Mary Baker Eddy: Difference between revisions

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'''Mary Baker Eddy''' (July 16, 1821 – December 3, 1910) was the founder of the [[Christian Science]] movement and   
'''Mary Baker Eddy''' (July 16, 1821 – December 3, 1910) was the founder of the [[Christian Science]] movement and   
the First Church of Christ, Scientist, in [[Boston]], [[Massachusetts]], founder of an international newspaper ''The Christian Science Monitor'',  and author of the book '''Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures'''.  Poor and homeless (dwelling with various friends and relatives) for the first half of her life, by the end of her life, she had become wealthy and a property owner, and was one of the most controversial and powerful women of her time.  More than two dozen biographies have been written about her life, beginning in 1907 (three years before her death), and including a new one as recently as 2014.
the First Church of Christ, Scientist, in [[Boston]], [[Massachusetts]], founder of an international newspaper ''The Christian Science Monitor'',  and author of the book '''Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures'''.  Poor and homeless (dwelling with various friends and relatives) for the first half of her life, by the end of her life, she had become wealthy and a property owner, and was one of the most controversial and powerful women of her time.  More than two dozen biographies have been written about her life, beginning in 1907 (three years before her death), and including a new one as recently as 2014.<ref>tbd}</ref>


Mary Baker Eddy's personal life was, for her times, as unusual as her outer successes later in life.  Her first husband moved her 1400 miles away from family and died, leaving her pregnant and with no money, and needing to make her way back to family in time for the birth.  Lacking a home or money of her own, she relegated her young son to relatives and moved frequently among the households of various friends and relatives.  She married for a second time, but this husband turned out to be a philanderer and disastrous at managing money, and she divorced him.  She later married a third time, a happy union lasting only a few years until his death.  In her later years, she became a healer and teacher, self-published an influential book, managed and guided a rapidly growing mega-church, accumulated personalwealth, and founded a newspaper which over the next century would win seven Pulitzer prizes.  She bought land at a time when very few women had rights to land or house ownership.
Mary Baker Eddy's personal life was, for her times, as unusual as her outer successes later in life.  Her first husband moved her 1400 miles away from family and died, leaving her pregnant and with no money, and needing to make her way back to family in time for the birth.  Lacking a home or money of her own, she relegated her young son to relatives and moved frequently among the households of various friends and relatives.  She married for a second time, but this husband turned out to be a philanderer and disastrous at managing money, and she divorced him.  She later married a third time, a happy union lasting only a few years until his death.  In her later years, she became a healer and teacher, self-published an influential book, managed and guided a rapidly growing mega-church, accumulated personalwealth, and founded a newspaper which over the next century would win seven Pulitzer prizes.  She bought land at a time when very few women had rights to land or house ownership.

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Mary Baker Eddy (July 16, 1821 – December 3, 1910) was the founder of the Christian Science movement and the First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts, founder of an international newspaper The Christian Science Monitor, and author of the book Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures. Poor and homeless (dwelling with various friends and relatives) for the first half of her life, by the end of her life, she had become wealthy and a property owner, and was one of the most controversial and powerful women of her time. More than two dozen biographies have been written about her life, beginning in 1907 (three years before her death), and including a new one as recently as 2014.[1]

Mary Baker Eddy's personal life was, for her times, as unusual as her outer successes later in life. Her first husband moved her 1400 miles away from family and died, leaving her pregnant and with no money, and needing to make her way back to family in time for the birth. Lacking a home or money of her own, she relegated her young son to relatives and moved frequently among the households of various friends and relatives. She married for a second time, but this husband turned out to be a philanderer and disastrous at managing money, and she divorced him. She later married a third time, a happy union lasting only a few years until his death. In her later years, she became a healer and teacher, self-published an influential book, managed and guided a rapidly growing mega-church, accumulated personalwealth, and founded a newspaper which over the next century would win seven Pulitzer prizes. She bought land at a time when very few women had rights to land or house ownership.

  1. tbd}