A
Little History about John Marsh
John
Marsh met John Crane in 1952 when he became his supervisor at
Convair Aeronautics. Marsh had moved to San Diego from Tucson,
Arizona in order to get the cancer treatments that his wife
needed. After several months, the doctors told John Marsh that
his wife was terminal and that there was nothing that they could
do for her. While at Convair, Crane told Marsh about Dr. Rife
and how he had found a way to eliminate diseases, including
cancer, using frequencies. He and Crane went to talk to Dr. Rife
and see if he would help. After some coaxing and appealing to
Rife’s desire to help people, they were able to get his aid.
Rife gave them an old instrument which they repaired and used on
Marsh’s wife. She was cured of her cancer after 6 treatments.
This began a friendship between these three men that would last
for years.
Many people know of Dr. Rife and John Crane but know little or
nothing about the great contributions that John Marsh made. Dr.
Rife, John Crane and John Marsh worked together as a team in the
1950’s and early 60s. They formed a company called Life Labs
and started building Dr. Rife’s frequency Instruments. In
1957, Marsh took an instrument to Dr. Robert P. Stafford (the
family doctor) for him to use on two patients that had cancer.
Dr. Stafford used the instrument for nearly 5 years on patients.
Dr. Staffords report is on the Marsh audio tapes and his paper
report is here for you to read. It was Marsh and not Crane who
made this possible. Marsh also contacted doctors in Salt Lake
City who started using the frequency instrument. It was through
his hard work and dedication that we have this information. John
Crane had done nothing until Marsh came along. Marsh had the
greatest motivation to get Dr. Rife’s technology revived. His
wife was dying of cancer! After what Dr. Rife’s instrument did
for his wife he could not rest. He worked as hard as he could
with Dr. Rife and John Crane to make the instruments the best
that they could be for the 1950s. Some people think that John
Crane was the true heir of Dr. Rife’s technology but nothing
could be further from the truth. After being court-ordered in
1964 not to associate with one another, both Marsh and Crane
went on separately building Rife’s instruments. Therefore,
there is no “true heir” to Rife’s technology and anyone
that says this is trying to take advantage of people.
In
the audio tapes and papers, Marsh gives some interesting
information. They (Rife, Marsh, and Crane) were in agreement on
how the instruments should work; that the ray tube instrument
was Dr. Rife’s and not Crane’s or Marsh’s though they
collaborated together; that the square wave audio frequencies
that were used in Rife’s ray tube instrument were his and not
Crane’s or Marsh’s; and that the audio frequencies were
derived from the color of the organisms and mathematics and not
from looking through the microscope. This is why there are no
lab notes for these audio frequencies. Some things Marsh’s
paperwork makes clear and other things we still do not know and
will not know until more information is found. It is still
unclear when the audio frequencies were derived, in the 1930’s
or 1950’s. One thing that is known is that Rife’s earlier
1930’s instruments, which used much higher frequencies, worked
better. Two examples are the 1934 instrument and the 1935 Rife
Ray #4. The instruments that used the #4 frequencies were used
by Dr. Johnson, Dr. Couche and Dr. Tully with amazing results.
Dr. Stafford made this statement about the audio modulated ray
tube instrument that he used: “these frequencies (audio) may
be wrong, or only nearly correct”. Nevertheless he still
reported very good results. Marsh points out the fact that the
ray tube instrument had some real accuracy problems and it was
only in the late 1960’s and 70’s when electronics had
advanced that this problem was solved. Even though Marsh and
Crane (not Rife) developed the pad type instruments, Marsh put
most of his energy into ray tube instruments. Crane put most of
his efforts into pad type instruments. Marsh felt that the ray
tube instruments worked much better because of the penetration
that the carrier frequency gave. In the late 1970’s, Marsh
built the ray tube instrument that is in the picture with him.
He felt that it was the best instrument that he had ever built
and that it far exceeded any that they built in the 1950’s. He
claimed to have had great success with it. This instrument still
works today.
Marsh
and Crane had a falling out in the 1980’s because Marsh felt
Crane tried to take all the credit. Crane never gave Marsh the
credit that he deserved. Marsh died in 1987 and his family didn’t
want any of his Rife related equipment and papers. His
collection and instruments were passed on to his nurse who took
care of him. AAA Production felt that Marsh’s story should be
told. She has kindly allowed AAA Production to put some of his
information on this web site so that he will get the credit that
he deserves. We hope those who read this information will enjoy
it and see the value of Marsh’s contribution.
| The John
Marsh Collection |
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