he answered the phone.  He did not recognize my voice and sternly demanded, “Who IS this?!!”  Then I understood why he’d been successful as both a Marine and the head of a juvenile delinquency program:  he had a lot of strength.

Many years ago he informed me that he’d studied his chart and concluded he’d be around until the age of 91 or 92 as I recall.  He was overweight and wheezing at the time and I wasn’t sure he could be correct.  But he came close – making it to 90 and well past his third Saturn return.  He was not one to complain about any of the health issues, aches and pains that accompany old age, taking each day as an opportunity to live life fully.  He once wrote that, “’Tis easier to face life when I kind of roll with the punches and recognize that not one of us knows what Our Creator intends.”  That was Ed:  always patiently committed.

I know it was difficult for him to see his wife Jane through her cancer diagnosis and final illnesses (she predeceased him by about three years).  He remained touchingly dedicated to her, searching for the proper holistic remedy to lessen her pain and speaking with more than a little pride about taking care of her – he seemed to consider it a privilege rather than a duty.

Ed Dearborn was like the grandfather I never knew.  I think he must have known how much we all loved him and needed him in our astrological lives.  Giving to others was second nature to him.  He shared his optimism, spirit and gifts with us all, without reserve.  We miss you, Ed!  We hope we’ll see you again.

Some of Edward L. Dearborn’s articles are:

“The Inconjunct, the Quincunx and Yods” The Mountain Astrologer, August-September 2006

Ramifications of the QuincunxConsiderations Volume XVIII, No. 2 (2003)

“Planetary Cycle Charts” The Mountain Astrologer, August 1998

“My Recollections of the 1946 AFA Convention” AFA Convention Program, 1996

“Astro Periodicals List” The Mountain Astrologer, August 1991

Many thanks to Joan Aldrich and Lois Livermore who helped with this piece.

Some of the Astrologers’ Memorial still lives on the Internet Archive, though without posts from more recent years.

The Judge and the Abortion Pill

Eclipses may cause upheavals when they occur, and their patterns highlight trends and events to come.  The April 2023 Court decisions on the abortion drug mifepristone are part of a larger pattern involving eclipses, the Biden administration, Joe Biden himself, the Jupiter-Saturn conjunction at 0 Aquarius and now Pluto’s change of sign from Capricorn to Aquarius as well.

U.S. District Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk was confirmed by President Trump in 2019.  Lawsuits filed by conservative groups in his Amarillo, Texas jurisdiction have been assured of the outcome, and the judge has already made decisions on immigration and LGBTQ workers.  His April 7, 2023 decision on mifepristone would amount to a nationwide ban on the drug, which was approved by the FDA and in use for over 20 years.

The original Roe vs. Wade Supreme Court decision guaranteeing the right to abortion was decided on January 22, 1973, four days after a Lunar Eclipse at 28 Cancer 40.  When the Court struck this ruling on June 24, 2022, transiting Pluto was at 28 Capricorn, closely opposing the eclipse degree.

The Kacsmaryk decision shortly after a full Moon was quickly brought to the Supreme Court, who froze the ruling on April 21, 2023 on the heels of a Solar Eclipse at 29 Aries, until the court appeals play out.

Let’s remember that the 2021 Biden inauguration Moon is also at 29 Aries.  Placed in the 12th house, it suggests the private nature of the matter addressed and the crusading energy placed in this question by many.  29 degrees certainly shows change, especially as the Moon in the inauguration horoscope conjoins Mars and squares Pluto and the Sun at the Midheaven.  President Biden is fighting Judge Kacsmaryk’s ruling, and his own Moon is about 1 Taurus, closely conjunct the administration’s Moon.  The Jupiter-Saturn conjunction at 0 Aquarius in December of 2020 set the stage, making these developments part of a larger cyclic trend.  And the transiting North Node will also be at 29 Aries in July of 2023, further emphasizing this point.

We can clearly see the many astrological layers at work:  Roe v. Wade decision on a Lunar Eclipse at about 29 Cancer, and the Supreme Court strikes Roe v. Wade with transiting Pluto at 28 Capricorn.  Court’s hold on Kacsmaryk’s decision on a Solar Eclipse at 29 Aries.  Pluto is at 0 Aquarius to 28 Capricorn from January 2023 through February 2024 and will activate these points, showing not only how things are slowly changing, but also the strong personal feelings involved on both sides of the question.

We don’t have a birth date for Judge Kacsmaryk.  However Wikipedia says that he was born in 1977 – the year of a Solar Eclipse at 28 Aries!  Now we know exactly why this particular judge is involved.

We may not be able to predict the final outcome of the court decisions.  But with Pluto at 29 Capricorn 47 for the November 2024 election, this issue will surely continue to motivate voters.

What Evangeline Adams Knew Review

I was very pleased to read Sara Rose Diamond‘s review of my update of What Evangeline Adams Knew: a Book of Astrological Charts and Techniques:
Christino has done the world of astrology a major service by compiling, and presenting in such a lively way, a lot of valuable information that would otherwise fall by the wayside… vital scholarship for the safeguarding of astrological history.

Brooklyn Author Betty Smith

Betty Smith, the well-known author of A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, had an early play produced in New York City this season.  I was surprised to learn that she had actually been a playwright for most of her career, and had no real success until her novel was published when she was 47 years old.

A Sagittarius, Smith was born on December 15, 1896 at 6:00 p.m. in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, according to her biographer (though no source is given for the time).  She had many trines in her birth chart, but her life often wasn’t easy.  With Cancer rising, her Moon in Taurus in the 11th house is exalted, suggesting popularity and a good income from her career.  A grand trine with Jupiter in Virgo in the 3rd house and Mercury in Capricorn in the 6th house shows her facility for writing.  With Cancer rising and a prominent Moon, her best work drew on her memories.

Betty’s mother was practical and down-to-earth (shown by the Moon in Taurus and 10th ruler Jupiter in Virgo).  But her father, well described by the Sun in Sagittarius opposite Mars and Neptune in the 12th house, was a dreamer who couldn’t support his family and died of alcoholism when his daughter was just 19.  The Moon also squares Venus on the cusp of the 8th house, showing other family issues and their modest circumstances.

Betty was forced to work at around age 15, and she worked diligently for most of her life, often struggling to get by.  She returned to school twice but never completed her high school degree.  And while she later attended college and then completed a master’s program in playwriting at Yale University, she never received those degrees because she lacked the prerequisites.

There are no angular planets in this chart, and aside from the Moon, there’s a lack of essential dignity.  The 7th, 8th and 9th houses are all traditionally ruled by Saturn, but its near-exact conjunction with Uranus, the modern ruler of Aquarius, covers these houses either way.  Placed in Scorpio in Smith’s 5th house, we can see her relentless pursuit of education and creative work, and her focus on her two daughters throughout her life.  But there was often an element of both responsibility and unexpected change in each of these areas.  Saturn may delay things, but with a close trine to the Midheaven, the author always found opportunities and had great success after middle age.

Smith’s sometimes rocky marriages also come under the rulership of Saturn and Uranus.  After splitting with her first husband following his infidelity and some separations, she essentially raised her girls alone.  She became bored with her younger second husband when their relationship stabilized, and her third husband, also younger and reflecting the Neptunian pattern in her chart, was a drinker who secretly cashed large checks and pawned household items before he died of a sudden heart attack when his wife was 63.

Smith worked in North Carolina for the depression-era Federal Theater Project and stayed there the rest of her life.  She wrote many plays, mostly with others, and earned some money through publication.  She drew on her personal experience for A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, and writing about urban poverty from a female point of view was innovative at the time.  The novel also resonated with many during the war years, as it reflected a simpler time and depicted women struggling to hold their families together and survive.

Many astrological events combined at the book’s publication on August 18, 1943 which radically changed Betty’s life as it quickly became a best-seller.  Smith neared a progressed Solar Eclipse in her 8th house (she had been in debt before immediately receiving a large royalty check).  Her progressed Midheaven at 13 Taurus in her 11th house of career earnings trined her 3rd house Jupiter and sextiled her Ascendant.  The progressed Ascendant at 21 Leo trined and sextiled her Sun-Mars-Neptune oppositions from her 2nd house of money.  The progressed Moon and Mercury in Capricorn through her 7th house kept her focused on her goals and added the help of her publisher and the public as both planets sextiled her MC and natal Saturn-Uranus conjunction. And transiting Pluto also squared her ruler, the Moon, from the 2nd house.

Smith continued writing; her fourth novel Joy in the Morning (1953) took a nostalgic look at her first marriage and was also a best-seller.  In early 2023, when her early play was first produced in New York, transiting Uranus in Taurus was near the progressed MC of her break-out novel, and squared her Nodes from the 11th house.

Like her mother, Betty Smith tragically suffered from dementia as she aged, and she began having trouble with words.  Jupiter in the 3rd house square Pluto in Gemini in her 12th contributed to her writing abilities, but ironically also suggests the possibility of mental challenges.  In her early 70s, Betty began forgetting names and her daughters eventually institutionalized her.  She died less than a year later at 75.

Perhaps due to her strong Moon in Taurus and its grand trine with Midheaven ruler Jupiter and IC ruler Mercury, we still share in Betty Smith’s memories of her family and the old neighborhood from A Tree Grows in Brooklyn.  No wonder, since the image of a tree growing in a harsh environment is so aptly symbolized by her Moon-Jupiter-Mercury grand trine in earth signs.

More on Betty Smith on Wikipedia.

About the 2023 NYC production of her early play.

Valerie Raleigh Yow’s biography of Smith.

Lynn Wells and Evangeline

Evangeline Adams practiced astrology in her New York Carnegie Hall studios from 1905 until her death in 1932, reading thousands of charts, with many more processed for mail order work by her assistants.  One of these was Lynn Wells, who wrote the introduction to the 1970 edition of Adams’ autobiography The Bowl of Heaven.  I could never find much information on Lynn Wells, until I located the publisher’s files and discovered that she actually used a pen-name.

Wells’ father, Clarence C. Smith, worked at Carnegie Hall and became its manager around 1911.  The family lived next door until the Hall was sold in 1925.  Lynn’s mother was friendly with Evangeline, who draw up her chart when she was a baby.  She became interested in astrology, and beginning at age 17, “I was trained by Miss Adams and worked with her for many years.”

Lynn married in 1925 and started her own astrology practice with her husband.  In 1946 they were pictured as some of astrology’s “top practitioners” in a Life magazine feature that said: “Most dignified of astrologers are Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Wells, who have an early American apartment in Greenwich Village, deal chiefly with professional men, are considered a little high-hat by competitors.  They married soon after Evangeline Adams predicted they would.”  Adams’ home was done in an early American style, too, so maybe she inspired Wells.  Holden and Hughes in Astrological Pioneers of America say that both Lynn and Charles wrote for astrological publications in the 1950s.

In The Bowl of Heaven, Lynn said that Adams “referred hundreds of people to me.”  A newspaper article in 1940 stated that Evangeline “left Miss Wells a collection of some 7,000 to 8,000 charts.”  But in her reply to an astrologer in 1982, Wells said that Adams’ “files contained at least 50,000 charts of clients, these no doubt lost or destroyed by now as I destroyed my own thousands of charts when I retired a few years ago.”  I have never found any trace of Adams’ charts or office files; all are probably gone.

Lynn Wells was born on February 23, 1901 in Norwalk, Connecticut, according to her marriage record.  In The Bowl of Heaven, she said that “my chart indicates that I cannot be a successful speculator.”  The couple also appear to have had no children.  So I’ve somewhat arbitrarily placed Uranus in her 5th house.

Leo rising would explain the way Wells inserted her own story into her introduction to Evangeline’s book, as well as the somewhat high-handed manner in which she responded to the astrologer in 1982 who asked for information about Adams’ Windsor Hotel forecast.  Unable to answer the question, she offered, for no apparent reason, “I note your chart contains the Part of Fortune and the Moon Nodes, which I consider superfluous now being invented by earlier astrologers searching for the source of Uranus and Neptune influences…”  I don’t know who would agree today.

If she was born at about 4:00 p.m., Lynn’s Venus in Aquarius would conjoin her 7th house cusp, and her husband was an Aquarius with the Sun, Mercury, Venus and Mars all in this sign.  Lynn also seemed to have a compelling need to identify herself through her relationship with Aquarius astrologer Evangeline Adams (Pluto in the 11th trine Venus).  In accepting the assignment to write the introduction to Adams’ autobiography in 1969, she wrote the publisher, “The original Bowl of Heaven is inscribed to me by Miss Adams.  Also her Astrology, Your Place Among the Stars is inscribed, “For Mollie, with sincere regard and affection from her teacher and co-worker.”  In a P.S., Lynn added that “Mollie was my young nickname.”  (Neither book was dedicated to Wells; by “inscribed” she means that Adams signed a copy of the book for her.)  Decades after her death, she continued to remind folks of her association with her famous employer.

The name rang a bell for me, and I recalled two pictures of Adams sold on Ebay addressed to “Mollie,” both were dated after Wells had her own practice.  One said, “For ‘my girl’ Mollie with much affection and all good wishes – Evangeline Adams, 1929.”  (Adams was warm, if not effusive, in all of the signed photos I’ve seen from her.)

In fact, Mollie Smith was Lynn’s birth name, and Mollie Wells was her married name, according to her marriage and Social Security records.  “Lynn” appears to have been a pseudonym.  With Mercury in Pisces square Neptune, the difference between the two was blurred.

It seems rather strange that I came across two pictures Mollie owned.  What are the odds?  How many must Adams have signed for Mollie/Lynn in the first place?  Lynn’s Sun opposite Mars fell right on Adams’ Nodes, and her Mercury conjoined Evangeline’s Ascendant, showing points of connection and identification.  Her Moon conjoined Adams’ Pluto, hinting at the potential for an obsessive focus on the older woman.  As Adams was the best-known astrologer of the time, their association served as something of an endorsement.

Mollie/Lynn Wells and her husband had moved to Florida by the 1960s, and later to North Carolina.  Lynn died at the age of 90 and left quite a bit of money to her local library to expand its building.