Background
Spear was born in the city of Boston in 1804, and was from a young age a member of the Universalist Church of America.
Spear was born in the city of Boston in 1804, and was from a young age a member of the Universalist Church of America.
The pastor of this church was Hosea Ballou, under whom John Murray and his brother, Charles, studied theology.
In 1830, Spear was ordained and became minister of the Barnstable congregation. In the 1840s, Spear was active in petitioning for social reform including women's rights, labor reform and the removal of the death penalty. Also a prominent abolitionist, Spear organized the first Universalist anti-slavery convention and helped to oversee the stretch of the Underground Railroad which ran through Boston.
He claimed that he was in contact with ‘‘The Association of Electrizers’’, a group of spirits including Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, John Quincy Adams, and Benjamin Rush, as well as Spear’s namesake John Murray.
Evidence indicates he occasionally faked signatures as a way to gain authority from a "guide from the past;" however, these signatures were dated beyond the lifetimes of the deceased. The following year, Spear and a handful of followers retreated to a wooden shed at the top of High Rock hill in Lynn, Massachusetts, where they set to work creating the ‘‘New Motive Power’’, a mechanical Messiah which was intended to herald a new era of Utopia.
The New Motive Power was constructed of copper, zinc and magnets, all carefully machined, as well as a dining room table. At the end of nine months, Spear and the ‘‘New Mary’’, an unnamed woman, ritualistically birthed the contraption in an attempt to give it life.
Unfortunately for Spear, this failed to have the desired effect, and the machine was later dismantled.
His business card notes, "Guided and assisted by beneficent Spirit-Intelligences, Mr. South. will examine and prescribe for disease of body and mind, will delineate the character of persons when present, or by letter, and indicate their future as impressions are given him. Will sketch the special capacities of young persons.
In 1872, Spear claimed to have received a message from the Association of Electrizers urging him to retire from the ministry.
He died in October 1887, in the city of Philadelphia, and was buried in the Mount Moriah Cemetery.