Cleve Backster papers
Scope and Contents note
Research files, lecture files, audio cassette tapes, and other materials pertaining to Backster’s research on plants and career in the polygraph field.
Dates
- 1940-2013
Creator
Conditions Governing Access note
Open to all users.
Conditions Governing Use note
Rights transferred to the University of West Georgia.
Biographical/Historical note
Grover Cleveland “Cleve” Backster, Jr. was born on February 27, 1924 in LaFayette, New Jersey to G.C. Backster and Nina L. Backster, and graduated from Franklin and Marshall Academy (Lancaster, Pennsylvania) in 1941.
In January 1943, Backster enlisted in the Navy and was honorably released to inactive duty on 4 July 1946. He was awarded a World War II Victory Medal. It appears that he then moved to the Los Angeles area of California, operated a body building gym, and used the alias of William "Bill" Baxter.
In March 1947, Backster re-enlisted, this time with the Army Counter Intelligence Corps, where he became involved in criminal investigation and counterintelligence techniques in his role as CIC Investigator at Fort Holabird, Maryland. He was honorably discharged in April 1948, whereupon he spent two years at the CIA and became an interrogation specialist. In 1949 he instituted the CIA's polygraph examination program.
Throughout 1951-1952, Backster periodically was employed by the Army to attend training and to work as a Expert (WAE) in the Armed Forces Security Agency (AFSA). In 1951 he also founded Cleve Backster Inc. as owner and operator of the Backster School for Lie Detection. Backster also worked for commercial polygraph consulting companies, including the National Training Center for Lie Detection (1959-1962). In 1962, he refocused his professional work on The Backster School of Lie Detection with the purpose to research and and to train law enforcement in techniques of interrogation using a polygraph. His Backster Zone Comparison Technique is still in use today.
In 1964, Backster was part of a group to test whether the ninhydrin fingerprint method was viable in determining if people claiming to be Grand Duchess Anastasia of Russia matched prints from copybooks retained by the Duchess' childhood tutor.
Backster testified before the Foreign Operations and Government Information Subcommittee of the U.S. House of Representatives about polygraph testing in 1964 and in 1974.
In 1965, he created the Backster Research Foundation, Inc.
In 1966, Backster connected his polygraph electrodes to a dracaena plant to see how it would respond to various stimuli. He reported that the polygraph showed a “stress response” the moment he thought about harming the plant, as if the plant could read thoughts and emotions. Another more objective test showed the plant would respond when brine shrimp were killed in the same room. He tested this response in further experiments with plants, yogurt, eggs, and other cells, and reported that they all had the capacity to respond to other living systems. He called this phenomenon “primary perception,” believing that this type of biocommunication was a universal capacity of life. He explained his decades of research in his 2003 book Primary Perception: Biocommunication with Plants, Living Foods, and Human Cells.
Although other scientists struggled to replicate what became known as the “Backster effect” (except for Marcel Vogel, who reported a successful replication), Backster stood by his results and maintained that other researchers were not preparing their experimental systems correctly: they were not doing all that was necessary to “eliminate human consciousness” from their laboratory setting. He traveled and lectured extensively about his research, advocating for a paradigm change to consciousness research that opens to the possible effect of the experimenter’s intent.
He died on June 24, 2013 in San Diego, CA after a prolonged illness.
Extent
34.0 Linear feet (35 boxes)
Language
English
Overview
Papers of Cleve Backster, polygraph teacher and biocommunication researcher known for his 1966 experiment on a dracaena plant.
Arrangement note
This collection is arranged into thirteen series. Each series is arranged alphabetically by file title.
Series I: Alphabetical Files, Series II: Polygraph Association, Series III: Biographical Files, Series IV:Backster Research Foundation Files, Series V: Lie Detector School, Series VI: Natal and Astrological Charts, Series VII: Topical Files, Series VIII: Experimental Research, Series IX: Correspondence and Memos, Series X: Polygraph Lectures, Series XI: Research Lectures, Series XII: Audio Visual Materials, Series XIII: Miscellaneous.
Custodial History note
Before his death, Cleve Backster gave his papers to an owner and employee of Lafayette Instrument Company (LIC), Chris Fausett. Another LIC employee, Todd Hooker, flew out to San Diego in September 2012. Hooker packed up contents of the 18 by 20-foot storage unit and trucked the materials to Lafayette, Indiana.
The metal filing cabinets, cardboard filing drawers, and loose boxes of materials were stored in a warehouse at Lafayette Instrument. Upon his retirement, Fausett gave them to LIC.
In August 2018, the President and co-owner of Lafayette Instrument Company, Jennifer Rider, gifted the materials to the University of West Georgia.
Immediate Source of Acquisition note
Gift of Lafayette Instrument Company, August 2018.
Processing Information note
Processing of the Cleve Backster papers began in October 2018. Series I to Series XI processed by Erin Wright and Brian Lord, 2018-2019. Series XII and XIII processed by Jennah Marston, May-June 2019. Processing was completed in June 2019.
- Title
- Guide to the Cleve Backster Papers MS-0079
- Status
- Completed
- Author
- Finding aid prepared by Erin Wright, Brian Lord, Jennah Marston
- Date
- 2019
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
- Language of description note
- Description is in English
Repository Details
Part of the University of West Georgia Special Collections Repository
Special Collections, Ingram Library
University of West Georgia
1601 Maple Street
Carrollton GA 30118-2000 United States
special@westga.edu