Newsletter: The Lay of the Land: Archives: Fall 2001 |
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INDEX CLUI Dives into
San Francisco Bay Fresh Kills Bay Tours by Land and Sea Took Public Out There First CLUI Touchscreen
Kiosk Developed DRS Featured
in Art Exhibit First CLUI Landcam
Installed The Reich Stuff An Arctic Island
(requires the
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FIELD REPORTThe Reich Stuff
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The main building at Orgonon contains the museum and observatory. CLUI photo by Michael Kassner |
Orgonon is a place in the countryside
near Rangeley, Maine, with an unusual observatory, the Orgone
Energy Observatory, built in 1948 by psychologist Wilhelm
Reich, who used it for research until his arrest by federal
agents in 1955. Though the observatory is not in use anymore,
it stands as a monument to Reich and his life's work, and
inside, the Wilhelm Reich Museum contains Reich's home library,
art studio, and laboratory preserved just as he left them.
Orgonon's 175 acres also contain hiking trails, and conference
facilities, and a bookstore selling Reich's works.
A student of Sigmund Freud, Reich was a controversial figure in the Vienna of the 1920s and 1930s. He publicly called for the need for a sexual revolution as founder of Sex Pol, the Austrian Sexual Party. He was an early campaigner for adolescent sexual education and for popular access to contraceptive and abortion services. He broke with Freud on the need for widespread social change to combat individual neuroses. In his studies of human orgasm he identified a life energy present in all organic substances which he called orgone. The quest to identify, study, and harness orgone energy would occupy Reich for the rest of his life.
Reich fled from Vienna to Oslo after the Nazis took power. He caught the last ship for the United States before WWII and settled in Forest Hills, NY (Queens). He chose Rangeley as the site for his Orgone Energy Observatory not only for its isolation and scenic beauty but because the site had properties which made it advantageous for the collection and observation of orgone. The Observatory sits on the side of a hill, facing east, and overlooking a lake. Orgone would blow in from the Atlantic Ocean, be funneled towards the site by surrounding mountains, and be concentrated in the Rangeley lakes area, trapped over the lake by the western mountains behind Orgonon.
Reich had grand plans for Orgonon and for the beneficial uses of orgone for mankind. The museum features three cloudbusters, devices used to affect weather patterns by increasing or decreasing orgone potential in clouds or in the surrounding air. The museum maintains that cloudbuster-produced rain averted a drought affecting Maine farmers in 1953.
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The astrolabe antenna (left) is mounted on the roof
of the observatory to detect Orgone Energy. Rangeley
Lake is visible below. CLUI photos by Michael Kassner |
From October, 1954 to April, 1955, Reich studied desert conditions in Arizona. He believed desertification was related to the presence of DOR (deadly orgone radiation) and that the process was being accelerated by nuclear testing and DOR from space. Reich hoped that one day intensive use of cloudbusters might be used to make the desert green and to counteract the negative effects of nuclear radiation in the environment.
While Reich was in Arizona,
the medical establishment and the federal government finally
executed the legal process they had initiated in order to
stop him: Reich was arrested for violating an injunction
that prohibited the interstate transport of orgone energy
accumulators used to treat cancer patients. FDA agents seized
all remaining accumulators along with research data, books,
and laboratory equipment, and allegedly burned much of it
in bonfires in Portland and New York. Reich died of a heart
attack at the age of 60 in the Federal Penitentiary at Lewisberg,
Pennsylvania. He was buried at Orgonon in 1957.
Reich requested in his will that his remaining research
be sealed for fifty years until the world was ready to understand
the significance of orgone research. His papers will be
made available to the public in 2007.
More information can be found at: www.wilhelmreich.com.


