Biography:George G. Ritchie

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Short description: American writer and psychiatrist (1923–2007)

George G. Ritchie (25 September 1923 – 29 October 2007) was an American psychiatrist who held positions as president of the Richmond Academy of General Practice;[1] chairman of the Department of Psychiatry of Towers Hospital;[1] and founder and president of the Universal Youth Corps, Inc. for almost 20 years.[2] In 1967 he entered private psychiatry practice in Charlottesville, Virginia, and in 1983 moved to Anniston, Alabama, to serve as head of the Department of Psychiatry at the Northeast Alabama Regional Medical Center. He returned to Richmond in 1986 to continue in private practice until retirement in 1992.[3]

Near-death experience

In 1943 as a young army recruit in Texas Ritchie caught pneumonia and passed out. He was placed in an isolation room. When an attendant checked him 24 hours later he found no pulse or breathing. A medical officer pronounced him dead, pulled a sheet over his face, and gave orders for his body to be taken to the morgue. But when the attendant came back nine minutes later he thought he detected chest movement, and although his vital signs were still negative he convinced the medical officer to give him a shot of adrenaline into the heart muscle. Ritchie's pulse returned and he started breathing. He regained consciousness four days later. But Ritchie had experienced waking up and seeing the body covered by the sheet. He then felt himself flying over the country, trying to get back to Virginia to continue his training to be a doctor. At one point he came down in a town and tried to ask someone a question, but the man didn't hear or see him. (Ten months afterwards, Ritchie happened to travel through Vicksburg, Mississippi and saw the exact place he had seen during the experience.)[4][5]

Ritchie wrote of his near-death experience (NDE) in Return from Tomorrow, co-written with Elizabeth Sherrill (1928-), and published in 1978. In the book he tells of his out-of-body experience,[6] his meeting with Jesus Christ,[7] and his travel with Christ through different dimensions of time and space.[8] Return from Tomorrow has been translated into nine languages.[9] Later he published another book, Ordered to Return: My Life After Dying, to elaborate on his heavenly experience.

Ritchie's story was the first contact Raymond Moody had with NDEs, during his post-graduate studies and residency in Psychiatry at the University of Virginia. This led Moody to investigate over 150 cases of NDEs in his book Life After Life[10] and two other books that followed.

Death

Ritchie died on October 29, 2007, at his home in Irvington, Virginia, aged 84, following a long battle with cancer.[2]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Ritchie, G. and Sherrill, E., Return from Tomorrow, 1978, back cover.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Anniston Star Obituary, October 31, 2007. Accessed 2007-12-18.
  3. Richmond Times-Dispatch obituary[yes|permanent dead link|dead link}}], October 31, 2007. Accessed 2007-12-18.
  4. Ian Wilson (1997). Life After Death: The Evidence. ISBN 9780283063008. 
  5. George G. Ritchie (1998). Ordered to Return: My Life After Dying. pp. 24–25. ISBN 9781571740960.  (First published 1991.)
  6. Ritchie, G. and Sherrill, E. (1978), op. cit., pp. 36-46.
  7. Ritchie, G. and Sherrill, E. (1978), op. cit., pp. 47-55.
  8. Ritchie, G. and Sherrill, E. (1978), op. cit., pp. 55-74.
  9. Ritchie, G. (1998), op. cit., back cover.
  10. Ritchie, G. and Sherrill, E. (1978), op. cit., pp. 9-10.

Bibliography

  • George G. Ritchie and Elizabeth Sherrill, Return from Tomorrow. Old Tappan, NJ: F.H. Revell, 1978. ISBN:0-8007-8412-X.
  • George G. Ritchie, Ordered to Return: My Life After Dying. Charlottesville, VA: Hampton Roads Publishing, 1998. ISBN:1-57174-096-1.

External links