rojash, not spooky at all. This is from the Helen Duncan website:
http://www.helenduncan.org.uk/campaign/pardond enied.html
There is no doubt that Mrs. Duncan was somewhat of an embarrassment to the authorities. In particular, her guide, Albert, in a seance in Edinburgh announced that HMS Hood had been sunk earlier that day in the North Atlantic. The time of this seance was 3:30 pm.
Brigadier Firebrace, a very enthusiastic believer in Spiritualism, who was the Chief of Security at the time in Scotland, attended that seance. He returned to his office and telephoned the Admiralty to see whether, as he called it, the rumour of the sinking was true. At that time it was denied.
By 9:30 p.m., as he was leaving the office, a telephone call was received from the Admiralty confirming the sinking at 1:30 p.m.
Everton and Chakka, it would appear that Helen Duncan announced the news just two hours after the Hood was sunk.
Everton, she didn't get the name wrong, so that argument is irrelevant.
Chakka, I'm not sure I'd call Tony Robinson gullible. Surely if he's investigating this case, as unlikely as some aspects may be, he has to consider them all, and do it with as few of his own pre-conceived ideas as possible. That's good investigative journalism.
Maybe it's just possible that she wasn't a fraud - at least not in this case. Ouch! It's certainly a difficult one.