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Energy from the astronomical universe that cannot be turbed off.
It is not only in the pages of Scripture that we can find occasions when God has directed the course of a man's life by means of a dream. My friend John Searl was such a case. He was undoubtedly born to a destiny, and was made awware of the course his life must follow from his earliest years..
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Save Searl John Roy Robert - The Epic Story of Free Ene... For Later | JOHN ROY ROBEK)
SEARL
| THE EPIC STORY
f FREE ENERGY
by
The Rev
© NICHOLSON
Energy from the
ASTRONOMICAL
UNIVERSE
that cannot be turned
offJohn Roy Robert Searl
THE EPIC STORY OF FREE ENERGY
by
The Rev. G. H. Nicholson
I write upon a great project to which a life's work
is being wholly devoted, and which will be of incalculable
benefit to us all. I write firstly upon the life of the man
himself as so clearly showing the hand of God in this
matter.
It is not only in the pages of Scripture that we can
find occasions when God has directed the course of a
man's life by means of a dream, My friend John Searl
was such a case. He was undoubtedly born to a destiny,
and was made aware of the course his life must follow
from his earliest years. This has been the salient fea-
ture of his life. The obstacles endangering his life, and
his life's mission would suggest that the forces of evil
were arrayed against him to defeat this purpose, but
Jobn was carried through these difficulties by what he
used to think of in his childhood days as "the Power",
which was ever present with him. This was his own in-
ner personal experience of God - the unseen power dir
ecting his life, and whom he later came to recognise as
God,
John's father was a sergeant serving in the Army of
British India, and he was born in a workhouse at Wan-
tage on the 2nd May 1932, The birth was premature and
he was under weight. The doctor said that he has only a
few hours to live. Another threat to his life's mission
came when he was dropped on the road from an Indian
1shawl. Predestination is a scriptural fact, and these
were the first of John's adverse experiences testifying
that these cannot thwart a destiny under the control of
the Unseen and which has to be fulfilled.
When I first saw him he was to me only an unknown
child suffering from double pneumonia, wrapped in a
shawl and hugged to his mother's breast as the only
place in poverty stricken ciraymstances where he could
be given some warmth, ina very old derelict cottage in
my Parish of Burghfield, There was snow and ice out-
side, The cottage had no heating and the temperature
inside must have been not far above freezing. That was
in the winter of 1938-39.
I felt deeply shocked to find such tragic circum-
stances which I thought meant certain death for the child,
and strongly felt that I must do what I could to save his
life. I talked to the doctor on the telephone upon this
desperate situation, and appealed to him as the only man
capable of changing the circumstances, to take responsi-
bility for the child, The boy recovered and was shortly
afterwards removed to Dr Barnardo's Homes. He
never returned to live with his mother, and from that
time I lost all touch with them.
As the boy grew up he was lodged with some foster
parents in Suffolk, and during this time of his life he
had a very meaningful dream which was repeated over
and over again. In fact he had to live with his dream,
It was a dream of his going to school with the other chil
dren in the presence of an overwhelming power in the
form of a gigantic steam roller which conveyed to his
mind that he was to develop a greater power than any
known in his day, and that in the fulfilling of fhi#-des-
tiny, he would have to be cut off from his sisters, his
fellow school children and from those whom he loved.
Later this dream was replaced by another contin-
2uously repeated dream which was complementary to
the former one, It was now indicated to him that the
power he was to develop was something to go upward
into space. By means of a vision he was given some
precise instructions as to how to builda craft for this
purpose, This was certainly the pre-education for
this work because it set his thinking upon right lines.
He understood that he would have a hard time overcom-
ing his difficulties, but he must not be put off by any-
thing he would encounter.
John spent about twelve years with his foster par-
ents which covered the buik of the war period, They
lived in a house in the proximity of an airfield which
was bombed by the enemy. He was also close at hand
when one of our bombers crashed on take-off. It came
to rest with all its bombs on board in the school play-
ground, but the bombs did not go off. John was might-
ily impressed by these escapes from danger and con-
scious of the ever-present Power assuring him of pro-
tection but always with a sense of the work he was re-
quired to do.
At the age of fourteen he was sent to a naval bar-
racks to be trained as a naval radio officer. Here he
became ili with what was described as "disease un ~
known", The coctor said he had not long to live, and he
was given permission to go home. He was very disap-
pointed at this because he wanted to beja Naval Radio
Officer, but this career would have been a.deviation from
his line of destiny, and so the Power had to intervene in
this way. He returned to his foster parents where he
quickly recovered, but the pains in his head continued.
‘Then followed another strange incident in his life,
which John does not know whether to describe as a
trance or not. All he knows is that he seemed to find
himself walking into the shed at the bottom of the gar-
3den and finding it crammed with a mass of books, He
took down a book and opened it at random, It showed
him a picture of a disc going up into space, while at
the same time the Power was impressing upon his mind
that he must remember his dreams and do what he was
being directed to do.
He later had another dream which also was indelibly
impressed upon his mind as the work of the Power in-
structing him upon the design of the craft he was to build.
in his dream he climbed up to the attic of a farm build-
ing and saw carefully laid out upon the floor a number of
straws in a circle all branching outwards but not joining
each other in the middle, there being a space at this point,
This set forth exactly the structural arrangement. for the
main members of his craft,
John's first job was with Electrical Rewinds Limi-
ted of Gray's Inn Road, London, to whom he was sent by
Dr Barnardo's Homes, and was placed under the author-
ity of a woman who is now called a "guardian" and with
whom he was lodged,
Without obtaining the consent of the Homes, the
guardian later persuaded John to become assistant to a
pharmaceutical chemist of her acquaintance. A few
months later the chemist told John he was fitted for
better things than this and introduced him to the doctors
for work at the hospital,
This next job also was obtained without the consent
of the Homes, and it lasted for four years. He did so
well in so many fields of this work, and so impressed
the doctors with whom he was always having medical
discussions, that they put him forward for a full course
of medical training that would lead eventually to the
position of surgeon. Again, a medical career of this
sort would have been right outside ‘his line of destiny,
and so the Power had to intervene. Because he had not
4been living with the guardian with whom they had placed
him, the Homes would not sign the application form for
his medical training,
The Homes now placed him in an inferior position
in an institute for old and ailing people who needed nur-
sing. He was only there for a short time because he
caught a bad cold and wrote out a prescription for it,
thus bypassing the matron and the doctor. They took
exception to this when it was found out, and reported
him to the Homes. He was brought back to the Homes.
in Ilford, Essex, and John now took the opportunity of
signing himself off from Dr Barnardo's.
In 1948 he went to a job as a projectionist in a cine-
ma in the Midlands, but the time was soon approaching
when he must be called up for conscription. He enlisted
in the R.A. F, and was stationed at an aerodrome in
Suffolk where there were British and American squadrons.
Here he made some more of what he later called his
"Levity Discs", which would go up into the air until out
of sight, and which the officers on the Station called
“luminous butterfly nets", This resulted in his being put
in the guardroom and then in the hospital, This was not
on account of any crime, but because he was greatly
feared as one who had strange powers. They did not
know what he would do next; whether he was a spy, or
whether he needed psychiatric treatment. In the hospital
he was drugged and beaten up in an endeavour to find out
the secret of his strange powers. Owing to this most im-
proper treatment that he had received, he wanted to get
out of the R.A, F. He got away on the)road to Liverpool,
and so John became a deserter.
John had no money, and after four days without food,
he met a devout member of the Pentecostal Church, who
was driving a van for his firm, and who declared he had
received a revelation from God in a dream telling bir
5to go to a certain place to meet'a young man, The Pen-
tecostal perceived that'John was a man ‘on the run’ and,
in spite of this, befriended him and took him in the van
to his own home at West Bromwich, having become con
vinced that the hand of God was with John in what he
was doing.
After a while at the Pentecostal’s home, John wanted
to return to the R.A. F, hospital to collect his property,
which consisted chiefly of equipment to do with his Lev-
ity Dises. His friend felt very nervous about this, but
believing that the hand of God was still with him, accom-
panied John to the R.A. F, Station, which John so boldly
approached and entered without being questioned by the
police, that he gave the Pentecostal the impression that
he was moving under a canopy of divine protective power.
John walked into the office of the Superintendent of the
Hospital and made his request, The Superintendent ex-
pressed great regret that John had run away. "Tt was so
unnecessary", he said, and allowed him to collect his
property and take it away. In this way John's period of
conscription with the R.A. F, came to its end before its
proper time.
‘The Pentecostal then arranged for John to have a
lodging in the house of a friend whom he felt he could
trust. This man was in the process of dying of cancer,
but he became a very helpful friend to John. He paid for
a shed to be put in the garden and for equipment to be
bought to enable John to continue his experiments. He
lived to see six experiments, and he saw the beautiful
halo that surrounds the craft resulting from the electro-
magnetic field created by the craft for its own lift and
movement, This affected radio sets nearby which were
blowing their heads off although not. switched on. It was
while he was lodged with this man that John was shot at
with an air rifle by an airman in ‘uniform, who lived
nearby and complainéd that John's aerial experiments
6wore frightening his pigeons.
These experiments conducted through the help of
his dying friend, were the beginnings of his scientific
understanding of the flight of his crafts, the design of
which had been inspired through his dreams. It was
about this time that John gave to his project the name
of "Lunic Enterprises", the letters of the name stand-
ing for "Launch Unit Navigable Individually Controllable".
After this friend died, John became employed by
the Midland Electricity Board, where he conducted fur-
ther researches into electricity largely inspired by his
dreams.
He made an experimental generator on a new prin-
ciple. This produced a high voltage and had the amazing
effect of lifting itself into the air. This unexpected re-
sult confirmed to him the things to which his dreams
had been directing him, The generator also served to
demonstrate the principles upon which he was to develop
his air and space craft,
He married in 1953, and in 1955 and the following
years they were living at Pangbourne in Berkshire, and
he was employed as a projectionist at the Rex Cinema
in Reading.
By arrangement with a local property owner, he had
the use of a space in a wood partly shielded from the pub-
lic eye where he could continue his work upon his Levity
Dises. Here he tested many structural shapes under
power in flight. From these tests he gradually formed
in his minda picture of do's and don't's required in
matters of design, and was learning more electrical
knowledge of the make-up of the effects involved. He
then applied this in the construction of alarger craft —~
which he sent up from a hill in Warminster. This was
not in connection with any of the UFO groups who came
7to frequent this hill a few years later.
At Pangbourne they had further experiences of peo-
ple being very greatly frightened by the advent of any-
thing that appeared to them to be supernatural. People
living near at hand objected to his work, and tried to
make them remove themselves to another neighbourhood.
They molested his wife and fought with him, and blood
was shed on both sides.
Jobn and his family finally settled down at Mortimer
in 1958, which was a neighbouring parish to that of my
parish of Burghfield in which he was born and where he
continued his work upon the development of an air and
space craft.
In his effort to gain public recognition and support
tor his work, he encountered only discrediting articles
from newspaper:reporters which did him much harm,
in 1963 he arranged a public demonstration of the ascent
of a Levity Dise on Mortimer Common, to which he in-
vited top people in government, politics, science, the
Services and industry, but none of these came, He only
had local villagers to see the ascent, and this did no-
thing to help him, It was disastrous because he had hirod
a marquee and made sumptvous provisions for the re~
ception of his important guests, which landed hiza in
serious debt.
John was not arrested until a court procedure re~
vealed the fact of his desertion, and this hac to be dealt
with first. He wes arrested and-remanded in jail for c
fortnight while the Court demanded to know the facts
concerning the termination of John's conscription service,
but the R.A, F, refused to give any information. As “9
charge could therefore be laid against him, he had to be
released. The Court then dealt with his indebtedness
which he is still paying off at the time of writing.
In the followingfyear he managed to get thirteen
8helpers,who together made forty-one experimental
study structures, They paid for the materials, but
were not much help because they were only interested
in the project from’ an entertainment standpoint. They
gradually dropped off when they found he was intent upon
developing a fully commercial proposition for the trans-
port of passengers and freight.
Since his grave illness as a child in the winter of
1938-39, Inever came across him again until 1968, and
then unknowingly. This resulted from an article about
him in the Reading Evening Post. I was very interested
because, inspired by the advent of flying saucers, I had
previously written two articles in my Parish Magazine
upon the Scriptures that relate to God's use of space
vehicles in Old Testament times, and upon their future
use in "the great and dreadful day of the LORD" when
He returns with all His saints "to execute judgment up-
on all” and when, as the prophetic words of the psalmist
say, "The chariots of God are twenty thousand, even
thousands of angels, the LORD is among them".
When I showed John these articles he was amazed
and much encouraged to find more than just a resem-
blance between these "chariots" of God and the problems
of design he was working upon for his air and space craft.
Some words of the Prophet Ezekiel were to him a pre-
cise statement which matched the key figures of what he
had assessed from his own research and study of the
problems involved, ~
This also convinced me that in this research work
John was in touch with the divine Truth that was ever
leading him on, and from then onwards I felt I was being
called to help him in this work. Still more so was this
the case when later his mother had seen that the articles
in the Parish-Magazine were written by me, and was then
able to tell him what up to that time neither of us] knew,
9that it was I who had felt so strongly moved to help him
at the time of his very grave illness as a child.
In the time that followed John was still battling to
overcome prejudice and was only slowly gaining support
from more people who would take up shares in his loan
without interest scheme and which shares were to count
for shares in the project when it became a money mak-
ing concern, At the same titae he was slowly making
more contacts with scientists, a number of firms, and
aviation people, including NASA of the United States, ali
of whom were interested. The Ministry of Defence gave
full recognition to his work, and filed copies of all his
documents and information about him. The Department
of Trade and Industry also now furnished him with a
mass of technical information which is the work of their
vesearch departments especially for the benefit of in-
dustry.
With the help of a team he constructed his '"Demon-
stration Craft One" which was twenty-one feet in diameter.
This was for the testing of the design by constructing it
with the weakest of materials - plywood and plastic
sheeting. This proved more successful than was antici-
pated because it had to be built on an awkward slope
which caused side strains, and it was perfectly rigid
with a number of people standing upon it.
At a meeting of members in June 1970 it was decided
that, as a number of bodies were now interested in his
work, the concern should now go forward under the title
of the
SEARL NATIONAL SPACE RESEARCH CONSORTIUM
In August of that year John issued the first of a series
of Journals designed to show the work and progress of the
Consortium. About this time alse he was joined by
William T. Sherwood of the U.S.A, He and his wife Mrs
10R.M, Sherwood set apart a room in their house as an
office for the Consortium, the purpose of which was
the keeping of records for the Consortium and for the
presenting of the project to the people of the U.S.A.
and of the world.
Since living Mortimer John has obtained employ-
ment with an engineering firm at Maidenhead where he
always worked in the night shift, and devotes the day-
time to the work of the Consortium, some of which car-
ries about with him in a dispatch case. At times this
has left him with only a few hours of sleep a week. His
work is to him as life itself.
To bring the record of his life and of his work up
to the time of writing (July 1975) I must add with very
much regret that during recent years serious bone
trouble has been developing in his head, which has
kmocked out the hearing of one ear. He has had two
operations upon this, with no signs of it being curable.
He continuously takes tablets to alleviate the pain.
To outward appearance he shows little sign, if any,
of suffering, in spite of his long hours of work, both by
day for the Consortium and by night for his income. I
can only explain his relentless energy with which he
carries on his work for the Consortium by referring to
what we have seen to be his mission of God, and the
enabling power that comes with it.
During the previous six years of research work,
John had worked out all the Levity Disc technique with
all its requirements for the air and space craft, "'Star-
ship Ezekiel" down to the last detail,
‘This original project has now been temporarily
laid aside in view of its great cost, and because it is
found that the-Searl Generator can be adapted for other
purposes, some of which would be very profitable and
boycould provide funds for/the original purpose.
These other purposes include any purpose for which
power is required. The particular thing that John has
been concentrating upon recently as funds permit is the
building of a prototype generator for the supply of eleo-
tricity for home and industrial use, and as a first step
he bas made a very small generator of 200 watts at 240
volts. I have been privileged to use this free power for
tape recording purposes and when I have played it back
to myself, I have found that it does the recording per-
fectly.
1 must stop writing somewhere, because this is a
story that has no ending. This seems to be the right
place, because this moment is a landmark. My own
use, however small, of the free power of the astrono-
mical universe, which makes the thunder and lightning
and maintains the planets in their courses, means that
the NEW ERA of free power for every purpose has
begun.
This sets the seal of success upon John's Life's
work, but cannot reveal its ultimate achievement which
is rather beyond our powers to envisage. This is the
beginning only of the NEW ERA that will transform our
way of life, and we hope that John may yet enjoy many
years of seeing the ever-widening fruition of his work.
Those of us who have discerned in John's life the
overruling hand of God leading him to the fulfilment of
his destiny, will regard this gift of a material blessing
as part only of a greater purpose of God, when they see
it coincides with the ever~increasing signs of the immi-
nence of Christ's return when "the government (of the
world) shall be upon his shoulder ... and to establish it
with judgment and with justice from henceforth even for
ever. The zeal of the LORD of hosts will perform this."
12Printed & Published
by
‘The Free Society
26 Morpeth Mansion:
Morpeth Terrace
London S, W.1.