Considered one of the leading psychics of the modern age, Jeane Dixon grew from humble beginnings to become a world renowned celebrity psychic. While it is commonly held that she was born in 1918, it was discovered through her Social Security card that she was actually born in 1904 in Medford, Wisconsin. She grew up in California and later established a successful real estate business in Washington, D.C. with her husband, James.
Otherworldly visions
Dixon's intuitive gifts were evident very early on. As a toddler she supposedly spoke of events that had not yet occurred and would ask for things that hadn't arrived in the mail yet. At the age of eight, a fortune teller told her that she would become a great psychic. Using meditation, prayer, psychometry, visions and dreams, Dixon honed her psychic gifts. Able to sense the arrival of visions up to three days in advance, they would appear in color or black and white and were accompanied by music and voices. Most of her visions had national or international implications.
Raised a devout Roman Catholic, Dixon always believed her gifts were bestowed upon her by God to help humanity. As such she didn't charge for her services, instead she took the profits from her seven published books and started the Children to Children Foundation.
Celebrity psychic
During World War II, Dixon foretold the death of popular actress Carole Lombard after touching her hands. She told Lombard not to fly, but the beauty was on a tour promoting War Bonds and did not want to interrupt her travel schedule. Tragically, she was killed the same night in a place crash.
It wasn't until November 22, 1963, however, that anyone really began to take notice of Dixon's talents. In 1956 an article had appeared in Parade Magazine in which Dixon predicted that a Democrat would win the 1960 Presidential Election and would be assassinated or die in office. John F. Kennedy won the presidency in 1960.
John F. Kennedy wasn't the only Kennedy whose death she foretold - at a meeting at the Ambassador Hotel she was asked if Robert Kennedy would ever become president. She responded, "No, he will never become President of the United States because of a tragedy right here in this hotel." He went on to win the California primary but was shot and killed while addressing a crowd at the Ambassador Hotel.
Dixon's talents became so esteemed that former president Richard Nixon was regularly briefed by her, even calling her "the soothsayer." She also advised Nancy Reagan.
Dixon's horoscope columns, books and celebrity following gave her a wide reaching audience who consulted her advice regularly until her death in 1997.
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