1995 Autumn Quarterly News

1995 Autumn Quarterly News

Quarterlyflews VOL. 32, NO. 4 1995 HOW FACTUAL EVIDENCE SUBDUED TABLOID FICTION IN THE NEXT FRIENDS SUIT OF 1907 This article will allow the reader to explore two first­ hand interviews that played an important part in pro­ DAILY. ~ ,··. PATRIOT~ ,.~ ' . ' ' . .. viding evidence that contributed to the dismissal of C:ONCOIII) N. 1L WEDNESDAY •. E'J.EMNG• AUGUST 11, 1907 ! a court action against Mary Baker Eddy, founder of the Christian Science Church. This action sought to wrench control of her person and property (including her copyright for Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures) away from her. The interviews, one by a prominent psychiatrist, Allan McLane Hamilton, and one by a well-respected journalist, Leigh Mitchell Hodges, offer us a unique window on Mrs. Eddy's actual mental and physical condition in 1907. Even though the court action was extremely unpleasant for Mrs. Eddy, it would, nonetheless, as she prophetically remarked to journalist Hodges, "cause the truth to stand out more clearly in the end." It is in this spirit that we provide these now largely inaccessible interviews. Genesis of the Next Friends Suit In the summer of 1906 the very newspaper that has the dubious distinction as the origin point in our language for the term "yellow journalism"- The New York World­ launched an aggressive campaign, under the direction of Joseph Pulitzer (founder of the "Pulitzer Prize"), against Mrs. Eddy. The "news" barrage attempted to present Mary Baker Eddy as senile, decrepit and dying of some deadly disease (probably cancer),l and as a puppet and prisoner of her own household staff who were allegedly squander­ ing her money. The sensational attack was published on the first page of The New York World on October 28, 1906. The purpose of such an attack and allegations against Mrs. Eddy and her staff were outlined in an editorial published Portion of first page, Concord [N .H.] Daily Patriot, in the New York American of November 3, 1906, titled August 21, 1907 "The World's Disgraceful Attack on Mrs. Eddy." The New York American summarized the nature of the lies as a buildings from 7 in 1890 to 1,104 in 1910.2 Yet the imme­ "three-fold" attack upon a woman, old age, and religious diate precipitating factor that brought extensive news cov­ belief. erage for this new denomination and its founder was the But what prompted the attack in 1906, which culmi­ dedication of the new extension to The Mother Church nated in the opening of the next friends suit in March 1907 edifice in Boston, scarcely a dozen years after the original spearheaded by ex-U.S. Senator from New Hampshire, edifice was completed. This new church building boasted William Chandler? Certainly the world-at-large was fasci­ an auditorium seating capacity of 5,000 and was dedi­ nated, awed, and sometimes envious of and frightened by cated, free of debt, on June 10, 1906. It seems that this the woman who from retirement in Concord, New Hamp­ growth was seen as a threat to Protestant Christianity since shire, could increase the membership of a church from according to one source, "scores of the most valued 48,930 individuals in 1900 to 85,096 ten years later; or church members are joining the Christian Scientist branch advance the number of Christian Science branch church of the metaphysical organization, and it has thus far been copyright 1995 by Longyear Foundation 519 Quarterly News 1995-Vol. 32, No. 4 nm !ff~~sg~s:~~E~~~ . It Couibamf a. Gootf Many Unpl~t Features Y I ·It would be interet~ to know jut wetly why the !lew. 'for~ •World thought it neceuary to make a bitter ud untruthful &tta.ck upcni Kn. ~ Baker G. Eddy, the reapeoted leader ·of the believen ~ ~; t:lin Science. ' ·' The.~Hack wu cittemive in a three-fold maJIJier. ~ It~~ · ~ ~ttaCk upon a wo~ ..It ~ !U1 attaak upOJI old age. Jt.. waa u attaak upon ~ligiou belief. , .It il ~~t nee~ to .IIRAiE a religio~· -belief m OBDD TO ·:u­ Sl'ECT rr~ · : ., ·.> It ilnot necei.U,. to be very much of a mu to realize that a womu William Chandler ·who h~ 'co~~d no orlme should be l~ft·-~ peac~, 'tree from bitter,. I ·. • .. Fine Arts in St. Louis. Mr. Hodges worked as a reporter uncalled-for criticilll!. : .. .:. Z,, 1 and editor for the Daily Ledger, Mexico, Missouri, · hd it doesn'~ ·take very much mallhood in a neWBpaper editor to . ' . ·. :·.: . )• .. ~· • :·. ' • . -. i 1895-96; Kansas City Star, 1897-1899; Ladies Home Jour­ realize : ~~ a womu ~ighty-aix years of age ia entitled to veneration nal, New York and Philadelphia, 1899-1901; The North from . ever)' man, ape~ally when her life ;Jlu ~een exemplaryf ~ American, Philadelphia, 1902-1925. He was one of the wilD SHE x.As DONE :NO ONE BY li.All.1d:. .. I ,. ' · .•J o; . four founders in 1907 of the Christmas Seal program in the ·We are giad im.'Edd7'a good health made it p011ible for her . tii&t . -. ... fight against tuberculosis and a member of the American ,personally to refute the inexplicable, sltm.derou aitaok upon her. :, · ~. Federation of the Physically Handicapped. Mr. Hodges "' , I ~ . hd we trut that the .New York World, u far as it ia pouible, will was a contributing writer to The New Yorker, Reader's see tlt to contlJie its attacks to 11Eli. IIJid, if.it mut attaok WODN,. Digest and The Times of London and the author of eight books.6 ~t it will at least exempt THOSE PAST FOURSCORE. Mr. Hodges' interview with Mary Baker Eddy Editorial from New York American, November 3, 1906 Monday, July 8, 1907 impossible to check them."3 Whether this claim was fac­ Published in The North American, tually true or not is perhaps of less importance than that Philadelphia, Sunday, July 14, 1907 it was believed by many to be true; and this, combined (published in the Boston edition of with the visible success of the new religion brought forth The North American, Monday, July 15, 1907) such comments from the religious press of the day be­ Last Monday afternoon the Rev. Mary Baker G. Eddy, discov­ moaning the fact that Christian Scientists built "a two mil­ erer and founder of Christian Science, extended the hospitality lion dollar temple for its own enjoyment, [but] it has no of her home, in Concord, N.H., to Leigh Mitchell Hodges, of The hospitals, no free dispensaries, no missions in the slums, North American, and in a personal interview discussed freely no orphanages .... "4 the attempts now being made to discredit her mental ability to Finding herself the object of a blast of public scrutiny, handle her private affairs. Mrs. Eddy adeptly handled interviews from more than a half-dozen journalists during the summer of1907, in addi­ tion to being evaluated at Pleasant View by three court­ appointed masters on August 14th.5 Certainly this suit was less than pleasant for Mrs. Eddy, but it has provided for future generations a wealth of solid evidence regarding the physical and mental state of the leader of the Chris­ tian Science movement at that time. What follows are the reports from these two interviews (abridged and edited for clarity and ease ofreading) pref­ aced by a short biography of each interviewer. Neither of the men were Christian Scientists, nor favorably inclined to the religion or Mrs. Eddy, but they were both committed to honestly reporting what they found. Leigh Mitchell Hodges Leigh Mitchell Hodges was born in Denver, Colorado, on July 9, 1876. He graduated from high school in Car­ Extension of The Mother Church during construction thage, Missouri in 1894 and then attended the School of in February 1906 520 copyright 1995 by Longyear Foundation Quarterly News 1995-Vol. 32, No.4 F I R S T .S E C T I 0 N ' . NORTH AMER.ICAN 136TH YEAR. No. "98· PH I LAD EL PHI A, SUNDAY, JULY t .t.. 190 7·-'I;Hl'::.-o~"l!..':?'J.~~... HT. 48 PAGE& Hodges article on Mrs. Eddy in The North American [Philadelphia], July 14, 1907 Mr. Hodges is not a Christian Scientist. He has never been prej­ "Oh, I always try to be kind, but when matters take such a turn udiced either in favor of or against Mrs. Eddy, her claims and as at present it is not easy to exercise the virtue as we should." doctrines. His mission was not the discussion of dogma, but to ascertain, as nearly as possible, the actual state of Mrs. Eddy's Finds Support in Bible physical and mental condition and the nature of her surround­ There was a barely noticeable tone of resentment in her voice ings in that home which has, for some years, been shrouded in a and her look. As she sat forward, quite erect, the crown of flaw­ mystery almost as impenetrable as that veiling the noted mis­ less diamonds at her throat glowed and sparkled gloriously, tress thereof. while the cross of similar stones worn on her bosom was agleam He had every opportunity to do this. No attempt was made to with many colors. These were the only jewels that adorned the influence him in any way. The following narrative of his visit to plainly fashioned waist of rich white satin brocaded in black 'Pleasant View' may, therefore, be accepted as a fair and impar­ tracery. On one of her hands, a group of small brilliants pro­ tial estimate of this remarkable woman and her domestic realm. claimed a circlet of old-time workmanship. "I find support in the Word of God," she said, quoting the fifth and sixth verses of the Thirty-seventh Psalm: Day after tomorrow Mary Baker G.

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