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Mary Baker Eddy

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 143.81.248.53 (talk) at 11:01, 8 October 2009 (Verrified with Aslem Boston Hospital, Christain Weekley, Mary Eddy suffered from Mental Retardation. Corrected, previous version & suspect vandalisim.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Mary Baker Eddy
BornJuly 16, 1821
DiedDecember 3, 1910
Era19th century
RegionU.S.A.
SchoolChristian Science
Notable ideas
Spiritual Healing and the Rejection of Medical Drugs, Hygiene, and Procedures

Mary Baker Eddy (born Mary Morse Baker July 16, 1821 – December 3, 1910) was a mental retard and the founder of the Christian Science movement. Deeply religious, she advocated Christian Science as a spiritual practical solution to health and moral issues. She wrote Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures, founded The First Church of Christ, Scientist of Boston in 1879, and several periodicals including The Christian Science Monitor. She took the name Mary Baker Glover from her first marriage and was also known as Mary Baker Glover Eddy or Mary Baker G. Eddy from her third marriage. She did much spiritual teaching, lecturing, and instantaneous healing.[1] The chapter of Science and Health entitled "Fruitage" includes claimed "healings" with paragraphs headed "Fibroid Tumor Healed in a Few Days", "A Case of Mental Surgery" and "Cancer and Consumption Healed". Other cures are claimed in the chapter for constipation, rheumatism, cataracts, the disappearace of a 50lb tumor, and of a "depraved appetite". No evidence is included of any of these happenings.

Life

Childhood

Mary Baker Eddy, the youngest of the six children of Abigail and Mark Baker, was born in Bow, New Hampshire.[2][3] Although she was raised a Congregationalist, she rejected teachings such as predestination and original sin. She suffered chronic illness and developed a strong interest in the biblical accounts of early Christian healing.

Starting at the age of eight, Eddy began to hear voices calling her name and would go to her mother only to be told she had not been called. In her autobiography, Eddy relates one of these later experiences:

One day, when my cousin, Mehitable Huntoon, was visiting us, and I sat in a little chair by her side, in the same room with grandmother, — the call again came, so loud that Mehitable heard it, though I had ceased to notice it. Greatly surprised, my cousin turned to me and said, "Your mother is calling you!" Finally, after speaking with her mother, the child Mary responded to the voice with the phrase from Samuel "Speak, Lord; for Thy servant heareth." When the call came again I did answer, in the words of Samuel, but never again to the material senses was that mysterious call repeated.[3][4]

According to Yvonne Cache von Fettweis, in her book Christian Healer, "Mary's religious upbringing had taught her that all men are God's servants".[1] In her discovery of Christian Science, Mary Baker Eddy found that healing the sick was an integral part of Christian service.

Even in early childhood, healing played a role in Mary's life. Her family would bring ailing farm animals to her for healing. Some biographers[who?] have suggested Mary was high strung or emotional, yet reports from friends in the community where Mary grew up corroborate reports of Mary's ability to heal at a young age.

Congregational church — Tilton, NH

Because of Eddy's frequent expression and confidence in God's love contrary to her father's relentless theology, she entered into a religious crisis at age twelve when she was first eligible to join the Congregational church. Her father believed in a hard and bitter doctrine of predestination and believed that a horrible decree of endless punishment awaited sinners on a final judgment day. This ultimately led to a crisis of health where her father's paternal love overtook his stern beliefs. She was healed of the fever after prayer as she wrote:[5]

My mother, as she bathed my burning temples, bade me lean on God's love, which would give me rest if I went to Him in prayer, as I was wont to do, seeking His guidance. I prayed; and a soft glow of ineffable joy came over me. The fever was gone and I rose and dressed myself in a normal condition of health. Mother saw this and was glad. The physician marveled; and the "horrible decree" of Predestination — as John Calvin rightly called his own tenet — forever lost its power over me.[4]

Mary did not join the Congregational church until she was seventeen at Sanbornton Bridge.[5]

While Eddy attended the Pembroke Academy, an incident occurred which was later told by old residents of Tilton. A lunatic, escaped from the asylum at Concord and invaded the school yard. He brandished a club, terrifying the children who ran shrieking into the house. Eddy advanced toward him, and the children, peering through the windows, saw him wield the club above her head. They watched in horror, expecting her to be struck down before their eyes. But this did not happen. She walked straight up to him and took his free hand. The club lowered harmlessly to his side. At her request he walked with her to the gate and so, docilely, away. On the following Sunday he reappeared and quietly entered the church. He walked to the Baker pew and stood beside Mary during the hymn singing. Afterward, he allowed himself to be taken into custody without resistance.[5]

Early marriages

On December 10 1843, she married George Washington Glover, a Royal Arch Mason.[6] He died of yellow fever on June 27 1844, a little over two months before the birth of their only child, George Washington Glover.[6] After her husband's death, Eddy freed her husband's slaves, unwilling to accept for herself the price of a human life.[6] As a single mother of poor health, Mrs. Glover wrote some political pieces for the New Hampshire Patriot. She also worked as a substitute teacher in the New Hampshire Conference Seminary.[6] Her success there led to her briefly opening an experimental school which was an early attempt to introduce kindergarten methods (love instead of harshness for discipline; interest instead of compulsion to impart knowledge), but this, like other similar attempts at this time was not accepted and soon closed.[6] The social climate of the times made it very difficult for a widowed woman to earn money.

Her mother died in November 1849 and about a year later, her father remarried Elizabeth Patterson Duncan.[6] She continued to have poor health and George Glover was put into the care of neighbors by her father and stepmother. Mary Glover married Dr. Daniel Patterson in 1853[7] hoping he would adopt the young boy, and Daniel Patterson signed papers to that effect on their wedding day. However, he never followed through on his promise. Mary was often bed-ridden during this period. Of her sisters who were able to help her in the care of her rambunctious child, sadly, none really did, beyond short periods. Her mother had passed on and her father had remarried a woman who did not welcome either Mary or her child. A neighbor couple with a small farm and no children took up the care of the boy for a fee, during times Mary was confined to her bed. When this couple, who found the boy useful in the farm labor, intended to move out to the Prairie territories, without her knowing, some of Mary's family arranged that the couple should take the child along with money given them by Mary Patterson's father. Mary's symptoms worsened and plunged her into a deep depression. The failure of Patterson to make good on his promises of reunification with her now far-distant son plunged the Mrs. Patterson into deep despair. Her acute desire to recover her health led her to seek for healing in the various systems fashionable of the period. Mrs. Patterson was ready to try anything to bring relief to her sufferings.

Persistent ill health

A fragile child, Mary Baker Eddy suffered intensely from a number of physical complaints. The exact nature of these illnesses, and their possible psychosomatic or hysterical (as it was called at that time) nature, is still a subject of debate. Mrs. Patterson's letters from this time, now at the Mary Baker Eddy Library for the Betterment of Humanity in Boston, Massachusetts, portray her sufferings and search for relief.

Study with Phineas Quimby and his influence

In October 1862 she became a patient of Phineas Quimby, a magnetic healer from Maine. She benefited temporarily by his treatment [8] and his beliefs influenced her later thinking and writing, although to what extent has been frequently disputed. Originally, Eddy gave Quimby much credit for his hypnotic treatments of her nervous and physical conditions and initially thought his brand of mesmerism entirely benign. From Quimby, Eddy was first exposed to the effects of unseen mental influences and beliefs on sick patients. While Quimby had his own notions on the nature of these unseen forces, which Eddy accepted early on, she would later draw decidedly different opinions on the nature of thought on the body and reject any form of hypnotism.

After being helped by Quimby, Eddy wrote the following defense of him in the Portland (Maine) Evening Courier in the fall of 1862: "...now I can see dimly at first, and only as trees walking, the great principle which underlies Dr. Quimby's faith and works; and just in proportion to my light perception of truth is my recovery. This truth which he opposes to the error of giving intelligence to matter and placing pain where it never placed itself, if received understandingly, changes the currents of the system to their normal action; and the mechanism of the body goes on undisturbed. That this is a science capable of demonstration becomes clear to the minds of those patients who reason upon the process of their cure."

On the day following the publication of the above article her views were criticized by a rival newspaper, the Portland Advertiser. Eddy wrote a second article, replying to the criticism. In it appeared the following paragraph, referring to Quimby and his doctrine: "P. P. Quimby stands upon the plane of wisdom with his truth. Christ healed the sick, but not by jugglery or with drugs…. P. P. Quimby rolls away the stone from the sepulchre of error, and health is the resurrection."

This quote stands in contrast to what she would later write in Science and Health, "Glory be to God, and peace to the struggling hearts! Christ hath rolled away the stone from the door of human hope and faith, and through the revelation and demonstration of life in God, hath elevated them to possible at-one-ment with the spiritual idea of man and his divine Principle, Love." She claimed her understanding of the spiritual message of the Bible deepened and her understanding of what she called "the Christ" replaced references to personal saviors.

1866 injury, healing and study leads to Christian Science

After a severe fall in Lynn, Massachusetts allegedly caused a major spinal injury in February 1866, Eddy reported that she turned to Matthew 9:2[9] in the Bible and recovered unexpectedly. Although she filed a claim for money from the city of Lynn for her injury on the grounds that she was "still suffering from the effects of that fall," she later withdrew the lawsuit.[10].

She devoted the next three years of her life to Biblical study and what she considered the discovery of Christian Science. In her autobiography, Retrospection and Introspection, Eddy writes "I then withdrew from society about three years,--to ponder my mission, to search the Scriptures, to find the Science of Mind that should take the things of God and show them to the creature, and reveal the great curative Principle, --Deity."[4]

Convinced by her own study of the Bible, especially Genesis 1, and through experimentation, Eddy claimed to have found healing power through a higher sense of God as Spirit and man as God's spiritual "image and likeness." She became convinced that illness could be healed through an awakened thought brought about by a clearer perception of God and the explicit rejection of drugs, hygiene, and medicine based upon the observation that Jesus did not use these methods for healing:

It is plain that God does not employ drugs or hygiene, nor provide them for human use; else Jesus would have recommended and employed them in his healing. … The tender word and Christian encouragement of an invalid, pitiful patience with his fears and the removal of them, are better than hecatombs of gushing theories, stereotyped borrowed speeches, and the doling of arguments, which are but so many parodies on legitimate Christian Science, aflame with divine Love. (Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures, 143:5, 155:15)

She eventually called this spiritual perception the operation of the Christ Truth on human consciousness.

Claiming to have first healed herself and then others, and having learned from these experiences, Eddy felt anyone could perceive what she called "the Kingdom of Heaven" or spiritual reality on earth. For her, this healing method was based on scientific principles and could be taught to others. This positive rule of healing, she taught, resulted from a new understanding of God as infinite Spirit beyond the limitations of the material senses.

At this time no one knows how much, or even if, Eddy influenced the great social and political movements of her day including abolition, the Wellness health movement and the women's suffrage movement. [11]

Publishing her discovery

In 1875, after several years of testing the effectiveness of her healing method, Eddy published her discovery in a book entitled "Science and Health" (years later retitled Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures), which she called the textbook of Christian Science. The first publication run was one thousand copies, which she self-published. In it she claimed "In the year 1866, I discovered the Christ Science or divine laws of Life, Truth, and Love, and named my discovery Christian Science" (p. 107). During these years she taught what she considered the science of "primitive Christianity" to hundreds of people. Many of her students became healers themselves. The last 100 pages of Science and Health (chapter entitled "Fruitage") contains testimonies of people who claimed to have been healed by reading her book.

Distinguishing between Eddy and Quimby and other criticisms

Gillian Gill, writes "I am now firmly convinced, having weighed all the evidence I could find in published and archival sources, that Mrs. Eddy's most famous biographer-critics -- Peabody, Milmine, Dakin, Bates and Dittemore and Gardner -- have flouted the evidence and shown willful bias in accusing Mrs. Eddy of owing her theory of healing to Quimby and of plagiarizing his unpublished work." [11]

Although Eddy used terms such as "Science", "Health", "error", "shadow", "belief", "Christ" and others used by Quimby, these terms are also to be found in the Bible. In the end, her conclusions from scriptural study and continued healing practice were diametrically opposed to the Quimby's teachings. Eddy also eventually rejected many of Quimby's conclusions on the dynamics of human disease, suffering, healing, redemption, God and Christ.

Through her study of the Bible, Eddy rejected Quimby's notion of a dualism between matter and spirit. She wrote in Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures, "All is infinite Mind and its infinite manifestation, for God is All-in-all. Spirit is immortal Truth; matter is mortal error." (S&H 468: 10-12)

Eddy found that while at first hypnotism seemed to benefit the patient, it later created more problems than the original sickness. Ultimately she rejected any form of hypnotism or mesmerism, stating "The hypnotizer employs one error to destroy another. If he heals sickness through a belief, and a belief originally caused the sickness, it is a case of the greater error overcoming the lesser. This greater error thereafter occupies the ground, leaving the case worse than before it was grasped by the stronger error." (S&H 104:22-28)

Eddy's use of these terms and her teaching are considered by both her defenders and Quimby's family to be distinct from Quimbyism. Quimby's son, George, wrote, "Don’t confuse his method of healing with Mrs. Eddy’s Christian Science, so far as her religious teachings go.... The religion which she teaches certainly is hers, for which I cannot be too thankful." (Gottschalk, Rolling Away the Stone, p. 72).

Phineas Quimby died in January 1866. In 1873, Eddy divorced Patterson for adultery to which he readily admitted. In 1877 she married Asa Gilbert Eddy, who died in 1882.

In 1903 Mark Twain published a satirical diatribe attacking Eddy and her church entitled Christian Science. Twain wrote "We cannot peacefully agree as to her motives, therefore her character must remain crooked to some of us and straight to the others. No matter, she is interesting enough without an amicable agreement. In several ways she is the most interesting woman that ever lived and the most extraordinary. The same may be said of her career, and the same may be said of its chief result...Whether she took it or invented it, it was—materially—a sawdust mine when she got it, and she has turned it into a Klondike; its spiritual dock had next to no custom, if any at all: from it she has launched a world-religion which has now six hundred and sixty-three churches, and she charters a new one every four days. When we do not know a person—and also when we do—we have to judge the size and nature of his achievements as compared with the achievements of others in his special line of business—there is no other way. Measured by this standard, it is thirteen hundred years since the world has produced anyone who could reach up to Mrs. Eddy's waistbelt."[12] However, later he seemed to reverse his stance as Paine wrote:[13]

I was at this period interested a good deal in mental healing, and had been treated for neurasthenia with gratifying results. Like most of the world, I had assumed, from his published articles, that he condemned Christian Science and its related practices out of hand. When I confessed, rather reluctantly, one day, the benefit I had received, he surprised me by answering:
"Of course you have been benefited. Christian Science is humanity's boon. Mother Eddy deserves a place in the Trinity as much as any member of it. She has organized and made available a healing principle that for two thousand years has never been employed, except as the merest kind of guesswork. She is the benefactor of the age."
It seemed strange, at the time, to hear him speak in this way concerning a practice of which he was generally regarded as the chief public antagonist. It was another angle of his many-sided character.

In view of Mark Twain's extended and caustic attack in his book "Christian Science" on both Christian Science and its founder, Mary Baker Eddy (whom he once described as the "queen of frauds and hypocrites"), it is widely assumed that his reference to "Mother Eddy" as "the benefactor of the age" was purely sarcastic. When Harper's refused to publish "Christian Science" in 1903, Twain interpreted the rejection as suppression caused by pressure from Christian Science and wrote, "The situation is not barren of humour. I had been doing my best to show in print that the Xn Scientist cult has become a power in the land - well, here is the proof: it has scared the biggest publisher in the Union."

Building a church

Eddy devoted the rest of her life to the establishment of the church, writing its bylaws, "The Manual of The Mother Church," and revising "Science and Health." While Eddy was a highly controversial religious leader, author, and lecturer, thousands of people flocked to her teachings. She was supported by the approximately 800 students she had taught at her Massachusetts Metaphysical College in Boston, Massachusetts between the years 1882 and 1889. These students spread across the country practicing healing in accordance with Eddy's teachings. Eddy authorized these students to list themselves as Christian Science Practitioners in the church's periodical, the Christian Science Journal. She also founded the Christian Science Sentinel, a weekly magazine with articles about how to heal and testimonies of healing.

In 1908, at the age of 87, Eddy founded The Christian Science Monitor, a daily newspaper which continues to be published today. She also founded the Christian Science Journal in 1883, a monthly magazine aimed at the church's members and, in 1898, the Christian Science Sentinel, a weekly religious periodical written for a more general audience, and the Herald of Christian Science, a religious magazine with editions in non-English languages, for children, and in English-Braille.

Death

Mary Baker Eddy's burial Memorial

She died on December 3, 1910 at her home at 400 Beacon Street, in the Chestnut Hill section of Newton, Massachusetts, and was buried at Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Massachusetts.[14]

Legacy

In 1921, on the 100th anniversary of Eddy's birth, a 100-ton (in rough) and 60-70 tons (hewn), eleven-foot square granite pyramid was dedicated on the site of her birthplace in Bow, New Hampshire.[15][16] A gift from James F Lord, it was later dynamited in 1962 by order of the church's board of directors.[16][17] Also demolished was Eddy's former home in Pleasant View, as the board feared that it was becoming a place of pilgrimage.[16] Although Eddy allowed personal praise in her lifetime for various reasons, including for publicity and fundraising, the church shuns both the cult of personality and religious reliquaries.

Residences

A number of the homes Eddy lived in are now maintained as historic sites. The following list contains these houses arranged by dates of her occupancy: .

Eight of these houses are currently owned by the Longyear Museum, and all may be visited, although Lynn and Chestnut Hill are being renovated and may not be open on a regular basis in 2007.[18]

Eddy Biographies, pro and con and in between

  • A well footnoted (scholarly) biography which eventually became the church-authorized biography of Eddy is Robert Peel's trilogy Mary Baker Eddy: The Years of Discovery (ISBN 0030575559), Mary Baker Eddy: The Years of Trial (ISBN 0875101186), and Mary Baker Eddy: The Years of Authority (ISBN 003021081X). (1966–1971)
  • A more recent single volume is another originally independent, but now church-authorized and still controversial, 1999 work by a non-Christian Scientist, Gillian Gill (ISBN 0-7382-0227-4). Gill's work included a review of numerous other Eddy biographies over the years. She also uncovered evidence that Phineas Parkhurst Quimby, from whom critics have long-claimed Eddy stole all her ideas, could not possibly have been the "author" of the so-called "Quimby Manuscripts" as Horatio Dressor, the son of two of Quimby's students, claimed. Gill wrote that Quimby's actual manuscripts, in his own almost illegible handwriting, indicated that for all intents and purposes Quimby was functionally illiterate and could not write a single cogent English paragraph let alone the manuscripts. She also uncovered materials that demonstrated that Dresser intentionally left out all manuscripts that would have demonstrated the independence of Eddy's ideas from Quimby's.
  • See also Stephen Gottschalk, Rolling Away the Stone, Mary Baker Eddy's Challenge to Materialism, (ISBN 0-253-34673-8) for a new account of her founding the church and relations to critics such as Mark Twain. (Indiana University Press: 2006)
  • Mary Baker Eddy, Speaking for Herself (ISBN 0-87952-275-5)
  • Willa Cather and Georgine Milmine The Life of Mary Baker G. Eddy and the History of Christian Science (1993) began as a famous magazine series 1907–08 and critical book in 1909.
  • Doris and Moris Grekel also wrote three-part non church-authorized biography on Eddy, The Discovery of the Science of Man: (1821–1888), (ISBN 1-893107-23-X), The Founding of Christian Science: The Life of Mary Baker Eddy 1888–1900, (ISBN 1-893107-24-8), and The Forever Leader: (1901–1910) (ISBN 0-9645803-8-1). This biography was aimed at serious students of Christian Science as opposed to the general public.
  • Former Church treasurer and clerk, John V. Dittemore teamed up with Ernest Sutherland Bates, in 1932, to write a biography, Mary Baker Eddy - The Truth and the Tradition. Most of the prose was written by Bates and Dittemore would later distance himself from the book. It has some genuinely distinct information including a list of Eddy's students taught at the Massachusetts Metaphysical College.
  • The famous Viennese novelist Stefan Zweig wrote a biography "The Mental Healers: Mesmer, Freud, Mary Baker Eddy." Original in German: "Die Heilung durch den Geist: Mesmer, Freud, Mary Baker Eddy." Zweig based his book solely on the Milmine biography (above) and after consultation with Sigmund Freud, concluded that Eddy was a madwoman. He never read her seminal work "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures" although it was available in German. Zweig's widow in a biography stated that Zweig had regretted his version of Eddy. A 1998 German reprinting of the book contains an afterword with corrections to Zweig's presentation.
  • Dakin, Edwin Franden (1929). Mrs. Eddy: The Biography of a Virginal Mind. London: Charles Scribner's Sons. p. 558.
  • Martin Gardner, The Healing Revelations of Mary Baker Eddy, Prometheus Books, 1993.

Works

  • Science And Health, With Key To The Scriptures - 1875, revised through 1910
  • Miscellaneous Writings
  • Retrospection and Introspection
  • Unity of Good
  • Pulpit and Press
  • Rudimental Divine Science
  • No and Yes
  • Christian Science versus Pantheism
  • Message to The Mother Church, 1900
  • Message to The Mother Church, 1901
  • Message to The Mother Church, 1902
  • Christian Healing
  • The People's Idea of God
  • The First Church of Christ, Scientist, and Miscellany
  • The Manual of The Mother Church

Notes

  1. ^ a b von Fettweis, Yvonne Caché; Warneck, Robert Townsend (1998). Mary Baker Eddy: Christian healer. Twentieth-century biographers series. Christian Science Pub. Society. ISBN 9780875103747.
  2. ^ "Longyear Historical Foundation - Short Biographical Sketch on Mary Baker Eddy". Retrieved 2006-05-30.
  3. ^ a b Wilbur, Sibyl (1907), "Childhood Days", The Life of Mary Baker Eddy, Boston: The Christian science publishing society (published 1913), pp. 9–20, ISBN 054818450X, retrieved 2008-10-23
  4. ^ a b c Eddy, Mary Baker G. (1891—1892), Retrospection and Introspection, Cambridge: University Press (published 1915), pp. 8–9, 22, 24–5, ISBN 0879520442, retrieved 2008-10-24 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  5. ^ a b c Wilbur, Sibyl (1907), "Education and Development", The Life of Mary Baker Eddy, Boston: The Christian science publishing society (published 1913), pp. 21–37, ISBN 054818450X, retrieved 2008-10-23
  6. ^ a b c d e f Wilbur, Sibyl (1907), "Change and Bereavement", The Life of Mary Baker Eddy, Boston: The Christian science publishing society (published 1913), pp. 38–48, ISBN 054818450X, retrieved 2008-10-23
  7. ^ Wilbur, Sibyl (1907), "Formative Processes", The Life of Mary Baker Eddy, Boston: The Christian science publishing society (published 1913), pp. 49–66, ISBN 054818450X, retrieved 2008-10-23
  8. ^ http://www.christianscience.com/mary-baker-eddy-faq.html
  9. ^ Hammond, Edward H. (October 1899). The Christian Science Journal. 17 (7). The Christian Science Publishing Society: 464 http://books.google.com/books?id=ygkrAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA464. {{cite journal}}: |chapter= ignored (help); Missing or empty |title= (help)CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  10. ^ Richard A. Nenneman (1997). Persistent Pilgrim: The Life of Mary Baker Eddy. Nebbadoon Press. ISBN 1891331027.
  11. ^ a b Gill, Gillian (1998), Mary Baker Eddy, Radcliffe Biography Series, Cambridge, MA: Perseus Books, pp. xi, ISBN 0738202274
  12. ^ Twain, Mark (1903), "Chapter 1", CHRISTIAN SCIENCE: with notes containing corrections to date, vol. Book II, New York and London: Harper & Brothers Publishers (published February 1907), pp. 102–103
  13. ^ Paine, Albert Bigelow (1912), Mark Twain: A Biography; the Personal and Literary Life of Samuel Langhorne Clemens (Scholar search), vol. 3, Philadelphia, Pa.: Chelsea House Publishers, p. 1271, ISBN 0791045390 {{citation}}: External link in |format= (help)
  14. ^ "Mrs. Eddy Dies Of Pneumonia; No Doctor Near", written at Boston, [[New York Times]], vol. 60, New York City (published December 5 1910), December 4 1910, pp. 1–2, ISSN 1594051, retrieved 2008-10-19, Mrs. Mary Baker Eddy, founder of the Church of Christ, Scientist, died Saturday night at 10:45 o'clock. The death was kept a secret until this morning, when a city medical examiner was called in. It was first publicly announced at the Mother Church this morning. Mrs. Eddy was in her ninetieth year. {{citation}}: Check |issn= value (help); Check date values in: |date= and |publication-date= (help); URL–wikilink conflict (help)
  15. ^ "Eddy Centenary Observed at Bow", written at Concord, NH, [[New York Times]], vol. 70, New York City (published July 17 1921), July 16 1921, p. 23, ISSN 1620732, retrieved 2008-10-19, A little group of between 75 and 100 persons gathered in the village of Bow, three miles from here, this afternoon to take part in the simple, brief exercises which marked the centennial of Mary Baker Eddy founder of the Church of Christ, Scientist. {{citation}}: Check |issn= value (help); Check date values in: |date= and |publication-date= (help); URL–wikilink conflict (help)
  16. ^ a b c Hartsook, Andrew W. (1994), Christian Science After 1910 (PDF), Bookmark, pp. 25, 26, 27 and 28, ISBN 0930227247, The Concord Evening Monitor of December 24, 1918, contained an interesting article regarding the project of a lone Christian Scientist.
  17. ^ "Mary Baker Eddy Memorial Defaced by Unknown Vandals", written at Concord, NH, [[New York Times]], vol. 72, New York City (published November 13 1922), November 12 1922, p. 1, ISSN 1620732, retrieved 2008-10-19, Rewards aggregating $250 have been offered for the arrest of persons who mutilated the memorial to Mary Baker Eddy at her birthplace in Bow. {{citation}}: Check |issn= value (help); Check date values in: |date= and |publication-date= (help); URL–wikilink conflict (help)
  18. ^ Longyear Museum | Historic Houses | Chestnut Hill & Lynn, MA

See also

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