Thomas townsend brown died

Thomas Townsend Brown 1923-

1 of 14 Thomas Townsend Brown 1923-1925 Jan Lundquist Morongo Valley, CA Jan 30, 2024 jlofton.writer at gmail dot com 2 of 14 Prologue In 2008, as I was beginning to plan my spring garden, I came across an article in an old horticulture journal claiming that electro culture could improve plant vitality and yield. When I looked into the subject, I found only three online references for it and two were to someone named Thomas Townsend Brown. I would soon learn that he was associated with the time traveling ship in The Philadelphia Experiment by Bill Moore and William Berlitz.1 Looking further, I discovered that a more creditable source, aviation author, Nick Cook, had placed Brown in the midst of the mid- fties wave of anti-gravity research.2 But Cook was not to be the last word on the subject. Author, Paul Schatzkin, was posting completed chapters of the de nitive biography of the man to his online Parallel Universe forum.3 The now out of print, and quite hefty Defying Gravity: The Parallel Universe of T. Townsend Brown4 had been written with the assis

Thomas Townsend Brown's Gravitator
Patent schematics

Origin

Thomas Townsend Brown

Year of Creation

1960

Type

Electrical Charge Device

Function

Creates energized particles that levitate objects. Weakens intermolecular bonds

Location

Icarus-23W

Collected by

Warehouse 13

Retrieval

November 12, 1979

Usage Period

1958-1967

[Source]

Origin[]

Thomas Townsend Brown was an American inventor whose research into odd electrical effects led him to believe he had discovered a connection between strong electric fields and gravity, a type of antigravity effect. After fashioning an insulating block capped with electrodes on either end dubbed the “gravitator”, he tested his oddity on an x-ray vacuum tube. He recorded that depending on the orientation of the positive and negative electrodes, the mass present within the tube seemingly grew or shrank. He came up with the name "Biefeld–Brown effect" for the phenomenon he had discovered and called the field of study electrogravitics.

Instead of being an

Alex’s Substack

I recently came across a quote in Paul Schatzkin’s book, “The Man Who Mastered Gravity: A Twisted Tale of Space, Time and The Mysteries In Between,” which explores the life and work of Thomas Townsend Brown.

Brown was an American physicist and inventor known for pioneering theories linking electromagnetic and gravitational fields, building on concepts initially theorized by Albert Einstein. He moved beyond theoretical work to practical experimentation, developing disc-shaped devices believed to generate and manipulate temporary, localized gravitational fields.

Brown’s work was highly controversial, largely due to its resemblance to the propulsion methods associated with observed UFOs, which fueled intrigue and skepticism alike.

Below is a quote from the book describing the experiment that sparked Brown’s lifelong passion for what he termed “electrogravitics”—a unique and unconventional phenomenon, or anti-gravity force, generated by the influence of an electric field on a mass:

“According to Kitselman, young Thomas Brown looked to the heavens, dreamed

Copyright ©fatunfo.pages.dev 2025