Edgar Cayce and Virginia Beach
```mediawiki Edgar Cayce (1877–1945) was an American mystic and psychic whose life and work became inextricably linked to Virginia Beach, Virginia, transforming the coastal city into a center for alternative spirituality and metaphysical research. Though born in Kentucky and spending much of his early life in various American cities, Cayce established his permanent residence in Virginia Beach in 1925 and remained there until his death, leaving a legacy that continues to shape the city's cultural and spiritual identity. His presence in Virginia Beach attracted seekers, researchers, and tourists interested in metaphysical topics, psychic phenomena, and esoteric philosophy. The Association for Research and Enlightenment (A.R.E.), the organization Cayce founded to preserve and study his work, remains headquartered in Virginia Beach at 67th Street and Atlantic Avenue and serves as the primary institutional repository of his life's documentation and teachings.
History
Relocation to Virginia Beach
Edgar Cayce's move to Virginia Beach in 1925 marked a turning point in both his personal life and the city's cultural development. Cayce had spent the preceding decades traveling extensively throughout the United States, conducting psychic readings from various locations including New York, Boston, and Dayton, Ohio. His reputation as a gifted clairvoyant had grown steadily, attracting patients, researchers, and curious individuals seeking his counsel on health matters, spiritual guidance, and personal questions.
By the mid-1920s, Cayce and his family were seeking a permanent base for his work. According to biographer Thomas Sugrue, whose 1942 account There Is a River was written with Cayce's direct participation, the choice of Virginia Beach was influenced by several factors—among them Cayce's belief, expressed in his own readings, that the region offered both spiritual significance and a measure of geographic safety from natural disasters.[1] This belief has persisted in local folklore ever since: Virginia Beach residents have long associated Cayce with the idea that the Hampton Roads region enjoys a kind of natural protection, a notion Cayce reportedly expressed through readings that characterized the area as less vulnerable to catastrophic weather and geological events than other parts of the United States. The A.R.E. itself has cited this element of Cayce's teachings in its publications, noting that Cayce pointed to Virginia Beach as one of the safer areas of the country.[2]
Cayce also hoped to establish a more permanent institutional framework for documenting and organizing his readings, which by that point numbered in the thousands. Virginia Beach, then a modest resort community on the Atlantic coast, offered relative quiet and affordability compared to the larger cities where he had previously worked.[3]
Founding of the A.R.E.
In 1931, Cayce, his family, and a circle of devoted supporters established the Association for Research and Enlightenment to systematically catalog, preserve, and study the readings he had given throughout his lifetime. The organization initially operated from modest facilities in Virginia Beach but grew steadily as membership expanded. Cayce's decision to create the A.R.E. reflected his vision of transforming his life's work from individual consultations into a comprehensive body of knowledge available for scholarly investigation and spiritual exploration.[4]
During the 1930s and 1940s, Virginia Beach became a destination for individuals drawn to Cayce's teachings. His death on January 3, 1945, did not diminish this; it solidified his status as a historical and cultural figure, and the A.R.E. continued to grow as an organization dedicated to preserving his philosophy and investigating the phenomena associated with his readings.
Post-1945 Growth
In the decades after Cayce's death, Hugh Lynn Cayce—Edgar's son—assumed leadership of the A.R.E. and guided its expansion through the mid-twentieth century. Under Hugh Lynn's direction, the organization broadened its programming, developed a publishing arm, and built the campus on 67th Street that remains its home today. Hugh Lynn Cayce also worked to bring serious researchers and scholars into contact with the A.R.E.'s archives, lending the organization greater credibility among those investigating parapsychology and alternative medicine.[5]
The A.R.E. established Atlantic University, an accredited graduate school offering programs in transpersonal studies, as an extension of its educational mission. The university operates in affiliation with the A.R.E. and reflects the organization's long-standing commitment to academic engagement with the subjects Cayce's readings addressed.[6] By the early twenty-first century, the A.R.E. had grown into an internationally recognized organization with members across dozens of countries, hosting annual conferences, study groups, and seminars that draw participants to Virginia Beach from around the world.
Culture
The cultural impact of Edgar Cayce on Virginia Beach extends well beyond his individual lifetime. The A.R.E. became a focal point for visitors interested in Cayce's teachings on reincarnation, holistic health, spiritual development, and universal consciousness. Annual conferences, seminars, workshops, and study groups organized by the A.R.E. have attracted participants from across the nation and internationally, establishing Virginia Beach as a recognized hub for esoteric and New Age philosophy. The organization's library and archives house more than 14,000 documented readings that Cayce gave during his lifetime, representing one of the most comprehensive collections of psychic and spiritual material ever assembled in a single institutional archive.[7]
Cayce's influence on Virginia Beach's cultural identity has manifested in concrete ways throughout the decades following his death. Numerous wellness centers, practitioners of alternative medicine, bookstores specializing in metaphysical philosophy, and meditation and yoga studios have established operations in the city, partly in response to the spiritual orientation that the A.R.E. campus has long projected. This identity distinguishes Virginia Beach from other coastal resort communities and has created a niche that attracts specific demographics of visitors and residents who might otherwise have no reason to choose the city over comparable destinations.
Local residents frequently describe the A.R.E. as representing a lesser-known dimension of Virginia Beach—one that sits quietly alongside the city's more prominent beach resort and military identities. Educational institutions and civic organizations in Virginia Beach have recognized Cayce's historical significance, incorporating his life and work into local history discussions and cultural programming. The city's tourism sector has similarly acknowledged the draw that Cayce's legacy represents, with various establishments and attractions highlighting the connection to promote cultural tourism.
Cayce's prediction about the region's weather and geographic safety has taken on a life of its own in local culture. Many Virginia Beach residents are aware of the tradition—sometimes expressed as the notion of a protective "dome" or force over the Hampton Roads area—that traces back to Cayce's readings. This belief circulates informally among longtime locals and is occasionally referenced by the A.R.E. in its educational materials, though the organization treats it as one element of a much broader body of prophetic and metaphysical readings rather than a literal meteorological claim.[8]
Attractions
The A.R.E. Campus
The A.R.E.'s headquarters and visitor center at 67th Street and Atlantic Avenue in Virginia Beach serves as the primary attraction related to Edgar Cayce's life and work. The campus sits directly on the oceanfront and is recognizable by a distinctive domed structure—referred to locally as the "Edgar Cayce Dome"—that forms part of the main building. This architectural feature has made the A.R.E. campus one of the more visually distinctive buildings along Virginia Beach's Atlantic shoreline and is frequently cited by locals as a landmark.[9]
The facility features a library, meditation room, bookstore, and exhibition spaces dedicated to Cayce's life, readings, and philosophical teachings. Visitors can access archival materials, attend lectures and workshops, and participate in meditation and study groups. Daily tours covering Cayce's history and the A.R.E.'s collections are available to the public, making the campus accessible to casual visitors and dedicated researchers alike. The bookstore carries a broad selection of publications related to Cayce's work and the wider traditions his teachings touched upon, including spiritual development, alternative medicine, and parapsychology. The facility functions as both a spiritual center and an educational institution, serving researchers, spiritual seekers, and individuals interested in the history of American spiritualism.[10]
Other Historic Sites
Several other locations in Virginia Beach maintain historical and cultural connections to Cayce. The Edgar Cayce House, where Cayce lived during the final years of his life, has been preserved and is occasionally available for tours, offering visitors an intimate glimpse into his domestic life and the environment in which he conducted many of his readings. Various markers and historical plaques throughout Virginia Beach commemorate Cayce's presence in the city and his contributions to its cultural identity. The Virginia Beach Public Library maintains historical collections and resources documenting Cayce's life and his impact on the community, making these materials available to researchers and interested residents.
The city's metaphysical bookstores, wellness centers, and spiritual organizations often feature displays, publications, and educational materials related to Cayce's life and philosophy, extending the reach of his legacy beyond the A.R.E. campus itself and into the broader commercial and cultural life of Virginia Beach.
Notable People
Edgar Cayce himself remains the most significant figure associated with this strand of Virginia Beach history. Born on March 18, 1877, in Hopkinsville, Kentucky, Cayce demonstrated unusual abilities from childhood, claiming to see visions and communicate with spiritual entities. His early work as a photographer was interrupted by a throat condition that he reportedly healed through self-hypnosis and what became his signature method of psychic reading—entering a self-induced trance state and delivering spoken diagnoses and guidance that a stenographer would transcribe verbatim. That practice, begun in the early 1900s, produced the 14,000-plus documented readings now held in the A.R.E. archives.[11]
Throughout his life, Cayce worked with physicians, researchers, and scholars who sought to understand and verify his claimed abilities. His readings addressed an extraordinarily broad range of topics, from medical diagnoses and treatment recommendations to reincarnation narratives, accounts of Atlantis, and spiritual philosophy. Biographer Sidney Kirkpatrick, whose 2000 account drew on A.R.E. archives and personal papers, characterized Cayce as a genuinely complex figure whose sincerity was not in doubt even among skeptics who questioned the verifiability of his claims.[12]
Gertrude Evans Cayce, Edgar's wife, played an essential role in his work throughout their life together in Virginia Beach. She served as the conductor in many of his trance sessions—asking questions and guiding the readings—and was central to the domestic and organizational infrastructure that made his prolific output possible. Her contributions are documented in the A.R.E. archives and acknowledged in the major biographical accounts of Cayce's life.[13]
Hugh Lynn Cayce, their son, became the principal figure in the A.R.E.'s operations after his father's death in January 1945. Under his leadership, the organization expanded its campus, publishing operations, and membership, transforming a small institutional archive into an internationally recognized center for metaphysical research. Hugh Lynn Cayce's tenure shaped the modern A.R.E. more than any other single individual after the founder himself. Numerous researchers, physicians, and scholars who were drawn to Edgar Cayce's work established professional relationships with the organization in Virginia Beach, contributing to its intellectual and institutional development over the decades that followed. ```
References
- ↑ Sugrue, Thomas. There Is a River: The Story of Edgar Cayce. Henry Holt and Company, 1942.
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Kirkpatrick, Sidney D. Edgar Cayce: An American Prophet. Riverhead Books, 2000.
- ↑ Kirkpatrick, Sidney D. Edgar Cayce: An American Prophet. Riverhead Books, 2000.
- ↑ Kirkpatrick, Sidney D. Edgar Cayce: An American Prophet. Riverhead Books, 2000.
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Sugrue, Thomas. There Is a River: The Story of Edgar Cayce. Henry Holt and Company, 1942.
- ↑ Kirkpatrick, Sidney D. Edgar Cayce: An American Prophet. Riverhead Books, 2000.
- ↑ Kirkpatrick, Sidney D. Edgar Cayce: An American Prophet. Riverhead Books, 2000.