The Judge Case Volume I
The Judge Case Volume I
The Judge Case Volume I
Ernest E. Pelletier
299'.934
C2004-903119-8
Contents
Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . vii
Illustrations: Part 1 & Part 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ix
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xi
Explanatory Notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xv
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I am deeply indebted and grateful to my wife, Rogelle A. Pelletier. This project could not have been accomplished
without the countless hours she contributed to it. Special thanks go to Doris Davy and Ted G. Davy of Calgary, AB,
for the incalculable amount of time they dedicated to proof-reading. As past co-Editors of The Canadian Theosophist,
their expertise and advice were very helpful and most appreciated.
Special thanks to Michael Freeman (deceased) former caretaker to the H.P.B. Library, then in Vernon, BC, for his
willingness to let us photocopy rare materials at his home, as well as allowing us to borrow others. This project would
not have proceeded without his support, and the cooperation of his wife, Jean Freeman.
Special thanks to Grace F. Knoche, Leader of The Theosophical Society, International, Pasadena, CA, for her support
and assistance, and for allowing me to publish, for the first time, two items from W.Q. Judges notebooks. Thanks also
to other members of the organization: Kirby van Mater, John van Mater (deceased), Will Thackara, Jim Belderis, Dave
Weitersen and David Blaschke for their valued assistance.
Special thanks to Donovan Sterling, Calgary, AB, for the numerous hours dedicated toward the cover design and
preparation of the photos included in Part 1 and Part 2.
Thanks must go to W. Emmett Small (deceased) of Point Loma Publications, San Diego, CA, for his counsel and
support, and also to (Mrs.) Carmen Small.
Many thanks are also due to Dallas TenBroeck, Calabasas, CA, for his invaluable help; Dara Eklund and Nicholas
Weeks of Studio City, CA; and John Cooper (deceased), Bega, N.S.W., Australia, for their unlimited support and
assistance.
Special thanks to all the members of Edmonton Theosophical Society for their support, tolerance and encouragement,
especially to JoAnne MacDonald and Robert Bruce MacDonald (Editors of Fohat), Dolorese Brisson, Stephania Duffee
and Maurice Mercier. Thanks also to Albert A. Pelletier of Toronto, ON, for his input.
I am also grateful to the Directors, past and present, of the Lizzie Arthur Russell Theosophical Memorial Trust
(L.A.R.T.M. Trust) for their financial support for my research.
Thanks must also go to Pauline Doberar (deceased) formerly of Vancouver, BC; Marian Thompson, West Vancouver,
BC; Sharon Ormerod, Hamilton, ON; Joan Sutcliffe, current caretaker of the H.P.B. Library, Toronto, ON; Professor
Sue Politella (deceased) formerly of Orrville, OH; Professor Raymond P. Tripp Jr., Concord, VT; Don Smith, Waialua,
HI; Richard Robb of Wizards Bookshelf, San Diego, CA; Jerome Wheeler and Wes Amerman, United Lodge of
Theosophists, Los Angeles, CA; Jerry Hejka-Ekins, Turlock, CA; Brett Forray, Turlock, CA; Daniel Caldwell, Tucson,
AZ; Joseph Ross, Ojai, CA; Vonda Urban, Chicago, IL; John Patrick Deveney, New York, NY; Michael Gomes, New
York, NY; Joy Mills, Ojai, CA; Robert Htwohl, Sante Fe, NM; Daniel Caracostea, Paris, France; Armand Courtois
(deceased), formerly of Kapellen, Belgium; Frank Reitemeyer, Berlin, Germany; William Johnstone (deceased),
formerly of Otorohanga, New Zealand; and Gladney Oakley, Morriset, N.S.W., Australia; Chris McRae and Dr. Art
Basu, Edmonton, AB; and Dr. Harry Lutzer, Edmonton, AB.
For their assistance with various aspects of my research, thanks are also due to Glenda Gingras (Archivist) and Elizabeth
Trumpler (Librarian) of The Theosophical Society in America, Wheaton, IL; Ms Robin Duff, Theosophical Books
London; Leslie Price, London, England; The University of Minnesota, Walter Library, Minneapolis, MN; The New
York Public Library Corporate Express Office; and to Woodlawn Cemetery, Bronx, NY.
Illustrations
Part 1 & Part 2
Part 1:
Frontispiece: William Quan Judge, July 1895
1. Helena Petrovna Blavatsky, circa 1877-1878
2. William Quan Judge
3. Henry Steel Olcott in 1875
4. Dr. Jirah Dewey Buck
5. (Mrs.) Melissa M. Buck
6. Major General Abner Doubleday
7. Edward Burroughs Rambo
8. Dr. Jerome A. Anderson
9. Bertram Keightley
10. Dr. Henry Travers Edge
11. Dr. Archibald Keightley and Dr. Herbert A.W. Coryn
12. George Robert Stowe Mead
13. Alfred Percy Sinnett
14. Emil August Neresheimer
15. Alexander Fullerton
16. Walter Richard Old
17. Claude Falls Wright
18. Annie Besant
19. Julia Keightley (Jasper Niemand)
20. Countess Constance Wachtmeister
21. Isabel Cooper-Oakley
22. Daniel Nicol Dunlop
23. Ernest Temple Hargrove
24. Dr. Franz Hartmann
25. Alice Leighton Cleather
26. Basil Crump
27. Tookeram Tatya
28. Gyanendra Nath Chakravarti
29. Subramania (Subrahmanya) Iyer
30. Nowroji (Navroji) Dorabji Khandalavala
31. Bertram Keightley, William Q. Judge, Colonel Olcott and George R.S. Mead
32. William Q. Judge (wearing his pill-box hat)
33. Workers at London Headquarters after Blavatskys death in 1891
34. Annie Besant, Colonel H.S. Olcott and William Q. Judge in 1891
35. The Neresheimer residence at Bayside, Long Island, New York
36. Delegates to the Worlds Parliament of Religions, Chicago 1893
37. Group of prominent Theosophists prior to attending the Worlds Parliament of Religions at Chicago
38.
39.
40.
41.
42.
43.
44.
45.
46.
Illustrations
William Q. Judge and Colonel H.S. Olcott, San Francisco, CA, October 1891
Mahatma Koot Hoomi
Mahatma Morya
Notre-Dame-des-Champs in Paris (side view)
Notre-Dame-des-Champs in Paris (front view)
Le Chteau cossais at Enghien, near Paris, France
Le Chteau cossais at Enghien, near Paris, France
Photo of the original Minute Book of The Theosophical Society
First page of the original Minute Book of The Theosophical Society
Part 2:
Frontispiece: William Quan Judge, 1892
47. Annie Besant (1891)
48. William Q. Judge (1891)
49. Colonel H.S. Olcott (1906)
50. Cover of the June 1895 issue of The Path
51. Clement Acton Griscom
52. Ernest Temple Hargrove
53. Henry Turner Patterson
54. George William Russell
55. Charles Johnston
56. Group photo: H.P. Blavatsky with her sister Vera Jelihovsky, niece Vera Vladimirovna Johnston (nee
Jelihovsky) and her husband, Charles Johnston, and Colonel H.S. Olcott
57. Diploma, The Theosophical Society of The Arya-Samaj of Arya-Wart
58. Albert E.S. Smythe
59. William Mulliss
60. Dr. Henry Newlin Stokes
61. James Morgan Pryse
62. Robert Crosbie
63. Alice L. Cleather at the birthday party of the blind Abbot of Kwan Yin Temple
64. Annie Besant with her new colleagues in Theosophy (1894)
65. Kavasji Mervanji Shroff
66. Damodar K. Mavalankar
67. Mohini Chatterji
68. Anagarika Hevavitarane Dharmapala
69. Headquarters of The Theosophical Society in America, 144 Madison Avenue, New York
70. Katherine Tingley
71. Katherine Tingley and Claude Falls Wright on board the steamship Paris (1896)
INTRODUCTION
If W.Q. Judge, the man who has done most for Theosophy in America, who has worked most
unselfishly in your country, and has ever done the biddings of Master, the best he knew how, is left
alone in . . . and if the . . . Society in general and its Esotericists especially leave him alone, without
their unanimous moral support, which is much more than their money then I say let them go!
They are NO theosophists; and if such a thing should happen, and Judge be left to fight his battles
alone, then shall I bid all of them an eternal good-bye. I swear on MASTERS holy name to shake off
the dust of my feet from everyone of them. . . .
H.P.B. [Letters That Have Helped Me - J.N., Vol. 2, pp.116-117.]
Mans destiny hangs by a thread at the best of times, and the actions of a few can affect the destiny of not
only one man, but the rest of humanity as well. Insidious interpretations of certain events color and shape
the thoughts and lives of those who follow. Throughout recorded history it is proven time and time again that
the historical interpretation of events by those who dominate a conflict is generally accepted as the right
one. Unfortunately, truth is the first casualty of conflict. The history within the Theosophical Society is not
exempt from this fate.
Since its inception in 1875 the Theosophical Society has experienced numerous conflicts, some of which
have polarized the membership and created splinter groups that held to their own version of the historical
interpretation. Errors found in the accounts of theosophical history have skewed philosophical arguments
and led to partisanship. Although there are numerous examples, the most troubling remains The Judge
Case.
Colonel Henry Steel Olcott was the first to use the phrase The Judge Case when describing this conflict
in his Presidents Address at the Nineteenth Anniversary of The Theosophical Society on December 25th,
1894. At that time he stated: We are at a crisis that is the most serious within our history since that of 1884.
The unavoidable failure to dispose of the charges against Mr. Judge last July, has set in motion most
powerful opposing currents of feeling. By some he is enthusiastically supported, by others as unreservedly
condemned. These sentiments have survived to this day.
The Judge Case: A Conspiracy Which Ruined the Theosophical CAUSE chronicles the events and tragedy
that besieged and diverted the Theosophical Movement from the Original Program created from the
inspiration and guidance offered by the true Founders of the Theosophical Society the Masters of
Wisdom.
Since 1875 Helena Petrovna Blavatsky (H.P.B.), William Quan Judge and Colonel H.S. Olcott have been
linked as co-Founders of The Theosophical Society. Yet Judges contributions to the Society are not
sincerely embraced by most theosophists because of the cloud of suspicion cast over his character by his
detractors.
An attempt was made in 1884 to discredit Blavatsky by conspiring and fabricating charges of deception
against her, the purpose of which was to destroy both her reputation and the Society she helped create. The
accusations in that case were advanced by Emma and Alexis Coulomb, whom Blavatsky saved from
destitution in 1879. The Coulombs, chided by Blavatsky for unethical behavior, chose to take revenge. They
forged letters and constructed apparatus in Blavatskys apartment at Adyar, the headquarters of the
Theosophical Society, to incriminate her. Eventually, after many years and several investigative reports,
xii
Introduction
Blavatsky was cleared of any wrongdoing. Still, H.P.B. periodically receives bad publicity by those whose
vaunted knowledge is based on ignorance.
Judge, Blavatskys staunchest ally, was painted with a similar brush a few years later this time by
prominent members of the Society. The Theosophical Society was founded on the premise that all members
are seekers of Truth on perfectly equal terms. As a body of students, each has the entire right and freedom
to hold any belief (or un-belief) that commends itself to them, and to express that unconditionally. The book
you are about to read will reveal that in spite of admonition from the President-Founder, Colonel H. S.
Olcott, he along with his associates violated the most vital spirit of the Society: of neutrality in matters of
belief, of brotherly love, of charity, and of seeking deficiencies in oneself rather than in others.
Light will also be shed on how Judge was unjustifiably denounced with malicious bitterness by those who
should have been the first to uphold the principles of Theosophy. Accusations of fraud were directed against
him, privately and publicly. While documents were being used in an insidious manner to bring accusations
of dishonesty against Judge, impugning his character, his accusers were professing that in the spirit of
tolerance and good will, their actions were taken to protect the membership against psychic delusions.
Dr. Archibald Keightley, a prominent London Member of the Theosophical Society and one of twelve in H.P.
Blavatskys Esoteric Section and later her Inner Group (of select individuals for special esoteric instruction),
saw the whole attack on Judge as a way to discredit him, H.P.B. and the Society. Dr. Keightley observed that
these attacks on Judge were initiated by the more orthodox Brahmins who bitterly resented their esoteric
doctrines being presented to non-Brahmins to Westerners. Dr. Keightley understood, as did Judge,
Blavatsky and the Mahatmas especially, that the true Vedic spiritual values had degenerated into a Brahminic
spiritual pride which had stagnated into a purely intellectual activity.
Unfortunately, Judge died before his name could be completely cleared. Following his death, dissension
occurred among his supporters, and any pursuit to vindicate him was lost. Evidence which Judge said could
be used against him in a conspiracy, and could also be used to clear his name, was in the hands of his
accusers and kept away from public scrutiny. Since then these same documents have allegedly been utilized
covertly to sully this mans honor. In writing history, especially a human tragedy, the story can never be
complete or accurate if organizations and historians supporting a particular bias have determined that their
cause is served better if certain documents remain hidden. It is indeed a sad state of affairs when whisper
becomes fact, especially in an organization whose motto is There is no Religion Higher than Truth and
whose goal is Universal Brotherhood.
When my wife and I joined the Society in 1977, through The Theosophical Society in Canada, Edmonton
Lodge (now Edmonton Theosophical Society), two elderly gentlemen were the firm anchors of the group.
The elder of the two, Emory P. Wood, was a serious student interested in theosophical history and completely
dedicated to H.P.B., the Masters, and to the Original Program. The other gentleman, Bertram J. Whitbread,
a few years younger and just as dedicated, was involved with the Esoteric Section (E.S.) and also associated
with a Lodge that had priests in the Liberal Catholic Church (L.C.C.). He studied Alice Baileys writings as
well. Group study was always centered on the original teachings as presented by Blavatsky and the Masters,
and these two gentlemen, both sincere and serious students for over sixty years, maintained a balance within
Edmonton Lodge. I am grateful for the wisdom and guidance they provided and the technique of study they
taught us. Students were encouraged to investigate everything and to determine the truth for themselves. It
was recommended that they start with an understanding of the original program, its source literature, and
its history before exploring other concepts. Examining Judges writings was part of the process. No
contradictions were noted in Judges writings when compared with Blavatskys or the Masters.
In 1985, Edmonton T.S. established a republishing program in an attempt to complete collections of its
Introduction
xiii
librarys periodicals and to share its reproductions of these original documents with other libraries and
individuals. In 1986, my wife and I attended the European School of Theosophy at Tekels Park, England.
Then in 1988 arrangements were made to visit major theosophical centers in California. While the principal
objective of our American travels was to seek assistance to fill the gaps in Edmonton T.S. Librarys
collections, we were equally interested in getting personally acquainted with fellow theosophists and
exploring how the various organizations cooperated with each other, as well as how they viewed the
Theosophical Movement as a whole. Our findings were that most of them appeared dynamic and that some
reconciliation between groups had occurred. In 1989 we toured the mid-Western United States. It became
clear that strong divisions remained and that the main source of the separateness in the Movement was the
conflict that arose shortly after the death of Blavatsky more precisely, The Judge Case.
Since there did not appear to be any one title in print dealing specifically with The Judge Case, I decided
to collect as much information as possible and compile it into a format detailing the facts. The intention at
the time was to render assistance to someone who could further investigate this critical issue and then write
a book delineating the whole situation.
Two specific items provided the starting point. Item one was a copy of Hettie Manskes accumulation of
documents pertaining to The Judge Case which was borrowed from Emmett and Carmen Small of Point
Loma Publications in San Diego, and also offered by Dara Eklund of Studio City, during our California visit
in 1988. Item two was received in 1991. Dallas TenBroeck, associate of United Lodge of Theosophists, Los
Angeles, mailed me a copy of a synopsis of The Judge Case he had recently compiled. Although these
documents supplied some valuable insight, innumerable gaps remained. By the mid 1990s, Edmonton T.S.
had acquired a complete collection of The Theosophist as well as several other early periodicals crucial to
researching The Judge Case. As the accumulation of documents became quite sizeable, we started to record
the information chronologically on computer. A sense of duty has since taken me further than ever
anticipated. What started as a query developed into a very complex investigation that has led to the volume
of documentation and analysis before you.
In 1894, six charges were brought against W.Q. Judge. He was accused of:
1.
being untruthful about his claims that he had been receiving teaching from and communication with
the Masters since 1875;
2.
being untruthful when denying that he had sent letters or messages purporting to be from the
Masters;
3.
being deceptive towards Olcott with regards to the Rosicrucian Jewel which belonged to Blavatsky
until her death in 1891;
4.
lacking straightforwardness with a message regarding Olcotts tenure of the Presidency; and
5.
allegedly using a brass seal to substantiate certain messages, telegrams, orders and letters.
The 6th charge brought against Judge was the most disparaging one. He was charged with sending letters for
personal advantage that purportedly contained imitation script as if sent and written by Masters. Although
this charge was vague at best and no substantial evidence was ever presented, the accusations themselves
were damaging and condemning. The result was that Judges reputation became not only tarnished, but
ruined in the eyes of many.
It is very easy to accuse or cast suspicion upon a persons character, but it is a nearly insurmountable task
to vindicate that individuals reputation. The burden of proving ones innocence can be extremely difficult
at the best of times, but never more so than when the accusers withhold material evidence, thereby denying
the accused the opportunity to mount a proper defense against the charges. Judge and his supporters
maintained, and research sustains, that material evidence has been withheld.
xiv
Introduction
The charges against Judge, virtually impossible to disprove at the time, are even more difficult to defeat one
hundred years later, especially after a century in obscuration. When a defense is brought before any jury, in
this case in the court of public opinion, the plaintiffs case needs to be examined in order to mount a proper
defense on behalf of the accused. Since there are many accusers in this case, some well known and some
hiding in the shadows, a liberal spectrum of factum probans (probative or evidentiary facts; circumstantial
evidence) valuable to the case has been presented. Every extant document made available was utilized to
expose the truth behind this conspiracy and great tragedy.
Many errors were found in accounts of theosophical history that could easily skew ones perception of
events. Whether accidental or otherwise, they may appear slight at first, but when looked at more closely,
they are shown to have steered public opinion in a completely different direction. One such example is in
A Short History of The Theosophical Society, published in 1938 by Theosophical Publishing House,
Adyar. On page 280, Josephine Ransom states that On 6 May Mrs. Besant, Mr. Judge and Dr. and Mrs. J.D.
Buck left New York for England. In fact, Judge did not sail with Besant on that date; he sailed one week
later, on May 13th. This small imprecision in Ransoms book leads one to the erroneous conclusion that Judge
and Besant reached London at the same time. They did not. Blavatsky died on May 8th, 1891 and Judge was
not present to deal with matters related to the immediate impact of H.P.B.s sudden demise, whereas Besant
was.
Many inconsistencies and inaccuracies were also found in Colonel Olcotts memoirs, Old Diary Leaves,
written much later from notes he kept. It is amazing how Olcotts sometimes foggy memory is widely
accepted and relied upon as fact.
Having reviewed all the evidence, the conclusion eventually drawn was that, while the charges themselves
could not be proved or disproved, W.Q. Judge was conspired against. I hope that you, the reader, upon a
similar process of analysis, facilitated by the information compiled and based upon the merits of the facts
presented, will be led to a similar conclusion.
This work is an attempt to bare the facts, to present a detailed factual defense to vindicate W.Q. Judges
reputation, and to repudiate the accusations of fraud. The process used to gather the information is as earlier
described, and the information is organized as detailed in the Explanatory Notes that follow this introduction.
Other than the Supplement, which summarizes and substantiates the findings of my investigation, all the
documentation in this volume, Part 1 and Part 2, is presented in a manner to allow historical records to speak
for themselves. Some familiar documents, and others which may be new for many, are presented. In the
Supplement, a fresh look at the evidence demonstrates that Judge was not only a chela of Mahatma Morya,
but possibly the only westerner aside from Blavatsky to have been initiated by Him into the occult mysteries.
The evidence collected also supports the probability that the ego within Judge was a chela (occult pupil) of
these Masters of Wisdom for a considerable time.
Through this detailed study it is hoped that Judge will be vindicated of the charges, that justice will finally
prevail, that he is awarded his rightful place in the annals of theosophical history as a True Theosophist and
a True Founder of The Theosophical Society, and most importantly as one of the individuals chosen by the
Masters of Wisdom to initiate a paradigm shift in human consciousness in the Western World. It is also
hoped that Judges writings will be read and studied more widely by students around the world.
All organizations are invited to add to this compilation by looking into their archives for additional
information not included in this work, and which should now be in the public domain. The time has come.
Ernest E. Pelletier
EXPLANATORY NOTES
Edmonton Theosophical Societys republishing program has consistently reprinted rare documents without
changes, that is, NO editing. It was deemed that the best way to expose the whole Judge Case was to present
the issues, as they unfolded, by using direct quotations from as many original sources as possible and letting
the facts tell the story.
To facilitate this, the Chronology section has been arranged into three columns. The first column states the
date that the event occurred and represents one file. The center column first mentions the title of the article
or identifies the item from which the quotations are extracted. Titles are in quotation marks and sometimes,
additionally, in italics or in capital letters depending on original source. All quotations, taken from the
contents of that file, are extracted to reveal the central idea. Titles of books, pamphlets and other publications
are in bold letters throughout, except when found within a quotation. On occasion, titles first published as
an article are in quotation marks, and appear in bold after they were reprinted as a pamphlet.
Where NOTE appears in the center column, it indicates either extra references to support the quotation or
where other information can be found relating to it, providing the reader a thread to follow the topic. I have
occasionally added comments, which are clearly identified as such.
The third column indicates the sources of the quotations. These are in bold lettering, except as indicated
above. This format was used, rather than italics, to make the titles more visually distinct. To assist the reader
not familiar with the material presented, full titles, or as much of them as possible were used rather than
abbreviations or acronyms. Vol. indicates volume and Supp. signifies Supplement. Wherever possible,
original pamphlets, circulars and letters have been included as reference sources.
Care was taken to place the source directly opposite the quotations, although this was not always feasible.
Exceptions arise in the cells containing biographical sketches of some of the main characters. In these
instances, the source may not necessarily be directly aligned with the material found in the center column.
A biographical sketch might be a synopsis of events or, in many circumstances, simply quoted in part but not
necessarily indicated as such by the use of quotation marks. However, all the sources from which the
information was drawn are included in the third column.
For quick reference at the end of the Chronology, a List of the Biographical Sketches (in alphabetical order)
is provided for the forty-nine main characters featured. A detailed sketch of H.P. Blavatsky is not included
here, although information regarding her death is mentioned, as biographical information on H.P.B. is readily
available elsewhere.
The Chronology has been compiled as its name implies: chronologically. Documents used in this section
have been in the public domain for some time, most from the time they were written. In the Supplement,
however, I have imparted my perspective on this highly interesting period of theosophical history. The
Supplement includes facts and documents which came my way over the years, but which have not necessarily
been generally accessible and/or available for perusal in the past. Some of these documents and observations
may alter perception of this history.
xvi
Explanatory Notes
The Supplement is followed by: Index to Supplement, Works Cited, Bibliography of Works by and about
William Q. Judge, and Illustrations: Sources. The legend of title abbreviations used throughout this volume
consists of the first column of Works Cited. Publications reproduced by Edmonton Theosophical Society
have additionally been indicated by ETS (in superscript) after the title.
Part 2 consists of appendices which contain some of the documents most pertinent to The Judge Case.
Some are fairly rare while others are crucial enough to the Chronology and Supplement to warrant their
presence within this volume. The reader is thereby provided with access to documentation in its original
context and the opportunity to investigate the evidence themselves. Each appendix includes a detailed Table
of Contents.
Appendices A to J have been assembled, some with an introduction or analysis, and one, Appendix J,
comprises a fresh look at Judges horoscope through commissioned work recently completed by two
professional astrologers.
Mahatma or Master are terms used throughout this work. A definition is included below as it is important
to understand what these words imply in the context of this work.
Mah~tman. (Sanskrit) Great Soul or Great Self is the meaning of this compound word (mah~
great; ~tman self). The Mahatmas are perfected men, relatively speaking, known in theosophical
literature as Teachers, Elder Brothers, Masters, Sages, Seers, and by other names. . . . They are men,
not spirits men who have evolved through self-devised efforts in individual evolution, always
advancing forwards and upwards until they have now attained the lofty spiritual and intellectual
human supremacy that now they hold. They were not so created by any extra-cosmic Deity, but they
are men who have become what they are by means of inward spiritual striving, by spiritual and
intellectual yearning, by aspiration to the greater and better, nobler and higher, just as every good man
in his own way so aspires. They are farther advanced along the path of evolution than the majority
of men are. They possess knowledge of Natures secret processes, and of hid mysteries, which to the
average man may seem to be little short of the marvelous yet, after all, this mere fact is of relatively
small importance in comparison with the far greater and more profoundly moving aspects of their
nature and life-work. G. de Purucker, Occult Glossary, Theosophical University Press, Pasadena, CA,
(1933) 1972, p.92.
Ernest E. Pelletier
Date: April 13th, 2004
CHRONOLOGY
Chronology
Mar. 18,
1882
Mar. 15,
1883
June 11,
1883
Nov. 4,
1883
Dec. 3,
1883
Official Reports
The Theosophist,
THE ARYAN THEOSOPHISTS OF NEW YORK.
Vol. 5, Feb.1884;
The New York Branch of the Theosophical Society has been formed Supp. p.31
with the above title. Officers are: President S William Q. Judge,
Secretary S Mortimer Marble, Treasurer S George W. Wheat. . . .
The Societys objects are
To promote the study of Aryan and other Eastern religions and
sciences, and vindicate its importance; to investigate the hidden
mysteries of Nature, and the psychical powers latent in man; and to
co-operate in the general work of the Theosophical Society.
Chronology
Dec. 4,
1883
THEOSOPHISTS REORGANIZING.
The Theosophist,
THE PEOPLE WHO SET NEW YORK TALKING SEVEN YEARS AGO.
Vol. 5, Feb.1884;
The New York Herald published an account of the meeting held at Supp. p.31
Mr. Wheats house at 355 West, 28th St. N.Y. City.
A most extraordinary meeting was held in a private residence up
town last night, at which a small group of gentlemen gathered together
for the purpose of reviving the work of the Theosophical Society,
started in New York nearly a decade ago, by Madame Blavatsky.
. . .the nucleus has been preserved, and some ten days ago word was
received by several of the initiates that a certain priest would be in
New York, yesterday, and would expect to meet a select few at the
place mentioned last evening.
General Abner A. Doubleday presided, William Q. Judge was
secretary. There were a boss printer, a somewhat noted journalist, a
professional accountant, a retired merchant, a student or two and
others of less note were present.
General Doubleday introduced the Hindoo, not by name, but as the
messenger of the Society. Some of those present recognized him as
the man who was present at the cremation of the Baron de Palm and
at the later ceremony of casting the Barons ashes into the sea. He was
attired with Oriental magnificence, strangely contrasting with the
business suits of the others. On his breast gleamed a jewel wrought
with the mystic word. OM. He spoke very little, but after
announcing that the time had come for the active work of the New
York Branch of the Theosophists, he read in Hindoostanee a short
passage from the Mahabbarat and gave to the acting President
(General Doubleday) a copy of the Bhagavad-Gita. . . .
After delivering his message and the book, the Hindoo disappeared.
No one followed him or asked a question. Immediately after this
event the ones present organized the new Society and elected their
officers and a second meeting was announced for the following
Monday, Dec. 10th.
Dec. 10 and
17, 1883
The Theosophist,
Vol. 5, Mar. 1884;
Supp. p.54
The Theosophist,
Vol. 52, May 1931;
p.196
Jan. 21,
1884
Feb. 15,
1884
The Theosophist,
Vol. 5, Feb. 1884;
Supp. pp.41-42
Hammer on the
Mountain.
pp.328-329
H.P.B leaves Wadhwan for Bombay after her visit with His Highness the The Theosophist,
Thakore Saheb. She was accompanied by Baboo Mohini M. Vol. 5, Apr. 1884;
Chatterjee and Franz Hartmann.
Supp. p.65
Hartmann (An American Buddhist) returned to Adyar on Feb. 29.
Report, p.32
H.P.B., H.S.O, Mohini M. Chatterchi, Burjorji J. Padshah,
S.Krishnamarchari (Babaji) and Babula (H.P.B.s servant) sailed on BCW, Vol. 6, p.xxvi
the 20th, from Bombay for Marseilles, France on the S.S.
Chandernagore.
First Report, p.123
Feb. 19,
1884
Feb. 20,
1884
Madame Blavatsky and H.S. Olcott sail from Bombay for Marseilles, The Theosophist,
France on the S.S. Chandernagore. They were accompanied by Vol. 5, Mar. 1884;
Mohini M. Chatterji, Burjorji J. Padshah, S. Krishnamachari (Babaji) p.154
and Babula, Blavatskys servant.
BCW, Vol. 6, p.xxvi
NOTE: On Feb. 15th Mme. Blavatsky left Wadhwan for Bombay. She was
accompanied by Franz Hartmann and Baboo Mohini M. Chatterjee. The Theosophist,
During their train ride Franz Hartmann describes an interesting Vol. 5, Apr. 1884;
phenomenon which occurred which is similar to the phenomenon that p.65
occurred at the May 27th, 1891, E. S. Advisory Council Meeting. See
May 27, 1891 entry.
Chronology
Feb./Mar.
1884
In the winter of 1884 news came to William Q. Judge in New York that
the long severed relations between himself, H.P.B. and Col. Olcott
were to be renewed, and the pen work resumed just where it had been
laid down at the time of their departure for India in 1878.
NOTE: There is no indication of an exact date for W. Q. Judges arrival
in London. In a letter some time after his arrival he wrote: Since
February 27th I have not met a congenial soul save Thomas. . . . Then
he adds March 20th . . . No further news from Olcott or the rest.
The Word,
Vol. 14, Mar. 1912,
p.324
p.331
Mar. 25,
1884
William Quan Judge arrives in Paris (from where he eventually made his The Word,
way to India). He is told by Madame Blavatsky that the Master had Vol. 15, Apr. 1912;
told her in India, that he was doing, or about to do something with pp.17-18
and for me. Also that he had been ordered by the Masters to stop
here and help Madame in writing the Secret Doctrine.. . .
Mar. 27,
1884
Under orders from K.H. the Board of Control gave a months leave, and Report, p.34
money for Mme. Coulomb to buy new clothing, for a vacation from
Adyar at Ooty (Ootacamund).
Hastings, Vol. 2,
p.77
th
th
NOTE: During the period from February 7 up to the 29 , when Hartmann
returned to Adyar, the Coulombs had undisputed possession of
Madame Blavatskys room.
Apr. 24,
1884
Apr. 30,
1884
The Theosophist,
Vol. 53, Nov. 1931;
pp.201-202
O.E. Library Critic,
Vol. 21, Apr. 1932;
p.9
May 13,
1884
The Theosophist,
Vol. 5, July 1884;
Supp. p.100
A Short History of
the T.S., p.200
General Report of
the 21st Anniversary
of the T.S., p.26
H.S. Olcott: On the 13th June I returned to London in company with Mr. Old Diary Leaves,
Judge, who had come over from New York to see us on his way out Third Series, p.155
to India, his intended future field of work.
End of June
1884
July 15,
1884
Chronology
July 20,
1884
Aug. 17,
1884
Sep. 29,
1884
The Madras Mail reports on Mr. Judges address to some Madras Theosophy
students [which] bore the following testimony to Hindu philosophy: Unveiled, p.58
The great Indian nation produced its Sanskrit. Great consideration was
due to this language. It contains Philosophy as refined as Herbert
Spencers and further it used language that Herbert Spencer could not
understand. His very ideas were to be found in Indian philosophy
elaborated to such an extent that Spencer would do well to throw his
books into the sea and apply himself to the study of Hindu
Philosophy.
Nov. 10,
1884
H.S. Olcott arrives in Bombay. He lectures at Framji Cowasji Hall on Ransom, p.204
Theosophy Abroad. He arrived in Madras on the 15th.
He stopped at Poona on the way to consult Judge Khandalawala BCW, Vol. 9, p.78
[N.D.K.] on the Coulomb problem and secured his support for his
policy.
NOTE: N.D.K., Navroji Dorabji Khandalawala was a highly respected
Judge and staunch friend of the Founders, especially Olcott and
Blavatsky. He was initiated into the Theosophical Society on March
9, 1880, and later became President of the Poona Branch of the T.S.
Nov. 16,
1884
THEOSOPHY ABROAD
The Theosophist,
Colonel H.S. Olcott, President-Founder of the Theosophical Society, Vol. 6, Dec. 1884;
delivered a lecture on Sunday evening in Patcheappahs Hall, on Supp. pp.158-159
Theosophy Abroad.
Nov. 17,
1884
After Olcotts arrival at Adyar on the 15th, he dissolved the Board of The Theosophist,
Control, which had been formed by Special Orders of Jan. 21st and Vol. 6, Dec. 1884;
Feb. 19th, 1884 and resumed the executive management of the Society. Supp. p.162
10
Nov. 26
1884
W.Q. Judge arrives in New York on board the British steamer SS. BCW, Vol.1, p.476
Wisconsin, which had left Liverpool on Nov. 15th.
Cdn. Theosophist,
NOTE: Judge sailed for the U.S.A. from Liverpool on Nov. 15, 1884.
Vol. 20, Apr. 1939;
p.35
Dec. 21,
1884
On Dec. 1st Olcott and Hartmann leave Adyar and sail to Colombo, Ceylon Hammer on the
to meet H.P.B., C.W. Leadbeater, and Mr. and Mrs. Cooper-Oakley Mountain, p.329
and return to Adyar with H.P.B and party on Dec. 21st aboard the S.S.
Navarino.
Vania, pp.242-244
Dec. 27-31,
1884
Official Report of
the Ninth
Anniversary at
Madras, 1884, p.17
Dec. 27-31,
1884
continued
Committees Report.
At the Ninth Annual Convention of the Theosophical Society at
Adyar (Madras), a Committee was appointed to advise Madame
Blavatsky as to the best course to be taken by her with reference to
certain letters published in the September number and the following
numbers of the Christian College Magazine, a sectarian paper
published at Madras under the auspices of the Scotch Free Church
Mission. In this Madame Blavatsky was denounced as being an
imposter and having performed so-called Occult Phenomena in a
fraudulent manner by the assistance of a woman named Coulomb and
her husband, both of which persons had been for some time residing
at the head-quarters of the Society in the capacity of house-keepers
and servants, but who had been recently expelled from the headquarters and from the Society, and on whose evidence the accusations
brought forward by the missionaries rested. . . .
Resolved: . . . it is the unanimous opinion of this Committee that
Madame Blavatsky should not prosecute her defamers in a Court of
law.
Signed by the members of the Committee:
Narandro Nath Sen, Chairman; Franz Hartmann, M.D.; S.
Ramasawmier; Navaraji [or Navroji] Dorabji Khandalawalla, B.A.,
L.L.B.; H.R. Morgan, Major-General; Gyanenedra Nath Chakravarti,
M.A.; Nobin K. Banerji; T. Subba Row, B.A., B.L.; Dewan Bahadur
R. Ragoonath Row; Rudolph Gebhard; P. Iyaloo Naidu; The Honble
S. Subramani Iyer, B.L.; P. Shrinivasa Row; A.J. Cooper-Oakley,
B.A., F.R.H.S., Secy.
The reasons which led the Committee to adopt this resolution are then
listed.
Report of
Investigation, pp.3-4
BCW,
Vol. 6, pp.410-411
Mar. 31,
1885
Wrzberg
Official Report of
the Ninth
Anniversary at
Madras, 1884,
pp.99-106
Theosophia, Vol. 5,
Nov.-Dec. 1948; p.12
Chronology
11
May 1,
1885
May 16,
1885
Theos. History,
Vol. 6, No. 5, Jan.
1997; pp.164-166
A Short History of
the T.S., p.203
12
Mar. 11,
1886
Apr. 1886
First issue of The Path, a magazine devoted to the Brotherhood of The Theosophist,
humanity, Theosophy in America and the study of Occult Science, Vol. 7, June 1886;
Philosophy and Aryan Literature, edited by W.Q. Judge, published pp.604-605
under the auspices of the Aryan Theosophical Society of New York.
Book review of The Path in The Theosophist.
The first number (April) of this magazine has just reached us and
promises well for the future. . . .
The fact that it is edited by Mr. William Q. Judge is in itself a
guarantee that the present standard of excellence will be fully kept up,
and the magazine bids fair to be a most important factor in helping on
the spread of those truths which the Theosophical Society has been
the means of once more bringing before the attention of Mankind.
Apr. 1886
continued
One year later, in her letter from Ostende, Belgium, dated March 19, 1887,
H.P.B. wrote to Judge:
He who does all & the best he can & knows how does enough for
them. This is a message for you. Your Path begins to beat the
Theosophist out of sight. It is most excellent. . . . The Path alone is
your certificate for you in Theosophy.
NOTE: The passage This is a message for you seems to imply that the
message is not hers but rather a message from the Masters for him.
Theos. History,
Vol. 5, No. 4,
Oct. 1994;
pp.125-127
Chronology
Apr. 27,
1886
13
May 1886
June 1886
WQJ T. Pioneer,
p.13
Echoes of the
Orient,
Vol. 1, p.xxvii
Report of
Proceedings, 1888
14
June 3,
1886
June 6,
1886
July 1886
A Short History of
the T.S., p.237
The Theosophist,
Vol. 8, Jan. 1887;
Supp. p.xxxii
A Convention of the American Board of Control was held at Rochester The Theosophist,
New York where various matters relating to admission of members Vol. 8, Jan. 1887;
and other details of organization were discussed.
Supp. p.xxxii
Madame Blavatsky had cabled to Judge to abolish the Board and A Short History of
make a central head.
the T.S., p.237
Olcott in his Old Diary Leaves stated that Blavatsky had written to Old Diary Leaves,
Judge. He wrote:
Third Series, p.379
The Overland mail of August 12th brought me the consoling news
that (of course without the shadow of constitutional authority) she had
cabled our people in New York to dissolve the American Board of
Control to pacify Coues, I presume and she also offered to turn
over her share of the Theosophist to Judge and make him her
successor (one of two or three dozens).
[As it turns out, it was not Blavatsky who sent that telegram to the
American Board of Control. See next cell for more details.]
NOTE: See July 27, 1886 and Oct. 30, 1886 entries.
Chronology
July 1886
continued
While in Elberfeld H.P.B. stayed with the Gebhard family. They had
some business interests in America which their son, Arthur, looked
after for them. (Blavatsky had commented to Judge to keep in touch
with the Gebhards son as she was fond of him.) Arthur, who was
back from America visited Blavatsky in Ostende. It was at this time
that [Arthur] sent a terse telegram to the American Board of Control
in July on the eve of their annual meeting in her name advising them
to abolish the Board. (Blavatsky gives her own version of this
message in a letter to Elliott Coues . . . which was published in The
Canadian Theosophist, Nov./Dec. 1984)
Blavatsky also wrote to Arthur Gebhard on July 13th from Ostende.
This letter is reprinted in The Theosophical Forum (New Series)
Vol. 5, Dec. 1933, pp.107-108.
NOTE: In a letter dated May 28, 1886, to Mrs. Waters, Mr. Judge
commented:
Now that Arthur [Gebhard] is going away I am left so to say with no
one to act near to me, and so perhaps my mind may be getting active.
15
Theos. History,
Vol. 5, No. 3, July
1994; p.86.
Cdn. Theosophist,
Vol. 65, pp.110-116
Practical
Occultism, p.27
July 27,
1886
H.P. Blavatsky wrote Mr. Judge; I know that you could do a lot of good A Short History of
in India. Take my place Judge. You will make up in devotion what the T.S., p.237
you lack in occult knowledge. I will give you my share of The
Theosophist . . . Replace me at Adyar . . . Even if I am dead you can
always get 10% from The Secret Doctrine and The Theosophist.
Aug. 22,
1886
Mme. Blavatsky was also very concerned that she had not been getting Theos. Forum (P.L.)
her royalties for her Isis Unveiled from J.W. Bouton, her publisher in Vol. 5, Nov. 1933;
New York. In this same letter she asked Judge to contact Bouton and pp.87-88
correct this problem. She wrote:
If the money is sent to Olcott I PROTEST. I am here, ISIS is mine I have
enough lost on it let me have, at least, the little I can get. . . . At any
rate say to Bouton that [if] he wants to have the Secret Doctrine he has
to deal directly with me not with Olcott, or any one else.
NOTE: In her Oct. 3rd, 1886 letter from Ostende, Mme. Blavatsky offers
more details about her dealings with Bouton. [See Oct. 3, 1886 entry
for references.]
16
Oct. 3, 1886
During a Convention held at Cincinnati, at the residence of Dr. J.D. The Theosophist,
Buck, there was a meeting of members of the American Board of Vol. 8, Jan. 1887;
Control and Presidents of American Branches. . . .
Supp. p.lv
. . . the Convention voted to organize the American section of the
General Council of the Theosophical Society, in succession to the late
Board of Control. . . .
Mr. W.Q. Judge was, upon motion of Mr. E.B. Page, seconded by Dr.
Buck, unanimously elected General Secretary and Treasurer.
Judge was elected permanent General Secretary and Treasurer, the
sole official of the American Section of the General Council of the A Short History of
Theosophical Society.
the T.S., p.237
Mar. 19,
1887
During the spring of 1887 while at Ostende, H.P.B. became gravely ill.
Her kidneys were badly infected and she was unconscious for hours
at a time.
During this time she had received a message of kindness and
sympathy from a well-wisher (not identified here), sent through W.Q.
JUDGE, to which she took time to answer. Having heard from my
dear old W.Q. Judge how kindly disposed you are toward me, and
having received from him several messages on your behalf, let me tell
you how grateful I feel for your kind expression of sympathy.
Yes, the work has brought upon me contumely, ignominy of all
kinds, hatred, malice and slander. Were it only from the outsiders I
would mind very little. But, sad to say, it is the Theosophists chiefly
who tear me to pieces.
Irish Theosophist,
Vol. 3, Feb. 1895;
pp.76-77
Chronology
17
The Letters of H.P. Blavatsky to W.Q. Judge: Part III: Letter Dated 19
March 1887.
H.P.B. also wrote a letter to Judge from Ostende on the same day.
This letter was to give advice on how to handle the emerging
difficulties with the formation of the American Section of the T.S. In
regards to independent branches, H.P.B. stated:
Let the Branches be all as free as every state is in America. . . . Make
a rule that any fellow found out slandering another SS be expelled
after the second warning. Make the rules strict and foremost of. Let
every one either peg out of the Society or hold his tongue & mind
his own business.
NOTE: This letter from H.P.B. likely contributed to Mr. Judges decision
in issuing By Masters Direction. [See Nov. 3, 1894 entry.]
Theos. History,
Vol. 5, No. 4,
Oct. 1994;
pp.125-127
Apr. 24,
1887
The Theosophist,
Vol. 10, General
Report, p.24
BCW,
Vol. 12, p. 479
May 18.
1887
NOTE: This enclosed paper drawn up by Mr. Judge was included in his
E.S.T. circular entitled By Masters Direction. See Nov. 3, 1894
entry.
The Theosophist,
Vol. 8, July 1887;
Supp. p.cvii
Theos. Movement
1875-1925, pp.138140
18
Apr. 3,
1888
Letter from H.P.B. to W.Q.J.,which she requested be read at the American Letters That Have
Convention on Apr. 22nd:
Helped Me, 1946
My Dearest Brother and Co-Founder of the Theosophical Society: ed., pp.276-283
We were several to call it to life in 1875. Since then you have
remained alone to preserve that life through good and evil report. It
is to you chiefly, if not entirely, that the Theosophical Society owes
its existence in 1888. . . . [M]y voice is but the feeble echo of other
more sacred voices, and the transmitter of the approval of Those
whose presence is alive in more than one true Theosophical heart, and
lives, as I know, pre-eminently in yours.
NOTE: Also reprinted in H.P. Blavatsky to the American Conventions,
(TUP) 1979, p.3, and Five Messages from H.P. Blavatsky to the
American Theosophists, 1922, p.3.
Apr. 4,
1888
A typewritten letter from H.P. Blavatsky to William Q. Judge, General Theos. Forum (P.L.)
Secretary of the American Section of the Theosophical Society, and Vol. 5, Dec. 1933;
first Vice-President of the Theosophical Publication Society.
p.108
Dear Sir and Brother,
I hereby grant to you as agent for the Theosophical Publication
Society the exclusive right to print and publish all or any part of my
forth-coming work entitled THE SECRET DOCTRINE during the
whole term of the copyright in the same; reserving to myself one half
of the net profits accruing from the said work, on account of which
profits the sum of ^10 [ten pounds] per month shall be paid to me in
advance out of the funds of the Theosophical Publication Society,
beginning six weeks after the date of publication; any further balance
due to me to be paid from time to time as may be agreed on between
us; the other half of the net profits to be for the use and benefit of the
Theosophical Publication Society.
I further agree to confirm this letter by a formal agreement to the same
effect whenever called upon to do so by you or by any other
authorized agent of the Theosophical Publication Society.
H.P. Blavatsky
[Blavatskys signature is in purple ink.]
On the letter there is a note written and signed in pencil by W.Q. Judge.
The ^10. monthly is only suggestion as I propose to pay her a royalty
which is better & not burdensome
Judge
NOTE: See March 9, 1890 for another notice from Blavatsky.
Chronology
Aug. 22,
1888
Letter from Master K.H. to Olcott received on board S.S. Shannon the day
before reaching Brindisi. [See NOTE]
Since 1885 I have not written, nor caused to be written, save through
her [H.P.B.s] agency, direct or remote, a letter or a line to anybody
in Europe or America, nor communicated orally with, or thro any
third party. Theosophists should learn it. You will understand later the
significance of this declaration, so keep it in mind.
19
Part of K.H.s letter to Olcott is quoted in the October 1888 issue of Lucifer, Vol. 3, Oct.
Lucifer.
1888, pp.146-147
Theosophy, Vol. 10,
Feb. 1922; p.103
NOTE: According to the records of Lloyds of London, the steamer
arrived in Brindisi August 23rd, at 7:30 a.m., leaving for London an
hour later.
Oct. 9, 1888
Oct. 19,
1888
20
Nov. 15,
1888
Col. Olcott, who had left London on Oct. 22nd, reached Adyar with his The Theosophist,
party of friends. The party included Charles and Vera V. Johnston, Vol. 10, Dec. 1888,
Richard Harte of New York, Mr. E. Douglas Fawcett and Baroness Supp. pp.xxvii-xxviii
Kroummess.
Old Diary Leaves,
NOTE: Richard Harte, a member of the Society since 1877, was an old Fourth series, p.68
friend of the Founders from New York where he had been on the staff
of the New York Telegram. Col. Olcott needed Hartes journalistic
experience at Adyar, as acting Editor, to replace Alfred J. CooperOakley who had resigned on April 1st. (He had edited Vols. VI, VII,
VIII, and part of IX.) While Olcott was away in Europe he had asked
Mr. C.W. Leadbeater, whom he had recalled from Ceylon, to fill in as
temporary editor of The Theosophist.
Nov 27,
1888
[From A REMINISCENCE.]
Irish Theosophist,
W.Q. Judges message to the Dublin Lodge:
Vol. 3, Feb. 1895;
The first and the vital object of the Society was the establishment of pp.79-81
the Universal Brotherhood of Humanity.
Dr. Keightley, in the course of his remarks, said: . . . . he was glad to
see that Dublin Lodge had recognized the fact by placing the notable
quotation from Lucifer (November 1887) which was the utterance
of a Master upon its walls. [He who does not practise altruism; he
who is not prepared to share his last morsel with a weaker or poorer
than himself; he who neglects to help his brother man, of whatever
race, nation or creed, whenever and wherever he meets suffering, and
who turns a deaf ear to the cry of human misery; he who hears an
innocent person slandered, whether a brother Theosophist or not, and
does not undertake his defence as he would undertake his own is
no Theosophist.] It was necessary to remember that we should be
absolutely united in the furtherance of such principles as were
contained in that utterance.
Dec. 1888
Echoes of the
Orient,
Vol. 1; p.xxxii
BCW,
Vol. 12, p.484
Judge was in Dublin, Ireland and . . . went from there to London and
assisted H.P.B. in the formation of the Esoteric Section.
BCW,
Vol. 1, p.479
Chronology
Dec. 14,
1888
21
In certain official documents H.P.B. is quoted as describing W.Q. Judge Irish Theosophist,
as being then a chela of thirteen years standing, with trust reposed Vol. 4; May 1896;
in him, and the chief and sole agent of the Dzyan (Lodge) in pp.142-143
America.
Theos. or NeoSpecial order by H.P. BLAVATSKY.
Theos., p.58
As head of the Esoteric Section of the Theosophical Society, I hereby
declare that William Q. Judge, of New York, U.S., in virtue of his Theos. History,
character as a chela of thirteen years standing, and of the trust and Vol. 6, No. 1, Jan.
confidence reposed in him, is my only representative for said section 1996; p.12
in America, and he is the sole channel through whom will be sent and
received all communications between the members of said Section and H.P.B. A Great
myself, and to him full faith, confidence and credit in that regard are Betrayal (1922)
to be given, Done at London this the fourteenth day of December, by A. Cleather,
1888, and in the fourteenth year of the Theosophical Society. pp.84-85
[Signed and sealed by] H.P. Blavatsky
Theosophy, Vol. 3,
Apr. 1915; p.275
NOTE: This appointment by H.P.B. was reprinted by Annie Besant and
W.Q. JUDGE in an E.S.T. circular, To All Members of the E.S.T., Echoes of the
from the Eastern School of Theosophy, May 27, 1891; 8pp., London. Orient,
[See May 27, 1891.]
Vol. I, p.xxxii
Theos. Movement
1875-1950, p.159
BCW, Vol. 1; p.479
Dec.27-29,
1888
22
Jan. 7, 1889
Jan. 10,
1889
Before Col. Olcott left for his trip to Japan he issued a number of orders
on this date. One such order was to appoint three Commissioners with
the power to represent him while he was absent. The Order stated:
I hereby delegate to the undernamed persons, jointly and severally,
under the Rules of the Society, the Custody and Management of the
Head-Quarters, and of the Correspondence and Funds of the Society,
and of the Organization of the New Sections, and, generally, to
exercise my Executive Functions in my name and on my behalf.
Namely, to:
Dewan Bahadur R. Ragoonath [Ragunatha] Row
Dewan Bahadur P. Sreenevasa [Srinevasa] Row
Mr. Richard Harte.
General Report of
the 13th
Anniversary of the
T.S. Dec. 1888; p.67
The Theosophist,
Vol. 10, Feb. 1889;
Supp. pp.xxxviixxxviii
The Theosophist,
Vol. 10, Feb. 1889;
Supp. pp.xxxix-xl
Apr. 1889; Supp.
p.lxv
NOTE: This was Col. Olcotts first tour of Japan and he had taken Mr. The Theosophist,
Dharmapala Hevanitarana with him as his companion.
Vol. 10, Aug. 1889;
Supp. p.cxlv
End of
March 1889
Madame Blavatsky invited Cheiro [pseudonym for Count Louis Hamon] Greatest Occultists
to come for a visit. On his second visit, the next day, she asked him to by Cheiro, pp.170read her palm. She said, I want to have some of my own theories 180
confirmed. Nothing you can say will be of any shock to me. Perhaps
it will be of help to me. Under such conditions will you not make the
effort?
Cheiro re-counts, Picking up a pencil she pointed to where the Line
of Health appeared to cut through the Line of Life. That is the end,
she said, but give me the exact year, or at least as near as you can.
After the reading Mme. Blavatsky thanked him and said, Your
warning will do me good, for I will now put my papers in order and
prepare in earnest for the short time that lies before me.
NOTE: From this episode, one would expect that Mme. Blavatsky would
have written another Will and Testament.
Chronology
May 10,
1889
23
Theosophical
Quarterly, Vol.24,
July 1926, p.14
Borderland, Vol.1,
Oct. 1893; p.175
Theosophy, Vol. 3,
May 1915; p.323
Mrs. Annie Besant joined the Theosophical Society in 1889 and became
a pledged member of the Esoteric Section.
Theos. Movement
1875-1950,
pp.156-157
NOTE: also in: H.P.B. and The Present Crisis in The Theosophical Pamphlet, 1894,
Society, by Constance Wachtmeister
(12 pages); p.4
NOTE: According to A Besant Diary of Principal Events Annie Besant The Theosophist,
met Blavatsky on May 10th, 1889, but she actually joined the Vol. 69, Oct. 1947;
Theosophical Society on May 21st.
p.85
June 1889
The Theosophist,
Vol. 10, Sep. 1889;
pp.703-710
24
June 1889
continued
June 1889
continued
THE SITUATION.
Judge also criticised this article in Centres of The Theosophical
Movement. He claimed that this article was intended to support and
enforce the first.
NOTE: This article was written by F.T.S., who was Richard Harte.
The Theosophist,
Vol. 10, June 1889;
pp.565-568
Chronology
Aug. 15,
1889
Aug. 26,
1889
25
Lucifer,
Vol. 4, Aug. 1889;
pp.506-509
Letter from Richard Harte to H.P.B. from Adyar, Madras. Harte rather
condescendingly describes what he interprets to be the effects of
pledge fever upon Judge, and thinks that bringing to focus the
karma of such a good man as Judge has been to confuse all his ideas
of right and wrong, loyalty and rebellion, truth and falsehood.
WQJ T. Pioneer
p.23
26
Sep. 12,
1889
WQJ T. Pioneer,
pp.23-24
Theos. Forum (P.L.)
Vol. 5, Jan. 1934;
pp.132-133
Echoes of the
Orient,
Vol. 1, p.xli
Oct. 1889
INCORPORATION.
The Theosophist,
Mr. William Q. Judge, Genl. Secy. of the American Section, wrote Vol. 11, Oct. 1889;
lately that he and some of the other leading Fellows had determined Supp. p.v
to incorporate the T.S. in America, and that this step had been already
taken in some of the States. . . . The Society, or a society called The
Theosophical Society and Universal Brotherhood. had then actually
been thus incorporated in the States of New York and Missouri; no
further information however has been received at Head-quarters, and
we cannot inform our readers . . . whether the Founders have been
placed on the list of incorporators, Mr. Judge holding, we believe, the
power of attorney of both of them.
Chronology
Oct. 23,
1889
27
DIXI
H.P.B.
PS. W.Q.J. had better show, & impress this on the mind of all those Letters That Have
Helped Me, pp.277whom it may concern H.P.B.
278
NOTE: Theosophia includes a reproduction of the original letter.
Theosophy,
Vol. 3, June 1915;
pp.371-372
Dec. 25,
1889
In 1889, Col. H.S. Olcott made a protracted visit to Europe, during which BCW,
he saw H.P.B. for the last time. The day before he left London for Vol. 12, p.484
Colombo, Lank~, she handed to him the following document:
I hereby appoint Colonel H.S. Olcott my confidential agent and sole
official representative of the Esoteric Section for Asiatic countries.
. . . (Signed) H.P. Blavatsky.
1890
NOTE: WHY I DO NOT RETURN TO INDIA was an Open Letter written in BCW, Vol. 12,
April 1890 by H.P.B. and was sent to India by the intermediary of pp.156-157
Bertram Keightley who left London for India, at H.P.B.s special
request, sometime in the Summer of 1890, reaching Bombay August
31, 1890. This letter was not published in the Theosophist until
January 1922 although it had been quoted by N.D. Khandalavala in
his article H.P. Blavatsky and Her Masters (Theosophist Vol. 20,
Oct. 1898, pp.23-24). Shortly after B. Keightleys arrival in India,
with the letter, Col. Olcott expressed that he wished to resign as
President of the T.S. [See Oct 7, 1890.]
28
1890
continued
Jan. 1890
continued
MUDDLED RULE-MAKERS.
The Theosophist,
Richard Harte, acting editor for The Theosophist while Col. Olcott Vol. 11, Jan. 1890;
is away from Adyar, admonished the President of a newly chartered Supp. pp.lxxv-lxxvi
Washington branch for their wording of their Constitution and Byelaws calling it tomfoolery and calling upon Mr. William Q. Judge,
General Secretary of the American Section of the Theosophical
Society for some explanation thereof.
Feb. 1890
MUDDLED MEDDLERS.
Lucifer,
H.P. Blavatsky reproached Richard Harte for his very untheosophical Vol. 5, Feb. 1890;
and undignified SS attack made by one officer of the T.S. on another pp.517-518
officer of the same. . . .
Such harsh expressions . . . are not only objectionable on account of
their offensive character, but detrimental and dangerous to the T.S.
NOTE: See May/June 1989 entry.
Chronology
Feb. 27,
1890
Shortly after Col. Olcotts return from Europe he issued a SPECIAL The Theosophist,
NOTICE.
Vol. 11, Mar. 1890;
The undersigned resumes the responsible direction of the Supp. p.cv
Theosophist; at the same time thanking Mr. Richard Harte most
sincerely for his valuable services during the period of the absence of
the undersigned from India.
Col. Olcott arrived in Adyar from Japan on July 11th, 1889, only to
sail again for Europe on August 8th, returning on Feb. 5th, 1890. On his
return to India he was accompanied by two valuable recruits.
Dr. J. Bowles Daly,LL.D., and Mr. E. Douglas Fawcett, in addition
to Mr. Harte, will henceforth be members of the Editorial Staff. Their
articles will be signed with their full names or initials. By a friendly
arrangement with Madame Blavatsky, a certain class of important
articles contributed to either Magazine will appear in both Lucifer and
the Theosophist.
NOTE: See Jan. 10, 1889 entry.
NOTE: From the above statement by Col. Olcott it would appear that
Mme Blavatsky had a serious discussion with Col. Olcott while he
was in London regarding unsigned Editorials which appeared in the
Theosophist. See June 1889 for APPLIED THEOSOPHY by Richard
Harte and Aug. 15, 1889 for A PUZZLE FROM ADYAR.
Mar. 9,
1890
In a letter dated Feb. 9, 1890 H.P. Blavatsky writes: I send you another Theos. History,
legal script & gave to the Countess one to the same effect.
Vol. 6, No. 2, Apr.
The legal script she mentioned has not been found but the following 1996; p.48
notice exists in the Archives of the Theosophical Society, Pasadena.
I hereby authorize Mr. W.Q. Judge editor of the Path & proprietor
of the Path Office & Library, to render the accounts of my books
the Secret Doctrine The Key to Theosophy and The Voice of
the Silence, on sale in the said office, to the Theosophical Publishing
Society, of 7 Duke Street, and to pay the Countess C. Wachtmeister
the manager of that office, all monies owing to me now, or what may
[be] owed in the future, from the sale of my books, as specified
above.
NOTE: See Apr. 4, 1888 entry.
29
30
Apr. 1890
June 1890
July 1890
In July 1890 the New York Sun published an article by Dr. Coues, in A Short History of
which gross charges were made against the character of H.P.B. and the T.S.,
charging Olcott and Judge with assisting H.P.B. in fraud and living pp.273-276
upon The Society.
NOTE: See Sep. 26, 1892, also see Sep. 12, 1890 for H.P.B. letter to Mrs
J. Campbell ver Planck.
NOTE: For more valuable information on the Coues-Sun case, see The
Canadian Theosophist, Vol. 66, No.6, Jan.-Feb. 1896, pp.127-130;
137-138.
Chronology
July 9, 1890
Aug. 9,
1890
Theosophy,
Vol. 9, Aug. 1921;
NOTE: See April 1890 and Aug. 31, 1890, re: Bertram Keightleys pp.306-307
American tour.
Aug. 25,
1890
31
32
Aug.31,
1890
Chronology
Sep. 12,
1890
33
Letter from H.P. Blavatsky to Mrs. J. Campbell ver Planck regarding the Theos. Forum (P.L.)
Vol. 4, Sep. 1932;
Coues/New York Sun suit.
I of course have no desire to impose any authority upon the E.S. pp.7-8
members of the Aryan in this libel affair. If members in supporting
Judge act contrary to their convictions, then such half-hearted
support is worse than no support at all. The matter is quite simple: the
libel suit has not been instituted to defend personalities, but to defend
the Society, the honour of every member of which has been attacked.
Theosophically & occultly, a libel suit which would have been
untheosophical & selfish if instituted to defend a person, becomes not
only a Theosophical action but a Karmic duty if the welfare of the
Society is thereby being protected. If Judge is abandoned by any of his
fellow-Esotericists because their convictions are contrary to the
above view, theirs will be the Karma. If it is impolitic to bring a suit,
then Judge & myself must be wrong & we do not know what we are
about & we are untheosophical & ignorant.* But if, on the contrary it
is not only politic, but a necessary duty, then it is the duty of every
Esotericist to support in every way this action, for remember that the
more people protest, the more grave will be the offence of slandering
so many innocent people: and it is necessary that the public should
learn that the members of the T.S. are not people of no reputation,
who may be covered with mud with impunity.
For myself I care not a jot; neither have I any desire to be unjust to
a single member of the E.S.: but you must admit that when the
convictions of my pupils are contrary to my own, I have not much
hope of their listening to my teachings.
Very Sincerely,
(Sgd.) H.P.B.
* In my own case I do not defend myself but (1) a dear friend &
Theosophist, who cannot defend himself; & (2) the Head of the
Section, who would dishonour you all otherwise.
NOTE: The above Letter from H.P. Blavatsky to Mrs J. Campbell ver
Planck is important because it establishes both H.P.B.s and W.Q.J.s
positions in defending against slander.
Sep. 30,
1890
Annie Besant was elected President of the Blavatsky Lodge at the Annual
general meeting which was held in the Lecture Hall, Theosophical
Headquarters, 19, Avenue Road, Regents Park, N.W.:
The following officers were elected 1890-91: President, Annie
Besant; Vice-President, William Kingsland; Secretary, Claude F.
Wright; Assistant-Secretary, Sydney V. Edge; Treasurer, Countess
Wachtmeister.
Lucifer,
Vol. 7, Oct. 1890;
pp.164-165
Mrs. Annie Besant
A Modern Prophet,
pp.168-169
34
Oct. 7, 1890
Col. Olcott wrote to H.P.B., telling her he wished to retire as President of A Short History of
the Theosophical Society.
The T.S., p.271
At the Xth Anniversary, it will be remembered, I asked permission to The Theosophist,
retire, that I might enjoy needed rest after my long and arduous service Vol. 12, Dec. 1890;
in the Tropics. The privilege was unanimously refused, with such Supp. p.xiv
touching expression of personal affection that I continued in Office.
I have now given five more years of service, and feel that I must insist
upon my right to withdraw into privacy, and devote myself to certain
literary work long contemplated.
NOTE: See 1890; Dec. 27, 28, 29, 1890 and Jan. 21, 1892 entries.
Dec. 1890
General Report of the Fifteenth Convention and Anniversary of the The Theosophist,
Theosophical Society.
Vol. 12, Jan. 1891;
Constitution and Rules of The Theosophical Society. [Revised]
Supp. pp.65-72
Article XIII (2):
No Fellow, Officer or Council of the Theosophical Society, or of any
Section or Branch thereof, shall promulgate or maintain any doctrine
as being that advanced or advocated by the Society.
NOTE: See also July 9-10, 1891 entry for Constitution and Rules.
General Report of
the 15th
Anniversary of the
T.S., pp.31-57
The Theosophist,
Vol. 12, Dec. 1890;
Supp. p.xiii
Chronology
35
Jan. 1, 1891
EXECUTIVE ORDERS.
The Theosophist,
Dated Adyar 17th November 1890" from H.S. Olcott.
Vol. 12, Dec. 1890;
In compliance with the above suggestion, the President-Founder Supp. p.xiii
hereby declares that, from and after the 1st January 1891, the present
four Indian Sections shall be merged into one, to be called the Indian
Section of the Theosophical Society, with its Head-quarters at Adyar.
Bertram Keightley, Esq., M.A. (Cantab), F.T.S., is hereby appointed
General Secretary of the Indian Section, subject to the approval of
Mdme. H.P. Blavatsky, to whose staff he is now attached.
Jan. 1, 1891
continued
W. Q. Judge Gen. Secy American Section published the first issue of the
Oriental Department, pamphlets consisting of Sanskrit and other
Oriental Scriptures specially translated for students of theosophy.
Published by Theosophical Society, American Section. P.O. Box
2659, New York.
Jan. 7, 1891
Mar. 12,
1891
36
Mar. 27,
1891
Apr. 1 1891
(est)
H.P.B. to Besant: Child, your pride is terrible; you are as proud as Annie Besant An
Lucifer himself.
Autobiography,
p.311 (1893)
p.442 (1939)
T.P.H. Adyar
Theosophy, Vol. 3,
May 1915; p.323
Apr. 1,
1891
Apr. 9,
1891
Mrs. Besant reached the States on April 9th, after a stormy voyage in the The Path, Vol. 6,
City of New York.
May 1891; p.53
Mrs. Besant accepted the hospitality of Mr. E.A. Neresheimer. . . .
On April 13th she delivered her first public lecture. . . .
Chronology
37
Apr. 9, 1891
continued
Apr. 26-27,
1891
Apr. 26-27,
1891
continued
BCW,
Vol. 13, p.176
Theosophy, Vol. 3,
Apr. 1915; p.276
Theos. or NeoTheos. by Margaret
Thomas, p.57
Cdn. Theosophist,
Vol. 13, May 1932;
pp.65-67
Echoes of the
Orient, Vol. I,
pp.xxxv-xxxvii
Cdn. Theosophist,
Vol. 13, May 1932;
pp.69-70
38
May 6,
1891
On the 6th Mrs Besant sailed for England in the City of Chicago, Dr. and The Path, Vol. 6,
Mrs. J.D. Buck of Cincinnati accompanying her.
June 1891; p.90
On 6 May Mrs Besant, Mr. Judge and Dr. and Mrs. J.D. buck left A Short History of
New York for England.
The T.S., p.280
NOTE: The compiler Josephine Ransom erroneously included Mr. Judge
as having sailed with Annie Besant on the 6th. Mr. Judge sailed for
England on May 13th, 1891. [See May 13th, 1891 entry.]
May 8,
1891
May 8, 1891
continued
May 8, 1891
continued
H.P.B. left us and her last message for the Society was given to Mrs. The Path, Vol. 9,
Oakley the night but one before she died. At three a.m. she suddenly July 1894; p.124
looked up and said Isabel, Isabel, keep the link unbroken; do not let
my last incarnation be a failure.
May 8, 1891
continued
But Mrs. Besant was not in England when H.P.B. died, quite
unexpectedly, and with only three of her pupils present, namely, Mr.
Claude Wright, Mr. Walter Old and Miss Laura Cooper (now Mrs.
G.R.S. Mead.)
In a footnote Mrs. Cleather adds:
How unexpected was the manner of her passing may be gathered
from the fact that she was, at that very time, building a little occult
room next to her own . . . in which each of her pupils was to sit
alone for development. . . .
H.P.B. A Great
Betrayal (1922) by
A. Cleather,
pp.81-84
Chronology
May 9,
1891(est.)
39
In reply to the announcement of H.P.B.s death . . . Mr. Judge promptly Isis Very Much
cabled to Do nothing till I come.
Unveiled, pp.27-28
NOTE: In a written testimony (March 5th 1998) by Mr. Dallas Ten Broeck,
recalling his experiences while living in India, stated that on several
occasions he heard Mr. B.P. Wadia saying that when W.Q. Judge had
received the cable of H.P. Blavatskys passing that he (Judge)
immediately cabled London to Seal her rooms. I am sailing
immediately. [Similarly, this compiler heard Emory Wood (past
President of Edmonton Theosophical Society and a dedicated student
of history, known for his excellent memory for detail) on many
occasions utter the same details about this event. Mr. Wood
corresponded with Mr. Wadia and other individuals and likely picked
up this information through these contacts.]
May 11,
1891
May 13.
1891
General Secretary W.Q. Judge sailed for London on the S.S. City of New The Path,
York.
Vol. 6, July 1891;
p.128
May 15,
1891
A DECLARATION.
Lucifer,
Signed by twelve Fellows of the Theosophical Society (and members Vol. 8, May 1891;
of the Inner Group of the E.S.), at the stake of our personal honour p.247
and reputation, hereby declare:
That we have fully investigated all the accusations and attacks which
have been made against the personal character and bona fides of H. P.
Blavatsky, and have found them in the vast majority of cases to be
entirely false, and in the few remaining instances the grossest possible
distortions of the simple facts. [A Declaration follows My Books
an article by H.P.B. which deals with accusations of plagiarism, want
of method and inaccuracy against her works.]
May 19,
1891
The Press.
Updating readers regarding bad press which H.P.B.s passing had
generated; signed by ten prominent members of the T.S.: Annie
Besant, C. Carter Blake, Herbert Burrows, Laura M. Cooper, Isabel
Cooper-Oakley, Archibald Keightley, G.R.S. Mead, Walter R. Old,
Constance Wachtmeister, and W. Wynn Westcott.
We do not propose to attempt any answer in detail to libels as
monstrous as they are vile, libels which deal, moreover, with supposed
events laid in distant quarters of the world, without any evidence
being adduced to substantiate the allegations.
Lucifer,
Vol. 8, June 1891;
pp.319-320
Echoes of the
Orient,
Vol. 1; p.xxiii
40
May 21,
1891
The Theosophist,
Vol. 12, July 1891;
p.634
Echoes of the
Orient,
Vol. 1; p.xxiii
May 23,
1891
Circular, 4 pages
Consultative Emergency Council.
Consisting of the European Advisory Council and the British Section
Council; held in the Lecture Hall at Headquarters, London, May 23rd,
1891, at 8 p.m.
William Q. Judge, as Vice-President T. S., in the Chair.
Lucifer,
Vol. 8, June 1891;
Resolved, that under the authority of this Council, a notice be sent p.336
out by the General Secretaries to all the Branches and unattached
members, informing them that a Convention is to be held, and
containing the order of business to be decided upon by this council;
and that the Convention be held at Headquarters, London, on
Thursday and Friday, July 9th and 10th, 1891.
May 27,
1891
W.Q. Judge convened a meeting of the Advisory Council of the Esoteric Theos. Movement
Section.
1875-1950, p.159
To All Members of the E.S.T.
The Council passed the following minute:
In virtue of our appointment by H.P.B., we declare:
That in full accord with the known wishes of H.P.B. . . . we primarily
resolve and declare that the work of the School ought and shall be
continued and carried on along the lines laid down by her, and with
the matter left in writing or dictated by her before her departure. . . .
That it was resolved and recorded that the highest officials in the
School for the present are Annie Besant and William Q. Judge, in
accordance with the . . . order to William Q. Judge of December 1888,
and with the order of April 1, 1891 to Annie Besant, as well as with
the written declaration of H.P.B. in a letter to William Q. Judge dated
March 27th, 1891. . . .
This segment ends with:
. . . and that from henceforth with Annie Besant and William Q.
Judge rest the full charge and management of this School.
Pamphlet, 8 pages
Theosophy,
Vol. 3, Apr. 1915;
pp.277-279
May 1915; p.325
July 1915; pp.425426
H.P.B. A Great
Betrayal (1922)
by A. Cleather,
pp.84-85
Chronology
41
The assumption, by Mrs. Besant and Mr. Judge, of the office of Outer H.P.B. Her Life and
Head in succession to H.P.B. was, therefore, the beginning of all Work for
subsequent trouble.
Humanity, p.120
Mrs. Besant included with her letter to Mrs. Ver-Planck (Mrs. Keightley)
in New York, the following signed declaration (together with the slip
of paper bearing the message W.Q. Judges plan is right):
I took from William Q. Judge, on the afternoon of May 27th, 1891,
certain papers selected from a number of letters in his possession.
These I took one by one, read them, folded them up, tied them into a
packet, and said I would read them myself to the Council, as they
concerned Bro. Judge. I opened this packet myself in the Council
meeting, in my place as chairman. I took up the papers one by one
and read them (or parts of them) aloud, and on raising one of them
saw a piece of paper lying between it and the next that was not there
when I tied them together. After reading those remaining I took it up,
and found it was a slip bearing some words written in red and signed
with s initials and seal. The words were: W.Q. Judges plan is
right. The paper is attached hereto.
(Signed) Annie Besant.
E.S.T. circular
by A. Keightley,
pp.3-4
Irish Theosophist,
Vol. 3, Mar. 1895;
p.97
Theosophy,
Vol. 10, Mar. 1922;
pp.147-148
Theosophy, Vol. 10,
Apr. 1922; p.176
Theosophy, Vol. 3,
July 1915; p.426
NOTE: See July 6, 1891 entry. The Message W.Q. Judges plan is right
Theosophy, Vol. 10,
was not included in the E.S.T. circular sent to E.S. Members.
Mar. 1922; p.148
According to Archibald and Julia Keightley, Besant claimed that no
one could have had access to those papers other than herself.
May 27, 1891
continued
A. Besant states Only as They have put us together, I have no power to The Path, Vol.10,
stand aside. [Letter dated July 2, 1891]
June 1895; p.100
Eastern and Western divisions of E.S. were established with Besant Theosophy, Vol. 3,
in charge of the Eastern division and Judge in charge of the May 1915; p.325
Western division (American).
42
May 27, 1891
continued
Pamphlet (1895)
The Case Against W.Q. Judge
A. Besants version, four years later, of how W.Q. Judge became Co- by Annie Besant,
Head with her and on the paper containing the words W.Q. Judges pp.82-83
plan is right.
Mr. Judge, who was sitting close beside me while I picked out the
letters, must have slipped the scrap into the bundle without my
noticing his action; at the time, being void of all suspicion of his good
faith, I accepted it as genuine.
Claude Falls Wright, in a signed statement dated April 24, 1895, Reply by William
wrote:
Q. Judge, pp.22-23
th
[O]n the afternoon of Wednesday the 27 of May, 1891, a message
from the Master among documents read by Annie Besant was found
by her in full sight of all present. Annie Besant was sitting at a small
table several feet distant from the group of Councillors, who sat
opposite her while she read the documents. William Q. Judge was not
seated by her at the time, but among the group and on the left side of
the hall.
NOTE: Claude Falls Wrights statement can be found in Appendix A, No.
13.
NOTE: For details on precipitation of letters see Mar. 1893 entry. H.P.
Blavatsky on Precipitation and Other Matters.
May 28-29,
1891
Chronology
May 28-29,
1891
continued
43
Letter of Wm. Lindsay to Countess Wachtmeister dated London, Feb.17, Irish Theosophist,
1895 (posted March 1st):
Vol. 3, May 1895;
What you told me was, that before H.P.B. died she showed you a box p.141
wherein was Masters seal and that immediately after H.P.B.s death
you took the box with the Masters seal in it into your keeping, and
that the box was not in anyone elses hands till given over by you to
Annie Besant on her return from America. When the box was opened
by Annie Besant the Masters seal was not to be found in it, and all
that took place before Mr. W. Q. Judge came to England [May 21,
1891].
Letter of C. Wachtmeister, addressed to G.R.S. Mead re: Wm. Lucifer,
Lindsays letter in which she stated:
Vol. 16, Apr. 1895;
H.P.B. never sh[o]wed me the seal above named. I did not even know pp.164-165
of its existence. I had seen the impression of the seal during H.P.B.s
life-time, but not the seal itself, and I believed these impressions to
be from a genuine seal belonging to the Master.
In The Case Against W.Q. Judge Annie Besant quotes from a
statement from Colonel Olcott that on Nov. 13, 1883, he had an
imitation seal made in brass of Master Ms seal while he was
passing through the bazaar in Lahore, Punjab, India.
Pamphlet (1895),
88pp., pp.12, 19, 3031, 41, 43, 53, 69,
71, 73-75, 83-84
June 10,
1891
W. Q. Judge came from London to attend a Dublin Lodge meeting. On The Path,
another evening at the Rotunda Lecture-hall, Liverpool, both Mr. Vol. 6, July 1891;
Judge and Mrs. Besant lectured jointly to an audience of 1800. The pp.134-135
lecture was entitled Theosophy what it is, and what it is not.
[Mr. Judge] proposed to speak to them of what Theosophy was not.
In the first place Theosophy was not Spiritualism, nor Buddhism, nor
Brahminism, nor Mohammedanism, nor Christianity, nor atheism, nor
materialism. Theosophy was the reformer of the religion of the East,
and the opponent of materialism in the West. . . . Mrs. Besant
continued the subject, dealing with the metaphysical aspect of
Theosophy.
July 2, 1891
Letter by Mrs. Besant to esotericists who did not wish to accept her as co- The Path, Vol. 10,
head of the E.S.T.
June 1895; p.100
If I could, I would say to you, my dear , sign only to Mr. Judge.
I should be quite content, for indeed there is no reason why you
should have any confidence in me. Only as They have put us together,
I have no power to stand aside.
July 4, 1891
After having reached Marseilles on the 2nd, Olcott arrived in London at BCW,
about 6 p.m. where he was met by Judge. After reaching Vol. 13, p.xxv
Headquarters, [Olcott] meditates together with Annie Besant in
H.P.B,s bedroom.
He [Olcott] went at once to Avenue Road, where he and Mrs. Besant A Short History of
visited H.P.B.s room together and pledged themselves to be true to the T.S., p.278
the Cause and to each other.
NOTE: See Nov. 18th, 1891 for more details on Olcott.
44
July 6, 1891
July 9-10,
1891
E.S.T. circular
by A. Keightley,
p.3
Theosophy,
Vol. 10, Oct. 1922;
p.402
Theos. Movement
1875-1925, p.646
Report of
Proceedings T.S. in
Europe, 1891; p.49
BCW, Vol. 1, p.477
July 17 &
27, 1891
Chronology
Aug. 1891
45
Lucifer,
Vol. 12, Apr. 1893;
pp.101-104
Theosophy,
Vol. 10, Apr. 1922;
pp.180-183
Aug. 21,
1891
Both Bertram Keightley, Gen. Sec. of the Indian Section, and Sydney V. Lucifer,
Edge sailed for Adyar; Mr. Edge to join the Headquarters staff and Vol. 8, Aug. 1891;
help the General Secretary of the Indian Section. . . .
p.518
The Vahan,
Sep. 1891; p.7
46
Aug. 30,
1891
In Character Sketch: . . . Mrs. Annie Besant, W.T. Stead, the editor of Review of Reviews,
Vol. 4, Oct. 1891;
Review of Reviews wrote:
One of the most difficult things in writing these sketches is the pp.349-367
attempt to delineate the character of ones personal friends. W.T.
Stead quotes from Besants final speech in the Hall of Science, Aug.
30, 1891, and added:
To me the essential miracle is the conversion of Mrs. Besant from
Materialism to a firmly based belief in the reality of the spiritual
world. . . . To have secured Mrs. Besant for Theosophy is an
achievement much more wonderful to me than the duplication of any
number of teacups or the tinkling of whole peals of astral bells.
Mrs. Besant has not only abjured Materialism, she has repudiated her
advocacy of neo-Malthusianism.
NOTE: See Nov. 15, 1895 for more on Annie Besant by W.T. Stead.
Chronology
Aug. 30, 1891
continued
47
A. Besants public claims to have received messages from the Masters as Theosophy,
well as the message in Jasper Niemands article in The Path, Vol. 10, Mar. 1922;
aroused a furore in the world and particularly amongst Theosophists pp.148-149
[b]ecause . . . it was . . . inferred that she herself was in
communication with the Masters and this inference was
strengthened by the fact that she made no denial, and by her
subsequent statements to various newspaper interviewers and by other
direct statements. . . .
NOTE: See Aug. 1891 entry.
[T]he press has taken up Annie Besants statement that she was in Lucifer, Vol. 9,
direct communication with the Masters.
Sep. 1891; p.83
In a section titled Additional Matter is found Statement of Annie
Besant (dated April 24, 1895) on messages she received from the
Masters after H.P.B.s death and before her lecture at the Hall of
Science. She wrote:
I add now an account of the messages received from Mr. Judge by
me; in which she claims Judge was responsible.
Sep. 1, 1891 The Vahan announced that Annie Besant proposes to visit India for a The Vahan, Vol. 1,
lecturing tour during the cool season, leaving the London Sep. 1891; pp.7-8
Headquarters about the end of November. . . . Miss F.H. Mller
proposes to accompany Annie Besant.
H.S. Olcott hopes to induce Mrs. Besant to join him at Head- The Theosophist,
quarters for the annual Convention at Adyar and make at least a Vol. 12, Sep. 1891;
short cold-weather tour in India.
Supp. pp.civ-cv
NOTE: Mrs. Besant did not go to India at this time. [See Oct. 1891 and
Nov. 18, 1891 entries.]
Sep. 8, 1891 The General Secretarys Tour.
The Path,
[W.Q. Judge] was to have started for the West upon the very day Vol. 6, Oct. 1891;
when the death of Madame Blavatsky caused him to sail for Europe, p.230
and upon his return the new date was fixed for Sep. 5th, but sickness
caused postponement till the 8th, at which time he left for Omaha.
Sep. 15,
1891
48
Sep. 16,
1891
Col. Olcott sails from Liverpool for the U.S.A. Arrives at New York Sep.
23rd, where he is for the first time since 1878, and is met by Fullerton,
Neresheimer and his sister, Mrs. Belle Mitchell. Gives one lecture.
On Sep. 28th, takes the overland train and stops at Sacramento and San
Francisco where Judge meets him.
BCW
Vol. 13, p.xxvi
The Theosophist,
Vol. 13, Dec. 1891;
Supp. pp.xxvi-xxvii
A Short History of
the T.S., pp.283-84
Oct. 1891
In a letter to Judge, Vera Jelihovsky, H.P.B.s sister, details that in Oct. The Path,
1891 she had written a letter to her daughter, Vera Johnston in Vol. 10, Apr. 1895;
London, asking her to transmit to A. Besant that Mrs. Besant must pp.25-26
not go to India, because the results of her voyage would be bad,
dangerous, harmful, and disastrous to the extreme. In the same time
I felt conscious that I was in duty bound to warn her.
She felt the impression had come from H.P.B. So I resolved to write
to my daughter . . . asking her to transmit to Mrs. Besant my profound
conviction it would not be safe for her to go over to India, or to
interfere with any other branch of the Theosophical Society elsewhere
than in England, for I Knew for sure that my sister Helen was against
it.
. . . Mrs. Besants answer [was] . . . I am ordered to go.
Mrs. Jelihovsky added: I thought then and there that she was
mistaken (now [1895] I am sure of it!) . . .
NOTE: See April 27, 1893, for more details as they relate to Bertram
Keightley. [Annie Besants statement I am ordered to go was
uttered by her only after Mr. Chakravartis visit to London in August
1893.]
Lucifer, Vol. 9,
NOTE: See Nov. 27, 1891, about Besants health.
Dec. 1891; p.344
Oct. 7, 1891
Pamphlet (1895),
The Case Against W.Q. Judge by Annie Besant
(88 pages), p.72
W.Q. Judge and H.S. Olcott met in San Francisco.
O. put the question direct to J. if he had written the letters, for the
good of the T.S. and to help vindicate H.P.B.s memory; telling him
that he (O.) knew of his (J.s) remarkable talent for imitating
handwriting, that he had heard of his imitating some at Adyar. . . .
W.Q.J. denied emphatically that he had written the letters, or any of
the sort.
RE: Rosicrucian Jewel
pp.76-78
Chronology
Oct. 7, 1891
continued
49
Lucifer,
Vol. 9, Nov. 1891;
pp.259-260
Pacific Theos.
Vol. 1, No. 1,
Nov. 1891; p.8
Nov. 15,
1891
50
Nov. 18,
1891
Hammer on the
Mountain, p.330
The Vahan, Vol. 1,
Jan. 1892; p.7
Theosophical News.
Pacific Theos.
Wm. Q. Judge reached home November 21st. The long trip has been Vol. 1, No.2, Dec.
more or less a strain upon his constitution.
1891; p.8
NOTE: Mr. Judge left Sep. 8th for his western tour. See Sep. 8, 1891 entry.
Nov. 27,
1891
Lucifer, Vol. 9,
Dec. 1891; p.344
The Vahan, Vol. 1,
Dec. 1891; p.8
Chronology
Dec. 1891
51
The Theosophist,
Vol. 13, Jan. 1892;
Supp. pp.3-4
Theos. Movement
1875-1950, p.167
Lucifer, Vol. 10,
Apr. 1892; p.96
NOTE: See Mar. 27, 1895 entry for more on H.P.B. by Olcott.
Echoes of the
NOTE: See Dec. 15, 1893 entry for references to Blavatskianism In and Orient, Vol. 2,
Out of Season by W.Q. Judge.
pp.53-58
Dec. 6,
1891
Dec. 9,
1891
Mrs. Besant embarked on the City of Paris to return to England, The Path, Vol. 6,
(arriving on Dec. 16th ).
Jan. 1892; p.325
Dec. 10,
1891
BCW,
Vol. 13, p.xxvii
NOTE: A Short History of the T.S. p.284, has Olcott arriving in Adyar
on Dec. 12th.
1891, Late
1891, Late
continued
52
1891, Late
continued
Theosophy, Vol. 3,
Apr. 1915; p.279
Theosophy,
Vol. 3, May 1915;
pp.323-325
William Q. Judge:
Theosophy, Vol. 10,
In America . . . Mr. Judge was considered the foreordained Jan. 1922; p.80
successor. But when . . . reporters sought to interview him, he
received them in a body and made them the succinct statement:
Madame Blavatsky was sui generis. She has and can have no
successor.
1892
1892
continued
Theosophy magazine examines MASTERS AND THEIR MESSAGE, THE CAUSES Theosophy,
Vol. 3, June 1915;
OF THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST WM. Q. JUDGE.
pp.369, 374-375
July 1915;
pp.422-423, 426
H.P.B. A Great
Betrayal (1922) by
A. Cleather,
pp.57-58
Chronology
1892
continued
53
The Path,
Vol. 7, Feb. 1893;
pp.343-344, 358
Mar. 1893; p.387
Theosophy,
Vol. 10, Oct. 1922;
Summarizes Panjab seal controversy and Judges statement (April pp.400-403
1893) that he knew nothing about the seal meaning thereby the
Panjab seal but interpreted by Olcott as denial as he believed Judge Theosophy, Vol. 10,
had in fact been using it on bogus messages. [pp.401-402]
Apr. 1922; p.174
NOTE: See Mar. 20, 1895 entry for Countess Wachtmeister and Wm. English
Lindsay on H.P.B.s seal
Theosophist,
Vol. 3, Nov. 1899;
pp.161-165
The Lamp, Vol. 3,
Dec. 1899; p.157
1892
continued
1892
continued
Pamphlet (1895),
(88 pages), pp.12, 19,
30-31, 41, 43-44, 46,
53, 63, 69-77, 83-84
Jan. 21,
1892
The Path,
Vol. 6, Mar. 1892;
pp.406-407
NOTE: Olcotts letter, which also appeared in the Theosophist, was dated
January 1st, 1892.
NOTE: See Mar. 9, 1892 and Sep. 1910, and Oct. 7, 1890 entries.
The Theosophist,
Vol. 13, Mar. 1892;
Supp. p.xliv
54
Jan. 21, 1892
continued
While Col. Olcott attributed his retirement to ill-health, the real reason
came to light several years later, in a letter by Herbert Burrows to the
English Theosophist for November, 1895. . . . Mr. Burrows referred
to the accusations of grave immorality against Col. Olcott, laid before
him by Mrs. Besant and Mr. Judge, and in consequence of which the
Colonel resigned his presidency.
Theos. Movement
1875-1950, p.190
English
Theosophist, Vol. 1,
Nov. 1895; p.22
NOTE: See Dec. 23, 1894, Jan. 11, 1896 and Oct. 2, 1895.
NOTE: See Oct. 2, 1895 for Mr. Herbert Burrows and the T.S.
Jan. 21, 1892
continued
In California the newspapers last month chose to inform the public Lucifer, Vol. 10,
that although Colonel Olcott had resigned the Presidentship of the Apr. 1892; p.169
Theosophical Society on the plea of ill-health, yet his real reason was
his dislike for the idolatry of H.P.B. practised by its members.
Col. Olcotts retirement has stirred up no bitter comments from the The Path, Vol. 7,
press, but the Chronicle printed his letter in extenso with a tolerably Apr. 1892; p.30
complete notice of his career. Other papers printed paragraphs. The
best wishes of all will go with Col. Olcott in his retirement from
official cares.
Explanation by William Q. Judge of Charges About Messages. (at The Path, Vol. 10,
the Boston Convention)
May 1895; p.68
He went into the question of the real reason for Olcotts resignation,
showing that Mrs. Besant was the person most involved in the demand
for that, and then, referring to the poison interview message showed
that charges of that sort had been circulated against Olcott in London
and not by Mr. Judge. . . .
English
Theosophist,
Vol. 1, Mar. 1896;
pp.51-52
Chronology
Feb. 1892
Feb.11,
1892
Feb. 22,
1892
55
The Theosophist,
Vol. 13, Feb. 1892;
pp.257-261
The Path,
Vol. 7, Apr. 1892;
pp.27-28
The Vahan, Vol. 2,
Oct. 1892; p.6
Theosophy,
Vol. 10, Nov. 1921;
pp.22-24
The Theosophist,
Vol. 13, Sep. 1892;
p.xci
Letter from W.Q. Judge to Col. Olcott in response to Olcotts resignation. The Path,
I beg to acknowledge the receipt, on the evening of the 19th of Vol. 6, Mar. 1892;
February, 1892, of your resignation of the office of President of the p.407
Theosophical Society, to take effect on the first of May, 1892. . . .
Having received this from you it is my duty, as Vice-President, to
notify the various sections of the Society of the fact of your
resignation and of its cause. This I will do at once.
NOTE: This is the third time that Col. Olcott attempted to resign his office
as President of the Society. In Judges letter to Olcott he states, . . .
have compelled you to carry out the wish for retirement which you
expressed in 1886 and repeated in 1890.
Mar. 1892
H.S. Olcott begins his critiques of H.P.B in Old Diary Leaves, in The The Theosophist,
Meeting of H.P.B. and Myself.
Vol. 13, Mar. 1892;
pp.323-336
Comments from Old Diary Leaves:
Olcott . . . was proclaiming that H.P.B. was the subject of distinct Theos. Movement
mental evolution; that she knew nothing of reincarnation until 1879, 1875-1950,
when she was instructed in this doctrine in India.
pp.202-203
NOTE: See entry for June 1895, H.S. Olcott vs H.P.B.
Theosophy,
Vol. 10, Jan. 1922;
pp.82-87, 105
Theosophy, Vol. 3,
June 1915; pp.375378, July 1915;
pp.418-419
56
Mar. 1892
continued
Pamphlet issued from the General Secretarys Office of the Theosophical Pamphlet, 7 pages
Society, European Section.
The Presidents Resignation issued by G.R.S. Mead, Includes:
1. Letter of Resignation from the President-Founder to the VicePresident [Jan.21, 1892]
2. The Vice-Presidents reply [Feb. 22, 1892]
3. Letter from the Vice-President to the G.S. of the European Section
(G.R.S. Mead), stating facts and procedures according to the
Constitution. [Feb. 22, 1892]
4. Letter from the V.P. to the G.S. of the European Section with
further information as to procedure according to the Constitution.
[Feb. 22, 1892]
G.R.S. Mead concludes:
It is therefore necessary that every member of the Theosophical
Society should record his or her opinion as to who is the fitting person
to succeed Colonel H.S. Olcott as President of the Theosophical
Society.
Mar. 10,
1892
Annie Besant [h]aving put pressure on Mr. Judge to request Olcott to Theos. Movement
resign, she returned to London and there advocated the election of Mr. 1875-1950, p.192
Judge to the Presidency. On March 10, 1892, she sent to all members
of the Esoteric Section a circular letter urging the choice of Judge as
Olcotts successor. She did this without Mr. Judges knowledge. . . .
NOTE: See modified circular to E.S. dated Aug. 1, 1892.
Mar. 11,
1892
Circular, 1 page
To The Members of the Blavatsky Lodge.
Annie Besant issues an E.S. Circular as President of Blavatsky Lodge.
I . . . frankly say to you that, in my view, the present Vice-President,
and remaining co-Founder of the Society, William Q. Judge, is the
most suitable person to guide the Society, and the one who cannot
with justice be passed over. He is not only the Vice-President and a
Founder, but he was the trusted friend and colleague of H.P. Blavatsky
from 1875 until she passed away.
Chronology
Mar. 25,
1892
57
Apr. 2,
1892
In a letter from Mr. [Kavasji] M. Shroff to Annie Besant . . . Mr. Shroff Theosophy Exposed
says that Brother W.Q. Judge is strongly suspected of having forged by J. Murdoch,
all along letters in the name of the Masters after H.P.B.s departure. Dec. 1893; p.34
In Mrs. Besants reply of April 22nd, she says, I know that Col.
Olcott has made random statements to that effect (that Judge forged
the letters), as he made random statements about H.P.B. committing
frauds. In Mr. Judges reply to Mr. Shroff, . . . he says that Olcott
should be asked for the proof of the charges against him (Judge), for
he is the one who has given them out and is their sole author.
NOTE: Theosophy Exposed by J. Murdoch. Murdoch includes William
Emmette Colemans paper, Critical Historical Review (pp.21-37)
which was read at the Chicago Psychical Science Congress of 1893,
which was officiated by Elliott Coues. It is from Colemans paper that
the above quote is taken. [See Works Cited section.]
58
Lucifer,
Vol. 10, May 1892;
pp.181-182
Theos. Movement
1875-1950, p.191
Theosophy,
Vol. 10, Mar. 1922;
pp.149-150
Report of
Proceedings, (1892),
pp.39-40
Theosophy,
Vol. 10, Nov. 1921;
pp.10-16
Chronology
Apr. 27,
1892
May 1,
1892
59
The Path,
Vol. 7, July 1892;
pp.128-130
Lucifer,
Vol. 10, June 1892;
pp.333-334
Pacific Theos.
Vol. 1, Mar. 1892;
p.8, July 1892; p.2
May 8,
1892
In the address at Adyar on White Lotus Day, and in a slip affixed to the The Path, Vol. 7,
June issue [of The Theosophist], the way is cautiously, and somewhat Aug. 1892; p.163
dexterously, opened for the withdrawal of the Presidential resignation.
If Col. Olcott[s] . . . Teachers should order him to cancel his
resignation and remain in office till the end of his life, he will obey,
health or no health.
May 13,
1892
May 24,
1892
May 25,
1892
The Path,
Vol. 7, Aug. 1892;
pp.167-168
Theosophy,
Vol. 10, Nov. 1921;
p.16
60
June 15,
1892
William Q. Judge, one of H.P. Blavatskys oldest and most trusted Lucifer,
friends, will be among us on English soil once more . . . [H]e is to be Vol. 10, June 1892;
the Societys next President, and, if the past may count for anything pp.271-272
in judging of the future, no hands could be found to which to confide
its destinies more loyal, more strong, and more true. . . . He will reach
England . . . the first week of July, so as to be present at the Second
Annual Convention of the European Section.
Notice, 4 pages
The Path,
Vol. 7, Aug. 1892;
pp.169-172
Lucifer,
Vol. 10, Aug. 1892;
pp.509-515
A letter of greeting from the American Theosophists, signed by Mr. Theos. Movement
Judge, was presented to the European Section . . . This letter referred 1875-1950, p.191
to Col. Olcotts resignation:
At our Convention in April last we asked to unite with us in a request
to Colonel Olcott to revoke his resignation. This we did in candour
and friendship. . . .
NOTE: Also included in Apr. 24,25, 1892]
An article from Mr. Judges address at the close of the Convention The WQJ T. Articles,
Promulgation of Theosophy.
Vol. 1, pp.73-76
July 21,
1892
Reminiscences of
H.P.B. by C.
Wachtmeister; p.113
Rebirth of The
Occult Tradition by
B. de Zirkoff;
pp.12-23, incl.
photos, plates, etc.
Chronology
July 21, 1892
continued
July 29.
1892
61
Rebirth of The
Occult Tradition,
pp.17-18
When W.Q. Judge learned of Mrs. Besants E.S. circular of March 10th Theos. Movement
endorsing him as successor to the Presidency, he quickly prepared a 1875-1950,
Circular containing an Important Notice which read as follows. This pp.192-193
notice was signed by both Mr. Judge and Mrs. Besant.
The E.S.T. has no official connection with the Theosophical Society.
When first organized it was known as a section of the T.S. but it
being seen that the perfect freedom and public character of the
Society might be interfered with, H.P.B., some time before her
departure, gave notice that all official connection between the two
should end, and then changed the name to the present one.
This leaves all T.S. officials, who are in the E.S.T. perfectly free in
their official capacity, and also permits members if asked, to say with
truth that the School has no official connection with the T.S. and is not
a part of it.
Members will please bear this in mind.
62
Aug. 1,
1892
Failure by the European Section to ask Col. Olcott to reverse his decision Theos. Movement
regarding his resignation led to suspicion of a political maneuver by 1875-1950,
Mr. Judge to gain the Presidency. Mrs. Besants E.S. circular of pp.193-194
March 10th, urging that Judge be elected, seemed to confirm this
supposition. . . . Another Circular issued by Mrs. Besant, and signed
also by Mr. Judge, was sent to all E.S. members on August 1, 1892 in
which Mrs. Besant affirmed that her previous Circular (of March 10),
expressing the hope that the choice of the Society would fall upon
William Q. Judge, as President, had not been made by her as one of
the Outer Heads, of the E.S.
NOTE: See Mar. 10, 1892 on E.S. Circular issued by A. Besant.
Aug. 21,
1892
EXECUTIVE ORDERS.
From H.S. Olcott, P.T.S. to W.Q. Judge, Esq. Vice-President T.S.
The restoration of my health and other important considerations
induce me to revoke my letter of resignation of office, and I beg to
hand you herewith an Advanced Copy of the Executive Circular
notifying the fact, which will appear in the September number of the
Theosophist.
Lucifer,
Vol. 11, Oct. 1892;
pp.165-167
The Theosophist,
Vol. 13, Sep. 1892;
Supp. p.xci
EXECUTIVE CIRCULAR.
From H.S. Olcott, P.T.S.
The Indian Section had, as early as February last, unanimously The Path,
agreed to recommend that if I were really compelled to retire the Vol. 7, Oct. 1892;
Presidential office should not be filled during my lifetime, but my pp.235-236
duties performed by the Vice-President, acting as P.T.S. . . .
The London Convention of the American Section, held in July, also
unanimously declared its choice of Mr. Judge as my successor, and
adopted complimentary Resolutions about myself, but abstained from
passing upon the question of my retaining office under the
misapprehension how caused I know not SS that I had definitively
and finally refused to revoke my January letter of resignation. The fact
being that the terms of my May note upon the subject (printed with the
June Theosophist) left the question open and dependent upon the
contingencies of my health and the proof that my return to office
would be for the best interest of the Society.
. . . I hereby give notice that I revoke my letter of resignation and
resume the active duties and responsibilities of office; and I declare
William Q. Judge, Vice-President, my constitutional successor and
eligible for duty as such upon his relinquishment of any other office
in the Society which he may hold at the time of my death.
Aug. 21, 1892
continued
The Path,
Vol. 7, Nov. 1892;
pp.249-250
More detailed information on the RESIGNATION OF PRESIDENCY T.S. BY COL. Theos. Movement
OLCOTT.
1875-1925,
pp.326-333, 646-647
NOTE: See also Sep. 26, 1892 entry Two Theosophical Events.
Chronology
63
Aug. 30,
1892
Sep. 26,
1892
Theos. Movement
1875-1950, p.154
Lucifer,
Vol. 11, Oct. 1892;
pp.95-96
The importance of this case lies in the fact that it constituted an absolute H.P.B. A Great
vindication of H.P.B., for every slander ever circulated directly or Betrayal (1922) by
indirectly was covered by it.
A. Cleather, p.59fn.
The Path,
Vol. 7, Nov. 1892;
pp.248-249
Echoes of the
Orient, Vol. 2,
pp.189-190
64
The Esoteric She, THE LATE MME. BLAVATSKYA SKETCH OF HER CAREER. Theos. Movement
The article written by Mr. Judge . . . at the invitation of the New 1875-1950, p.154
York Sun, received editorial sanction from the words, Mr. Judges
article disposes of all questions relating to Madame Blavatsky as
presented by Dr. Coues.
[New York Sun, September 26, 1892]
Oct. 21,
1892
Nov. 1892
The Theosophist,
Vol. 14, Nov. 1892;
p.73
Report of
Proceedings T.S. in
America, 1895; p.23
Chronology
Nov. 30,
1892
65
Mrs. Besant arrived in New York City from London for her American The Path, Vol. 7,
Tour. Her tour included speaking engagements in New York, Toledo, Jan. 1893; p.329
Fort Wayne, Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Minneapolis (where
she found the cold intense), Sioux City, Omaha, Portland, Oregon;
Tacoma, Seattle and San Francisco.
Judge showed Besant his correspondence with H.S. Olcott including Theosophy, Vol. 10,
the letter concerning the August 1891 Jasper Niemand article in The Mar. 1922; p.139
Path. [see Aug. 1891 entry]
Theos. Movement
NOTE: This was Mrs. Besants third visit to America. See February 25, 1875-1950, p.200
1893, entry, the date she departed.
Dec. 21,
1892
1893
1893
continued
While a member of the E.S. and one of its Co-Heads, Mrs. Besant joined Theos. Movement
the London Lodge and took part in the experiments of Messrs. Sinnett, 1875-1950, p.261
Leadbeater and the rest of their coterie thus violating her pledges and
pursuing two absolutely antithetical systems of occult development.
NOTE: It is doubtful that Besant joined London Lodge at this time
because she was still President of Blavatsky Lodge. I have not seen
any other references to support that she did join but she certainly had
close relations, and more than likely engaged in various psychic
practices with Leadbeater. Besant did give a lecture at the London Transactions of the
Lodge on June 5th, 1894. Her lecture was The Culture of the Soul on L.L., No. 22,
Indian Methods of Spiritual Self Culture. [See Sep. 30, 1890]
June 1894
66
Jan. 1893
Jan. 1893
continued
Pacific Theos.
Vol. 2, Feb. 1893;
p.4
Annie Besant declared in San Francisco, that she could and would Pacific Theos.
believe no ill of Brother Judge, and that if he were to be accused she Vol. 5, Apr. 1895;
would await his explanation before attempting to act. [Editorial by p.149
Jerome Anderson]
Jan. 22,
1893 (circa)
Faces of Friends.
The Path,
In his biography about Bertram Keightley, Mr. Judge mentions that Vol. 8, Aug. 1893;
Mr. Keightley left Adyar in January 1893.
pp.143-144
Jan. 26,
1893
The Path,
Vol. 7, Mar. 1893;
pp.372-374
Echoes of the
Orient, Vol. 2,
pp.454-456
Lucifer, Vol. 12,
Mar. 1893; p.82
Sunrise, Vol. 40,
April/May 1991;
pp.151-157
Chronology
Feb. 25,
1893
67
Mrs. Besant departed on Saturday from New York, on the New York, Pacific Theos.
Vol. 2, Apr. 1893;
for London.
p.4
Theosophy,
Vol. 10, Mar. 1922;
pp.139-140
Theosophical Activities: American Section; Annie Besants American Lucifer,
Tour.
Vol. 12, Mar. 1893;
pp.81-82
Mar. 1893
Mar. 23,
1893
The Path,
Vol. 7, Mar. 1893;
pp.381-385
Theosophy,
Vol. 3, Jan. 1915;
pp.161-164
General Report of
the 16th
Anniversary of the
T.S., Dec. 1891; p.3
68
Apr. 1893
W.Q. Judge published, AUTHORSHIP OF SECRET DOCTRINE which included The Path, Vol. 8,
letters from the Masters. It is attributed to ONE OF THE STAFF.
Apr. 1893; pp.1-3
NOTE: See July 21, 1892 entry.
Apr. 5,
1893
Echoes of the
Orient, Vol. 1,
pp.321-329
Lucifer,
Vol. 14, Mar. 1894;
pp.72-74
WQJ T. Articles,
Vol. 2, p.274
Echoes of the
Orient, Vol. 1,
pp.403-404
Chronology
Apr. 15,
1893
An Interesting Letter.
(Written to an Indian Brother) [Olcott] by W.Q. Judge.
In Aug.1891 Jasper Niemands article A Theosophical Education
appeared in The Path, preceded by a quote from the Master. Olcott
questioned this message. W.Q. Judges letter was published in
Lucifer Apr. 1893. W.Q.J. states:
I find it perfectly proper for me to assert, as I do, in accordance with
my own knowledge and belief, that our true progress lies in fidelity to
Masters as ideals and facts. Regarding Jasper Niemand, W.Q.J.
wrote:
I did not write the article you quote. I am not Jasper Niemand. Hence
I did not get the message he printed a part of in his article. Jasper
Niemand is a real person and not a title to conceal my person. In
reply to questions on the Masters Seal:
Whether He has a seal or uses one is something on which I am
ignorant. In my experience I have had messages from the Master, but
they bear no seal and I attach no significance to the point. A Seal on
other messages of His goes for nothing with me; the presence or
absence of a seal is nothing to me; my means of proof and
identification are within myself and everything else is trumpery.
69
Lucifer,
Vol. 12, Apr. 1893;
pp.101-104
Theosophy,
Vol. 10, Apr. 1922;
pp.180-183
WQJ T. Articles,
Vol. 2, pp.43-47
NOTE: See comments and criticism by W.R. Old and S.V. Edge
THEOSOPHIC FREETHOUGHT. July 1893 entry
NOTE: See THEOSOPHY IN THE WEST comments by Navroji Dorabji
Khandalvala [N.D.K.]. July 1893 entry
Apr. 15, 1893
continued
70
Apr. 15, 1893
continued
Apr. 23-24,
1893
The Theosophist,
Vol. 14, July 1893;
pp.623-628
Annie Besant praises W.Q. Judge after her return from her American
Tour.
I want to place on record here my testimony to the splendid work
done in America by the Vice-President of our Society, the General
Secretary of the Section, WILLIAM Q. JUDGE. H.P.B. knew well what
she was doing when she chose that strong quiet man to be her second
self in America. . . .
Report of
Proceedings,
held at New York
Apr. 1893; p.4
Theosophy, Vol.10,
Mar. 1922; p.140
Theosophy,
Vol. 10, Mar. 1922;
pp.140-141
Chronology
Apr. 23-24,
1893
continued
Apr. 27,
1893
71
Report of
Proceedings,
held at New York
Apr. 1893; p.17
The Theosophist,
Vol. 14, June 1893;
Supp. p.lix
Theosophy at The Worlds Fair, September 15-16, 1893. INFORMATION Pamphlet, 8 pages
FOR MEMBERS OF THE T.S..
Outlined the steps to procure an assignment of the Society to a date
in the PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS so as to present the subject of
Theosophy. . . . It included the proposed program.
May 17,
1893
Cdn. Theosophist,
Vol. 4, Mar. 1923;
p.11
Report of
Proceedings T.S. in
America, 1895; p.23
72
May 27,
1893
The Theosophist,
Vol. 14, June 1893;
Supp. p.lix
The Path, Vol. 8,
July 1893; p.128
Lucifer, Vol. 12,
July 1893; p.517
Annie Besant published H.P. Blavatskys letter of Oct. 23,1889 re: W.Q.
Judge [W.Q. Judge is the antaskarana . . .]
[T]he document of October 23, 1889 . . . was published to the
members of the E.S. by Annie Besant in her Answers to
Correspondence for June, 1893.
Theosophy, Vol. 3,
June 1915; pp.371372, Apr. 1915; pp.
276, 279
In April Lucifer Mrs. Besant says referring to W.Q. Judge: H.P.B. Irish Theosophist,
knew well what she was doing when she chose that strong quiet man Vol. 1, Aug. 1893;
to be her second self in America. . . . In him we find the rare p.119
conjunction of business quality of the skilful organizer and the
mystical insight of the Occultist. . . .
Annie Besants Autobiography quoted H.P.B.: Child. . . your Theosophy, Vol. 3,
pride is terrible; you are as proud as Lucifer himself.
May 1915; p.323
June 1893
continued
Chronology
June 15,
1893
At Taplow, England, on the evening of June 15, 1893, Mrs. Besant met Theos. Movement
and talked with Dr. and Mrs. Keightley on the subject of this [E.S. 1875-1925, p.647
Advisory] Council meeting. . . . No action had as yet been taken in the
E.S.T. on Mr. Olds and Mr. Edges actions [THEOSOPHIC
FREETHOUGHT article in The Theosophist]. In discussion they asked
Mrs. Besant what she had done with the parcel of letters between the
time when she read and tied them together (in the afternoon) and the
moment of taking them into the Council with her (in the evening).
She replied that she had locked them in a drawer in her room, where
no one could have access to them, and took them from there into the
Council Meeting, and that they were not out of her possession for a
moment.
NOTE: See May 27 and July 6, 1891 entries.
June 17,
1893
June 24,
1893
The American General Secretary, Bro. Judge, arrived at Southampton The Path, Vol. 8,
June 24th, where Dr. and Mrs. A. Keightley met him, and he got to Aug. 1893; p.155
Headquarters on the evening of the same day.
July 1893
73
74
July 1893
THEOSOPHIC FREETHOUGHT.
The Theosophist,
Comments and criticism by W.R. Old and S.V. Edge in response to Vol. 14, July 1893;
W.Q. Judges statements in An Interesting Letter: As to Masters pp.606-611
seal, about which you put me the question, I do not know. Whether
he has a seal or uses one is something on which I am ignorant, they
wrote in a footnote:
In regard to this statement we can only remark that Mr. Judges
memory must be seriously defective. We must therefore remind him
that a very important step in connection with the re-organization of the
Esoteric Section of the T.S. was taken, after the death of H.P.B., on
the authority of a certain message, purporting to come from one of the
Mahatmas, and which bore, as Mr. Judge will now remember, a sealimpression, said by him to be that of the Master. No doubt Mr.
Judge will take the opportunity of either rectifying his statement or of
showing how his acting upon the authority of the Masters seal at
one time, and professing ignorance of it at another, may be regarded
as consistent.
NOTE: See Apr. 15,1893 entry for Judges remarks which generated this
article from Old and Edge.
THEOSOPHY IN THE WEST. THE TENDENCY TOWARDS DOGMATISM..
Comments by N.D. Khandalavala on Judges article An Interesting
Letter:
Mr. Judge asserts that our true progress lies in fidelity to Masters as
ideals and facts; that a constant reliance on Masters as such ideals and
facts or either will lead the T.S. on to greater work. . . .
N.D.K. stated:
Does not the Christian missionary come canting after us with exactly
the same words?
Most objectionable of all to N.D.K. is Mr. Judges statement that
[H]e does not care one iota for all the external evidence. . . . He
informs us that the means of proof and indication are located within
himself.
July 1893
continued
The Theosophist,
Vol. 14, July 1893;
pp.623-628
Theosophy,
Vol. 10, Apr. 1922;
p.171
July 6-7,
1893
The Path,
Vol. 8, Aug.1893;
pp.156-157
Irish Theosophist,
Vol. 1, July 1893;
p.106
Chronology
July 6-7, 1893
continued
75
A. Cleathers report on the third Convention dated from London, July The Theosophist,
1893, praised Judge:
Vol. 14, Sep. 1893;
Short though the time has been during which he was able to be with pp.763-766
us, it has been unusually profitable; his presence always brings with
it such a strong sense of solidarity and loyalty; and the feeling of unity
and harmony was exceedingly strong this year. . . .
July 15,
1893
Mr. Judge was obliged to leave for New York on the 15th. . . .
The Theosophist,
Vol. 14, Sep. 1893;
p.764
76
July/Sep.
1893
Sinnett claimed independent communication with the Masters within the Theos. Movement
last few months vindicating him regarding Mars and Mercury 1875-1950,
controversy.
pp.196-197
W.Q. Judge in a letter to H.S. Olcott:
The Case Against
[Y]ou have erred in saying in print that once H.P.B. gone, the W.Q. Judge by A.
precipitated writing must alter. That is incorrect, as can be shown Besant (1895); p.30
from precipitation by mediums. . . . Why even Sinnett now has a
medium or clairvoyant he calls K.H.s chela who gives him new socalled instruction in the old hand of K.H.
Aug. 1893
Circular, To All members of E.S.T. (dated July 14, 1893, London) from
A. Besant and W. Q. Judge suspending Walter R. Old and Sidney V.
Edge from their membership in the E.S.T. for violating their pledge
of secrecy in the footnote of their article, THEOSOPHIC FREETHOUGHT, which criticized Judges An Interesting Letter. [See
April 15, 1893 entry]
NOTE: See July 1893 entry.
Circular, dated
London July 14,
1893, included in
To All Members of
E.S.T., 4 pages
Theos. Movement
1875-1950,
pp.237-238
Chronology
Aug. 15,
1893
77
Mrs. Besant published Gurus and Chelas, an article by Mr. Sturdy in Lucifer,
which he was taking aim at Mr. Judges belief in the Masters and the Vol. 12, Aug. 1893;
communication of letters. Besant took exception to a few paragraphs pp.550-555
and printed the article excluding them.
On The Watch-Tower [in this same issue]:
It may be as well to remind the readers of LUCIFER that one of the
lines laid down by H.P.B. for the conduct of this magazine and she
would not have adopted and carried on a policy in antagonism to the
wish of her MASTER was the admission to its pages of articles with
which she totally or partially disagreed, where the articles raised
questions bearing on Theosophical teachings or interests.
Mrs. Besant then quoted H.P.B.: Keeping strictly in its editorials, and
articles by its individual editors, to the spirit and teachings of pure
Theosophy, it (LUCIFER) nevertheless frequently gives room to articles
and letters which diverge from the Esoteric teachings accepted by the
editors. . . .
She then continued:
This is the policy followed still by LUCIFER, and it should be
understood that the publication of such articles, say, as those of Mr.
Sinnett [Esoteric Teaching] and of Mr. Sturdy [Gurus and Chelas]
in the present issue, by no means implies any agreement with the
views put forward on the part of my colleague G.R.S. Mead or of
myself.
p.531
Theosophy,
Vol. 10, Mar. 1922;
pp.145-148
NOTE: See Oct. 1893. Olcott reprinted the same article in The
Theosophist with the insistence from Mr. Sturdy that the expurgated
paragraphs be added.
Aug. 26,
1893
Annie Besant left England for her fourth trip to the United States in a First Five Lives of
little over two years. . . .
Annie Besant, p.391
Mrs. Annie Besants passage for the States has now been taken in the The Path, Vol. 8,
City of Paris, which leaves Southampton Aug. 26th.
July 1893; p.125
78
Aug. 30,
1893
Personal letter from W.Q. Judge to Col. Olcott quoted in full by A. Besant
in The Case Against W.Q. Judge. [pp.29-35]
In this letter Judge deals with his relations with Masters and
happenings in the T.S. of which he was made aware by Master. The
work and position of the E.S. holding the T.S. together after the death
of H.P.B. is also included.
pp.30-31, 32
Re: seal and passwords, Judge quoting from Master:
Yes, Olcott made it as a joke and a very childish one, but we have the
right to adopt the seal if we like and to use it; and it has been used
even on a letter to him not as validating the message but to show him
if he wants to see that we have the object now.
Re: H.P.B.s Rosicrucian Jewel . . .
pp.44-46
p.53. . .
pp.32, 48
W.Q. Judge on H.S. Olcotts resignation:
The reason for my work against your resignation is found in Masters
order and naught else. [NOTE: See Apr. 24-25, 1892]
Revoking of resignation mentioned.
Sep. 1893
Sep. 1893
continued
p.46
On Masters plans . . .
NOTE: See Appendix A for The Case Against W.Q. Judge.
NOTE: See Sep. 28, 1893 for Olcotts reply to Judges letter.
p.33
The Theosophist,
Vol. 14, Sep. 1893;
pp.723-725
WQJ T. Articles,
Vol. 2, pp.267-279
The Theosophist,
Olcott reviewed The Ocean of Theosophy.
I wish I could unqualifiedly praise his present work; but I cannot. It Vol. 14, Sep. 1893;
pp.762-763
contains some errors that are flagrant.
NOTE: See July 15, 1893.
Chronology
Sep. 15-16,
1893
79
Annie Besant in Chicago for Worlds Fair, Parliament of Religions, Theos. Movement
Theosophical Congress. Included in the party was G.N. Chakravarti, 1875-1950, p.202
a Brahmin member of the T.S. from Allahabad, and a Hindu scholar.
INCIDENTS OF THE CONGRESS by Geo. E Wright.
Mr. Wright had been appointed Chairman of the Committee of Lucifer,
Organization by the Parliaments Religious Committee to organize Vol. 13, Oct. 1893;
a separate T.S. Congress of our own, with facilities and opportunities pp.160-164
equal to those enjoyed by any of the great religious denominations.
The Path,
NOTE: Some years later Leoline Leonard Wright wrote Vignettes from Vol. 8, Nov. 1893;
the Worlds Congress of Religions which gives insight on some of pp.239-245
the individuals attending the Congress.
[See Dec. 1938 entry]
Sep. 15-16,
1893
continued
The Path,
Vol. 8, May 1893;
p.62
Aug. 1893;
pp.158-159
Sep. 1893;
pp.191-192
Oct. 1893;
pp.199-204
pp.204-206
pp.223-229
Nov. 1893;
pp.247-249, 259
NOTE: Mrs. Besant left New York, on Sep. 27th, for London on City of
Paris.
Sep. 15-16,
1893
continued
On the Watch-Tower
Lucifer,
Unofficial programme of topics and presenters at the Parliament of Vol. 13, Sep. 1893;
Religions.
pp.1-2.
THEOSOPHY AT THE PARLIAMENT OF RELIGIONS.
Oct. 1893; pp.95-96
It was described in one of the Chicago papers as a rival to the
Parliament itself, so great was the interest excited.
NOTE: For all the Lectures, Report and Documents; see The
Theosophical Congress held by the Theosophical Society at the
Parliament of Religions, Worlds Fair of 1893, at Chicago, ILL.,
Sep. 15,16,17. Report and Documents. 195 pp. [Reprinted by Edmonton
Theosophical Society, 1988]
80
Sep. 15-16,
1893
continued
Sep. 15-16,
1893
continued
Sep. 15-16,
1893
continued
Sep. 27,
1893
Chronology
Sep. 28,
1893
Oct. 1893
Oct. 1893
continued
Olcott reprinted Gurus and Chelas by E.T. Sturdy but with the three The Theosophist,
expurgated paragraphs included, and which stated in part:
Vol. 15; Oct. 1893;
Of concrete things and persons we need concrete proofs. Of concrete pp.27-32
letters and messages from living men, we need concrete evidence; not
metaphysical or mere argumentative proof. . . .
All such is glamour: there is no false mystery in chelaship; all
nonsense about developing intuition is merely making excuses for
what cannot be proven and is the same in the end as the Christian
faith.
NOTE: See Aug. 15, 1893 entry. See also July 6-7, 1893.
In October Lucifer, Mrs Besant writes over her signature an article in Theosophy,
reference to Gurus and Chelas and took a strong stand against the Vol. 10, Mar. 1922;
spirit and logic of Mr. Sturdys article.
pp.145-148
NOTE: See Aug. 15, 1893 for Mrs. Besants editorial comments where Lucifer,
she quotes H.P.B. on editorial policies.
Vol. 13, Oct. 1893;
pp.147-149
Oct. 6, 1893
In Oct. and Dec. 1893 Lucifer published Some Modern Failings by Irish Theosophist,
Chew-Yew-Tsang (E.T. Hargrove).
Vol. 3, June 1895;
In Mr Hargroves letter of May 14, 1895 he stated that the meeting p.160
mentioned by Dr. Keightley in Luciferian Legends and Mrs.
Besants version of that same meeting, where she discovered the
identity of Che-yew-Tsang (E.T. Hargroves pseudonym), was held on
Friday Oct. 6th , 1893.
[See May 1, 1895 entry for Besants version.]
NOTE: Luciferian Legends is part of the text in The Plot against the
Theosophical Society pages 44-62. [See April 3, 1895]
NOTE: See Appendix E Mr. Hargroves letter.
81
82
Oct. 19,
1893
Oct. 20,
1893
Oct./Dec.
1893
Lucifer,
Vol. 13, Oct. 1893;
pp.97-100
The Path, Nov. 1893, printed a short biography of Countess The Path,
Wachtmeister, in FACES OF FRIENDS
Vol. 8, Nov. 1893;
pp.246-247
Announcement: Reminiscences of H.P. BLAVATSKY and The Secret The Path, Vol. 8,
Doctrine by Countess C. Wachtmeister is now out.
Nov. 1893; p.259
NOTE: See Nov./Dec. 1893 entry for book reviews.
Chronology
Nov. 10,
1893
83
Nov. 15,
1893
Nov. 23,
1893
Pamphlet, 8 pages
For the proof of a man is his life. The proof of an Ideal is its life in
the soul.
Nov./Dec.
1893
Lucifer,
Vol. 13, Nov. 1893;
pp.248-249
Book Review: Reminiscences of H.P. BLAVATSKY and THE SECRET The Path,
DOCTRINE by Countess C. Wachtmeister, is the little book so eagerly Vol. 8, Dec. 1893;
awaited by the Theosophic world.
pp.285-286
NOTE: See March (Late) 1895 entry. C. Wachtmeister wrote to Claude F. Irish Theosophist,
Wright and suggested that he write a follow-up book on H.P. Vol. 2, Nov. 1893;
Blavatsky since he was there at her last moments.
p.155 (s/b p.23
pagination error by
editor)
84
Nov./Dec.
1893
continued
Dec. 15,
1893
Lucifer,
Vol. 13, Dec. 1893;
pp.303-308
Echoes of the
Orient,
Vol. 2, pp.53-58
WQJ T. Articles,
Vol. 2, pp.19-26
Dec. 20,
1893
When Mrs. Besant arrived in Adyar, 20 December, 1893, she was called Ransom, pp.298-299
by the President into consultation with himself, Countess
Wachtmeister, Sturdy, Edge, Old, and Judge Khandalavala. After
many anxious talks, and at the Presidents request, Mrs. Besant
undertook to formulate demands that the accusations against Judge
with reference to certain letters and in the alleged writings of the
Mahatmas should be dealt with by a Committee, as provided by the
Rules which had been specially altered at the Convention (1893), to
meet this or any similar case. They provided for a Judicial Committee
which, by three-fourths majority vote, could deprive the President
or Vice-President of office at any time for cause shown.
Dec. 1893,
Dec. 25th.
Mrs. Besant returned to London [from America] with Chakravarti and a Theos. Movement
little later followed him to India. [Mrs. Besant and Countess 1875-1950, p.203
Wachtmeister arrived in Colombo Nov. 10, 1893] After the December
Convention she toured India until March 1894, when she set sail for
England.
He [Judge] claimed to have given sixteen years (from 1875 to 1891)
of unbroken service to the T.S. and the Masters. . . . It was not until
Christmas, 1893, that I learned that the sixteen years were illusory,
that for the greater part of them little work was done . . . [p.9]
At Adyar I looked over the incriminating documents, and was
startled by the . . . trivial and impossible character of the supposed
messages; it was at once clear why he had steadily opposed my
going to India. . . . [p.14]
While in India, Mrs. Besant changed her mind about Judge. She
became convinced that she had been deluded [and] that Judge had Isis Very Much
himself written the missives to which she had pinned her faith Unveiled, 2nd ed.,
written them all with his own hand.
p.58
NOTE: Annie Besant went to India against W.Q.J.s advice (relates to
Oct.1891 warning from J. Jelihovsky) See Feb.23, 1895 entry.
Chronology
Dec. 1893,
Dec. 25th.
continued
85
A. Besant formulated The Case Against W. Q. Judge with H.S. Olcott H.P.B. As I Knew
Her by A. Cleather,
and G.N. Chakravarti while she was in India.
p.57
Mrs. Cleathers comments on that period:
In fact, from this date (1889) would seem to have begun the fatal and
treacherous process which led, after H.P.B.s death, first to the
Besant-Judge Split in the T.S., in 1895, and then to the steady
alteration, perversion, and degradation of her teachings by the leaders
of both factions, especially on the Besant side under the guidance,
first of Chakravarti, and then of Leadbeater. A notable fact in this
connection is revealed here by Mr. Sinnett, which supplies the key to
Mrs. Besants subsequent policy and close association with
Leadbeater. He relates that, after Mrs. Besants first visit to India in
1893, where with Chakravarti and Olcott the Case Against W.Q. Judge
was formulated, she joined his circle, having realised the importance
of his private methods of communicating with the Master K.H. then
in full progress.
NOTE: See Oct. 1891 entry for Vera Jelihovskys warning against Besant
going to India that year.
Dec. 1893,
Dec. 25th.
continued
Lucifer,
Vol. 13, Jan. 1894;
pp.429-432
Lucifer, Vol. 14,
Mar. 1894; pp.79-82
Apr. 1894;
pp.96, 166-171
The Theosophist,
Vol. 15, Apr. 1894;
pp.442-449
Olcott also sent The Path a CARD, denying the same, which was The Path, Vol. 9,
published as a NOTICE titled A MISTAKE CORRECTED
May 1894; p.65
NOTE: See April 1894 for more on Besants Lecture tour in India.
Prasnottara,
A complete itinerary of her lecture tour in India was posted as a Vol. 3, No. 34, Oct.
Supplement to Prasnottara Vol. 3, No. 34, Oct. 1893, pp. v to vii. 1893; p.vi
[which appears to be accurate.]
Besant lectured for an hour and a half at Allahabad, on January 31,
1894, where she was met by Professor G.N. Chakravarti, and lodged
at a bungalow in his compound. (Lucifer March 1894, p.81)
According to her schedule Besant stayed or was with Chakravarti for
the most part from January 26 or 27 to February 1st, 1894.
86
Jan. 11,
1894
Annie Besant wrote to W.Q. Judge threatening exposure of abuse of Theos. Movement
Masters names if he did not resign from the Vice-Presidency and Co- 1875-1950, p.231
Headship of the E.S.
A. Besants letter quoted in THE PERSECUTION OF WILLIAM Q.
JUDGE, THE OBJECT IN VIEW by W.Q. Judge.
You must resign the outer headship (of E.S.T.) held jointly with
myself, or the evidence which goes to prove the wrong done must be
laid before a committee of T.S. . . . And you must resign the position
of President-elect.
Mr. Judge denied the charges and refused to resign.
NOTE: See March 1895 (late) entry.
Letter to the Editor by Archibald Keightley detailing his observations The Path,
regarding Besant and Chakravarti:
Vol. 10, June 1895;
It is with sincere regret that I find myself obliged to make public pp.98-100
denial of the truth of Mrs. Besants statement that she told me that the
Master had informed her of Mr. Judges guilt. Mrs. Besant never so
told me.
Besant: I wrote to Mr. Judge . . . privately, so that by a voluntary The Case Against
resignation he might free the Society, and thus prevent the necessity W.Q. Judge by A.
of taking public action against him.
Besant (1895);
pp.14, 18
Jan. 12,
1894
Chronology
87
Feb. 1894
Feb. 1, 1894
G.R.S. Mead, as General Secretary of the European section, attempted to The Vahan, Vol. 3,
follow the NEW CORRESPONDENCE SCHEME as inaugurated in the Feb. 1, 1894; p.5
American Section, however, As scarcely a dozen members have
replied to this announcement the scheme will not be adopted in this
section. . . .
The Theosophical
Society and The
Westminster
Gazette, p.11
The Theosophist,
Vol. 15, May 1894;
Supp. p.xxvii
The Vahan, Vol. 3,
July 1894; [insert]
88
Feb. 6-7, 1894
continued
The Path,
Vol. 9, Mar. 1895;
pp.159-160
Isis Very Much
Unveiled, p.85
Feb. 8, 1894 Annie Besants personal letter (from Agra) to W.Q. Judge.
The Path, Vol. 9,
As you know, I refused the offer to nominate me as President; since Mar. 1895; p.432
then I have been told not to oppose, so I remain passive and wait.
[Judge asks: by whom?]
Irish Theosophist,
Vol. 3, Mar. 1895;
NOTE: See Feb.14, 1894, March 1895 (late), June 1895 entries.
p.104
Dr. A. Keightley quotes part of this same letter of Mrs. Besant to The Path,
Judge: My one hope is, my very dear brother, that you will have the Vol. 10, June 1895;
heroism to say frankly the wrong has been done under a mistaken pp.98-99
view, UNSELFISHLY SAYING WHAT YOU KNEW WAS MASTERS WILL
THOUGH NOT DIRECTLY WRITTEN BY HIM, and that you may thus make
it possible for us to remain co-workers.
Feb. 14,
1894
Chronology
Mar. 8,
1894
Letter by Annie Besant regarding the note Judges plan is right found by The Path, Vol. 10,
her at the May 27th Meeting in London in 1891:
June 1895; p.100
Masters approval in the message is just one of the very things
challenged as not Masters. From my standpoint, no tie was made by
Them in this matter.
[Very different from what she wrote on July 2, 1891]
Mar. 10,
1894
Mar. 12,
1894
Letter addressed to W.Q. Judge, General Secretary, American Section The Path,
T.S., from Elliott B. Page (as a member of the Council of T.S.). Letter Vol. 9, June 1894;
stated that the Society should not have an investigation to determine pp.98-100
whether the sending of messages purporting to come from a Master,
or Masters, is untheosophical and that to do so would only tend to
raise a dogma in the Society. . . .
NOTE: See replies by Judge April 23-24, 1894 and May 27, 1893.
Mar. 13 to
17, 1894
Mar. 14,
1894
89
90
Mar. 15,
1894
W.Q. Judge issued 5,000 copies of his printed statement To all Members
of the Theosophical Society: giving all details and copies of letters
exchanged so far.
(Pamphlet called Charges Against William Q. Judge)
NOTE: See Feb. 6-7, 1894 entry.
The charge is made against me as Vice-President: I have replied as
an individual and shall so continue, inasmuch as in my capacity of
Vice-President my duties are nominal. . . . The only charges that could
be made against the Vice-President would be those of failing to
perform his duties, or misusing the office. . . . On the face of this very
vague charge, then, it is evident that there is nothing in it relating to
the official Vice-President.
Judge objected to making the question of the Mahatmas a matter for
judicial decision in the TS:
The Society has no dogma as to the existence of such Masters; but
the deliberations of an official committee of the Society on such a
question . . . would mean that the Theosophical Society . . . is
determined to . . . affix it to the Constitution of the Society. To this I
will never consent. . . .
He reasserted that he had personal communications from the Masters:
[N]ot only have I received direct communications from Masters
during and since the life of H.P. Blavatsky, but that I have on certain
occasions repeated such to certain persons for their own guidance, and
also that I have guided some of my own work under suggestions from
the same sources, though without mentioning the fact.
NOTE: See April 1894 for Editorial notes on DO MAHATMAS EXIST?
JUDGES DECLARATION
Mar. 19,
1894
Theos. Movement
1875-1950, p.206
WQJ T. Articles,
Vol. 2, p.299
Pacific Theos.
Vol. 4, Apr. 1894;
pp.129-133
The Path,
Vol. 9, Aug. 1894;
pp.159-160
Isis Very Much
Unveiled, 2nd ed.,
p.85
MR.
New England
Theosophical
Corporation,
2 page circular
Chronology
Mar. 20,
1894
91
Report of
Proceedings of the
Eighth Annual
Convention
Apr. 22-23, 1894;
p.23
Theos. Movement
1875-1950, p.221
Theosophy, Vol. 10,
July 1922; p.275
Mar. 26,
1894
by George W. Russell.
Circular, 8 pages
Replying to Besants charge that Judge wrote the letters from the T.N.C.A.B.
Masters, Russell queries Who can say what was behind the hand that Item 1995, p.546
wrote, the will of the Adept or the will of Mr. Judge? Calls the
motion by the Indian Section for Judges explanation or expulsion a
violation of the principles of freedom in our ranks, and I call upon all
true men and women to rise up and protest against it.
NOTE: Reprinted as Appendix A in The Descent of the Gods, edited by
Raghavan & Nandini Iyer, pp.659-664.
92
Mar. 27,
1894
G.R.S. Mead and Bertram Keightley (as General Secretaries for the
Europe and Indian Sections respectively) issued a circular, For the
information of the Members of the European and Indian Sections of
the Theosophical Society. Both commented on Olcotts letter of Feb.
7th, 1894, to W.Q. Judge and warned that H.S. Olcott was not
following the procedure as laid out in the Constitution for charges
against the Vice-President.
It appears to us that such an attitude is inconsistent with that strict
impartiality and justice which ought to characterize at least the official
actions of the President of the T.S., and that it is calculated to bring
discredit upon the Society by laying its chief executive officer open
to the charge of condemning a colleague without even giving him a
hearing.
Theosophical
Society, European
Section, 4 pages
Theos. Movement
1875-1950,
pp.209-211
The Path,
Vol. 9, May 1894;
pp.65-67
[Answered from Adyar by H.S. Olcott on May 13, 1894 and circulated
to members from London on June 15, 1894]
NOTE: See Apr. 27, 1894 for further observations from Colonel Olcott
found in Austral Theosophist.
Mar. 31,
1894
Apr. 1894
Letters to Jasper Niemand published in Letters That Have Helped Me. The Path, Vol. 9,
They [the Letters] were written for me and Dr. Keightley and for Apr. 1894; p.16
the use of others later on by W.Q. Judge, at the express wish of
H.P. Blavatsky.
The recipient of the Letters, Jasper Niemand (Mrs. Julia Keightley) is
featured in FACES OF FRIENDS in The Path.
Announcement that authorship of Letters That Have Helped Me is Lucifer, Vol. 14,
Apr. 1894; p.95
now made public.
Chronology
Apr. 1894
continued
93
H.S. Olcott warned delegates to the Worlds Parliament of Religions not Lucifer, Vol. 12,
to identify the T.S. with any form of religion, creed, sect, or any July 1893; p.517
religious or ethical teacher or leader; our first duty being to affirm and
defend its perfect corporate neutrality in these matters. [May 27,
1893]
In ANNIE BESANTS INDIAN TOUR H.S. Olcott wrote:
Apr. 1894; p.167
True, she has declared herself virtually a Hindu in religion almost
from the beginning of the Indian part of her tour. What of that? [See The Theosophist,
Dec. 1893, Dec. 25th entry]
Vol. 15, Apr. 1894;
pp.442-449
MRS. BESANT AND INDIAN CIVILISATION.
Wm. Emmette Coleman (San Francisco, CA) wrote:
Light, Vol. 14, Apr.
Mrs. Besant has publicly embraced the Hindu religion as a whole, 14, 1894; pp.176-177
and requested that she be called by her new Hindu name of Anna or
Ani Bai, instead of her European one. She tells the people that she
was and is a Hindu, that in her prior incarnation she was an Indian
pandit, and she is now visiting her own land after a sojourn in the
West, where she was re-incarnated to know the nature of the
materialistic civilisation of those regions.
Apr. 1894
continued
94
Apr. 1894
continued
Chronology
Apr. 23-24,
1894
95
Theos. Movement
1875-1950,
pp.213-215
Dr. Anderson proposed to submit resolutions in support of Judge and The Path,
that H.S.O.s actions were uncalled for, unconstitutional, illegal, and Vol. 9, May 1894;
improper.
pp.64-66
Aug. 1894;
Olcotts comments [July 10, 1894] . . .
pp.160-162
Letter from E. Page to Judge read. Stated that the Society should not The Path,
have an investigation to determine whether the sending of messages Vol. 9 June 1894;
purporting to come from a Master, or Masters, is untheosophical and pp.98-100
that to do so would only tend to raise a dogma in the Society.
Report of
NOTE: For W.Q. Judges reply on T.S. neutrality see May 27, 1893.
Proceedings of the
T.S. American Sec.,
NOTE: See entries of March 12 and 14, 1894 for more details.
Apr. 1894; pp.21-25
Resolutions were passed at the Convention. One read:
Pacific Theos.
That, in the opinion of this Convention, the action of the President, Vol. 4, May 1894;
Col. Olcott, in calling a judicial Committee to consider such charge pp.150-151
was uncalled for, unconstitutional, illegal and improper.
Another read:
That this convention hereby declares its unswerving belief in the
integrity and uprightness of the Vice-President of the T.S., Wm. Q.
Judge and expresses to him the most cordial thanks of the Section
for his unrecompensed and self-sacrificing years of labor on behalf of
the T.S. as a whole.
Confidence in W.Q. Judge was expressed by several west coast Vol. 4, Apr. 1894;
lodges.
pp.141-144
Apr. 23-24,
1894
continued
She then further explained that Col. Olcott had agreed to transfer of p.66
Indian Headquarters to some other place.
96
Apr. 27,
1894
The Theosophist,
Vol. 15, May 1894;
Supp. p.xxvii
Theosophy, Vol. 3,
July 1915; p.428
The Vahan, Vol. 3,
July 1894; p.11
Irish Theosophist,
Vol. 2, June 1894;
p.121
NOTE: Judicial Committee postponed to July 10, 1894, see July 7th, 1894
entry.
Light, Vol. 14,
May 26, 1894; p.245
Light published Olcotts EXECUTIVE NOTICE, issued from Adyar, dated
April 27, 1894, under the title MRS. BESANTS CHARGE Theos. Movement
AGAINST W. Q JUDGE.
1875-1950, p.220
Apr. 27, 1894
continued
Quotes from Executive notice issued by Olcott which give a brief outline Austral Theos.
Vol. 1, July 1894;
of affairs to this point, including:
Colonel Olcott observes that he Deplores that his colleagues, Mr. p.97
Mead and Mr. Keightley, should have acted in such haste as to have
committed the indiscretion of censuring him for breaches in procedure
and a violation of Constitution of which he was not guilty. He regrets
also that the fact of Mrs. Besant being the accuser of Mr. Judge should
not have been mentioned, if the public was to be taken into confidence
at all at this preliminary stage.
NOTE: See March 27, 1894 entry
Chronology
May 1894
97
Irish Theosophist,
NOTE: See June 2, 1895 entry and June 10, 1895 for Dr. Gambles letter Vol. 3, July 1895;
of April 16, 1894 (Gambles letter should be dated 1895) to J.D. pp.181-182
Buck.
The Path,
C. Wachtmeister denied having said that.
Vol. 10, Dec. 1895;
pp.291-292
NOTE: C. Wachtmeister apparently admitted to a friend that she had H.P.B. As I Knew
made a mistake in following Annie Besant after H.P.B.s death Her by A. Cleather,
and had subsequently left the Society. On her death-bed she stated p.22
she had wept long and bitterly over the ruin which Mrs. Besant
had wrought to H.P.B.s work.
May 13,
1894
Theosophical
Society. European
Section.
No. 2, 2 pages
NOTE: The detailed reply to Messrs. Mead and Keightleys letter, that
the Notice [of April 27th, 1894] states is in preparation and will be Theos. Movement
circulated to all Branches was never, so far as we know, either 1875-1925,
prepared or circulated. All that Olcott issued was a plea in pp.502-504
extenuation, similar to the above quoted Notice.
Resolutions were passed by an unanimous vote They voice in no
uncertain tones the united protest of American Theosophists against Pacific Theos.
the introduction of dogmas into Theosophy and their faith in and Vol. 4, May 1894;
loyalty to our beloved General Secretary, Wm. Q. Judge.
pp.150-152
98
May 20,
1894
June 1894
W.Q. Judge (as General Secretary, American Section T.S.) gave an The Path, Vol. 9,
official answer on the authentication of Messages from Masters in June 1894; pp.98-100
a letter dated March 14, 1894 to Elliott B. Page (in response to his
letter of March 12, 1894).
NOTE: See March 12 and 14, 1894 entries.
The Path, Vol. 9,
Olcott on same, in PROCEEDINGS OF THE JUDICIAL COMMITTEE OF THE Aug. 1894;
THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY
pp.161-162
June 1894
continued
June 12,
1894
The President-Founder arrived in Paris, where he met Annie Besant and Lucifer, Vol. 14,
Miss H.F. Mller, on June 12th, and presided at the lecture given by July 1894; p.432
the former in the beautiful hall of the residence of the Duchesse de
Pomar on June 13th. The party then returned to England and after a
brief stay in London the President-Founder left for Germany to
endeavour to found there a Lodge of the T.S. in concert with Dr.
Hubbe Schleiden. He returned to London on July 4th, to arrange with
the secretaries of the Indian, European and America Sections for the
holding of the Judicial Committee on July 8th.
NOTE: See July 7, 1894, for more details on delays in reaching a
compromise. The General Council of the T.S. met on July 7 and the
meeting of the Judicial Committee was actually held on July 10, 1894.
Chronology
July 1894
99
The Theosophist,
Vol. 15, July 1894;
Supp. pp.xxxvixxxvii
Denied by W.Q. Judge in letter of Aug. 3, 1894 to the Editor of The The Path,
Theosophist, in which he explained the proposal was made by C. Vol. 9, Sep. 1894;
pp.194-195
Wachtmeister.
In a letter by C. Wachtmeister dated Aug 7, 1894, she wrote:
Take away the words American Section replace them by the
Countess Wachtmeister and the paragraph is correct.
It is quite true that I made this suggestion to the American
Convention [San Francisco in April 1894], because I think that Adyar
is useless to the Society as a whole, being in such a remote corner of
the globe.
NOTE: See entry for April 23-24, 1894.
Letter from William Q. Judge, Gen. Sec. American Section, to B. Prasnottara, Vol. 4,
Keightley, Gen. Sec. Indian Section, T.S., August 3rd, 1894 regarding Sep. 1894; p.149
the proposal of the American Section to remove the Head-quarters
of the Theosophical Society as such, away from the sacred soil of
India. Permit me to say that the American Section has not proposed
anything of the kind. . . .
NOTE: See Aug. 3, 1894 entry for letter and Sep. 9, 1894 for Bertram
Keightleys retraction and apology.
July 4, 1894
W.Q. Judge arrived in London. and at once demanded, first, copies of The Path,
letters, and second, an inspection of all the evidence. Mrs. Besant Vol. 9, Mar. 1895;
promised these but did not perform.
pp.433-434
Only Dr. J.D. Buck accompanied Judge to England. Later Dr. A. Lucifer, Vol. 16,
Keightley also was witness with them.
Mar. 1895; p.65
E.T. Hargrove stated:
Theosophical
He arrived at Southampton, accompanied by Dr. J.D. Buck of Quarterly, Vol. 29,
Cincinnati, several days before the Committee was due to assemble. Oct. 1931; p.107
Dr. Archibald Keightley and I met them at the dock and travelled with
them to London. Judge was obviously very tired and frail.
NOTE: See March 1895 (Early) and July 19, 1894 entries.
100
July 7, 1894
Theos. Movement
1875-1950, p.218
Lucifer, Vol. 14,
July 1894; p.432
Neutrality of the
T.S., pp.8-10
July 7, 1894
continued
Mr. Judges defense is that he is not guilty of the acts charged; that
Mahatmas exist, are related to our Society and in personal contact
with himself; and he avers his readiness to bring many witnesses and
documentary proof to support his statements.
July 7, 1894
continued
PROCEEDINGS
The Path,
Vol. 9, Aug.1894;
pp.161-162;
Mar. 1895;
pp.433-434
The Path,
Vol. 9, Aug. 1894;
The meeting was worth holding for several reasons. . . . because we pp.161-162
have come to the point of an official declaration that it is not lawful
to affirm that belief in Mahatmas is a dogma of the Society, or
communications really or presumably from them, authoritative and
infallible. . . . under our Rules, an officer or member cannot be
impeached and tried. . . . the successorship to the Presidency is again
open . . . and at my death or at any time sooner liberty of choice may
be exercised in favor of the best available member of the Society.
OF THE JUDICIAL COMMITTEE OF THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY,
Chronology
July 7, 1894
continued
[Olcott] It having been made evident to me that Mr. Judge cannot be tried
on the present accusations without breaking the lines of our
Constitution, I have no right to keep him further suspended, and so
hereby cancel my notice of suspension, dated the 7th February, 1894,
and restore him to the rank of Vice-President.
NOTE: Also found in The Neutrality of the Theosophical Society. AN
ENQUIRY Into Certain Charges Against The Vice-President, Held in
London July, 1894 published July 21, 1894.
NOTE: See Feb. 6-7, 1894 and Mar. 20, 1894 entries.
101
July 7, 1894
continued
The question was then raised whether the charges against Mr. Judge Theos. Movement
should be included in the printed report. . . . However, when the 1875-1950, p.226
assembled delegates came to see the full iniquity of officially
spreading broadcast a series of charges after having denied the
accused the opportunity of meeting and rebutting them, this motion
was too much for even the most prejudiced to be responsible for. The
report says: On being put to the vote the resolution was not carried.
July 10,
1894
Theos. Movement
1875-1950,
pp.220-221
The Path,
Vol. 9, Aug. 1894;
pp.158-163
Theosophy,
Vol. 3, July 1915;
pp.428-429
Three protests were made by W.Q. Judge and submitted to H.S. Olcott: Neutrality of the
1. That W.Q.J. was never elected to office of Vice-President.
T.S., pp.4-5
2. If he were V.P., tribunal can only try charges as V.P.
3. The principal charge . . . cannot be tried without breach of the
constitutional neutrality of the Society in matters of private belief
. . . and especially as to belief in the existence, names, powers,
functions or methods of Mahatmas or Masters.
102
Resolved: that we will join hands with them to further the cause of
genuine Brotherhood in which we all believe.
W.Q. Judge compelled H.S. Olcott to show him the evidence before he The Path, Vol. 9,
left London. He was shown it July 19th, 1894, in J.D. Bucks presence, Mar. 1895; p.434
but was not given time to copy it.
Mrs. Besant stated:
He made no complaint at the time that he was hurried in his
inspection. As to copies, no duty lies on me to supply Mr. Judge with
copies, still less with copies of long letters on various subjects, in
which perhaps only a few sentences are cogent to the charges made.
. . .
NOTE: Reprinted in The Case Against W.Q. Judge, April 1895.
See also July 4 1894, July 19, 1894 and March 1895 (Early).
Chronology
July 10, 1894
continued
103
W.Q. Judge gave an official view of decisions about the authenticity of The Path, Vol. 9,
messages and the position of the T.S.
June 1894; p.99
NOTE: See June 1894, Mar. 12, 14, 1894 for letters from and to Elliott B.
Page.
104
NOTE: See Dec. 15, 1894 and Feb. 1895 entries Lucifer, Vol. 15, Feb.
1895; pp.500-514 [Statements by G.R.S. Mead, Bertram Keightley,
Alexander Fullerton, and various lodges: The Clash of Opinion, To
the Editor of Lucifer]
Ernest T. Hargroves Letter To the Editor of The Irish Theosophist Irish Theosophist,
(dated April 17, 1895) disputed Bertram Keightleys article on facts Vol. 3, May 1895;
and statements which he used to disqualify Dr. Archibald Keightleys pp.137-140
letter in Lucifer (Vol. 16, April 1895):
But Mr. B. Keightley, in his letter to Lucifer, is particularly careful
to controvert nothing. He vaguely disputes Dr. Keightleys account of
the legal procedure which Mrs. Besant did not follow, but does not
say which item set forth by Dr. Keightley who had been
professionally advised in regard to what he wrote is, in his own
opinion, incorrect; nor does he give what he considers to be the proper
procedure.
NOTE: See entry for April 17, 1895.
Chronology
July 12,
1894
105
H.P.B. A Great
Betrayal (1922) by
A. Cleather,
pp.55-56
At the time of the London Convention of the European Section of the Theos. Movement
Society [July 12-13]:
1875-1950, p.228
Mrs. Besant proposed to Dr. J.D. Buck that a Jury of Honour be
impaneled to pass on the charges. She suggested the names of
Messrs. Sinnett, Bertram Keightley, Sturdy, Burrows, and Firth for
membership on such a jury. This was declined on the grounds that Mr.
Judge had not yet been supplied with certified copies of the
documents alleged to contain the evidence against him; that he
would need time to produce witnesses and documents in rebuttal;
finally, that the majority of the names submitted were those of men
known to be already prejudiced against him. . . .
The Theosophical
Society and The
Annie Besant stated that Burrows proposed the Jury of Honour. [Also Westminster
mentioned by Thomas Williams in his letter to Light, Feb. 16, 1895.] Gazette, p.12
MRS. BESANTS STATEMENT, Read by herself, at the Evening Session
of the Convention. [Path p.164]
As this left the main issue undecided, and left Mr. Judge under
stigma of unproved and unrebutted charges, it was suggested by Mr.
Herbert Burrows that the charges be laid before a Committee of
Honour. [Neutrality of The T.S., Appendix, statement by Annie
Besant.]
The Path,
Vol. 9, Aug. 1894;
pp.163-166
Lucifer, Vol. 14,
Aug. 1894; p.459
Annie Besant stated that certified copies of the evidence and charges were The Case Against
not supplied to W.Q.J. Added he was shown them July 19th (after W.Q. Judge by A.
meetings of July 7, 10, and 12).
Besant (1895); p.9
W.Q. Judge asked for the evidence every day, from July 4th or 5th to Lucifer, Vol. 16,
19th. [Two different dates are recorded as to when W.Q.J. arrived in Mar. 1895; p.65
London; Lucifer has the former and The Path has the latter date.]
The Path,
NOTE: See also: July 19, 1894 entry.
Vol. 9, Mar. 1895;
pp.432-434
WILLIAM Q. JUDGES STATEMENT, Read by himself, at the Evening
Session of the Convention.
The Path,
I repeat my denial of the said rumored charges of forging the said Vol. 9, Aug. 1894;
names and handwritings of the Mahatmas or of misusing the same. pp.166-167
106
July 12, 1894
continued
The Convention of the European Section was held at 19 Avenue Road, The Path, Vol. 9,
London, in the Blavatsky T.S. hall on July 12th and 13th, 1894.
Aug. 1894; p.167
The Path,
Vol. 9, Aug. 1894;
pp.158-168
p.166
Resolution by B. Keightley:
p.167
That this meeting accepts with pleasure the adjustment arrived at by
Annie Besant and William Q. Judge as a final settlement of matters Lucifer, Vol. 14,
pending hitherto between them as prosecutor and defendant with the Aug. 1894; p.463
hope that it may be thus buried and forgotten.
The apparent trouble in the Society, of which our enemies have made Pacific Theos.
so much, all disappeared, as every one thought it would, when the Vol. 5, Aug. 1894;
leaders of the Society came together face to face.
pp.10-11
A resolution was moved and carried without dissenting voice by the Theosophy, Vol. 3,
Convention, accepting with pleasure the adjustment arrived at as a July 1915; p.430
final settlement of the matter, with the hope that it may be thus buried
and forgotten.
Theos. Movement
On all sides those who had been rent by partisan emotions, those who 1875-1950, p.237
had endeavored to remain neutral and impartial, leaders and followers
alike joined in mutual congratulations and felicitations over what
seemed to be a complete restoration of unity.
Chronology
July 12, 13,
1894
continued
The statement of Mrs. Besant recited in effect that she had only brought
the charges in an effort to destroy injurious rumors regarding Mr.
Judge that were afloat; that she believed him to be in communication
with Masters; that the rumors of the charges had greatly exaggerated
their actual nature; that accusations were largely inspired by persons
actuated by hatred for Mr. Judge; that the actual issue involved was
that she thought that Mr. Judge had given a misleading material form
to messages received psychically from the Masters in various ways,
without acquainting the recipients with this fact. Mrs. Besant closed
her public statement with these words: For any pain that I have given
my brother, in trying to do a most repellant task, I ask his pardon, as
also for any mistakes that I may have made.
107
Theosophy,
Vol. 3, July 1915;
pp.429-430
The Path,
Vol. 9, Aug. 1894;
pp.163-166
[see above]
Statement by Wm Q. Judge:
It is now time that this should be put an end to once for all if
possible. I repeat my denial of the said rumoured charges. . . . I admit
that I have received and delivered messages from the Mahatmas and
I assert their genuineness.
July 12, 13,
1894
continued
July 18,
1894
E.S. circular issued by Annie Besant and W.Q. Judge as Co-Outer H.P.B. A Great
Heads quoting H.P.B.s statement of Oct.23, 1889:
Betrayal (1922) by
The Esoteric Section and its life in the U.S.A. depends upon W.Q.J. A. Cleather, p.87
remaining its agent and what he is now. The day W.Q. Judge resigns
H.P.B. will be virtually dead for the Americans. W.Q.J. is the
Antaskarana between the two Manas(es), the American thought and
the Indian SS or rather the trans-Himlayan esoteric knowledge. Dixi.
H.P.B.
108
July 19,
1894
The Path,
Vol. 9, Mar. 1895;
pp.432-434
The Plot Against
The Theosophical
Society (pamphlet)
by A. Keightley et al,
pp.3-4
Lucifer, Vol. 16,
Mar. 1895; p.65
Chronology
July 19, 1894
continued
Besant: The complaints of Mr. Judge that he has been refused copies of
the documents are not true, nor is it true that I promised him copies of
the documents. I refused to show him the documents because he had
copies in the statement of those I was going to use, and I did not care
to run any risks with the originals. These were, however, shown to
him afterwards by Colonel Olcott at my request, and he took his own
time in scrutinising them; all the more important ones bear his own
endorsement, Seen, July 19th, 1894, W.Q.J. He made no complaint
at the time that he was hurried in his inspection. As to copies, no duty
lies on me to supply Mr. Judge with copies, still less with copies of
long letters on various subjects, in which perhaps only a few sentences
are cogent to the charges made; I have not the time to make copies,
nor am I inclined to undertake the cost of having them transcribed; if
Mr. Judge chooses to appoint a trustworthy copyist, such a person can
come and make copies of all the documents, used and not used. Since
the Spring of 1894, he has had, as given in the appended presentment
of the case, a copy of all the written evidence I was going to use.
What he has not had is a copy of all the irrelevant parts of the letters
from which the relevant passages are taken.
109
His attempts to get rid of the evidence, first to browbeat me into The Case Against
handing it over to him, and then to persuade me to destroy it, W.Q. Judge by A.
compelled me to think that he had no defence and feared the future Besant (1895); p.20
publication of the documents. The efforts made to win over Colonel
Olcott, flagrantly in face of former conduct by Mr. Judges friends,
roused my suspicions, and when Mr. Judge left England, refusing to
the last all explanation, not only to me, with whom he was grimly
angry, but to those who had stood by him throughout, I felt that the
obvious judgment arising on the prima facie case was the only one
possible, and that the darker charges of fraud and forgery were true.
In Statement of Annie Besant, Written April 24th , 1895.:
The Case Against
I am not able to produce documentary evidence; immediately after I W.Q. Judge by A.
learned from the Master, in Sept., 1893, that Mr. Judge had deceived Besant (1895); p.82
me, in the shock of the disgust I felt, I destroyed the messages,
except those written on the margins of letters. Nearly a year later, just
ere leaving for Australia, I destroyed all the letters I had received from
Mr. Judge as I could not carry them with me round the world, and
would not risk their falling into the hands of others, in case of my
death.
July 19, 1894
continued
In letter to the Editor Irish Theosophist: THE CHARGES AGAINST Irish Theosophist,
Vol. 3, Feb. 1895;
WILLIAM Q. JUDGE. dated Jan.25, 1895, Judge stated:
I have not been furnished with copies of the documentary evidence pp.85-86
by which the charges are said to be supported. These documents
being letters written by myself and some of them ten years old have
been in the possession of Mrs. Besant from about February, 1894 to
July 19th, 1894, and open enemies of mine have been allowed to make
copies of them, and also to take facsimiles, but they have been kept
from me, although I have demanded and should have them.
110
July 21,
1894
The Path,
Vol. 9, Mar. 1895;
pp.432-434
The Theosophist,
Vol. 15, Sep. 1894;
p.777
July 22,
1894
Walter R. Old wrote a letter to Col. Olcott, which H.S. Olcott requested Lucifer,
be published in Lucifer, regarding Olds objection to A. Besants Vol. 14, Aug. 1894;
statement that because of personal hatred for Mr. Judge and the T.S., pp.463-464
Messrs. Old and Edge had repeated charges against Judge.
NOTE: Brief background explanation of events:
Old had been under suspension from the E.S. . . . since August 1893, Theos. Movement
because of a statement in the Freethought article [published in The 1875-1950,
Theosophist attacking Mr. Judge], violating the rule of occult secrecy pp.237-238
to which he was pledged.
NOTE: See April 15, 1893 entry.
Chronology
July 22, 1894
continued
111
Cheiro mentioned that Madame Blavatsky had introduced Annie Besant Greatest Occultists
to him and that he took impressions of her hands on July 22nd, 1894. by Cheiro, p.181
NOTE: For a study of Annie Besants palm print and delineation see
Fohat Vol. IV, No.4, Winter 2000 and Vol. V, No. 1, Spring 2001 for
ANNIE BESANT: HER PASSIONS AND HER RELATIONSHIPS.
July 25,
1894
July 28,
1894
112
Aug. 3,
1894
CORRESPONDENCE.
Prasnottara,
Letter from W.Q. Judge as Gen. Sec., American Section, to Bertram Vol. 4, No. 45, Sep.
Keightley, Gen. Sec., Indian Section, T.S.
1894; p.149
I request you to give as much publicity to this letter as you have to
your own. In the July issue of Prasnottara B. Keightley had asked
for a protest against the proposal of the American Section to remove
the Head-quarters of the Theosophical Society as such, away from the
sacred soil of India. Mr. Judges reply to this was:
Permit me to say that the American Section has not proposed
anything of the kind and up to this date none of its workers, to my
knowledge, has thought of doing so. The proposition to which you
refer was made by your own delegate from India at the American
Convention and was noted down in a resolution drawn by myself . . .
and written in terms which would be most polite to your own delegate.
We depreciate hasty statements like these in your paragraph, since
they tend to raise unnecessarily questions and feelings which ought to
have no existence.
NOTE: See July 1894 and Sep. 9 1894 entries.
Aug. 4,
1894
Aug. 4, 1894
continued
Chronology
113
Aug. 11,
1894
The Charges Against Mr. W. Q. Judge. by A.F.C., from Canterbury. Light, Vol. 14,
A.F.C. gave a brief summary of the results from the judicial inquiry Aug. 11, 1894; p.383
held on July 10, 1894 and wrote that:
Mrs. Besant has repeatedly stated in public that she has received
Mahatmic letters since the death of Madame Blavatsky in the same
script as those previously received, thus establishing to her
satisfaction Madame Blavatskys bona fides. She now states that in
those recent letters she has been mistaken, and in turn misled the
public. I now know that they were not written or precipitated by the
Master, and that they were done by Mr. Judge.
A.F.C. also commented that:
[T]he Mahatma, or Mahatmas, implicated should themselves have
been privately interviewed as to the genuineness or otherwise of the
writings attributed to them by Mr. Judge . . . they might have cleared
up much more satisfactorily the charges against the Vice-President.
Aug. 15,
1894
114
The Path,
OCCULTISM AND TRUTH reprinted in The Path.
Vol. 9, Sep. 1894;
Mr. Judge added comment:
The general propositions found in the above as to morality and the pp.184-185
higher type of Occultism are so old and have been so widely spread,
so often dwelt on in the work of the Theosophical Society, that one
would hardly suppose any member was unacquainted with them; but
a good thing cannot be too often repeated, and hence all must instantly
concur. The circular was issued in London for distribution, and a copy
having been sent to New York it is published according to the desire
of the signers.
Sep. 1894
Sep. 1894
continued
Sep. 1894
continued
The Path,
Vol. 9, Oct. 1894;
pp.201-207
Lucifer,
Vol. 15, Sep. 1894;
pp.26-30
Chronology
115
Sep. 9, 1894 Bertram Keightley published a retraction and an apology for an earlier Prasnottara, Vol. 4,
article in Prasnottara in which he stated that the American Section Sep. 1894; p.150
had made a proposal to move the Head-Quarters from the sacred soil
of India to America.
I regret extremely that the mistake should have arisen and desire
sincerely to apologise for the same and especially for the delay in its
correction.
NOTE: See July 1894 and Aug. 3, 1894 entries.
Sep. 18,
1894
Sep. 19,
1894
The President-Founder, H.S. Olcott, arrived in Adyar in the morning, via Prasnottara,
Bombay.
Vol. 4, No. 45, Sep.
1894; p.154
Sep. 27,
1894
EXECUTIVE NOTICES.
The Theosophist,
th
Adyar, 27 September, 1894. Issued by H.S. Olcott.
Vol. 16, Oct. 1894;
Mr. Walter R. Old notifies the undersigned officially that, being Supp. p.ii
unable to accept the official statement in regard to the enquiry held
upon the charges preferred against the Vice-President of the T.S., he
resigns the offices of Treasurer and Recording Secretary. He will
continue working, but in the private capacity of a member of the
Birmingham Lodge. [We] regret to lose Mr. Olds agreeable and
profitable companionship in India. . . .
Oct. 1894
The Theosophist,
Vol. 16, Jan. 1895;
p.39
116
Oct. 1894
continued
Lucifer,
Vol. 15, Dec. 1894;
p.338
Theos. Movement
1875-1950,
pp.238-239
NOTE: Such copies in detail had not been given to Mr. Judge as the
accused in the case.
Oct. 1894
continued
Oct. 1894
continued
Oct. 13,
1894
Mrs. Tingley joined the Theosophical Society. She was accepted into the Sunrise, Special
Esoteric Section a few weeks later.
Issue, Apr./May
1998; p.101
It appears to be at about this time that Mr. Judge and Mrs. Tingley
visited Cheiro for a palm reading. Cheiro wrote briefly about the Greatest Occultists
attack on W.Q.J.s reputation then stated:
by Cheiro,
At about the time of this dispute, I was living in New York, when pp.185-189
one afternoon William Q. Judge accompanied by a remarkably
handsome woman appeared in my waiting room and requested an
interview. . . .
I was, however much struck by his magnetic dominant personality
and pleased him by stating that at that period of his life he had reached
the climax of whatever his ambition was; . . . you have already
reached the last chapter in your life.
Cheiro stated about Mrs. Tingley:
If it should be that this lady is in any way associated with whatever
your work is, she will take your place and carry on that work to even
greater success than you could do. She will also live to a very great
age.
NOTE: Cheiro claims Katherine Tingley left impressions of her hands
with him, at his request. She consented and apparently signed and
dated the copies on May 30, 1896. This does not appear to match the
timing of the above mentioned visit to his office in New York.
Chronology
Oct. 25,
1894
Oct. 29,
1894
Isis Very Much Unveiled: The Story of the Great Mahatma Hoax. Was 132 pages, 2nd ed.,
published initially in the Westminster Gazette of Oct. 29, 1894 and (1895)
nine succeeding issues.
Nov. 1894
W.Q.J. issued Minutes of Council E.S.T. held in London, May 27, 1891. Pamphlet, 8 pages
NOTE: See May 27, 1891 entry for details.
Nov. 3,
1894
117
STRICTLY PRIVATE AND ONLY FOR E.S.T. MEMBERS., E.S.T., from William Pamphlet,
12 pages
Q. Judge.
By Masters Direction. A private pamphlet issued by W.Q. Judge,
New York, to the members of the E.S.T.
Declares Mrs. Besants co-headship of the E.S. at an end under T.N.C.A.B.
Masters direction and himself sole head. Gives a brief history of the Item 1968, p.540
E.S., and warns of a plot by Black Magicians against the T.S. and
E.S.T. working through certain Brahmans of India.
NOTE: See May 18, 1887 entry.
[Judge] issued an E.S. circular letter, headed By Masters Order, in Theos. Movement
which he deposed Annie Besant from her Co-Headship in the Esoteric 1875-1950,
School because of her breach of secrecy that she was pledged to.
pp.241, 243, 245
NOTE: See Mar. 19, 1887 entry.
NOTE: See Jan.-Mar. 1938 for CONCERNING BOOKS.
118
Nov. 3, 1894
continued
Nov. 3, 1894
continued
Nov. 3, 1894
continued
Chronology
Nov. 3, 1894
continued
Nov. 15,
1894
Lucifer started a series of articles by Vera Jelihovsky (H.P.B.s sister) Lucifer, Vol. 15,
called HELENA PETROVNA BLAVATSKY
Sep. 1894; pp.202208, 273-279, 361364, 469-477
NOTE: See Dec. 1894 entry, The Path publishes Letters that were written Vol. 16, Mar. 1895;
pp.44-50, 99-108
by Blavatsky to her family.
119
120
Nov. 19,
1894
A circular by Laura M. Cooper and Herbert Burrows to (G.R.S. Mead). The Vahan,
A considerable number of the members of the T.S. feel very deeply Vol. 4, Jan. 1895;
the absolute necessity of some reply being made by Mr. W.Q. Judge, p.1
the Vice-President of the Society, to the series of charges which have
lately appeared against him in The Westminster Gazette. Those
members do not of course express the slightest personal opinion as to
Mr. Judges innocence or guilt; but for his own sake as well as for the
sake of the Society of which he is Vice-President, they strongly feel
that he should be invited to make such a reply, or to state his reasons
for not so doing.
NOTE: See Nov. 27, 1894 re: letter enclosed with this circular.
Nov. 20,
1894
Nov. 25,
1894
Nov. 26,
1894
Chronology
Nov. 26, 1894
continued
Nov. 27,
1894
A letter by Laura M. Cooper and Herbert Burrows addressed To The The Vahan,
General Secretary of the European Section, T.S. (G.R.S. Mead)
Vol. 4, Jan. 1895;
The enclosed circular has been sent by us to a large number of the p.1
members of the European Section, T.S., and, with not more than half
a dozen exceptions, they have expressed their desire that the different
Lodges should be invited by you to express their opinions, as soon as
possible, as to whether Mr. Judge, Vice-President of the Society,
should be requested to reply to the charges lately brought against him
in The Westminster Gazette. [See Nov. 19, 1894 for circular.]
NOTE: See Jan 5, 1895 and Jan. 11, 1895.
NOTE: Also see Dec. 1, 1894 for a list of names supplied by Mr. Smythe
of persons who had indicated their opinion on the matter.
Nov. 28,
1894
121
122
Nov. 29,
1894
On Nov. 29 Mr. Mead was asked by Mr. H. T. Edge to read the Dublin The Vahan,
Lodge circular at the Blavatsky Lodge. Mr. Mead explained:
Vol. 4, Feb. 1895;
I replied that that would be out of order, and on taking the chair I p.2
stated to the Lodge that I had been requested to read the Dublin Lodge
circular, but that I could not do so unless I read all communications
also from other Lodges, and if I did so, I would prevent debate on the
subject. This would be improper at an ordinary public meeting and
without notice, and therefore I would call a special meeting for that
purpose. . . .
Dec. 15 was then called as the date for that special meeting.
Mead continues: Nevertheless, in spite of my ruling, the lecturer of
the evening, Mr. E. T. Hargrove, began to quote the circular in his
speech and I had to rule him out of order
NOTE: See Dec. 15, 1894 for Meads ruling at that meeting.
Nov. 30,
1894
Dec. 1894
NOTE: The Path started a series of articles [thirteen parts] by Vera The Path,
Jelihovsky (H.P.B.s sister) called Letters of H.P. Blavatsky. Vol. 9, Dec. 1894,
pp. 265-270; Jan.
William Q. Judge added footnotes to some of the Letters.
1895, pp.297-302;
NOTE: These letters were written by H.P. Blavatsky to her family. These Feb. 1895, pp.329letters provide the reader with an occult perspective on the personal 385; Mar. 1895,
pp.411-415
life of an occultist.
Vol. 10, Apr. 1895,
pp.6-8; May 1895,
pp.33-37; June 1895,
pp.73-78; July 1895,
pp.105-108; Aug.
1895, pp.139-142;
Sep. 1895, pp. 169174; Oct. 1895,
pp.203-206; Nov.
1895, pp.235-240;
Dec. 1895, pp.267270
Dec. 1894
On The Watch-Tower.
G.R.S. Mead accuses The Path of hero-worshipping of H.P.B.
Lucifer,
Vol. 15, Dec. 1894;
pp.265-268
The Path, Vol. 9,
Feb. 1895; p.405
Chronology
Dec. 1894
continued
Referring to the allegations against W.Q. Judge in The Westminster Northern Theos.
Vol. 2, Dec. 1894;
Gazette the editor, E.A. Bulmer, remarks:
A clever barrister could throw discredit upon the doings of a saint, p.1
and a skilful journalist can so manipulate facts with his own
inferences and suggestions as to blacken the character of an
archangel.
Dec. 1894
continued
Circular issued by members of the T.S. in New York and Brooklyn, Circular Letter,
through Henry T. Patterson, F.T.S. and is submitted for the signatures 3 pages
of those members desiring to so express themselves.
American members have generally believed that Mr. Judge could and
did have communication with Mahatmas, but that belief is not due to
claims made by him. . . .
We do not think the charges can be proved or disproved. We think
that if we have any confidence in our brother, due to his nineteen
years of service, we must accept his statement that he has never
misused the names and handwritings of the Mahatmas; has never
attempted to mystify anyone; has never used any wrong methods. .
...
And, finally, we believe that Brother Judge was selected for the work
he has done and is doing, by some Power or Intelligence greater than
ours. . . . [Review of charges and events]
NOTE: See January 1st 1895 for the reprinted Circular (8 pp.), TO THE
MEMBERS OF THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY, signed by 121 American
members.
123
124
Dec. 1,
1894
Circular from the General Secretary (G.R.S. Mead) to the members of the
[Executive] Committee.
I herewith enclose you a copy of the names of the memorialists for
your information. You will at once see that it includes names that give
it great weight. . . .
. . . The memorialists do not demand a trial, they simply ask whether
or not the Lodges wish to invite Mr. Judge in the interests of the
Society to make some reply or state why he cannot. If the Lodges do
not wish it, the matter can then drop. If the Lodges wish it, then their
voice is paramount and the officials of the Section must give ear to it.
...
. . . It is certainly impossible, according to the finding of the
President, General Council and Judicial Committee, to try the VicePresident on the charges formulated against him in July, but it is
possible for the Lodges of the Section and the Sections of the Society
to say whether or not they are prepared to stand or fall by their VicePresident in the public estimation, without raising a finger of protest
against such a dangerous precedent. This we may be sure they will
state sooner or later, and it is better they should do so in order than in
disorder.
The Vahan,
Vol. 4, Jan. 1895;
pp.3-4
The Vahan,
Vol. 4, Feb. 1895;
Mead explained the purpose for the List of Memorialists in his p.1
NOTICE of Dec. 31, 1894. He stated:
I should also have been compelled to add that one of the express Light, Vol. 15, Jan.
purposes for which these signatures were obtained was to memorialize 12, 1895; p.21
the late Convention of the Indian Section.
Albert Smythe, Editor, listed only the English Theosophists who had The Lamp, Vol. 1,
expressed their opinions as to whether Mr. Judge, Vice-President of Feb. 1895; pp.108the Society, should be requested to reply to the charges recently 109
brought against him in the Westminster Gazette.
Among prominent English Theosophists who want an explanation
from Mr. Judge are Herbert Burrows, Laura M. Cooper, Miss Mller,
Dr. Wynn Westcott, W. Kingsland, Hon. O. Cuffe, Dr. Carter Blake,
M.U. Moore, Oliver Firth, Thomas Williams, and Sydney Old. Of
those who consider an explanation unnecessary Dr. Archibald
Keightley, Mrs. J.C. Keightley, Dr. H.A.W. Coryn, F.J. Dick, G.W.
Russell, W.A. Bulmer, E.T. Hargrove, Basil Crump, T. Green, H.T.
Edge, and Alice Cleather are well-known. Others await the acrobatic
feline.
NOTE: See Nov. 27, 1894 entry.
Dec. 3,
1894
Chronology
Dec. 3, 1894
continued
125
The New York Sun printed in full Judges reply to the accusations against The Path, Vol. 9,
Jan. 1895; p.322
him. In Literary Notes (The Path):
WESTMINISTER GAZETTE, hastening to try and gather the pecuniary
profits of its long attack on the T.S., at once, before the reply made by
Mr. Judge had reached it, got out the whole thing in the form of a
pamphlet in which it assumes on what it calls foreknowledge that no
reply would be made. Mr. Judges reply was about 5,000 words long,
and will call for a new edition if the thing is to be printed complete.
But that reply was printed in full by the New York Sun. The pamphlet
is a monument of assumption, presumption, and ignorance, combined
with malice and falsehood. It may be put on the shelf with the S.P.R.
Report on H.P.B. It is not sold by the PATH.
In a letter dated Jan. 25, 1895 to George R.S. Mead, W.Q. Judge
stated:
I have replied to the public newspaper in the only way it deserves. I The Path, Vol. 9,
have still under consideration a full reply to the T.S. respecting the Mar. 1895; p.433
real charges, but I have refused to be hurried until the right time. . . .
I have additional reasons for waiting until all possible innuendos and
distortions shall have come forth. . . .
NOTE: See Nov. 26, 1894 and Dec. 23, 1894 entries.
Dec. 9,
1894
Dec. 10,
1894
126
Dec. 15,
1894
Lucifer,
The Clash of Opinion re: Westminster Gazette articles.
Vol. 15, Dec. 1894;
G.R.S. Mead inserted:
I consider it my duty to insert with rigid impartiality the resolutions pp.337-342
of Lodges or expressions of opinion of groups of members, or the
letters of members immediately concerned in the present state of
affairs. Printed letters and resolutions.
The Clash of Opinion. To the Editor of LUCIFER
By Franz Hartmann. Stated he found Garretts pamphlet amusing, Jan. 1895;
however, appears in quite another aspect, if we regard it is an attack pp.427-428
upon the T.S. as a whole.
NOTE: See Dec. 9, 1894 entry.
Includes letters from T. Green, Julia and Archibald Keightley, and pp.429-434
others.
The Clash of Opinion. A LETTER TO THE EUROPEAN SECTION. Letter Feb. 1895;
pp.500-505
by G.R.S. Mead, Feb. 1, 1895, London.
Rightly or wrongly, I have until now considered it my duty to keep
silent on the present condition of affairs in the Theosophical Society.
...
I have hoped against hope that Mr. Judge would, of his own free will,
resign his office and relieve us from all this turmoil. . . .
MR. BERTRAM KEIGHTLEYS REPLY. (to the Westminster Gazette).
pp.505-507
Chronology
Dec. 19,
1894
127
Prasnottara,
Vol. 4, Nov./Dec.
1894; p.204
Light, Vol. 15, Jan.
12, 1895; pp.21-22
Annie Besant was in Australia at the time that Judge issued his Nov. 3rd, Eastern School of
1894 E.S.T. circular. She arrived at Colombo, Ceylon, on December Theosophy,
18th, on her way to attend the Adyar Convention. In response she 4 page circular
issued a counter-circular For E.S.T. Members Only from Colombo.
In it she stated:
The E.S.T. Order . . . I reject. I shall pursue my work quietly, with
such of the Council left by H.P.B. as think it right to work with me.
Mr. Judge thinks it right to rent the School in twain, and I can only go
on steadily as I have learned. We have come to the parting of the
ways. I recognize no authority in Mr. Judge. Not from his hands did
I receive my work; not into his hands may I surrender it. She closed
by stating members must choose between her and Judge and added:
No member can belong to both schools.
On her way to India . . . she prepared a long article on the Theos. Movement
Westminster Gazette attack, which she gave to the Madras Mail upon 1875-1950,
arriving at Adyar. This article contained a defence of herself and pp.245-249
accusations of Judge.
This public reply by Annie Besant to W.Q.J.s E.S.T. circular of The Path, Vol. 10,
November 3rd, 1894, By Masters Direction, violated the pledge of Apr. 1895; p.1
secrecy and privacy within the E.S. Judge wrote:
The charge is made publicly and privately, as well as in a set of
resolutions offered by Mrs. Besant and passed at a meeting in India in
December. It is based the fact that in a circular issued by me privately
in the E.S.T. I stated that the spiritual crest, the center, of the wave of
evolution is in the West and not in the East.
The Theosophical
Society and The
Annie Besant declared it to be public since part of Judges E.S. Westminster
circular was published in The Westminster Gazette.
Gazette, p.13
A Commonsense View of Mr. Judges Circular of November 3rd, 1894 Pamphlet, 8 pages,
by Bertram Keightley. [printed in Feb. 1895]
p.1
[Reprinted in] The Prasnottara.
NOTE: See Feb. 1895 also Dec. 23, 1894.
Prasnottara,
Vol. 5, No. 52, May
1895; pp.39-49
128
Mr. Bulmers remarks on Judges Nov. 3rd, 1894 Circular which declared Northern Theos.
Annie Besants headship in the E.S.T. at an end.
Vol. 2, Mar. 1895;
pp.25-26
NOTE: See Nov. 3, 1894 entry.
Dec. 21,
1894
Dec. 22,
1894
Letter to the Editor of The Vahan from Julia C. Keightley and Archibald The Vahan, Vol. 4,
Feb. 1895; p.13
Keightley.
A rumour having arisen that William Q. Judge is not himself the
author of Letters that have helped me, we ask your fraternal assistance
in contradicting this report. It is false.
The true account of the authorship of the Letters by Mr. Judge will
be found in the Irish Theosophist for January 1895.
NOTE: The correction appeared in the Feb. 1895 issue of The Irish
Theosophist, pp.87-88. See Jan. 13, 1895 entry.
Dec. 23,
1894
The Theosophical
Society and The
Westminster
Gazette,
16 page pamphlet
Daily Chronicle,
Jan. 16, 1895
Lucifer,
Vol. 15, Feb. 1895;
pp.505-507
Chronology
Dec. 23, 1894
continued
129
Letter From MR. HERBERT BURROWS: A REPLY WE MUST HAVE OR I LEAVE THE Isis Very Much
SOCIETY.
Unveiled, 2nd ed.,
I am a sceptic by nature, and I was then a materialist, and the honest pp.80-84
conclusion that I came to was that the case for the prosecution was far
too weak to warrant a conviction. That opinion I still hold. If I thought
differently I should be outside the Theosophical Society instead of in
it.
NOTE: See Oct. 2, 1895 entry.
Dec. 25-28,
1894
The Theosophist,
Vol. 16, Jan. 1895;
pp.8-11
p.10
The Path,
Vol. 9, Feb. 1895;
p.410
Mar. 1895;
pp.438, 442
General Report of
the 19th
Anniversary of the
T.S., 62 pages
130
Dec. 25-28,
1894
continued
General Report of
the 19th
Anniversary of the
T.S., 62 pages
Dec. 25-28,
1894
continued
Pamphlet,
15 pages, p.8
General Report of
the 19th
Anniversary of the
T.S., p.45
Lucifer,
Vol. 15, Feb. 1895;
pp.454-468
NOTE: See Apr. 1895, regarding the vote taken by the Australians.
NOTE: See Nov. 25, 1894; Nov. 26, 1894 and Feb 7, 1895 for related
articles in New York Sun.
Dec. 25-28,
1894
continued
From Annie Besants speech against Mr. Judge, at Adyar, Dec. 25, 1894. New England Notes,
I lay before you exactly the facts of the division in Europe and I tell Vol. 1, Jan. 1, 1895;
you my own personal opinions. When I return, there will be a very p.4
strong if not an overwhelming party in favor of the policy of truth, of
absolute honor and uprightness, and unless something is done, some
of our best people will immediately leave the Society and public
propaganda will be rendered well-nigh impossible.
NOTE: See Jan.1, 1895 for W.Q. Judge quoting H.P.B..
Dec. 25-28,
1894
continued
Lucifer,
Vol. 2, Apr. 1888;
p.141
BCW, Vol. 9,
pp.140-141
Chronology
Dec. 25-28,
1894
continued
131
Dec. 27,
1894
Dec. 30,
1894
Dec. 31,
1894
132
Letter from James M. Pryse, manager of the H.P.B Press, to G.R.S. Mead. The Vahan, Vol. 4,
As you refuse to insert full list of signatures to Dublin circular, I Feb. 1895; p.5
must therefore insist that all circulars and other matter on the same
subject be stricken from THE VAHAN. As co-editor I refuse to agree to
the publication of the paper in its present falsified and misleading
form, which purports to be an impartial representation of opinions,
when in fact it is only a partizan sheet which excludes one side from
a fair hearing.
Until both sides are published or none, I cannot consent to its
publication.
In a letter of reply to Mr. Meads response to the above:
Further, you announced your intention of breaking your contract with
the H.P.B. Press for no apparent reason.
1895[Early]
Est. Date
Garrett published 3rd edition of Isis Very Much Unveiled, Being the T.N.C.A.B.
Story of the Great Mahatma Hoax. 136 pp. This edition omitted the Item 1960, p.538
letters from Theosophists with Besants reply in the Jan. 15, 1895
Daily Chronicle.
Circa 1895
Jan. 1895
DEAR EDITOR Letter from Thos. Green dated January 1st, 1895.
Irish Theosophist,
The order came from Mrs. Besant and Bertram Keightley [in India] Vol. 3, Jan. 1895;
this morning to close the [H.P.B.] Press [in London]. Accordingly it p.68
is closed, and now regretfully we return the copy of the I.T.
[T]he H.P.B. Press converted into the Irish Theosophist Press. The Path, Vol. 10,
Pryse goes to Dublin. [see Irish Theosophist, Vol. 3, Apr. 1895; Apr. 1895; p.28
p.88]
[The H.P.B. Press was set up in 1891. T. Green was in charge along Lucifer,
with James M. Pryse who was the supervisor; managers were Vol. 9, Nov. 1891;
Countess Wachtmeister, Annie Besant, G.R.S.Mead, and E.T. Sturdy.] pp.254-255
At the Fifth Annual Convention of the Theosophical Society in
England, August 7th, 1889, Mr. Green spoke of the work of the
H.P.B. Press, which, although not an official activity of the Society,
and quite independent of the Societys funds, existed solely to help the
T.S. The printing-press belonged to Dr. Keightley, and was lent by
him, and the rest of the plant was provided by two members of the
Society.
NOTE: The H.P.B. Press printed most of the theosophical literature. The
closing of the Press may have been intended to cause financial harm
to Dr. Keightley who was a strong supporter of W.Q. Judge.
See An Introduction to Appendix F for more details about the Press.
English
Theosophist,
Vol. 3, Sep. 1899;
pp.120-124
Chronology
Jan. 1895
continued
133
Brief excerpts were printed in the Theosophic Messenger, Mar. 1905, T.N.C.A.B.
Item 1999, p.548
pp.120-121, and The Messenger, May 1915, pp.467-768.
In letters to the Editor, J. Keightley, E.T. Hargrove, and Roger Hall
[May 25, 1895] repudiate some of the alleged facts.
Irish Theosophist,
Roger Hall wrote:
[H.P.B.] said she knew she must soon leave us. I asked her about the Vol. 3, June 1895;
filling of the void. . . . She answered that W.Q. Judge was her favorite pp.158, 163-165
pupil and would worthily bear her mantle when she was gone. Shortly
after he came over on a visit and she introduced me to him, saying
distinctly that he was her destined successor. After he had gone back
to America she always spoke of him in the same way to me and, I have
no doubt, to others who were seeing her nearly every day.
NOTE: Mme Blavatsky knew she was to die soon. See End of March 1889
entry for details.
NOTE: See May 25, 1895 for more on Roger Halls letter.
Jan. 1895
continued
134
Jan. 1895
continued
Article by W.Q. Judge warning against BOGUS MAHATMA MESSAGES The Path,
Vol. 9, Jan. 1895;
pp.302-303
Echoes of the
Orient, Vol. 1,
pp.446-448
WQJ T. Articles,
Vol. 1, pp.369-370
Jan. 1895
continued
Jan. 1, 1895
Jan. 1, 1895
continued
Chronology
Jan. 4, 1895
Letter of Jan. 4, 1895 to A. Keightley from W.Q. Judge. Judge enclosed O.E. Library Critic,
an exact transcript of the Jany 3, 1895" message said to have been Vol. 22, Nov. 1932;
received by him from H.P.B. nearly four years after her death:
pp.6-8
Dr. A. Keightley (for Councillors etc.)
Comrades
Enclosed is an exact transcript of what HPB said to me Jany 3,
prematurely ended by a visitor as usual & as results from European
continual nagging at me. It is word for word. More will be said later.
You can let all worthy & devoted loyalists read this It may be read
in a proper group. Copies not to be made. This is to be with Council
papers.
Fraternally William Q. Judge
Go to no extremes in thought or act hereupon.
NOTE: See Appendix G, No. 7, for the Jany 3 [January 3rd] document
and notes by Dr. Stokes on this matter. This Jany 3" document was
written in Judges own handwriting and verified and declared to be a
copy of the original document, and to be accurate in every respect.
Signed by Joseph H. Fussell, Elsie V. Savage, Margherita Siren,
Helen Harris. Also see March 29, 1896 entry.
Jan. 5, 1895
135
Meeting of The Blavatsky Lodge (which had been adjourned from The Vahan,
December 15, 1894).
Vol. 4, Feb. 1895;
Mr. Mead: On Jan. 5th, when an adjourned meeting met to complete pp.2-3
the business, I ruled proxy votes out of order. I have since been taken
to task in an official letter to the Secretary of the Lodge from one of
the objectors to the resolutions, who writes: The refusal of the VicePresident [myself] to accept my proxy was, in my opinion, an
arbitrary, unjustifiable proceeding for which he had no authority.
NOTE: [myself] refers to G.R.S. Mead.
Now the fact is, that I held in my hands twenty-one proxy votes for
the resolutions and three against them. Mr. Burrows also held five
proxy votes for the resolutions. I would not allow these votes because
notice had not been given to the Lodge (consisting of upwards of 300
members) that proxy votes were in order. I leave my Section to decide
what truth there is in these unjustifiable accusations against my
honour, and in which direction partisanship lies.
NOTE See next entry for the results of that meeting.
136
Jan. 5, 1895
continued
The Blavatsky
moved by Herbert Burrows that the Blavatsky Lodge (London) ask Lodge of the T.S.,
W.Q. Judge to resign and reply to the charges. Three Resolutions were 1page circular
passed. A copy of these Resolutions was sent to every Lodge in the
Theosophical Society.
A special meeting of the Blavatsky Lodge was held on Saturday last, Light, Vol. 15,
when, on the motion of Mr. Herbert Burrows, it was resolved that, in Jan. 12, 1895; p.22
the interests of Theosophy, Mr. Judge ought definitely to reply to the
charges which had been brought against him, and till he had done so
should cease to hold the office of Vice-President.
Mr. T. Green issued a circular at the door inviting those who did not The Path,
agree with the action taken to unite in forming a new Lodge. . . .
Vol. 9, Feb. 1895;
H.P.B. Lodge is a new Lodge formed in London . . . in consequence pp.408-409
of the foregoing. . . . Some twenty persons signed for the Charter.
NOTE: See Jan. 11, 1895.
Jan. 5, 1895
continued
Jan 11,
1895
The formation of the H.P.B. Lodge, a new Lodge in London as a result of The Path,
the passing of resolutions by the Blavatsky Lodge.
Vol. 9, Feb. 1895;
NOTE: see Jan. 5, 1895 entry.
pp.408-409
Apr. 1895; p.31
Announcement by G.R.S. Mead, General Secretary:
I . . . announce the issue of a Charter, under date, January 11th, 1895,
to [list of names] . . . to be known as the H.P.B. Lodge of the The Vahan, Vol. 4,
Theosophical Society.
Feb. 1895; pp.14,16
Archibald Keightley (Pres.), Thomas Green (Vice-Pres.), Henry T.
Edge (Sec.), Basil Crump (Treas.), Mary E. Cuer (Libr.). First meeting
was held on Jan. 14th.
NOTE: See Jan. 15, 1895 regarding the first meeting of the H.P.B. Lodge.
Chronology
Jan. 12,
1895
137
E.S.T. circular by A.
Keightley, 17 pages
Echoes of the
Orient, Vol. 1,
p.xxxii
Letter to the Editor from Julia and Archibald Keightley correcting Irish Theosophist,
rumours that Master Hilarion wrote the letters in Letters That Vol. 3, Feb. 1895;
pp.87-88
Have Helped Me.
Those of us to whom the Master Hilarion is objectively, as well as
psychically known, have the best of reasons for asserting that these
letters were not from him, and we do so state now and here.
NOTE: See Dec. 22, 1894 entry.
Jan. 15,
1895
J.D. Bucks letter to the Editor with his objections to the article:
Irish Theosophist,
OCCULTISM AND TRUTH which had been published in Lucifer (Aug. Vol. 3, Jan. 1895;
1894, pp.442-443) and reprinted in The Path (Sep. 1894, pp.184- pp.66-68
185).
The Path,
NOTE: See Aug. 15, 1894 for W.Q. Judges added comments in The Vol. 9, Jan. 1895;
pp.320-321
Path.
A special meeting of the Aryan T.S. was held in New York while Mr.
Judge was in Cincinnati. Considered resolutions passed at Adyar at
the Annual Convention of the T.S. in India requesting the resignation
of Mr. Judge.
The Aryan T.S. passed a resolution requesting William Q. Judge not
to resign from the office of Vice-President of the T.S. and further
resolving that there is no necessity for the further investigation of the
charges made against William Q. Judge. It was further Resolved,
that the Trustees sign these relations on behalf of the Aryan Branch as
having been unanimously passed by a called meeting of the Branch,
notice of which was sent to every member; and that they be sent to all
the Branches of the Theosophical Society.
It was signed by all Trustees except Mr. Judge.
[Under Rules and By-Laws of the T.S., a member was responsible
only to his local Branch and tryable only by that Branch.]
The Path,
Vol. 9, Feb. 1895;
pp.409-410
The Path, Vol. 10,
Apr. 1895; p.29
138
Jan. 15, 1895
continued
Circular, 1 page
Letter from the
Board of Trustees
of the Aryan T.S.
1page
Dated Jan. 18, 1895
Resolutions unanimously endorsed by the Pacific Coast Committee and Pacific Theos.
Vol. 5, Feb. 1895;
several branches (list).
pp.112-113
Jan. 15, 1895
continued
The H.P.B. Lodge [London], at a meeting held on the 11th ult., The Path, Vol. 10,
unanimously passed a resolution expressing its entire concurrence in Apr. 1895; p.31
the decision concerning Mr. Judge recorded by the Aryan Lodge of
New York. [and] also passed other resolutions . . . expressive of its
entire confidence in Mr. Judge. . . .
List of Resolutions passed by the H.P.B. Lodge.
Four Dutch members wish to declare that they are in perfect The Vahan,
sympathy with the decision of the Aryan Lodge of New York Vol. 4, Mar. 1895;
concerning Mr. Judge.
pp.5-6
Jan. 16,
1895
Circular, 1 page
Lucifer,
Vol. 15, Feb. 1895;
pp.508-509
Mr. Fullerton of New York has issued a circular in which he states Prasnottara,
that in consequence of a message he has received, believed by him to Vol. 5, Mar. 1895;
be from the Master, he has surrendered his own ideas as to the p.12
necessity of Mr. Judge meeting the charges, and accepts Mr. Judge
completely.
Jan. 16, 1895
continued
Bertram Keightleys letter THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY to the Editor The Daily
of the Daily Chronicle pointed out discrepancies as to facts in Isis Chronicle,
Jan. 16, 1895
Very Much Unveiled by E. Garrett.
NOTE: See Dec. 23, 1894 and Dec. 27, 1894 entries.
NOTE: On Jan 15, 1895, The Daily Chronicle published Mrs. Besants
Dec. 23, 1894 reply from Adyar, Madras. Both Bertram Keightleys
and Mrs. Besants replies were later published as a 16 page pamphlet,
The Theosophical Society and The Westminster Gazette. See
Jan. 19, 1895 for more on Mrs. Besants reply to the Westminster
Gazette.
Chronology
Jan. 17,
1895
Mr. Judge returned to New York after a lecture tour to Fort Wayne on the
6th and 7th of January, Chicago on the 8th and 9th, Cincinnati on the 12th
to 15th. Hargrove commented that:
In 1881, and again in the summer of 1882, he [Mr. Judge] had spent
some time in Carupano, Venezuela, on business, and had suffered
severely from Chagres fever, a malignant type of malarial fever which
often leaves a predisposition to tuberculosis in its trail; but he could
have continued to repel that physical attack with ease, as he had done
for years, if it had not been for a far worse strain on his vitality,
namely, the strain of his resistance to the efforts of the Dark Powers
to kill him, the venomous hatred of his persecutors and slanderers,
once his close associates, supplying the lines of contact for the major
onslaught. These efforts culminated during the winter preceding the
Boston Convention.
139
140
Jan. 19,
1895
Jan. 20,
1895
Letter from A. Besant, written from Benares, to H.S. Olcott asking for the
documents on which the charges against W.Q. Judge were based:
I have to request that you will furnish me with the documents on
which were based the charges preferred by me last July against Mr.
W.Q. Judge.
A proposal has been made to call a Special Convention of the
European Section T.S. on my return to Europe, for the purpose of
discussing the attitude to be taken by the Section towards this case,
and there is a general demand for the production of these papers for
the information and guidance of Members. I therefore request you to
again place them in my care.
Lucifer,
Vol. 16, Apr. 1895;
pp.163-164
The Theosophist,
Vol. 16, Apr. 1895;
Supp. p.xx
NOTICE TO MEMBERS.
Prasnottara,
Mrs. Besant, Countess Wachtmeister and the General Secretary Vol. 5, Feb. 1895;
[Bertram Keightley], took up residence in the new Head-quarters of p.2
the Section at Benares on January 21st [1895].
Chronology
Jan. 21, 1895
continued
141
In TRUTH AND OCCULTISM. Dr. Buck denied the accuracy of Constance Irish Theosophist,
Wachtmeisters quote in her letter of Dec.21, 1894. She wrote: Do Vol. 3, Mar. 1895;
you remember telling me that I was right in believing that W.Q. Judge pp.89-90
had acted in a fraudulent and deceitful manner in sending out spurious
orders and messages. . . .
In his response (Jan. 21, 1895) Dr. Buck stated:
Aside from the insulting tone of the letter, which I pass by, I hereby
declare upon my honour that the above statements are from beginning
to end fabrications. There is not a word of truth in any single
statement therein contained.
Mrs. Besant having written Dr. Buck under date of Dec. 25th , 1894,
from Adyar: My poor friend, you told me you would take the karma
of defending Judge even at the cost of truth. Dr. Buck replied,
drawing a line under the words, even at the cost of truth: The
underlined portion is not mine, as you will see by referring to my
letter. . . . That means, if words have meaning, that I would disregard
known truth or wilfully prevaricate to uphold Judge. I never
knowingly did such a thing, or said it, or thought it.
Dr. Buck closed with:
America will disregard all these accusations (not disregard truth and
honour) and support Judge for his splendid work and character as we
know it. The evidence we have for him is far stronger than the
evidence yet brought against him. . . .
Note: See Dec. 21, 1894, Feb. 15, 1895, and Mar. 15, 1895
Jan. 25,
1895
The Path,
Vol. 9, Mar. 1895;
pp.433-434
The Path, Vol. 10,
May 1895; p.61
Pacific Theos.
Vol. 5, Mar. 1895;
pp.126-128
Lucifer, Vol. 16,
Mar. 1895; p.65
The Vahan,
Vol. 4, Mar. 1895;
pp.1-12
142
Jan. 25, 1895
continued
Irish Theosophist,
Vol. 3, Feb. 1895;
pp.85-86
Lucifer,
Vol. 16, Mar. 1895;
p.65
THE JUDGE CASE, FINAL REFUSAL TO GIVE COPIES OF DOCUMENTS TO Irish Theosophist,
ACCUSED.
Vol. 3, May. 1895;
pp.132-133
NOTE: See May 15, 1895 and Feb. 26, 1895 entries.
Jan. 25, 1895
continued
Jan. 26,
1895
Lucifer,
Vol. 16, Mar. 1895;
pp.66-67
Editorial notes, from Light, regarding Olcotts address at the Nineteenth Light, Vol. 15, Jan.
26, 1895; pp.37-38
Anniversary of the T.S.:
The rift in the Theosophical lute goes on widening. Mrs. Besants
long manifesto in the Daily Chronicle only makes it more clear that
Mr. Judge has been playing Mahatma. But the next day Colonel Olcott
came to the rescue in a very remarkable way. He, too, seems to imply
that Mr. Judge is guilty, but he opens a gate which promises to lead
into some very curious pastures at which also Mrs. Besant hints. The
suggestion is that Mr. Judge is a psychic or medium, and that he was
only used to produce forged papers. It is a dangerous doctrine, but we
shall hear much of it in the future, and society will have to add this to
its burdens and its puzzles.
NOTE: Mrs Besants long manifesto is found in The Theosophical
Society and the Westminster Gazette, (16 page pamphlet SS See
Dec. 23, 1895 and Jan. 16, 1895 entries).
NOTE: Also see Dec. 25-28, 1894 for more on Olcotts address or see
Appendix A, No. 5, for his entire address.
Chronology
Feb. 1895
143
Lucifer,
Vol. 15, Feb. 1895;
pp.441-467
Theos. Movement
1875-1950, p.247
NOTE: In Mrs. Besants The Case Against W.Q. Judge, p.82, she
stated that she was not able to produce documentary evidence as she
had destroyed it. [See Sep. 15-16, 1893]
Feb. 1895
continued
Feb. 1895
continued
Resolutions from the Indian Section asking W.Q. Judge to resign and from Lucifer,
some European Lodges asking him to reply to the charges made Vol. 15, Feb. 1895;
against him.
pp.509-514
Feb. 1895
continued
144
Feb. 1895
continued
Pamphlet, 8 pages
Lucifer,
Vol. 16, Mar. 1895;
pp.58-64
Prasnottara,
Vol. 5, May 1895;
pp.39-48
Feb. 1895
continued
A Letter to The
European Section
(circular) by G.R.S.
Mead, 6 pages
Lucifer,
Vol. 15, Feb. 1895;
Published in Lucifer under The Clash of Opinion. A Letter to the pp.500-505
European Section.
Theosophy, Vol. 15,
July 1927; p.391
Chronology
Feb. 1, 1895
continued
Letter from Mr. Fred J. Dick, of Dublin, to Branch Presidents of Lodges, The Vahan,
submitted corrections of dates and facts that were posted by Mead in Vol. 4, Mar. 1895;
Feb. issue of The Vahan. Criticized Mead for not posting the list of pp.3-4
names from the Dublin Lodge in support of W.Q. Judge. He claimed
that Mead had the list and refused to publish it. Olcott also refused to
bring the matter up at the Annual Convention at Adyar.
It was an expression of the convictions of many European Fellows
of the T.S. on matters before the Adyar Convention, and which
Colonel Olcott was, in my opinion, bound in honour to read to them.
Meads reply: I have simply to state that I received none of the copies
of the documents Mr. Dick refers to.
Feb. 1, 1895
continued
Feb. 1, 1895
continued
Brixton Lodge unanimously carried resolutions for W.Q. Judge not to Irish Theosophist,
resign and expressing its fullest confidence in William Q. Judge. Vol. 3, Feb. 1895;
p.85
A PROTEST. To Members of the Theosophical Society in Europe. The Vahan,
signed by Julia Keightley, A.L. Cleather, and others (24 in total). Re: Vol. 4, Feb. 1895;
G.R.S. Meads Notice of Dec. 31, 1894.
pp.6-7
NOTE: See Dec. 31, 1894.
Feb. 1, 1895
continued
Resolutions, etc., from Lodges and Centres as to what to do regarding The Vahan,
the accusations against Mr. Judge as well as Additional Signatures Vol. 4, Feb. 1895;
to the Dublin Lodge Circular. Formation of the new H.P.B. Lodge pp.10-16
was announced (p.14) and officers list (p.16).
Feb. 1, 1895
continued
Feb. 1, 1895
continued
W.A. Bulmer received many letters in reply to his Jan. 1895 editorial on Northern Theos.
Judge. Letters eulogistic, letters condemnatory, letters pitying, Vol. 2, Feb. 1895;
blaming, and praising me.
pp.17-18
145
146
Feb. 3, 1895 A Forgotten Pledge by Che-Yew-Tsang (E.T. Hargrove). Written without Pamphlet, 14 pages
Mr. Judges knowledge or consent, in which he revisited The
Meaning of a Pledge an article said to have been written by Dr.
Archibald Keightley which had appeared in Lucifer Vol. 3, pp.63-67.
Mentioned that Mr. Judge had endured similar attacks by
Theosophists as H.P.B. did.
Who was the centre of the attacks levelled some years ago? That
centre was H.P.B. And as that great conductor of the Societys Karma
is no longer visible here . . . another has to fill the office of scapegoat.
That scapegoat is William Q. Judge. If befoulment is necessary from
without, let it not come from within! The wise bird does not soil its
own nest.
NOTE: See H.P.B. letters to Judge Mar. 19, 1887 and Feb. 15, 1895
entries. See next cell for The Meaning of a Pledge.
Feb. 3, 1895
continued
Feb. 3, 1895
continued
Chronology
Feb. 4, 1895
continued
Feb. 5, 1895
Letter from G.R.S. Mead, Gen. Sec. European Section T.S. to W.Q. Judge The Vahan,
in response to Judges letter of Jan. 25, 1895. Accused Judge of Vol. 4, Mar. 1895;
publishing shameful attacks on others.
pp.2-3
It certainly would have been proper for you to resign in July until
you had fulfilled the promise made in your first circular of March 15th,
1894, that you would be willing to have the matter investigated,
though not officially by the Judicial Committee. In July you argued
that the charges did not lie against Vice-President, and now you argue
the exact contrary. The reason for resignation is to avoid friction and
stress in the Society and does not fix guilt upon you. Such resignation
is the invariable custom.
Claimed that Judge was not satisfied with an exact copy of every
word she would have used before the Judicial Committee but that he
wanted the original letters handed over to him.
NOTE: See Jan. 25, 1895 for W.Q. Judges letter.
Feb. 6, 1895 Letter from the Secretary, Fred J. Dick, of The Dublin Lodge to the Irish Theosophist,
Executive Committee of the European Section T.S.
Vol. 3, Feb. 1895;
At a meeting convened for the purpose of considering a Voting Paper p.85
issued by Mr. Mead . . . held this evening, it was
Resolved: That this Lodge declines to take action by voting either for
or against the suggested Resolution for the following reasons,
namely:
1. That Mr. Mead has exceeded the duties of his office in issuing such
Voting Paper:
2. That the vote would be Unconstitutional:
3. That it calls in question the decision of the Judicial Committee
appointed under the Constitution:
4. And therefore that this Lodge declines to be bound by the result of
any such vote.
NOTE: See Feb. 1, 1895.
147
148
Mr. Judge whose health has utterly broken down, left New York on the The Path, Vol. 9,
13th for a months rest and treatment. It is hoped that change of air and Mar. 1895; p.439
relief from work will enable him to rally.
Early in 1895, Mr. Judge went to Mineral Wells, Texas, trying to
regain his health. Katherine Tingley had rented a house for him, and
by taking care of him and acting as his amanuensis when he was too
ill to write himself. . . .
He later returned to New York to prepare for the Boston Convention.
Feb. 15,
1895
WQJ T. Pioneer,
p.34
Echoes of the
Orient, Vol. 1, p.liii
Irish Theosophist,
Vol. 3, Feb. 1895;
p.73
WQJ T. Articles,
Vol. 1, pp.242-243
Chronology
149
HISTORY REPEATED
Irish Theosophist,
A letter of H.P. Blavatsky, dated Ostende, March 19th, 1887, seems Vol. 3, Feb. 1895;
so applicable to the present hour that we have permission to repeat it pp.76-77
thus in print. Ed.
Having heard from my dear old W.Q. Judge how kindly disposed you
are toward me, and having received from him several messages on
your behalf, let me tell you how grateful I feel for your kind
expressions of sympathy.
Yes, the work has brought upon me contumely, ignominy of all
kinds, hatred, malice and slander. Were it only from the outsiders I
would mind very little. But, sad to say, it is the Theosophists chiefly
who tear me to pieces. . . .
Dear and far distant friend, that is private and strictly confidential. I
open my poor old aching heart before you. If Judge has such a great
esteem for you, you must be worth all that he thinks.
NOTE: See March 19, 1887.
Irish Theosophist,
Vol. 3, Feb. 1895;
pp.79-81
Irish Theosophist,
Vol. 3, Feb. 1895;
pp.84-85
WQJ T. Articles,
Vol. 2, pp.309-310
Irish Theosophist,
Vol. 3, Mar. 1895;
pp.106-107
150
Feb. 15, 1895
continued
Feb. 16,
1895
Chronology
Feb. 16, 1895
continued
Letter from George W. Russell re: Besants implication that the ethical Lucifer,
principle on which the defence of Mr. Judge was based is contradicted Vol. 16, Mar. 1895;
by the teaching of the Master.
pp.68-69
NOTE: Refers to Some Words on Daily Life [see Sep. 15, 1891 entry]
and WHY I BECAME A THEOSOPHIST [see Sep. 15, 1889 entry].
Feb. 17,
1895
Letter of Wm. Lindsay to Countess Wachtmeister from London, (posted Irish Theosophist,
March 1st). Countess Wachtmeister had thought fit to publish in Vol. 3, May 1895;
Lucifer part of Wm. Lindsays letter to her. He therefore sent a copy p.141
of the full text to the Irish Theosophist with a request to publish it.
It read in part:
What you told me was, that before H.P.B. died she showed you a box
wherein was Masters seal, and that immediately after H.P.B.s death
you took the box with the Masters seal in it into your keeping, and
that the box was not in anyone elses hands till given over by you to
Annie Besant on her return from America. When the box was opened
by Annie Besant the Masters seal was not to be found in it, and all
that took place before Mr. W.Q. Judge came to England [May 21,
1891].
NOTE: Refer to Mar. 20, 1895, letter of Countess Wachtmeister and to
April 23, 1895 for letter from William Lindsay.
NOTE: See also May 9, 1891 (est.); May 28-29, 1891; 1892; May 14,
1895 entries.
151
152
Feb. 18,
1895
Feb. 21,
1895
The Theosophist,
Vol. 16, Apr. 1895;
Supp. p.xx
Lucifer,
Vol. 16, Apr. 1895;
pp.163-164
Chronology
Feb. 23,
1895
153
154
Feb. 26,
1895
Irish Theosophist,
Letter from Sinnett to The Irish Theosophist.
In reference to an article by Mr. Judge in the last number of The Irish Vol. 3, Mar. 1895;
Theosophist [AN OLD MESSAGE FROM THE MASTER], I feel reluctantly pp.106-107
compelled to deny that I regard the message he sent me as genuine.
NOTE: See notes of Feb. 15, 1895.
Feb. 27,
1895
Lucifer,
Vol. 16, Apr. 1895;
pp.159-160
The Path,
Vol. 10, Apr. 1895;
p.23
Pacific Theos.
Vol. 5, Apr. 1895;
p.151
NOTE: See Feb. 1895 entry. THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY AND THE
PRESENT TROUBLES.
Mar. 1895
(Early)
Chronology
Mar. 1895
(Early)
continued
CORRESPONDENCE.
The Path,
Letter from E.T. Hargrove explaning why the identity of Che-Yew- Vol. 9, Mar. 1895;
Tsang wasnt revealed in the February issue of The Path as promised p.434
in the circular A Forgotten Pledge.
The reason for this silence was that I had intended the article on Our
Overwhelming Virtues to appear in the same number as the letter to
Julius, if the editor would allow it. The article was to have been
signed Che-Yew-Tsang, with the name Ernest T. Hargrove in brackets
beneath. If that arrangement had been carried out there would have
been no need to give the latter name in the letter to which I refer. I
wrote accordingly to the editor before the arrival here of the January
issue. When this arrived I found in it Our Overwhelming Virtues, but
owing to great pressure of work I failed to catch the February issue in
time to make the necessary alteration and arrange for the insertion of
the name in the letter to Julius. That is all.
NOTE: See Feb. 3, 1895 A Forgotten Pledge. Also see in The Path, for
the letter to Julius. Vol. 9, Feb. 1895, pp.401-402
NOTE: See May 1, 1895. A. Besants version on how she came to know
of the identity of the Chinaman.
Also see May 21, 1895.
Mar. 1895
155
156
Mar. 5,
1895
According to Mr. Neresheimer, at 10 oclock a.m., this date, instructions To the Members of
were received through Mrs. K. Tingley (then anonymous as the E.S.T.
Promise) from the Masters. . . . it was through this person that the Apr. 3, 1896; p.16
instruction was given to us. . . . in the following words:
March 5th, 1895. This course should be adopted at the Convention;
it cannot be avoided. If any time is wasted much will be lost; a split
should be declared in such a way that it will leave the door open for
the others when they wish to restore harmony. America must insist
that it can no longer submit to such friction, intolerance and
untheosophical work.
It declares itself independent until the disrupting forces bring the
fight to a close. Unless this is done another year will pass in turmoil
and strife and the chief aims of the Masters work retarded.
You must fix it so that it will be well planned and no mistakes.
Consult with SSSSSSS at once.
San Francisco and Boston will join heartily; others will follow.
Under no circumstances must Mr. Judge know of this.
NOTE: See Nov.25, 1931 entry.
Mar. 5, 1895
continued
A Circular letter to Fellow Theosophists by Robert B. Holt from London. Circular letter,
1 page
Claimed that:
Two things seem to be forgotten by some of us. First that our
allegiance is due to Truth only; secondly, that all pledges are given to
the moral law.
It is because I cannot reconcile these duties with the pretensions of
Mr. Judge that I am compelled to renounce his leadership. . . .
When grave charges were reluctantly formulated against him [Mr.
Judge], instead of meeting them with the frankness proper to a man
conscious of his integrity, he endeavoured to stifle all enquiries with
legal technicalities.
Mar. 11,
1895
Pacific Theos.
Vol. 5, Apr. 1895;
pp.151-152
The Path, Vol. 10,
Apr. 1895; pp.23-24
Chronology
Mar. 15,
1895
157
158
Mar. 15, 1895
continued
Lucifer,
Vol. 15, Feb. 1895;
pp.441, 456 [441468]
NOTE: See issues of the Annual Convention of the Indian Section Dec.
25-28, 1894 and Feb. 15, 1895 and Feb. 1895 for outline of contents.
Mar. 15, 1895
continued
Chronology
Mar. 15, 1895
continued
159
The Path,
Vol. 9, Mar. 1895;
pp.430-431
Lucifer,
Vol. 16, July 1895;
pp.375-379
Echoes of the
Orient, Vol. 1,
p.448 [448-454]
Echoes of the
Orient, Vol. 2,
pp.49-52
NOTE: See Besants comments in March 1895 (late) and Feb. 14, 1894.
Mar. 15, 1895
continued
PERSONAL NOTES.
The Lamp, Vol. 1,
Mr. Judges ill-health has rendered a months absolute rest Mar. 1895; p.125
imperative.
Note by D.N. Dunlop that in 1889 H.P.B. gave Mr. Judge a photo, on Irish Theosophist,
which are the following words: To my dear and loyal colleague, Vol. 3, Mar. 1895;
W.Q. Judge. This bears the Masters signature. I believe Mrs. Besant p.108
has seen it, and declared it to be genuine.
Mar. 19,
1895
Letter by A. Keightley to G.R.S. Mead defending Dr. Zander, H. Coryn The Vahan, Vol. 4,
and himself against allegations made by Mead that they accepted Apr. 1895; pp.4-5
Judge unqualifiedly and they therefore have no choice but to
support Mr. Judge in all his policy.
Also commented on Mead advocating that Besant publish the
prosecutors brief against Judge which is incomplete and onesided while still refusing to furnish Judge with copies of the
evidence.
Meads reply: It is time for all of us to have this document before us. p.6
If it is so unfair, so weak, so paltry, it will be all the easier for Mr.
Judge to refute it.
160
Mar. 20,
1895
Circular, 2 pages
To Fellow Theosophists, by Robert B. Holt.
Mrs. Besant gave her entire confidence to Mr. Judge and he betrayed Mar. 20, 1895
it. . . .
Think what it must have cost a woman of her ability and reputation
to have to add, I now know they were not written or precipitated by
the Masters, and that they were done by Mr. Judge. This was publicly
acknowledging herself to be a duped simpleton. But Truth demanded
the avowal and she unhesitatingly made it.
Defends Besants honor, maintaining that she was sincere in bringing T.N.C.A.B.
charges against Judge.
Item 1964, p.539
NOTE: See also Mar. 5, 1895 for Robert B. Holts first Fellow
Theosophists circular.
Chronology
Mar. 27,
1895
161
POSTSCRIPT
The Theosophist,
H.S. Olcotts rebuttal to Judges publication of the Prayag Letter.
Vol. 16, Apr. 1895;
[Olcott] pronounces the message a false one and if this is likely to pp.475-476
shatter H.P.B.s oft-declared infallibility as the transmitter of only
genuine messages from the Masters, so let it be: the sooner the
monstrous pretence is upset the better for her memory and for a noble
cause. . . . [T]he writer . . . reiterates, for the hundredth time, that
H.P.B. was as human and fallible as either one of us, and that what
she wrote and taught, and what was written through her, should be
judged strictly on its intrinsic merits and by no standard of presumed
authority. . . .
. . . Is it not absurd, then, to imagine that any Master, in even the
most casual relations with the Society, would indulge in this insulting
attack upon Brahmanic philosophy. . . .
NOTE: See Mar. 15, 1895 entry.
H.S. OLCOTT VS. H.P.B. by W.Q. Judge.
Olcott does not like [the Prayag Letter] because he lives in India, and
it is too gallingly true. . . .
The message condemns bigotry. The persons to whom it was sent
were then of the most theologically bigoted families. . . . [T]o their
superstitions, to their upholding idolatry, to the horrors of caste, the
letter adverts. The whole letter rings true and strong.
The Path,
Vol. 10, June 1895;
pp.81-83
WQJ T. Articles,
Vol. 2, pp.332-334
Echoes of the
Orient, Vol. 2,
pp.203-204
Theosophy, Vol. 3,
June 1915; p.374
The Path,
Vol. 10, June 1895;
pp.96-97
162
Mar. 1895
(Late)
continued
Mar. 1895
(Late)
continued
Circular, 2 pages,
[date estimated
March 1895 from
Albert Smythes
notes]
T.N.C.A.B.
Item 1949, p.536
THE LAST THREE YEARS OF THE LIFE OF MADAME BLAVATSKY. The Path,
Countess Wachtmeister wrote to Claude F. Wright:
Vol. 9, Mar. 1895;
As my book, the Reminiscences of H.P. Blavatsky and the Secret p.435
Doctrine, has been read with such interest all over the world, it seems
to me that it would be an admirable plan to follow it up by carrying on
the threads from where I dropped them, through to the end of her life.
To the Readers of the PATH: By C.F. Wright.
Acting on the suggestion contained in the letter from Countess
Wachtmeister, I am at present actively engaged in collecting
reminiscences, personal and otherwise, of H.P.B. during the last three
years of her life. . . .
Chronology
Apr. 1895
163
Apr. 1895
continued
Isis and the Mahatmas: A Reply by William Q. Judge (approximate Pamphlet, 30 pages
date). Includes W.Q.J.s reply to the New York Sun (Nov. 26, 1894),
also To the Editor of the The Westminster Gazette, and other
correspondence relating thereto and lastly, A FINAL WORD TO THOSE WHO
DEMAND MR. JUDGES RESIGNATION PENDING HIS DETAILED REPLY.
NOTE: See Nov. 26, 1894.
Apr. 1895
continued
LUCIFER for April continues the persecution of Mr. Judge and his friends. The Path, Vol. 10,
. . .
June 1895; p.101
The Clash of Opinion.
Lucifer,
Letters from B. Keightley, Annie Besant, H.S. Olcott, J.D. Buck, A. Vol. 16, Apr. 1895;
Keightley, and others published.
pp.159-165
NOTE: See March 1895 (Early) regarding demands by the Indian Section
for explanations from W.Q. Judge.
Apr. 1895
continued
Apr. 1895
continued
After her return to England on April 21st, 1894, Annie Besant issued The Theos. Movement
1875-1950, p.248
Case Against W.Q. Judge (88 pages) [See April 2, 1895 entry.]
Detailed six charges against W.Q. Judge and reviewed events of the
Judicial Committee Meeting and thereafter. [Published Apr. 29, 1895]
NOTE: The charges and evidence Mrs. Besant advanced were reviewed
in detail by a barrister, Mr. Basil Crump, who offered the opinion that
the case was ill framed and quite inadequate. From preface to
conclusion it would be childs play to pick to pieces and pulverise.
[See his pamphlet, May 5th, 1895. Also see Dec. 1894.]
Theos. or NeoMrs. M. Thomas comparison and analysis of The Case Against W. Theos. by Margaret
Thomas, pp.64-67
Q. Judge.
164
Apr. 1895
continued
Apr. 1895
continued
The Path,
Vol. 10, Apr. 1895;
pp.1-5
WQJ T. Articles,
Vol. 2, pp.284-289
Echoes of the
Orient, Vol. 1,
pp.454-458
The Path,
Vol. 10, June 1895;
pp.81-83
p.205
Echoes of the
Orient, Vol. 2,
pp.203-204
WQJ T. Articles,
Vol. 2, pp.332-334
Echoes of the
Orient, Vol. 3,
pp.470-472
NOTE: See letter (Prayag Letter) written from Dehra Dun by H.P.B. to
A.P. Sinnett. The bulk of the letter apparently is a direct dictation of
M. to H.P.B. See Appendix B, No. 1, for Letter No. CXXXIV from
Dehra Dun from The Mahatma Letters to A.P. Sinnett 2nd edition
pp. 461-464. Also see Mar. 15, 1895 entry.
Apr. 1895
continued
Chronology
Apr. 1895
continued
165
Apr. 1895
continued
On March 26th . . . . the following cablegram, which, with other Irish Theosophist,
letters of the same [supportive] tenor from New Zealand and Vol. 3, Apr. 1895;
Australia, are in sufficiently amusing contrast with Mrs. Besants pp.123-124
prophecy upon Australian matters as confidently expressed to the
Adyar Convention last December.
Vigilate, London. Sydney Branch votes in confidence Judge.
Foregoing received from Sydney. Reuter.
SOME QUOTATIONS.
Pertaining to EAST AND WEST from K.H., H.P.B., M.M. Chatterji,
and Damodar in contrast to Mrs. Besants prophecy.
NOTE: See Dec. 25-28, 1894. Re: A. Besants assumption that she had
gained the confidence of the Australian Theosophists by her influence.
The Australian Section split after visit from Besant.
Sep. 1895; p.228
In a letter from Mr. Willans, on behalf of twenty-three members in
Australia and two Centres in N. Z., he detailed the methods that were
adopted to obtain the vote and influence of the Australian Section in
favor of Mrs. Besants action in the Case against W.Q. Judge. . . . a
devoted group of workers in Australia and N. Z. . . . have, through all,
remained loyal to Mr. Judge, and who have upheld the principles of
Theosophy.
Apr. 1895
continued
166
Apr. 1895
continued
Apr. 1,
1895
Apr. 2,
1895
Mrs. Besant left for Bombay en route for England. She delivered two Prasnottara, Vol. 5,
lectures in Bombay, April 4th and 5th, before leaving. She arrived in Apr. 1895; p.31
England on the 21st.
On April 2nd Mrs. Besant left [Benares] for Bombay en route for The Theosophist,
England and delivered two lectures there on April 4th and 5th. . . . She Vol. 16, May 1895;
sailed April 6th.
p.531
Apr. 3,
1895
The Plot Against the Theosophical Society by Dr. A. Keightley & Pamphlet,
others is published. Narrated the facts and the opinions concerning the 89 pages, published
period July 5th - 19th, 1894 using reprinted articles supporting Judge in London
from the Irish Theosophist, The Path, and The Vahan, and E.T.
Hargroves A Forgotten Pledge, as well as Luciferian Legends, by
Archibald Keightley, which appears for the first time.
This pamphlet is issued in defence of various members of the
Theosophical Society who have recently been attacked in Lucifer and
The Vahan. Mr. W.Q. Judge, Vice-President of the Theosophical
Society, has been, and still is, the outer object at which these attacks
have been made, but all who have ventured to say a word on his behalf
have also been singled out for calumny. H.P. Blavatsky is the inner
centre of attack, but behind the Messenger there is the Message, and
it is Theosophy which is really being assaulted.
NOTE: See notes for Apr. 6, 1895.
Chronology
Apr. 6,
1895
167
p.3
pp.4-8
pp.9-22
pp.23-24
p.24
pp.25-27
NOTE: With the exception of: Some Words by H.P.B. and Some pp.27-34
Words on Daily Life by a Master of the Wisdom, the material printed
in this is the same as that found in The Plot Against The T.S. printed
in England. Much condensed.[see Apr. 3, 1895 entry]
Apr. 17,
1895
Irish Theosophist,
Vol. 3, May 1895;
pp.137-140
Lucifer,
Vol. 16, Apr. 1895;
pp.159-162
NOTE: See Jan. 20, 1895 entry for Olcott letter; also Jan. 25, 1895 for
letter from Judge to Mead.
LITERARY NOTES Re: The Irish Theosophist:
The Path,
Letters to the Editor has a striking contribution from Ernest T. Vol. 10, July 1895;
Hargrove, which does not put Mr. B. Keightley in a very pleasant p.131
light. . . .
Apr. 19,
1895
We hear from America that a movement is on foot among Mr. Judges Prasnottara,
supporters in the American Section for the purpose of getting Vol. 5 June 1895;
Resolutions adopted at the coming American Convention, declaring pp.57-59
that the American Section secedes from the Theosophical Society and
no longer remains part of our world organisation.
168
Apr. 19, 1895
continued
Apr. 21,
1895
Letter to Miss A. Walsh from A. Fullerton stating he had changed his Pamphlet, 2 pages
mind regarding the stand he had taken in his circular of Jan. 16th. He
indicated he had withdrawn from the E.S.
You are quite right in saying that we, opponents of secession, are the
real F.T.S., and that those who secede simply cut themselves off from
the T.S. itself.
NOTE: See May 14, 1895.
Apr. 23,
1895
Letter from William Lindsay in which he re-affirmed his version of the Irish Theosophist,
facts and addressed Bertram Keightleys endorsement (With regard Vol. 3, May 1895;
to the seal, I was present when the Countess denied having ever seen pp.141-142
it. . . .):
Of course I am not responsible for the truth of the statement made by
the Countess, but only for the correct rendering of such, as told to me,
which I maintain I have done and, after all, the principal point remains
unchanged, viz., that the seal was gone before W. Q. Judge came to
England.
NOTE: See Appendix A for more information regarding the Masters
sealand some of the correspondence relating to it; also see Feb. 17,
1895, and Mar. 20, 1895.
Chronology
Apr. 23, 1895
continued
169
Apr. 26,
1895
Apr. 27,
1895
A.P. Sinnetts letter to A. Fullerton after Judge published the Prayag Theos. Movement
Letter (under title A MAHATMAS MESSAGE TO SOME 1875-1950, p.258
BRAHMANS), on his suspicions of H.P.B.
. . . I have known for a great many years that many letters in the
Mahatmas handwriting, coming through Madame Blavatsky herself
were anything but what they seemed. (Originally printed by the
Boston Herald on April 27th, 1895.)
Theosophy,
NOTE: See May 1895 and Jan. 16, 1895.
Vol. 3, June 1915;
General comments by the editors of Theosophy on Sinnetts views. pp.376-379
Note: A detailed look at the Mars & Mercury & Earth Chain controversy Theosophy,
which restarted in Feb. 1893 with a rebuttal in The Path by Judge to Vol. 10, Feb. 1922;
pp.101-107,
statements made by Sinnett.
170
Apr. 27, 1895
continued
NOTICE.
The Path,
Mr. Alexander Fullerton, late Treasurer of the American Section and Vol. 10, May 1895;
member of the Executive Committee, as well as volunteer assistant to p.65
the General Secretary and Editor of The Theosophical Forum, retires
from all official positions at Headquarters upon April 27th.
NOTE: See Apr. 22, 1895 and May 14, 1895 entries.
Apr. 28,
1895
Mrs. Besant delivered her first public lecture in St. James Hall, on
Mahatmas as Facts and Ideals.
The next day, Sunday April 28th, Mrs. Besant was to have a meeting
with [a] very strong Committee of the most earnest members in
Europe . . . for the purpose of verifying the documentary evidence in
her hands and attesting the accuracy of all extracts and the fact that no
portion of the contest is omitted from the printed evidence which in
any way bears upon the questions at issue.
Prasnottara, Vol. 5,
June 1895; pp.57-58
Lucifer, Vol. 16,
May 1895; p.251
The Convention of the American Section of T.S. was held at Boston, Theos. Movement
April 28-29, 1895, with the 89 active Lodges all represented by 1875-1950, p.250
delegates in person or by proxy.
The Convention was held at the new Headquarters in Boston.
The Path, Vol. 9,
Feb. 1895; p.406
Ninth Annual Convention of The American Section T.S. and First Convention
Theosophical Society in America held in Boston, Mass., April 28-29, 1895. Pacific Theos.,
Resolved . . . that the American Section, consisting of Branches of Vol. 5, May/June
the Theosophical Society in America, in convention assembled, 1895; pp.155-161
hereby assumes and declares its entire autonomy and that it shall be
called from and after this date The Theosophical Society in Circular, 2 pages
America.
That William Q. Judge shall be President for life. . . .
Resolutions carried 191 for, and 10 against.
Mr. A. Fullerton took the floor against the resolutions and spoke for
half-an-hour. . . . He concluded by asserting that the proposed change
was only a personal matter around Mr. Judge, and that if they would
only wait a month they would have all the evidence to prove him
guilty.
NOTE: Fullertons speech can be read in Report of Proceedings for the
Ninth Annual Convention, T.S. In America held at Boston Apr. 2829, 1895, starting on p.25.
The Path,
Vol. 10, May 1895;
pp.65-72
The following is the protest presented to the Convention by some of the Lucifer,
minority, who remain loyal to the parent Society: . . .
Vol. 16, May 1895;
We also put ourselves on record as deprecating the methods pp.253-254
employed by Mr. William Q. Judge. . . .
. . . we hereby solemnly protest against any such secession. . . .
Chronology
171
Report of
Proceedings T.S. in
America, 1895;
pp.18-24
NOTE: See Sep. 7, 1895 and Dec. 27, 1896 for Olcotts A Historical
Retrospect.
Apr. 28, 1895
continued
NOTICES.
Apr. 29,
1895
The Case Against W.Q. Judge. Published by Annie Besant at the Offices Pamphlet, 88 pages
of the Theosophical Publishing Society, London, Apr. 29, 1895.
The Path,
William Q. Judges Explanation of the charges made against him Vol. 10, June 1895;
read to the delegates after the April Convention at Boston, is being p.104
printed, and will soon be accessible to all members.
Contains Besants Statement prepared for the July 1894 Judicial T.N.C.A.B.
Committee, along with a breakdown of the six main charges brought Item 1947, p.535
against Judge and evidence by Olcott and B. Keightley. Says if
definite action on Judge is not taken at the July European Convention,
she and G.R.S. Mead will put forth resolutions from Australian,
Indian and European Sections asking Olcott as President to expel
Judge from the Society. A variation of this pamphlet exists as 80 pp.
NOTE: See compilers Introduction to The Case Against W.Q. Judge,
in Appendix A, for an explanation regarding this 80 page edition.
NOTE: See June 1895 for replies by J.D. Buck and W.Q. Judge to a
statement made by Besant on page 13 in The Case Against W.Q.
Judge.
Apr. 29,
1895
continued
Pacific Theos.
Vol. 5, May/June
1895; pp.155-161
172
Apr. 29, 1895
continued
Cdn. Theosophist,
Vol. 13, May 1932;
pp.67-68
Apr. 30,
1895
Letter from the Independent Theosophists of Boston criticizing the action Circular, 1 page
taken at the Annual Convention of the American Section calling the
members Judgites. Followed by a rebuttal by Kalekamiyuen (A.W. Boston Herald,
Wadhame). [This article was to appear in Atmas Messenger for May Apr. 30, 1895
1895.]
THE JUDGITES. A Theosophical Pope. Independent Theosophists
Protest. (from Boston Herald, Apr. 30, 1895)
Issued from Boston, protesting the formation of the T.S. in America,
election of W.Q. Judge as President thereof, and calling for responses
from those of similar opinion.
By The Independent Theosophists of Boston.
Pamphlet, 29 pages
Circular, 1 page
The Theosophist,
Vol. 16, July 1895;
p.659
Chronology
Apr. 30, 1895
continued
Fellow Theosophists:
The Theosophist,
Hence the wish to secede is not unanimous. . . .
Vol. 16, July 1895;
. . . For practical work, the American Section has always been pp.660-661
virtually independent. Every Branch is, according to the Constitution,
a self-governing body. Like our own United States Government, the
T.S. is a federation of independent centres under one constitution and
one head. Therefore, secession has not been declared for the sake of
independence. Its true purpose is to shield Mr. Judge. . . .
. . . Remember, those who stand firm against secession form the real
T.S.
Very much opposed to the pamphlet dated New York, April 6th, 1895,
in support of W.Q. Judge, but support Mr. Fullertons actions against
secession. Signed by Marie A. Walsh, William John Walters (Editors
of Mercury) and Sven Ryder.
May 1895
Letter from Annie Besant. (Just returned to England Apr. 21, 1895)
The Vahan,
I hold out my hand to all who will stand in the Theosophical Society Vol. 4, May 1895;
for straightforward dealing and honest work, and ask them for help p.6
and support.
May 1895
continued
May 1895
continued
May 1895
continued
THE PAGEANT OF THE FIFTH ACT: A Study of Mrs. Annie Besant. Pamphlet, 4 pages
By Herbert Coryn.
Once a fervent Christian, glowing with emotional Christianity; once
pupil of Bradlaugh, and fervent Freethinker; once Fabian Socialist;
once devoted follower of H.P.B.; now Hindu; what next? . . .
After leaving Christianity she tried to destroy it. Then, becoming
Socialist, she opposed herself to the Bradlaughites. Withdrawing from
the next position she took shelter with H.P.B.; now, breaking the
Theosophical Society into halves, she becomes Hindu. . . . A psychic
vision which she thinks to have been the thought-body of the Master,
dissolves the faith in Judge that once was perfect. . . .
. . . She does what in the moment seems to her right, but a wandering
comet can have no place in a system. Her genius is rather destructive
than constructive. [Footnotes have been omitted.]
173
174
May 1895
continued
May 1,
1895
The Chinaman.
The Vahan,
Annie Besants version of her knowing of E.T. Hargroves Vol. 4, May 1895;
pseudonym. Mrs. Keightley sent word asking me to go up to her pp.4-5
sitting-room, where I found her with Mr. Hargrove and Dr. Keightley;
she said , I have a present for you, here is a Chinaman who will do
you any service. She then said she trusted to my honour not to
mention to anyone that Mr. Hargrove had written under the above nom
de plume, and only told me, trusting to my good faith.
NOTE: See Feb. 3, 1895; March 1895 (early); May 14, 1895, May 21,
1895 and June 1895. Also see Hargroves letter in Appendix E.
May 2,
1895
Chronology
May 5,
1895
175
Circular, 4 pages
THE CASE AGAINST W.Q. JUDGE. A REVIEW.
By Basil Crump, Barrister-at-Law.
He found Mrs. Besants evidence superficial, unsubstantial, not
based on solid evidence or facts, and therefore, inadmissible in any
court, or before any unprejudiced group.
Poor Mrs. Besant, her Prosecutors brief is a sad failure. . . .
. . . If this case were being tried before a proper tribunal, there would
certainly be no defence required. But alas! it is being tried by lynchlaw. And what proof have we in this brief? . . . THERE IS NO
PROOF. . . From preface to conclusion it would be childs play to
pick to pieces and pulverise. . . .
. . . Of such flimsy arguments and proofs this brief is composed
from cover to cover. Foolish, irrational, and utterly dumbfounding to
those of us who once looked up to Mrs. Besant as one who then
possessed an unusual degree of intellectual power. . . .
. . . No Court of Law would look at an extract, apart from the
document as a whole. It is simply outrageous that these extracts
should be put forward as evidence. . . . [T]he various messages and
letters alleged by Mrs. Besant to have been received by her from Mr.
Judge, have been destroyed by her! I am not able to produce
documentary evidence (p.82) I destroyed all the letters I received
from Mr. Judge. And Mrs. Besant cites these letters as evidence
against him! . . . Extracts have been preserved; the letters themselves
have been destroyed by the prosecutor.
Mr. Crump stated that by 1895 W.Q. Judge had been a Chela for
twenty years, then added:
Why should she be a judge in matters of Occultism? She has only
been in the Theosophical Society for five years, before which she was
an avowed Atheist and Materialist.
NOTE: See Apr. 29, 1895 The Case Against W.Q. Judge. London
Published by Annie Besant.
May 8,
1895
To . . . Dear Friends:
Circular, 3 pages
The Vahan,
Vol. 4, June 1, 1895;
pp.1-2
176
May 8, 1895
continued
Secession of Mr. Judge and his Adherents in America from the The Vahan,
Theosophical Society. Including Mr. Judges letter to Col. Olcott Vol. 4, June 1, 1895;
published as Farewell Remarks . . . [See next cell.]
pp.1-2
Col. Olcott supplied the summary of the convention:
The majority of delegates at the late Convention of the American
Section of the Theosophical Society resolved themselves into a new
society as fellows: S
The Resolutions passed at the Boston Convention are then listed.
W.Q. Judge, the President of T.S. in America, sent Colonel Olcott
information of the action of the Boston Convention with copies of the
Resolutions there passed and the Historical Sketch. On June 5th
Olcott issued what he termed an EXECUTIVE NOTICE from Zumarraga,
Spain, abolishing the American Section of the T.S. [See June 5, 1895
entry.]
NOTE: Interestingly this Circular and letter from Mr. Judge to Col. Olcott
appears to have been then forwarded by Olcott to The Vahan and
signed by Col. H.S. Olcott, [as] President-Founder of the T.S. of New
York. [What is interesting and may perhaps be important is why
Olcott would choose to sign in this manner.] [See June 1st, 1895 for
Olcotts travel dates.]
NOTE: See June 5, 1895 entry re: Olcotts Executive Notice.
May 8, 1895
continued
May 14,
1895
The Vahan,
Vol. 4, June 1, 1895;
p.2
Irish Theosophist,
Vol. 3, June 1895;
pp.157-158
WQJ T. Articles,
Vol. 2, pp.330-331
Circular, 4 pages
A Narrative by Alexander Fullerton.
His description of events from 1890 to date including his experience Not for Publication
with the seal and Mahatmic communications received through
W.Q.J. Narrated his vacillations, back and forth, in favor of then
against Mr. Judges position.
Chronology
May 14, 1895
continued
May 15,
1895
Notice of Resolution to expel W.Q.J. prepared by Annie Besant and Lucifer, Vol. 16,
G.R.S. Mead was sent to members of the T.S.
May 1895; p.183
If some definite action with regard to Mr. Judge shall not have been
taken by the European Section before the meeting of its Annual
Convention in July, we the undersigned . . . shall propose and second
at the Convention the following resolution:
Whereas Mr. W.Q. Judge has been called on to resign the office of
Vice-president of the Theosophical Society by the Indian,
Australasian and European Sections, but has not complied with their
request; and
Whereas he evaded the jurisdiction of the Judicial Committee of July,
1894, refused a Jury of Honour, and has since given no full and
satisfactory explanation to the Society in answer to the charges
brought against him;
Resolved that this Convention of the European Section of the
Theosophical Society unites with the Indian and Australasian Section
in demanding his expulsion from the Society, and requests the
President-Founder to immediately take action to carry out the demand
of these three Sections of the Theosophical Society.
177
178
Irish Theosophist,
Vol. 3, May 1895;
W.Q. Judges reply to H.S. Olcotts letter of Feb. 26, 1895 in which pp.132-133
Olcott stated that Judge had no right to have copies of the evidence
against him. Judge claimed otherwise:
WQJ T. Articles,
The law requires inspection and copies of letters if demanded by the Vol. 2, p.324
accused; Theosophy and brotherhood would not require less than
law.
NOTE: See Feb. 26, 1895.
The Path,
Vol. 10, July 1895;
Article mentioned. . .
pp.130-131
FINAL REFUSAL TO GIVE COPIES OF DOCUMENTS TO ACCUSED.
Chronology
May 15, 1895
continued
179
LITERARY NOTES.
The Path,
The editor, in summarizing the May issue of The Theosophist stated: Vol. 10, July 1895;
In the review of the Path we are told that H.P.B.s letters are p.131
inaccurate and misleading to a degree. [In reference to serialized
Letters of H.P. Blavatsky in The Path, started in Vol.9, Dec.1894,
p.265]
In The Theosophist, under REVIEWS. MAGAZINES., in reference to The The Theosophist,
Vol. 16, May 1895;
Path:
If we have the least influence with the Editor of our New York p.527
contemporary, we should beg him not to publish any more of H.P.B.s
letters without the most careful revision. They are inaccurate and
misleading to a degree; trifling incidents of our early days being
distorted and exaggerated beyond recognition.
NOTE: See June 1895, H.S. Olcott vs H.P.B.
pp.137-140
Letter To the Editor of THE IRISH THEOSOPHIST. from G. Rowe and W. Irish Theosophist,
Box of Bow Lodge T.S.
Vol. 3, May 1895;
We send you herewith the monthly report of this Lodge and trust you pp.140-142
will be able to find room for it in your magazine. Unfortunately we are
precluded from the pages of The Vahan by the censorship now being
exercised by its editor; for this identical report was sent to The Vahan
for insertion, only to be mutilated by having every word that referred,
in terms of trust and loyalty, to W.Q. Judge cut out.
The Bow Lodge T.S. report follows.
NOTE: May 2, 1895 entry.
180
May 20,
1895
Chicago Branch repudiated the action of the Boston Convention which Chicago, May 20,
formed the American T.S. In a letter dated May 20 signed by George 1895, Circular, 1
E. Wright as President, he states:
page
We remain a regularly chartered Branch of the parent Theosophical
Society.
MIRROR OF THE MOVEMENT.
The Path, Vol. 10,
Loyalty Branch T.S.
June 1895; p.103
The Chicago branch split; those supporting American T.S. formed
Loyalty Branch T.S.:
At a meeting of the old Chicago Branch to ratify the action of the
recent Convention not all the members favored it, and to avoid friction
and to have the opportunity of carrying on the work . . . the members
favoring the resolutions . . . withdrew and reorganised themselves into
a society under the above name. . . . A Preamble and Resolutions
concerning the reorganization were adopted at the meeting. . . .
Theosophical Activities, under AMERICA detailed a fraudulent Lucifer,
message ascribed to M, received by George Wright, which included: Vol. 16, June 1895;
The duty of the American group is cut off from the diseased parts pp.344-346
(sic) so that itself can live. . . .
This document was written in the M. script, on heavy rice-paper,
scented with sandal-wood, and was surreptitiously placed in the desk
of Mr. G.E. Wright . . . who was opposed to secession. . . . Mr. Judge,
Mr. Claude Wright and Dr. and Mrs. Keightley pronounced the letter
genuine, and it promptly found its way to the press as having
reached Mr. Wright occultly. . . . the fact being concealed that Mr.
G.E. Wright repudiated the letter, and knew exactly the occult means
by which it had reached his desk.
NOTE: See July 5, 1895 and June 1895.
William Q. Judge was staying in Cincinnati with Dr. Buck. In a letter to Letters That Have
a friend he wrote about the state of his own health:
Helped Me, p.185
I am away from home for my health (which is) much hurt by others
hate. * * *
Besant has had what ought to be her last say, and I read to delegates
at our Convn my explann of the charges my last word. It will
soon be published.
NOTE: The letter is included, in chronological order, in Appendix D, Part
V, Letters from W.Q. Judge to E.T. Hargrove.
Chronology
May 21,
1895
181
Julia C. Keightley [Jasper Niemand] in a letter To the Editor of THE IRISH Irish Theosophist,
THEOSOPHIST corrected Countess Wachtmeister on the matter of Vol. 3, June 1895;
H.P.B.s reincarnation.
pp.158-159
[T]he Countess Wachtmeister has apparently misunderstood me to
say that I believed H.P. Blavatsky to have reincarnated in a physical
body. I never had and have not such belief. I have no knowledge upon
the subject, one way or the other, but I always inclined and do still
incline to the contrary belief. I also believe H.P.B. to be consciously
working on the inner planes of Being.
In a letter (reprinted in The Irish Theosophist pp.158-159) to the The Vahan,
Editor of The Vahan which appeared under title The Legend of Vol. 4, July 1895;
pp.3-4
Che-yew-Tsang., Julia C. Keightley stated:
When working with or for Mrs. Besant, whether in America or in
England, I always required from her her directions in writing, in order
to guarantee myself against her constant forgetfulness and her
characteristic inability to admit herself to be mistaken. . . . my
experience inclines me to the belief that Mrs. Besant, when she
changes her mental attitude, forgets much of what she thought and
said under the influence of a prior state of consciousness. Also
clarified some facts on the Chinaman controversy.
May 25,
1895
June 1895
The Path,
Vol. 10, June 1895;
pp.81- 83
WQJ T. Articles,
Vol. 2, pp.332-334
182
June 1895
continued
Letter from J.D. Buck to the EDITOR PATH on Besants pamphlet, THE CASE The Path, Vol. 10,
AGAINST W.Q. JUDGE.
June 1895; p.97
In referring to a message which she [Besant] says informed her that
Master did not write certain messages and that Mr. Judge did, the
following occurs in parenthesis:
(I informed few people of this last year, but among the few were Mr.
Judge, Dr. Buck and Dr. Keightley, so that they knew on whose
authority my knowledge was based. . . .)
Mrs. Besants memory is entirely at fault on the point; she never told
me that Master made any such declaration to her.
In a conversation with Mrs. Besant in Richmond Park I asked her if
Master ordered her to bring these charges against Mr. Judge. Her
reply was, He ordered me to take action. This is all she said on the
matter. There was not the slightest reference to any previous message
on the subject.
See p.13 of The Case Against W.Q. Judge, which is included in
Appendix A, No. 8. [See April 29,1895.]
NOTE: Also see Sep. 15-16, 1893; March 15, 1895, and Apr. 6, 1895.
Denial by Judge. Most emphatically I state that Mrs. Besant never said p.97
to me that which, on page 13 of the pamphlet Dr. Buck refers to, she
asserts having informed me of last year: i.e. that she had learned from
Master that the messages were not done by Him but by me! [See
April 29, 1895.]
June 1895
continued
EDITOR PATH:
The Path,
Vol. 10, June 1895;
pp.98-100
Theos. Movement
1875-1950, p.249
Mrs. Besant told us at Richmond that she had had no order from the
Master except take action. That she took orders through Mr. The Path,
Chakravarti as coming from the Master. That it was Mr. Chakravarti Vol. 10, June 1895;
who told her Master ordered her to mail the letter requesting Mr. p.98
Judge to resign. And she admitted occult ties with a group of
Brahmins in India, such ties being prohibited by the rules of a private
body to which we and she then belonged.
NOTE: See Feb. 8, 1894 and Feb. 14, 1894 entries.
Chronology
June 1895
continued
June 1895
continued
Mrs. J. Keightley, in her letter of May 21, 1895 on misstatements made by Irish Theosophist,
Annie Besant regarding the Chinaman episode, wrote:
Vol. 3, June 1895;
Having read in The Vahan for May, 1895, the statement of Mrs. pp.158-159
Besant in regard to the Chinaman episode, I ask your editorial
courtesy in order to say, definitely and clearly, that that statement, as
such, is wholly incorrect.
Mr. Hargroves long letter of May 31st, 1895, regarding this subject p.164
follows Mrs. Keightleys.
As Mrs. Besants article in the May Vahan, containing the abovementioned incorrect assertions and accusations, required comment in
the same journal, I wrote a letter to the editor endorsing Dr.
Keightleys statement of fact. . . . Mr. Mead had not the common
courtesy to acknowledge the receipt of this letter, nor, as I see, did he
insert it.
Basil Crump (Barrister at Law):
p.164
I certify that I have seen the originals of all the letters quoted or cited
by Mr. Hargrove, and that these quotations are correctly given.
NOTE: See May 15, 1895 for ADEPTS AND MEDIUMS by Basil Crump.
NOTE: See also May 1, 1895, May 14, 1895 and May 21, 1895.
Comments on letters from Mrs. Keightley and E.T. Hargrove in June The Path, Vol. 10,
Irish Theosophist.
Aug. 1895; p.161
The Vahan printed Mrs. J. C. Keightleys letter of May 21st, 1895, The Vahan, Vol. 4,
under title The Legend of Che-Yew-Tsang. Also included are a July 1895; pp.3-5
letter from H. Burrows, and comments by G.R.S. Mead.
NOTE: See June 19, 1895 for H. Burrows letter and Meads comments.
June 1895
continued
183
184
June 1895
continued
June 1,
1895
June 1, 1895
continued
The Path,
Vol. 10, July 1895;
pp.135-136
Theos. Forum
(New Series),
Vol. 1, June 1895;
pp.30-31
Northern Theos.,
Vol. 2, July 1895;
p.74
Mrs. Annie Besant . . . declared it a personal attack on herself and an The Path,
insult to those upholding her. . . . [F]ully half the hall arose and Vol. 10, Aug. 1895;
protested against the purblind and fanatical attitude that had brought pp.164-165
about the repudiation of a document intended to draw harmoniously
together for the greater advancement of our cause all workers in the
Movement.
NOTE: See also July 4, 1895.
June 1, 1895
continued
Secession of Mr. Judge and his Adherents in America from the The Vahan,
Theosophical Society.
Vol. 4, June 1, 1895;
The majority of delegates at the late Convention of the American pp.1-2
Section of the Theosophical Society resolved themselves into a new
society as fellows:
Resolutions are listed.
NOTE: See June 5, 1895, entry for Olcotts EXECUTIVE NOTICE from
Spain.
Chronology
185
June 2,
1895
CORRESPONDENCE.
The Path, Vol. 10,
Letter from Franz Hartmann arguing that T.S. in America is the Aug. 1895; p.160
original Society.
The Vahan states that the American Section has seceded from the
main body of the T.S. This is not true in my opinion. I know of no
other T.S. than the one started in America. . . . I acted as the Delegate
of the Parent body of the T.S. to the Indian division at Adyar in 1883
at their anniversary meeting, and I reported back to New York. Thus
the real T.S. in America has merely resserted its original
independence. . . .
June 2, 1895
continued
Pamphlet, 20 pages
186
June 5,
1895
EXECUTIVE NOTICE.
Issued by H.S. Olcott from Zumarraga, Spain, regarding T.S. in
America. Abolished American Section of T.S., cancelled all charters
and diplomas, asked for all Sectional archives and other property and
explained the legal status of the T.S.
The undersigned notes with regret that the American Convention was
led into the adoption of the wholly false and misleading idea, that the
Theosophical Society, now existing, is not de jure the continuation of
the Society which was formed by H.P.B., the undersigned, and our
colleagues, at New York in 1875, but an adventitious body, the growth
of circumstances, and having no real corporate authority over its
Sections and Branches. There is, however, at Adyar, the original
Record Book of the proceedings of Council, in which, in Mr. Judges
own handwriting, and signed with the name of Mr. A. Gustam, the
then Recording Secretary T.S., is written the report of a meeting of
Council, held early in 1878, at which the President was given full
discretionary powers to establish Headquarters wherever he chose, to
adopt whatever measures he might see fit in the Societys interest, the
Council ratifying in advance whatever he might do. This record is
unfortunately in India at this moment, but it has been written for, and
will be published at the earliest practicable date, for general
information. It will then be seen how unsupported by facts is the
record of the Societys history which was laid before the American
Convention and before the counsellor-at-law, whose professional
opinion was obtained thereupon. . . . As President-Founder, therefore,
the undersigned declares that the Theosophical Society has had an
unbroken existence from the date of its foundation in 1875 to the
present day, and that every charter and diploma issued by it under its
seal and over the Presidents signature, has been valid and of
constitutional force. . . .
Finally, the undersigned gives notice that Mr. W.Q. Judge, having by
his own act lost his membership in the Society, is no longer its VicePresident, and the said office is now vacant.
NOTE: See Aug. 23, 1895 for L.F. Wades analysis according to the Bylaws. Also see Dec. 27, 1896 for A Historical Retrospect (18751896) of the Theosophical Society.
NOTE: See April 26, 1895 and Sep. 7, 1895 for Olcotts 4 page
EXECUTIVE NOTICE.
June 5, 1895
continued
NOTE: See May 8, 1895 entry, for letter from Judge to Olcott.
In his EXECUTIVE NOTICE, H.S. Olcott appoints . . . a special
Committee . . . to have charge of all American Affairs pending the
issue of a Section Charter, and as Presidential Agents to supervise the
proper organisation of the new American Section of the Theosophical
Society.
NOTE: Also see May 20, 1895 and June 1, 1895 entries.
Circular, 4 pages
Lucifer,
Vol. 16, July 1895;
pp.421-425
The Theosophist,
Vol. 16, Aug. 1895;
Supp. pp.xlii-xliv
Prasnottara,
Vol. 5, July 1895;
pp.73-78
The Vahan,
Vol. 4, July 1895;
pp.1-3
Partial reprint in
New England Notes,
Aug 23, 1895; p.124
Chronology
June 5, 1895
continued
187
Theos. Forum
(New Series),
Vol. 1, July 1895;
pp.45-46
The Path, Vol. 10,
Aug. 1895; p.164
June 5, 1895
continued
June 5, 1895
continued
Proposed Programme for the European Convention of July 4th and 5th, Pamphlet, 7 pages,
1895, and announcing that H.S. Olcott will be in the chair.
issued June 5, 1895
Suggestion for the Rerganization of the T.S., including a Draft of
a Proposed Constitution for The Theosophical Society in Great Britain Pamphlet, 4 pages
and Ireland, following the impending separation of the T.S. in (not dated)
Europe into two distinct bodies.
June 8,
1895
June 10,
1895
Lucifer,
Vol. 16, July 1895;
p.353
188
June 14,
1895
Letter from Olcott to the Presidents of Branches who have joined the T.S. Letter, 1 page
in America asking them to return their Charters and all diplomas of
members who were in favor of the secession.
Report by A. Cleather.
The Path,
The agenda for the forthcoming [European] Convention is now out, Vol. 10, July 1895;
and the policy of Mr. Judges persecutors is therein partially pp.134-135
disclosed.
She commented regarding Olcotts June 5th EXECUTIVE NOTICE:
You are all cut off, root and branch, your diplomas cancelled, and
your names erased from the roll kept at the Societys Headquarters,
Adyar! It is a sorry document, this, to be issued by the man who
could had he so chosen have kept the Theosophical movement
one and undivided.
June 15,
1895
Annie Besant attacked the formation of T.S. in America, called it a Irish Theosophist,
secession.
Vol. 3, June 1895;
p.166
The only comfort remaining to the disembodied ghosts of the Lucifer,
thousands of self-imagined members of the non-existent Society, and Vol. 16, June 1895;
to Colonel Olcott, their shadowy and illegal chief, is that he is pp.265-266
graciously allowed to retain the unique and honorary title of
President-Founder, by the Theosophical Society of America an
honorary title truly, as he presides over nothing, and is founder of a
non-existing organization.
Chronology
June 15, 1895
continued
189
Extracts of H.P.B.s letters on W.Q.J. were published. The Editor states: Irish Theosophist,
Some [letters] are written as late as 1890. . . . Two are . . . to Mr. Vol. 3, June 1895;
Judge . . . who was prevailed upon to give them to friends on account pp.154-157
of their prophetic nature. ED.
Letters That Have
If knowing that W.Q.J. is the only man in the E.S. in whom I have Helped Me, p.279
confidence enough not to have extracted from him a pledge. . . . There
is nothing I would not do for him and I will stick to him till death
through thick and thin. . . . He has to be defended whether he will or
not. . . .
I trust Judge more than anyone in the world. . . . He has numerous
enemies who work against him underhand and openly too. . . .
H.P.B.s comments on value of The Path magazine:
He who does all and the best that he can and knows how does
ENOUGH for Them. This is a message for Judge. His Path begins to
beat The Theosophist out of sight. It is most excellent. . . . The Path
alone is his certificate for him in Theosophy.
Irish Theosophist,
Vol. 3, June 1895;
p.154
Theos. or NeoTheos. by Margaret
Thomas, p.56
June 19,
1895
190
June 20,
1895
June 27,
1895
Theos. Movement
1875-1950, pp.25354 [253-258]
W.Q. Judge referred to his letter of May 2nd, 1895 to Olcott, and answered
Olcotts June 5th EXECUTIVE NOTICE regarding the retention of
property by T.S. in America.
The American Society became The Theosophical Society in
America and legally turned over to its successor its archives and
property; and as the Section ceased to exist on April 28th; and as
neither Col. Olcott nor any other person has any right, title or interest
in the property of the former Section, and never did have, his demand
is ridiculous.
pp.415-421
The Path,
Vol. 10, Aug. 1895;
p.164
Theos. Forum
(New Series),
Vol. 1, July 1895;
pp.45-46
Chronology
July 1895
191
The Path,
Vol. 10, July 1895;
pp.125-127
Lucifer,
Vol. 3, Oct. 1888;
pp.89-93
HPB Theos.
Articles,
Vol. 1, p.287
July 1895
continued
July 1895
continued
Theos. Forum
(New Series),
Vol. 1, No. 3,
July 1895; p.48
The Path, Vol. 10,
Aug. 1895; p.168
The Formation of
The Council, 1 page
The Search Light,
Apr. 1898; p.29
192
July 1, 1895
Chronology
July 4, 1895
continued
193
Report of
Proceedings
European Section,
Pamphlet, 46pages
p.19
Dr. Archibald Keightley, President of the H.P.B. Lodge, then asked Lucifer,
that a resolution of Mr. Coryns challenging the de jure existence of Vol. 16, July 1895;
the Society, should be taken before the election of officers. The pp.353, 358-360
president ruled that the motion was out of order. . . .
Mrs. Annie Besant: . . . the preamble of the letter is meant to
prejudge the case. . . . It is in inverted commas, and meant to point to
the fact that we are a non-existent body. . . . . . I would pray you not
to indorse it, for to accept it in any way would be to deny your own
existence, which is an absurdity. . . . I would ask . . . to allow the letter
to be read, and then let it lie on the table, passing it over in absolute
silence so to speak (No); because if we indorse it, we condemn
a large number of our brothers; if we accept it, we also condemn
others. . . .
The Chairman then read the letter which had been received from the
Society in New York, which was received with loud applause.
Report of
Proceedings
European Section,
Pamphlet, 46pages,
pp.23-25
p.27
At 2:45 p.m. a large meeting was held by those holding to the The Path,
principles of Theosophy . . . for the purpose of organizing the T.S. in Vol. 10, Aug. 1895;
Europe.
pp.164-166
On the motion of Dr. Coryn, William Q. Judge was unanimously and p.166
with acclamation elected President of the T.S. in Europe.
194
July 4, 1895
continued
Mr. G. Mellis voiced a protest as to whether Olcott should chair the Report of
meeting on the ground that the charges brought against him by Mrs. Proceedings
Besant had not been cleared up. . . .
European Section,
p.2
Besant denied making any charges against Olcott.
I rise to say that I have brought no charges of any kind against The Path, Vol. 10,
Colonel Olcott.
Aug. 1895; p.165
This was apparently greeted with Astonished silence among the
members acquainted with the facts.
NOTE: See The Theosophical Movement (1875-1925) pp. 326-333 for
a brief history of this incident.
NOTE: See Dec. 1895 for The Resignation Mystery, 1892.
With reference to Mrs. Besants statement at the European Section Irish Theosophist,
Convention, that she had brought no charges of any kind against Vol. 3, Sep. 1895;
Colonel Olcott, Bro. E. A. Neresheimer of New York writes, that in p.228
case some confusion should exist in the minds of those not acquainted
with the facts, he thinks it right to state that Mrs. Besant went to the
U.S. in 1892 expressly for the purpose of bringing accusations against
Colonel Olcott, and that upon the strength of those accusations
Colonel Olcott was asked to resign. He also states that the account
given by Mr. Judge in his reply is correct.
Report from Alice Cleather:
The public withdrawal of Mr. Herbert Burrows from the T.S., news The Path, Vol. 10,
of which has doubtless reached you, seems to have created some little Nov. 1895; p.264
stir. He sent a letter of explanation to half the principal dailies in the
kingdom apparently, so the public feel they know all about it. In his
withdrawal he raises the question of Mrs. Besants denial of ever
having brought charges against the President-Founder.
NOTE: See Oct. 2, 1895, for more information about Besants denial.
July 5,
1895
Chronology
July 5, 1895
continued
195
Theos. Movement
Convention of European Section continued:
Olcott declared that the former American Section had seceded from 1875-1950, p.254
the Theosophical Society, thereby abrogating its charter, and asserted
that the T.S. in America, formed at Boston, was an adventitious body,
the growth of circumstances, and having no real corporate authority
over its Sections and Branches.
ANNUAL CONVENTION OF THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY IN EUROPE.
(ORGANIZED AUTONOMOUSLY AS SUCH.)
Following the proceedings [of the Fourth Annual Convention of the
European Section, July 4 & 5], the delegates, members of branches
and unattached members who had found it necessary to protest against
the actions of the European Section T. S., first, in rejecting the
resolution of Dr. Coryn to consider the legal relation of the co-called
European Section T.S. to the Parent Society established at New
York in 1875, and second, the refusal to send a fraternal reply to the
letter of greeting sent by the T.S. in America, assembled. . . . Dr.
Coryn was elected chairman, and D.N. Dunlop was elected secretary
to the meeting. . . .
Dr. Keightley, having arrived, then took the chair. . . .
Dr. Coryn moved and G. Mellis seconded that Mr. William Q. Judge
be President of the T.S. in Europe. . . .
The Letter of Greeting from the T.S. in America to the European
Section T.S. was then considered, and E.T. Hargrove read a draft
reply thereto. This was agreed to and accepted, subject to the altered
conditions, and was ordered to be sent. [The Letter was sent July 6th,
1895.] . . .
The representatives of the English group of Branches then proceeded
to elect officers for current year as follows: Dr. Keightley, President;
W.A. Bulmer, Vice-President; and H.T. Edge, Treasurer. . . .
The Irish delegates also met and proceeded to elect officers for their
national division as follows: D.N. Dunlop, President; Geo. W. Russell,
Vice-President; F.J. Dick, Treasurer.
FIRST
NOTE: See Lucifer, Vol.16, July and August 1895; pp.358 and 415.
NOTE: See July 4, 1895 Fifth Annual Convention of the European
Section T.S. held at London, July 4th and 5th, 1895. Report of
Proceedings. First Annual Convention of the T.S. in Europe, pp.39-46
Irish Theosophist,
Vol. 3, July 1895;
pp.182-188
The Path,
Vol. 10, Aug. 1895;
pp.165-166
Sep. 1895; p.198
Oct. 1895; pp.230231
196
July 6,
1895
Theos. Forum
(New Series),
Vol. 1, Sep. 1895;
p.80
Aug. 15,
1895
European Section
Lucifer,
Since [the Convention of the European Section], the members Vol. 16, Aug. 1895;
withdrawing from the meeting with their friends have formed a new pp.512-513
society, to be known as the Theosophical Society in Europe. To
prevent any misunderstanding as to the reason for this step, Mr. Judge
has been elected President. . . .
Chronology
Aug. 15, 1895
continued
On the expectation of Hargroves visit to Toronto, Albert Smythe gives The Lamp, Vol. 2,
his comments on the Che-Yew-Tsang controversy.
Aug. 1895; p.1
Mr. Hargroves literary ability has been the source of a notable
controversy. Under the pseudonym or psychonym of Che-Yew-Tsang
he addressed two articles entitled, Some Modern Failings, to Lucifer,
which that journal published in October and December, 1893. The
Editor was made aware of the identity of the author, but the associate
editor was not until some time subsequently, when, smarting under the
impression that he had been had somewhere, and by a Chinaman at
that, he challenged the right of anyone to conceal himself under a
nom-de-plume. If people rely on their own judgement and approve or
disapprove of the utterances they meet with, not according to the
source from which they may understand these utterances to emanate,
but according to their intrinsic value as it appears to them they will
avoid the necessity of untimely recantations.
NOTE: See March 1895, May 1, 1895, May 14, 1895, May 21, 1895, and
June 19, 1895 entries.
Aug. 17,
1895
A Letter to Mrs. Annie Besant on The recent Crisis in the Theosophist Pamphlet, 4 pages
Movement. From Amy Constance Morant.
Then came your letter of the 11th of June (in answer to mine reporting
progress) in which you said, as you will remember, I have no
intention, further, of entering into any platform controversy on the
Judge question, having done all that I consider to be my duty about
him. . . .
In her conclusion, Morant stated:
I am compelled now as once before, many years ago, in a large
Socialist meeting I was compelled to act and speak in direct and
uncompromising opposition to the course you are pursuing.
Morant also [e]xplains that the American Section had only voted for
autonomy, but Olcott in his June 5 EXECUTIVE NOTICE had declared T.N.C.A.B.
that by so doing, they had seceded. Says she will follow Judge as Item 1986, p.544
Pres. of the T.S. in Europe.
NOTE: Morants pamphlet also includes a brief reply by A. Besant dated
Aug. 22, 1895.
197
198
Aug. 23,
1895
NOTE: See April 26, 1895, also June 5 and 27, 1895.
Aug. 30,
1895
The Path,
Mr. Ernest T. Hargrove arrived on the St. Louis from England on the Vol. 10, Sep. 1895;
30th of August. Mr. Hargrove is coming to this country to lecture and p.199
aid in other fields of labour for the Cause. No definite tour has been
mapped out for Mr. Hargrove so far, but further particulars of his
work will appear in the PATH.
NOTE: See July 1895 entry regarding Hargroves departure from England.
Sep. 1895
UNFOUNDED CHARGES
The Path,
In a letter to the Editor, Claude Falls Wright wrote:
Vol. 10, Sep. 1895;
Mr. Alfred Faulding states that on a letter received by him from me pp.191-192
some weeks ago, were written some words in another handwriting
from my own. He therefore accuses me (to others, not to myself,) of
having written the sentence or sentences in that other handwriting and
of trying to make him believe these were written from Master. As I did
not put the writing there, and as I did not cause anyone else to put the
writing there, and as I was not aware until I thus heard through a third
party of its existence on my letter, I have written to Mr. Faulding
denying such charge and make this public statement in order that all
friends may know the actual facts in the case. . . .
. . . Certain it is that I did not put it on, and certain it is that Mr.
Faulding has stated that the writing is there.
It seems to me that all have had lessons enough in accusing brothers
of misdeeds.
VISIT OF E. T. HARGROVE.
Chronology
Sep. 1895
continued
199
The Northern Theosophist was discontinued owing to some difference The Path, Vol. 10,
of opinion among its proprietors. It was announced that The English Nov. 1895; p.259
Theosophist, which succeeded it is an old friend with a new name
but the same dress.
Circular, 4 pages
Sep. 7, 1895 EXECUTIVE NOTICE. THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY.
H.S. Olcott issued an Executive Notice (from London), giving text of
early Resolutions of July 16, 1877 and August 27, 1878 whereby the
President received unrestricted powers over any and all aspects of the
conduct of the TS anywhere and in any way.
Also included is his explanation as to what happened after H.P.B. and The Theosophist,
he moved to India, the formation of New Branches, and the Vol. 17, Oct. 1895;
comatose state of affairs in New York. [last page]
Supp. pp.i-iii
Lucifer,
Vol. 16, Oct. 1895;
pp.164-167
Prasnottara,
Vol. 5, Oct. 1895;
pp.129-135
The Vahan, Vol. 5,
Oct. 1895; pp.1-3
200
Sep. 7, 1895
continued
Sep. 7, 1895
continued
Theos. Forum
(New Series),
Vol. 1, Oct. 1895;
pp.95-96
NOTE: See Apr. 28, 1895 and Dec. 27, 1896 entries.
Sep. 7, 1895
continued
The Theosophist,
Vol. 17, Nov. 1895;
p.119
Chronology
201
Oct. 1895
early
William Q. Judge was quite ill and decided to leave New York and go to Theosophy (Path),
Asheville, South Carolina to find a better climate. By the end of Vol. 11, May 1896;
October Mr. Judge went further south to Aiken, SC, where E.T. pp.34-37
Hargrove spent two weeks with him during the Christmas season.
Judge left Aiken on Jan. 9, 1896 for Cincinnati.
NOTE: See THE LAST DAYS OF W.Q. JUDGE. A copy can be found in
Appendix F, No. 4.
Oct. 1895
Oct. 2, 1895
English
Theosophist, Vol. 1,
Nov. 1895; p.22
Borderland,
Mr. W.T. Stead, Editor, examined the various charges which Mr. Vol. 2, Oct. 1895;
Burrows had flung in the face of his colleagues.
pp.344-345
Mr. Burrows letter of resignation is a serious indictment of the
Theosophical Society as it now exists.
English
Mr. Herbert Burrows deems it indispensable that he should come Theosophist, Vol. 1,
forward and publicly shake off the dust from his feet as a testimony, Nov. 1895; pp.19-20
not against Mr. Judge or against H.P. Blavatsky, but against the
Theosophical Society which has buried H.P. Blavatsky, and cast out
Mr. Judge.
NOTE: See Jan. 21, 1892, H.S. Olcott resigned as President.
202
Oct. 2, 1895
continued
English
Theosophist, Vol. 1,
Dec. 1895; p.32
The Path, Vol. 10,
Nov. 1895; p.264
Jan. 1896; p.328
The Theosophical Society in Australasia will be an accomplished fact. The Path, Vol. 10,
. . . The Sydney Lodge had a very enthusiastic meeting, and drew up Jan. 1896; p.327
a draft constitution similar to that of Europe or America. W.Q. Judge Feb. 1896; p.360
was unanimously elected President. . . . In a week or two there will be
a formal meeting in Sydney at which the New Zealand centres will be
represented, and then the constitution will be finally adopted.
Oct. 26,
1895
Nov. 1895
Chronology
Nov. 15,
1895
203
Dec. 1895
204
Dec. 1895
continued
Dec. 1895
continued
On the Watch-Tower.
Lucifer, Vol. 17,
Mrs. Besants editorial comments. Annie Besant changed her Dec. 1895; p.271
teachings on Mars, Mercury and Earth.
NOTE: See The Path Vol. 8, Dec. 1893, pp.270-271;
Lucifer Vol. 13, Nov. 1893, p.206.
Dec. 27-30,
1895
The Theosophist,
Vol. 17, Jan. 1896;
pp.1-5
pp.24-25
Chronology
1896
Jan. 1, 1896
205
H.P.B. A Great
Betrayal (1922)
by A. Cleather, p.71
Theosophic Isis,
Vol. 1, June 1896;
p.179
The Theosophic Isis: A New Monthly magazine; Devoted to Universal Theosophic Isis,
Brotherhood, Theosophy, and The Occult Sciences. Edited by H.A.W. Vol. 1, Jan. 1896;
pp.1-3
Coryn.
Published for T.S. in Europe (England).
In this, the first issue published, the Editor stated:
We stand in rivalry with no other of the existing organs or
expressions of Theosophy but wish to each success in work as
sincerely as we wish it for ourselves.
Jan. 11,
1896
Feb. 1896
On The Watch-Tower.
IF IT WERE ONLY POSSIBLE!
In G.R.S. Meads editorial, reference is made to H.P.B. as the old
nurse who made playthings for the Society, which it had now outgrown. He concluded:
Some foolish people call the old nurse a horrid old woman, but the
parents of the child know how to reward her faithful services.
Lucifer,
Vol. 17, Feb. 1896;
pp.444-445
Theosophy (Path),
Vol. 11, Apr. 1896;
p.30
206
Feb. 15,
1896
Theosophy (Path),
Vol. 11, Apr. 1896;
This installment shows the close affection and understanding which pp.29-30
existed unbroken between Mr. Judge and H. P. B. . . .
May 1896; p.62
Mar. 1896
Mar. 21,
1896
(Saturday)
Theosophy (Path),
Vol. 11, Apr. 1896;
p.27
NOTE: For more details of the last days of W.Q. Judge see Appendix F
and Appendix D, Part IX.
NOTE: J.D. Buck, Vice-President, took over as Acting-President of T.S.
in America.
Chronology
207
Mar. 22,
1896
Mar. 23,
1896
THE DEPARTURE.
Report on the funeral ceremony of William Q. Judge.
The funeral services were held at the head-quarters of the Aryan
Theosophical Society, 144, Madison Ave, N.Y., City, on Monday,
March 23rd, 1896. The services were very simple. . . .
. . . Mr. Wright then announced that Dr. J.D. Buck, Vice-President
of the American Society would succeed Mr. Judge as President, until
the next Annual Convention in Chicago on April 26th, and then he
would probably be elected permanent President. . . .
. . . [T]he body was taken to the Fresh Pond crematory and there
Incinerated. . . . . . The ashes will be buried in a cemetery plot owned
by Mrs. Judge.
The Theosophist,
Vol. 17, May 1896;
pp.509-510
The Lamp,
Vol. 2, Apr. 1896;
pp.130-133
Mar. 27,
1896
First Council Meeting held after Mr. Judges death, at Mrs. Tingleys O.E. Library Critic,
house at 7.45 p.m.
Vol. 22, No.3,
Oct 1932
NOTE: See AFFIDAVIT January 20th, 1898 for details.
E.S. Notice issued (Friday) announcing a General Meeting of the E.S.T. Theos. Movement
at the Headquarters 144 Madison Avenue New York, to be held on 1875-1950, p.264
Sunday March 29th.
The Theosophist,
The undersigned has learnt by cable dispatch from New York, that Vol. 17, Apr. 1896;
Mr. William Quan Judge, late Vice-President T.S. and General Supp. p.xxv
Secretary of our American Section, died on the 21st instant in that city.
...
The event is a catastrophe for the new society which the deceased
formed less than one year ago.
208
Mar. 28,
1896
A letter handwritten by Mr. Fussell the day before the General Meeting of Theos. Movement
E.S.T. held at Headquarters, N.Y., to Rev. S.J. Neill of Auckland, 1875-1950,
New Zealand.
pp.272-273
I know you will wish to hear concerning E.S.T. matters and the status
of affairs since the passing away of the Outer Head of the E.S.T.
So far as is at present known W.Q.J. has left no directions in regard
to carrying on the work of the School. Of course if he has done this,
such directions will be followed.
An informal meeting was held last Sunday afternoon (Mar. 22) at the
house of C. A. Griscom, Jr. to talk over matters relating to the work.
There were present C. A. Griscom, Jr., E. A. Neresheimer, Jas. M.
Pryse, E. T. Hargrove, C. F. Wright, H. T. Patterson, A. H. Spencer,
E. B. Page and J. H. Fussell.
In regard to the E.S.T. the following plan was proposed. That in the
event of there being no directions left by Mr. Judge, a circular letter
be sent out, signed by the above named and other New York members
of the School to all E.S.T. members in America, suggesting that a
Council be formed to carry on the routine work of the School, such
Council to be concerned solely with this and having no authority as
teachers or in strictly esoteric matters. Members will be asked to sign
and return a printed slip to the effect that they approve of the plan for
organization, etc.
The above is only a rough statement of the idea, but its purpose is to
get the members to hold together and to coordinate the efforts of all
so that we may be kept in touch with one another.
As soon as such Council is formed we will have a basis from which
to work and be able to cooperate with the Council in the Eastern
Division appointed by Mr. Judge.
Of course nothing will be done in this matter until we are assured
that no directions have been found among the Chiefs papers.
I will keep you informed of anything that may be done or that may
turn up in regard to the work.
With good wishes to you all,
Fraternally yours, (Signed) Joseph H. Fussell
NOTE: This letter from Mr. Fussell corroborates Mr Hargroves letter
dated Jan. 30, 1898. [The original of Mr. Fussells letter, March 28,
1896, to S.J. Neill was in the possession of the editor of The
Theosophical MovementSS1875-1950]
NOTE: See Jan.30, 1898 for Hargroves Letter to Mrs. Tingley.
Chronology
Mar. 29,
1896
209
To the Members of
the E.S.T., Apr. 3rd,
1896, 19 pages
Theos. Movement
1875-1950,
pp.264-265
NOTE: Mr. Hargrove quoted from the Jany 3rd, 1895 message which W.Q.
Judge received through Katherine Tingley.
See: Appendix G, No. 7, for entire message.
NOTE: A verbatim report of this meeting was issued one week later in
an E.S.T. circular, To the Members of the E.S.T. See April 3, 1896
entry.
Mar. 29, 1896
continued
Bombay Branch T.S. passed resolution expressing grief at the death of The Theosophist,
W.Q.J.
Vol. 17, May 1896;
Supp. p.xxix
Mar. 31,
1896
Apr. 1896
The Path,
The Path changed name (as planned) to Theosophy.
Commencing with the next, April, number, The Path, which has been Vol. 10, Mar. 1896;
published for ten years under that name, will drop the title and pp.361, 390
thereafter will be issued under the name of Theosophy.
Apr. 1896
continued
210
Apr. 1896
continued
Apr. 1896
continued
Apr. 1896
continued
Irish Theosophist,
Vol. 4, Apr. 1896;
pp.121-123
Tributes to W.Q. Judge from J.D. Buck, E.T. Hargrove, Dr. J.A. Anderson The Lamp,
and others.
Vol. 2, Apr. 1896;
pp.129-139
Tribute by Sidney G.P. Coryn:
It would be a needless task to remind ourselves of his most faithful Theosophic Isis,
friendship, of his unswerving loyalty, of the master force which was Vol. 1, Apr. 1896;
ever in his love for men and war for truth.
pp.81-84
And by H.: We all know that W.Q. Judge was the expression on this
plane of a very high soul vowed for ever to the service of the Lodge.
Apr. 3,
1896
E.S.T. (circular including a verbatim report of E.S.T. meeting of March To the Members of
29, 1896). Signed by E.T. Hargrove, J.M. Pryse, J.H. Fussell, H.T. the E.S.T., 19 pages
Patterson, C.F. Wright, G.L. Griscom, C.A. Griscom Jr., E.A.
Neresheimer.
The papers left by him provided for the future management of the
School. . . . [T]he name and identity of W.Q. Judges occult heir and
successor is to remain unknown to the members in general for one
year.
NOTE: See Feb. 25, 1932 entry. Some Reminiscences of William Q.
Judge (Neresheimer Report). Neresheimer eventually repudiated this
document. Mr. Neresheimer made a special deposition as to the events
following Mr. Judges death. He was one of his executors and claimed
he found the so-called Occult Diary and turned it over to Mrs.
Tingley.
NOTE: See 1922 entry. Notes by Basil Crump (5pp.)on EST Circular.
Chronology
Apr. 26,
1896
Apr. 26, 27
1896
211
212
Apr. 27, 28
1896
Theosophy (Path),
Vol. 11, May 1896;
pp.33-61
* NOTE: See Oct. 13, 1894. Judge was told by Cheiro that he had
already reached the last chapter of [his] life.
May 1896
continued
Ourselves,
Vol. 1, May 1896;
pp.71-74
Chronology
May 1896
continued
213
May 5/18,
1896
Mme. Vera Petrovna de Zhelihovsky died. Born at Odessa, Southern BCW, Vol. 1,
Russia, April 17/29, 1835.
pp.534-537
H.P.B.s younger sister. She was a writer of childrens stories and a
contributor to various Russian magazines.
Irish Theosophist,
Vol. 4, June 1896;
To quote the words of one who knew her best of any [not identified]: p.182
Her affection to her sister was of the truest and the most steadfast.
She had a great heart, and I do not think that there ever was a thing Lucifer,
she ought to do that she left consciously undone.
Vol. 18, June 1896;
p.267
May 7,
1896
May 8,
1896
May 14,
1896
An Urgent Appeal, a circular to E.S.T. members by order of the Outer Circular, 4 pages
Head and Council.
A CRUSADE has been directed by the Master, and it is for the members
to supply the material necessary in order to complete the plan.
Theos. Movement
NOTE: This E.S.T. circular appears to have been delayed 3 days to 1875-1950, p.268
include Hargroves An Occultists Life. [See May 17, 1896 entry]
NOTE: See June 1896 entry.
214
May 15,
1896
A WARNING.
E.S.T. circular,
Circular to E.S.T. members from the Council warning of attacks and May 21, 1896;
attempts at disintegration by the Black Powers. . . . [E]ach opportunity pp.1-2
made use of by the White Brotherhood also opens the doors to action
by Dugpas and the evil side. . . .
. . . We are not yet quite ready to inform all of the identity of the
Outer Head. . . .
Note: This circular was kept back owing to a number of events.
(see May 21, 1896)
May 17,
1896
An Occultists Life.
Hargrove issued a circular on K. Tingley to E.S.T. members prefacing
it with the statement:
The paper should be read in careful connection with the E.S.T.
Circular of April 3rd, 1896. adding: Issued with the consent and
approval of the Council, unknown to the O.H., May 17th, 1896.
He claimed:
Promise reached Theosophy by degrees, and in the process of
reaching it underwent a training and preparation even more rigid and
comprehensive than that experienced by either H.P.B. or W.Q.J.
Always guided by the Master, every event in her life had a meaning
and a purpose: when the moment of consummation came, several
years ago, known and recognized by Mr. Judge, the meaning and the
purpose became clear at last.
Circular, 7 pages
Theos. Movement
1875-1950, pp.268,
279-288
NOTE: Neresheimer later claimed that W.Q. Judge never appointed her
as his successor. See Feb. 25, 1932.
May 18,
1896
NO LONGER A MYSTERY.
New York Daily
Identity of the Unknown Adept of the Theosophists Revealed.
Tribune,
The mystery of the identity of the successor to the late W.Q. Judge May 18, 1896; p.7
in the leadership of the esoteric branch of the Theosophical Society is
a mystery no longer. The secret was told yesterday morning in
Chickering Hall by Ernest T. Hargrove, the exoteric president of the
Theosophical Society in America.
Included a long authorized interview with Mrs. Tingley.
Chronology
May 21,
1896
215
June 1896
June 1896
continued
June 1896
continued
A TRIBUTE.
To Mr. Judge by G.L.G. (Genevieve Ludlow Griscom)
Theos. Forum
By committee composed of H.T. Patterson, E.A. Neresheimer, and (New Series),
C.A. Griscom, Jr. announcing the launch of a most vigorous crusade Vol. 1, Apr. 1896;
on the other side of the ocean, rewaken the flagging energies of those p.191
who have become indifferent. . . . The Crusade was led by K. Tingley
as Outer Head and E.T. Hargrove as President.
Theosophy (Path),
Vol. 11, June 1896;
NOTE: See also Feb. 11, 1897 entry.
p.96
Theosophy (Path),
Vol. 11, July 1896;
p.106
216
June 1896
continued
NOTICE.
BUST OF WILLIAM Q. JUDGE. August Lindstrom, the noted Swedish
sculptor who made the bust of W.Q. Judge which was unveiled at the
Convention, has now completed a number of casts of the bust. It was
made from a mask of his face taken after death and has received
favourable criticism of everyone who knew Mr. Judge. Each one is
made by hand and satisfactory in every way. They may be ordered
from August Lindstrom, 1267 Broadway, N.Y. City, or from
Theosophical Publishing Co., 144 Madison Avenue, N.Y. City. The
price is $10.00 each in the United States.
(date
unknown)
E.S.T. Private. Circular listing some members names and their Circular, 1 page
signs.
(date
unknown)
Katherine A. Tingley issued from 144 Madison Avenue, N.Y., the new Circular, 20 pages
Book of Rules, Strictly Private and Confidential.
June 13,
1896
June 18,
1896
Circular, 3 pages
To Members of the Theosophical Society:
Circular by Alexander Fullerton detailing three incidents involving
Judge which made him side with Besant.
1.) That he had told Judge to tell the truth and Judges reply was That
it is not so easy a thing to do.
2.) That Judge had told him that he had taken the original ring of
H.P.B.s and left the duplicate for Mrs. Besant.
3.) That in order to receive the documentation Judge allegedly
asserted I hypnotized her and made her do it.
NOTE: See June 1895 entry for Annie Besants version of what happened.
July 1896
THE SUCCESSOR OF THE LATE MR. W.Q. JUDGE. by Bertram Keightley Prasnottara,
We . . . refrain from passing any opinion whatever of our own Vol. 6, July 1896;
regarding this lady of whom not much is known and but little is pp.139-140
definitely asserted; and instead of speculating upon her aims and
objects, we deem it proper to wait contentedly and allow the plot to
develop itself until the donoument [sic] is pretty clearly seen. . . .
. . . What [the world] seeks . . . is . . . a . . . rational explanation of
this panorama of Nature. . . .
If Mrs. Tingley can supply this need she is most welcome; she will
everywhere be adored, be she a reincarnation of H.P.B. or of Joan
dArc, or for the matter of that even a soulless entity of mere flesh,
blood and bone.
Theos. Forum
(New Series),
Vol. 2, No. 3, June
1896; p.32
Chronology
Sep. 12,
1896
To the Branch Presidents and Secretaries, and to the members of the T.S., American
American Section T.S.
Section,
From Alexander Fullerton Gen. Sec. American Section T.S. Circular, 3 pages
Procedures for a person or Branch previously a part of T.S. in
America, now wishing to join the American Section T.S.
The two principles governing the matter are very simple. They are
first, that Mr. Judges Society is an organization outside of and
distinct from the Theosophical Society . . . and that membership in it
can be no more a passport to the T.S. than can membership in [other]
bodies; but that, second, sincere persons having entered it in ignorance
or through delusion, persons really interested in Theosophy and work
belonging to the T.S., it is only right that no unavoidable obstacle
should be placed in their way when learning the facts and seeking
union with the Society.
Sept. 23,
1896
Oct. 7, 1896
217
218
Dec. 27,
1896
Jan. 1897
Circular, 4 pages
The Theosophical Society and The Secession Therefrom.
Historical facts by Constance Wachtmeister and Alexander Fullerton
explaining why there were now two Theosophical Societies.
Outlines the genesis of the Judge case from 1893 to the 1895 split.
According to the authors the 1895 declaration of the American T.N.C.A.B.
Section of the Society as an autonomous body was simply to put Item 2000, p.548
beyond reach of expulsion a person charged with the grave offenses
described, and who refused to submit to an investigation of their
truth, as the Dec. 1894 Annual Convention at Adyar had passed the
resolution of the Indian Section that Judge submit to an investigation
of the charges raised against him or be forced to resign from the
Theosophical Society.
NOTE: A copy of this circular is in the archives of Edmonton T.S.
Jan. 1897
continued
Theos. Forum
(New Series),
Vol. 4, No. 1,
May 1898; p.13
Jan. 13,
1897
Theos. Forum
(New Series),
Vol. 2, No. 11,
Mar. 1897; p.172
Chronology
219
Feb. 11,
1897
Theos. Forum
(New Series),
Vol. 2, No. 12,
Apr. 1897; p.190
Feb. 23,
1897
CEREMONY.
The Laying of The Corner Stone S.R.L.M.A. BY THE FOUNDERDIRECTRESS, KATHERINE A. TINGLEY, AT POINT LOMA, SAN DIEGO,
CALIFORNIA, FEBRUARY 23, 1897, ASSISTED BY MR. E.T. HARGROVE,
MR. F.M. PIERCE, AND OTHERS. Synopsis of report. Some photos
included.
Universal
Brotherhood,
(Path/Theosophy).
Vol. 12, Nov. 1897;
pp.44-50
Theos. Forum
(New Series),
Vol. 2, No. 12,
Apr. 1897;
pp.191-192
Feb. 24,
1897
The Grail
Vol. 1, No. 4,
June-July 1897;
pp.88-90
The San Diego
Union, Wednesday
Morning, Feb. 24,
1897
The Grail
Vol. 1, No. 4,
June-July 1897;
pp.89-90
220
Apr. 4,
1897
Apr. 26,
1897
Theos. Forum
(New Series),
Vol. 3, No. 1,
May 1897; pp.1-16
June 28,
1897
Announcement: PHOTOGRAPHS.
Theosophical News,
Orders can now be placed for new photographs of KATHERINE A. Vol. 2, No. 2, June
TINGLEY, SUCCESSOR OF W.Q. JUDGE, AND LEADER OF THE THEOSOPHICAL 28, 1897; p.5
MOVEMENT THROUGHOUT THE WORLD,
Which were taken at Los Angeles Calif, upon Mrs. Tingleys arrival
there on her return with the party which accompanied her on the
Crusade.
Aug. 1897
Theos. Forum
(New Series),
Vol. 3, No. 4,
Aug. 1897; p.63
Chronology
Aug. 16,
1897
221
Theosophical News,
Vol. 2, No. 10, Aug.
23, 1897; p.1
The Path,
Vol. 7, Feb. 1893;
pp.354-356
Application for
Fellowship
(see Appendix C)
Aug. 29,
1897
Sep. 1, 1897
Theosophical News,
Vol. 2, Sep. 20,
1897; p.2
Theosophy (Path),
Vol. 12, Oct. 1897;
pp.378-379
222
Sep. 3, 1897 Letter addressed to Mr. E.T. Hargrove, President, THE THEOSOPHICAL
SOCIETY IN AMERICA and signed by Neresheimer on behalf of the
Executive Committee. It was also signed by H.T. Patterson and A.H.
Spencer.
We are in receipt of your communication of September 1, 1897,
tendering your resignation as President of the T.S. in A., to take effect
on the 13th inst.
It is with deep regret that we notify you of the acceptance of same.
. . .
NOTE: In Theosophy this letter is dated September 9, 1897.
Sep. 3, 1897
continued
Theosophical News,
Vol. 2, Sep. 20,
1897; p.2
Theosophy (Path),
Vol. 12, Oct. 1897;
pp.378-379
To The Members of the E.S.T. from Katherine A. Tingley, , accepting E.S.T. circular,
Mr. Hargroves resignation.
2 pages
When I first suggested Mr. Hargrove as President of the Signed with 3 dots.
Theosophical Society, I knew at that crisis he was the only available
man to fill the place. . . .
NOTE: Parts of this E.S.T. circular were reprinted with K. Tingleys
permission in Theosophical News.
Sep. 10,
1897
Theosophy (Path),
Letter from E.T. Hargrove. He resigned as Editor of Theosophy.
For the same reason as given in the first of the above Vol. 12, Oct. 1897;
communications, it has become necessary for me to resign the pp.379-380
editorship of THEOSOPHY; . . . Mrs. K.A. Tingley and Mr. E.A.
Neresheimer have kindly consented to act as co-editors, beginning
with the November issue.
Oct. 9, 1897
Nov. 1,
1897
Chronology
Nov. 17,
1897
223
Dr. Archibald Keightley resigned as President of the Theosophical Society Theos. Forum
in Europe (England). Notice sent to the Executive Council in England: (New Series),
Vol. 3, No. 5,
Owing to circumstances into which I shall not enter, I find it wisest, Feb. 1898; p.26
in the interests which we have most at heart, to hand you hereby my
resignation. . . .
Letter to P , (Esoteric name for Mrs. Tingley)
pp.26-27
Herewith I hand to you my resignation of the offices of President of
the Central Group, E.S.T. in London, and of presiding officer of the
Council, E.S.T.
I wish to hold no official position, retaining only my simple
membership in T.S., E.S.T. and Council. . . .
(An Acknowledgment of this letter was received from Mrs. Tingley.
A. K.)
NOTE: See Jan. 27, 1898 entry.
Jan. 13,
1898
Ten prominent and influential members who had shown no signs of California Utopia,
wavering gathered at the home of Katherine Tingley.
pp.38-39
A constitution for a new theosophical organization was presented.
. . . The new organization was called The Universal Theosophical Conger, p.7
Brotherhood, which a month later was changed to the Universal
Brotherhood. Among the signators were Basil Crump, E. August
Neresheimer, Robert Crosbie, Joseph H. Fussell, and Arthur L.
Conger Jr.
Jan. 18,
1898
Letter from 15 members from Headquarters of the T.S. in America, New Circular, 1 page
York, addressed to DEAR CO-WORKERS:
Statements have been circulated among the T.S.A. to the effect that
there is discord among the members of the Headquarters Staff, and
that its members do not work harmoniously with Mrs. Tingley and
with Mr. Neresheimer. . . .
. . . We are a unit in our disapproval of the circular referred to.
Signed by Elliott B. Page, John M. Pryse, James M. Pryse, A.L
Conger, Jr., Joseph B. Fussell, and others.
NOTE: The circular mentioned above was dated January 17, 1898. The
circular was unsigned and included a list of nominations for officers
to be elected at the upcoming Convention.
Presidents Office.
TO ALL MEMBERS OF THE T.S.A.
In view of the fact that recently a circular letter has been sent to all
Branches T.S.A. which was not authorized by me, canvassing support
of a certain program for Officers and Executive Committee, to be
elected at the next Convention on Feb. 18th and 19th, at Chicago, I
deem it my duty to point out to the members that the offices of the
Theosophical Society in America do not require preliminary
canvassing like a political organization.
Signed by E. Aug. Neresheimer, President T.S.A.
Circular, 1 page
224
Jan. 20,
1898
Jan. 27,
1898
AFFIDAVIT
Signed by E.A. Neresheimer, Joseph H. Fussell, H.T. Patterson, and
James M. Pryse, it stated:
We, the undersigned, who were present at the first Council Meeting
held after Mr. Judges death, on March 27th, 7:45 p.m. at Mrs.
Tingleys house . . . hereby declare that we did not depend upon Mr.
Hargroves statements or actions in our acceptance of Mrs. Tingley as
Outer Head of the E.S.T. . . .
Theos. Forum
(New Series),
Vol. 3, No. 5,
Feb. 1898; pp.25-26
Universal
Brotherhood,
Vol. 12, Jan. 1898;
p.192
Theos. Movement
1875-1950,
pp.271-272
Eirenicon, No. 105,
Winter Solstice,
1952; p.8
Chronology
End of Jan.
1898 est.
225
Circular, 8 pages
Esoteric School of Theosophy.
By Katherine A. Tingley, Outer Head.
My object in preparing this circular is to call the attention of all
worthy members of the School to the importance of the new cycle. .
..
. . . We have Judases in our midst now, just as H.P.B. and W.Q.
Judge had them.
She quoted from H.P.B. to bolster support to carry on with the work
started by H.P.B. and W.Q. Judge and stated in her conclusion:
I call upon you, for the sake of H.P.B., W.Q.J., and all that they
worked and hoped for, to take at the beginning of this new cycle this
precious golden opportunity the door which will lead you to a
higher plane of thought and action.
Feb. 2, 1898 Letter from Robert Crosbie to P later known to be Katherine Tingley. O.E. Library Critic
Vol. 23, Nov./Dec.
[P. was the letter used to signify Purple.]
I remember that the day I first saw you, I recognized you as the O.H. 1934; p.9
[Outer Head] without hint or instruction as such, and in spite of the
fact that I was not looking for a womans form in that connection.
NOTE: See April 1, 1901 and 1933 entries.
Feb. 18,
1898
MISCELLANEOUS NEWS.
The Fourth Annual Convention of The T.S.A.
With the first day of the new cycle, February 18th, was ushered in
before the world THE UNIVERSAL BROTHERHOOD founded by Katherine
A. Tingley on January 13, 1898. . . . [T]he Convention adopted the
Resolutions, Mrs. Tingleys Proclamation, the Constitution of
Universal Brotherhood and a new Constitution of the Theosophical
Society in America.
The Chairman of the Committee on Resolutions, Mr. Iverson L.
Harris, read each of the above mentioned.
Mrs. Tingleys Proclamation included the following statement:
The work of each messenger necessarily differs in many respects.
H.P.B. attracted the attention of the world to the philosophy. W.Q.J.
simplified the teaching and solidified the organization which she
founded.
And now it is my privilege and duty in carrying on that work so ably
begun, to furnish an organization which shall be the well-made tool
by which the work can be carried forward into the next century on a
grander scale than ever before, and adapted to the needs of the time SS
an organization which will be free, as far as possible, from the
limitations hitherto existing, and which shall unify all branches of this
great work:
I have, therefore, to announce that there has been established by me
an organization called UNIVERSAL BROTHERHOOD or, THE
BROTHERHOOD OF HUMANITY.
Note: Mr. Neresheimer was appointed President of T.S. in America.
Universal
Brotherhood,
Vol. 12, Mar. 1898;
pp.313-320
226
Feb. 18, 1898
continued
OFFICIAL NOTICE.
Theos. Forum
(New series),
The Fourth Annual Convention of the Society which met at Handel Vol. 3, No. 5,
Hall, Chicago on February 18th, came to an abrupt conclusion. . . .
Feb. 1898; pp.1-2
Endeavor was made, in accordance with an elaborate and carefully
prearranged plan to annul the Constitution of the Society and convert
it into a literary annex to a new Society, established by Mrs. Tingley,
and of which she was to be for life the sole director and source of
authority. . . .
. . . The illegality of the action taken [proposed amendments to be
brought to the membership two months in advance, which was not
done in this case] made it null and void and left those delegates and
members who disapproved of it, no other course than to hold their
own meeting, whereat . . . [i]t was unanimously agreed to continue the
T.S.A. as at present constituted. . . .
(Signed) A.H. Spencer, Vice-President and Acting President
[J.D. Buck was a member of the Executive Committee.]
TO THE BRANCHES AND MEMBERS OF THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY IN AMERICA.
Theos. Forum
(New series),
Vol. 3, No. 5,
Feb. 1898; pp.14-18
Chronology
227
Circular, 1 page
Esoteric School of Theosophy. Strictly Private And Confidential.
To the Members E.S.T. Signed Katherine A Tingley, Outer Head;
issued from New York.
You will soon hear of a new step taken at Chicago which is the
outward aspect of a higher esoteric body of enormous importance,
which all may aspire to through loyalty and devotion. . . .
Members will please note that I should disapprove of any documents
or letters sent out to this School, unless indorsed by myself. Mr.
Crump and Mrs Cleather still act as my agents in England. Miss
Churchill, Secy. Acting Council of the E.S.T.:
E.A. Neresheimer; H.T. Patterson; J.H. Fussell; Iverson L. Harris;
F.M. Pearce; D.N. Dunlop; Wm. Lindsay; Clark Thurston.
Based on notes
All the above are perfectly reliable.
copied by Helen
NOTE: While the Headquarters was still at 144 Madison Ave. New York, Harris from the
Mrs. Tingley had rewritten the E.S.T. Pledge on Apr. 3, 1896, before Archives at Point
the formation of the Lodge of Light. This new Lodge of Light had Loma.
a new Pledge and its own initiations based on Masonic Ritual.
Feb. 23,
1898
Feb. 27,
1898
The Future of the Theosophical Publishing Co. issued by Julia Pamphlet, 35 pages
Keightley. Correspondence resulting from the difficulties between
Neresheimer and herself regarding The Path magazine and the book
business which were bequeathed to them by Judge. Includes W.Q.J.s
will.
Mar. 1898
The
Internationalist,
Vol. 1, No. 6,
Mar. 15, 1898;
pp.112-120
Theos. Forum
(New series),
Vol. 3, No. 7,
Apr. 1898; pp.11-13
English Theosophist
(New Series),
Vol. 2, No.3,
May 1898; pp.53-57
228
Mar. 1898
continued
Mar. 1,
1898
Mar. 1, 1898
continued
Universal
Brotherhood,
Vol. 12, No. 12,
Mar. 1889; pp.309310
English Theosophist
(New Series),
Vol. 2, No. 1.
Mar. 1898; pp.2-3
Vol. 2, No. 2, Apr.
1898; p.35
Theosophy,
Vol. 21, Oct. 1933;
p.571
[missing original
pamphlet from
Hargrove]
Circular, 1page
To All members of The Universal Brotherhood.
Warned of circulars sent out by J.D. Buck, A.H. Spencer, and others,
which are incomplete, inaccurate and misrepresentative of the facts.
...
There was no alteration of the Constitution or amendment thereto,
but an entirely new Constitution was adopted which was entirely legal
and within the right of the Convention. . . also . . . no other body has
the right to use the name of the T.S.A. . . .
. . . Branch Charters of the T.S.A. to be returned . . . for preservation
in the archives of THE UNIVERSAL BROTHERHOOD and, on receipt of the
same, new Charters of THE UNIVERSAL BROTHERHOOD will be
immediately issued.
From: Katherine Tingley, E.A. Neresheimer, President, and Jerome A.
Anderson, as Vice-President, of T.S. in A.
Endorsed by Acting Council of the E.S.T. and by the Cabinet of THE
UNIVERSAL BROTHERHOOD.
Chronology
229
Mar. 10,
1898
English Theosophist
(New Series),
Vol. 2, No. 2,
Apr. 1898; p.35
Mar. 13,
1898
English Theosophist
(New Series),
Vol. 2, No. 2,
Apr. 1898; pp.28-32
230
Mar. 29,
1898
Letter from Julia Keightley to the Editor of the Crusader, claiming that
the statement, Mr. E.T. Hargrove and Mrs. Keightley both attempted
to gain a hearing when the resolutions had been carried, but an
adjournment had already been moved which had appeared in the
Crusader (Nos. 7-8, p.75) was erroneous and requested the usual
courtesy of publication of her correction. J. Keightley stated that
when Mr. Spencer, Mr. Hargrove and herself each attempted to speak
they were told they were out of order; and that when Messrs.
Spencer, Hargrove, Harter, and others unknown to me again
endeavoured to be heard, [t]hey were played down by the organ, and
loud cries from the platform, but not from the audience, were heard.
English Theosophist
(New Series),
Vol. 2, No. 2,
Apr. 1898; pp.37-38
Apr. 1898
English Theosophist
(New Series),
Vol. 2, No. 2,
Apr. 1898; p.36
NOTE: Dr. Anderson followed Mrs. Tingley but lost all confidence in
the leader and returned to the original Theosophical Society of
which Colonel Olcott was President. See entry for Dec. 25, 1903.
Apr. 1898
continued
Chronology
May 1898
May 29-30,
1898
THE CONVENTION.
The Fourth Annual Convention of the Theosophical Society in
America continued at the Grand Hotel, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Called to order at Convention Hall, Grand Hotel at 10.30 A.M. by
Mr. A. H. Spencer, Acting President, who announced that the
Convention was to be held in continuance of that commenced at
Chicago on Feb. 18th last, and which was suspended by default. . . .
Resolutions adopted . . . (5) That the Theosophical Society in
America in Convention assembled at Cincinnati on May 29th, 1898
does hereby declare its purpose to continue the organization as
heretofore under the Constitution adopted at Boston in 1895 and its
regularly adopted amendments. . . .
Officers for the ensuing year elected, viz: President, Dr. J. D. Buck;
Vice-President and Treasurer, Mr. A.H. Spencer. . . .
They met again at 8 P.M. with about 300 persons present.
Met again at 10.30 A.M., May 30th.
231
The Search-Light,
New York, Vol. 1,
May 1898; p.30
Cdn. Theosophist,
Vol. 27, Sep. 1946;
p.216
Cdn. Theosophist,
Vol. 8, July 1927;
p.101
H.P.B. Theos.
Movement, p.345
Theos. Forum
(New Series),
Vol. 4, June 1898;
pp.7-8
English Theosophist
(New Series),
Vol. 2, No. 4,
June 1898;
pp.73-77
Theos. Forum
(New Series),
Vol. 4, June 1898;
p.16
232
June 1898
1899
Both Albert Smythe and D.N. Dunlop were expelled by Mrs. Tingley Cdn. Theosophist,
because she deemed their brand of Theosophy was not acceptable. Vol. 1, Apr. 1920;
p.28
Aug. 15,
1899
English Theosophist
(New Series),
Vol. 2, No. 4,
June 1898; 1 page
Theos. Review,
Vol. 24, Aug. 15,
1899; p.486
O.E. Library Critic,
Vol. 24, Feb. 1937
Chronology
Jan. 22,
1900
233
May 1900
Extracts from W.Q. Judges unpublished letters [printed in The English The Lamp,
Vol. 4, May 1900;
Theosophist, which had become Theosophy.]
The A B C of Theosophy should be taught all the time . . . All pp.88-89
members who work hard come at last to the notice of the Lodge; and
the moment they do so the Black Lodge also takes notice, and hence
questions arise, and we are tried in subtle ways that surpass sight, but
are strong for the undoing of him who is not prepared by right thought
and sacrifice to the higher nature for the fight.
Apr. 1,
1901
Address by Robert Crosbie at a meeting in honor of W.Q. Judge held in Pamphlet, 51pages
San Diego under the auspices of the Point Loma Theosophical In Honor of W.Q.
Society.
Judge; p.46
Mme Blavatsky was the first leader, by the force of her wisdom and
power of leadership, and all the true students of Theosophy accepted
her as such. And when she appointed William Q. Judge as her
successor, his leadership was accepted for the same reason and so,
too, with Katherine Tingley, who was appointed by William Q. Judge
as his successor.
NOTE: See Appendix G, No. 13, for more details. Also see also Feb. 2,
1898 and 1933 entries.
234
Mar. 25,
1902
Feb. 1903
Mar. - Sep.
1903
H.S. Olcotts account of the events of the Judge Case for 1894 (Old The Theosophist,
Diary Leaves).
Vol. 24, Mar. 1903,
pp.321-322; Apr.
1903, pp.385-400;
May 1903, pp.449452; July 1903,
p.583; Aug. 1903,
pp.641-647; Sep.
1903, pp.705-713
Apr. 27,
1903
Mr. Kavasji Mervanji Shroff died at Bombay. He was the first Indian who The Theosophist,
received a diploma from the T.S., having joined in 1878, before Vol. 24, June 1903;
H.P.B. and Col. Olcott left America. Mr. Shroff had been in America Supp. p.xxvi
on a lecturing tour when Olcott approached him about joining the T.S.
Mr. Shroff, a member from Bombay, was of great help to the
Founders after their arrival there on February 16, 1879. He did much
to rouse the interest of Parsees, in the great truths of their religion and
to help on that revival in religion which is so marked a feature of the
day in the Parsee, as well as all other communities of India. He was
one of the Vice-Presidents of the Bombay Lodge, T.S., the first Lodge
formed in India.
[Continued in next cell]
Chronology
Apr. 27, 1903
continued
235
He displayed marked sympathy for dumb creatures and did his best to
ameliorate their condition and alleviate their suffering, and for
preventing cruelty to animals. Mr. Shroff was involved in establishing
the Bai Sakerbai Hospital for Animals. He gathered the headmen,
from different classes of traders, in the Bombay Bazaar and convinced
them to levy a tax on their trade returns for the upkeep of such a
Hospital. He managed to get some land donated and the necessary
buildings. He then arranged for the Bombay government to attach a
Veterinary College to the Hospital, thus providing students the best
possible chance for professional training.
Old Diary Leaves,
Mr. Shroff was also the founder on a grand scale, of a Dairy Farm, the Third Series,
first of its kind in Bombay, in order to supply the Bombay public with pp.420-421
pure and unadulterated milk.
Dec. 25,
1903
The Path,
Vol. 8, Apr. 1893;
pp.8-10
The Theosophist,
Vol. 25, Mar. 1904;
Supp. p.xiv
236
Apr. 13,
1904
Pamphlet, 64pages
The Vow of Poverty
and Other Essays,
p.1
Jan. 24,
1905
Letter from E.A. Neresheimer to Sidney on Tingley being W.Q.J.s Theos. Forum (P.L.)
successor.
Vol. 7, Oct. 1935;
The successorship was attested to by many competent persons at the pp.25-26
proper time, and the subsequent work of the successor have proved the
truth and validity of it more than any statement made by persons. . . .
It is a fact, the successor of Wm. Q. Judge does not tolerate anything
that is inimical to the great cause, hence some persons find it very
uncomfortable and invent all sorts of excuses when they wish to get
from under.
Is it that you had looked for a real saint and were disappointed?
Jan. 1906
Miss Frances Henrietta Mller, B.A., died in Washington. She was born
in the early 1850s into a relatively well-off family. In 1873 she was
one of the first women to attend Girton College, Cambridge. In the
mid-1880s she was active in a number of feminist organizations. She
looked to women as the moral saviours of humanity.
Divine Feminine,
pp.174-175
Banishing the
Beast, pp.12-14
Miss Mllers Application for Membership was dated at T.S. Application for
Headquarters on January 20th, 1891. She had written to Blavatsky Membership form
asking if women enjoyed the same rights as men in the T.S. Blavatsky
responded there were no distinctions, what counted was the work
done, and that women could equally aspire to the position of Adept or
Mahatma.
Lucifer, Vol. 8,
She was elected Vice-President of the League of Theosophical Aug. 1891; p.517
Workers at the first Annual Convention of the European Section, July
1891. This organization was for spreading Theosophy by using Lucifer. Vol. 14,
propaganda and doing charitable work.
Apr. 1894; p.170
Aug. 1894; p.524
She was free to travel which allowed her to lecture extensively. In
England she lectured at the Blavatsky Lodge on womens rights and The Theosophist,
Theosophy. She would travel to India yearly to attend the Anniversary Vol. 13, Mar. 1892;
celebrations of the T.S. While in India she would do practical pp.377-382.
missionary work among educated Hindus, inciting them to work for, Vol. 13, Aug. 1892;
as well as speak of the spiritual regeneration of India. The Jallandhur Supp. pp.87-88
Branch started the H.P.B. Sanskrit School under the auspices and
financial support of Miss Mller. She also donated monies to help Lucifer, Vol. 13,
replace the funds which had been misappropriated by the Recording Sep. 1893; pp.2-3
Secretary and Treasurer, Pandit S.E. Goplacharlu, from the Treasury
at Adyar.
Letters from WQJ
to Hargrove, see
Mr. Hargrove stated that Miss Mller was a wild woman by nature Appendix D, Part V
and selection, who like Mrs. Besant, had gone native in India, and
who used to travel with Hindu youths whom she had adopted.[Also
see The Path Vol. 10, April 1895]
[Continued in next cell]
Chronology
Jan. 1906
continued
237
Early in 1895 Miss Mller adopted a young adult Bengali as her son. The Theosophist,
Her plan is to have her protg educated for the Bar, enter Vol. 16, Feb. 1895;
Parliament, and devote his life to social and political reform in India. p.344
He added his adoptive mothers name to his own Akshaya Kumar
Ghose Mller.
The Path, Vol. 10,
At the 1894 Annual Convention at Adyar, Miss Mller publicly Apr. 1895; p.31
accused Mr. Judge of having tried, some years ago, to force Col. H.S.
Olcott to resign the Presidency of the T.S. [See General Report of Irish Theosophist,
the Nineteenth Anniversary of the Theosophical Society, Dec. 15- Vol. 3, Mar. 1895;
28, 1894, pp.51-53. Also see Dec. 1895 The Resignation Mystery, p.97
1892" and Jan. 21, 1892.]
Miss Mller had met Swami Vivekananda at the 1893 Parliament of Vivekananda,
Religions in Chicago. She had extended a cordial invitation for him pp.91, 102, 133-134,
to come to England. The Swami, still in America, sailed from New 157, 938
York about the middle of August 1895, reaching Paris near the end of
the month and then on to England. When he arrived in London he was
greeted by Miss Mller and E.T. Sturdy. After strenuous work in
England and because of his ill health, Mller proposed a holiday tour
of the continent. She became his disciple and toured with him. In
1898 she travelled with the Swami in Northern India along with other
devotees. She generously donated monies toward the purchase of the
Belur Math, headquarters of the Ramakrishna Math and Mission. By
late 1899 Miss Mller left the Swami on account of his illness she
could not associate sickness with holiness. The Swami died July 4th,
1902.
* On the original Application for Membership form Miss Mller gives Old Diary Leaves,
her address as Pinkneys Green, Maidenhead. She was certified to be Fifth Series, pp.323a worthy member, to join the Blavatsky Lodge, by Walter R. Old and 324
Isabel Cooper-Oakley.
H.S. Olcott entered in his Diary for June 14, 1895 that Miss Mller
had resigned from membership in the T.S. In her letter of notification
to the Westminster Gazette she says that she withdraws because there
is no longer any reason for her remaining and that she does not
esteem the opinions of the leaders of the Theosophical Society.
[Continued in next cell]
238
Jan. 1906
continued
NOTE: For more on Pandit S.E . Goplacharlu see Official Notices in The Vahan, Vol. 1,
Feb. 1892; p.8
The Vahan, Second Series [Vol. 1], Oct.1, 1893, p.3.
NOTE: Annie Besant suspected that Colonel Olcott had an affair with
Miss Mller while he was staying in Miss Mllers home in the
summer of 1891, following H.P.B.s death. On Nov. 18th, 1891,
Besant sent a telegram to Judge and sailed immediately for New York
where she asked Judge to lay charges against Olcott. The only direct
references that Olcott may have had an affair can be found in a letter
addressed by Herbert Burrows to the Editor of The English
Theosophist. [See Jan. 21, 1892.] One could deduce from Miss
Mllers attack on Judge that it may have been based on revenge,
perhaps not realizing that it was Besant who asked Judge to bring
charges against H.S. Olcott.
Sep. 1906
Sep. 23,
1906, Est.
Hammer on the
Mountain (1972),
p.336
Theosophical
Lectures, 1907;
pp.121-122
T.N.C.A.B.
Item 154, p.60,
The Word,
Vol. 22, Oct. 1915;
pp.7-19
Damodar,
pp.657-658
Chronology
Feb. 17,
1907
239
Theosophia, Vol.25,
Summer 1968,
pp.11-13
BCW, Vol. 1,
pp.503-518
Yankee Beacon of
Buddhist Light: Life
of Col. Henry S.
Olcott (1988) by
Howard Murphet,
formerly published
as Hammer on the
Mountain (1972),
339 pages
240
Feb. 17, 1907
continued
Apr. 1907
Theosophical
Quarterly,
Vol. 5, July 1907;
pp.16-26
Nov. 1908
Theos. Messenger,
Vol. 10, Nov. 1908;
pp.33-42
Feb. 18,
1909
After Robert Crosbie split from Point Loma (1904), he formed the United
Lodge of Theosophists in Los Angeles, California (1909).
Mr. Crosbie was a Boston Theosophist during the time of W.Q.
Judge. . . . [A]fter Judges death . . . [he] gave [Mrs. Tingley] his
loyalty and support. About 1900 he went to Point Loma. . . . However,
in the course of a few years, he came to feel that nothing constructive
was to be accomplished by remaining [there] . . . and he quietly left
the Point Loma Society in 1904 and came to Los Angeles. . . . When,
in 1909, he had been joined by a small nucleus of persons who shared
this ideal, The United Lodge of Theosophists was formed to carry out
the purposes in view.
Pamphlet, 26 pages
The United Lodge
of Theosophist, Its
Mission and Its
Future.
Theos. Movement
1875-1950, p.316
Chronology
241
June 1909
1910
Sep. 1910
BCW,
Vol. 6, p.448
Lucifer, Vol. 8,
Aug. 1891; p.517
The Vahan, Vol. 1,
Sep. 1891; p.8
Apr. 14-15,
1912
William Thomas Stead died. (Born in 1849) English journalist, editor and
spiritualist. He was assistant editor (John Morley was editor) of the
Pall Mall Gazette from 1880 to 1883, and editor from 1883 to 1888.
In 1890 he started publishing the prestigious monthly, Review of
Reviews. Being interested in spiritualism, psychical research and
Theosophy, W.T. Stead edited Borderland (1893-1897), a periodical
especially devoted to these subjects. Bound for New York, Stead lost
his life on the ocean liner, Titanic.
H.P.B. by Sylvia
In July 1893, he wrote: It is barely twelve months since my hand Cranston, p.361
began to write automatically. His communications with his departed
friend Julia were documented in Review of Reviews starting in Borderland, Vol. 1,
July 1893; p.39
April that year and then in Borderland.
242
Aug. 7,
1912
Franz Hartmann died from heart failure. (Born Nov. 22, 1838 at BCW,
Donauwrth, small town on the Danube in Bavaria). His father was Vol. 8, pp.130, 439German and his mother was of Irish descent.
457
A German physician, philosopher and mystic, who was one of the
most productive workers in the early days of the Theosophical
Movement, and a personal friend of H.P.B. He was a great student of
Paracelsus, and of mediaeval occultism in general.
BCW,
Since his early youth, Franz felt as if he had two distinct personalities Vol. 8, p.457
in him: one was a mystic, a dreamer and an idealist, while the other
was obstinate and self-willed, inclined to all sorts of mischief.
The Theosophist,
In 1865, he became doctor medicinae and Magister pharmaciae. He Vol. 34, Oct. 1912;
came to live in the United States on August 28,1865 and became an p.119
American citizen in 1867.
When The Occult World of A.P. Sinnett was published, he managed
to get a copy of it. Being still greatly attracted to certain aspects of the
Spiritualistic view of life, he became much irritated at its contents and
wrote to Col. Olcott, giving him and the Brothers a piece of his
mind. Correspondence ensued, which led him to eventually sail to
India. On December 4, 1883 he arrived at Madras then went to Adyar
where he was welcomed by H.P. Blavatsky. He was in residence at
Adyar during W.Q. Judges visit, also during the expulsion of the
Coulombs, and at the time of the visit of Richard Hodgson, December
1884-January, 1885. His first-hand account is in his Report Of
Observations made during a Nine Months Stay at the
Headquarters of The Theosophical Society (Madras), India. He
received his first letter from Master M. on December 25, 1883, only
three weeks after his arrival at Adyar, in reply to a brief letter he had
placed in the Shrine.
Around 1893, Hartmann started editing a German Theosophical
Monthly journal called Lotusblthen which continued for eight years
(1893-1900, sixteen volumes.)
In April 1897, he came to America to represent the German
Theosophists at the Convention of the T.S. in America held in New
York. Dr. Hartmanns association with Katherine Tingley did not last.
He founded in Munich on September 3, 1897, a body known as the
International Theosophische Verbrderung, on lines which he
considered to be closer to those indicated by H.P. Blavatsky in the
early days.
During his lifetime of devotion to the Theosophical Movement he
wrote a large number of books, including The Life Of Paracelsus
(1887). He died in his homeland at Kempten, in Southern Bavaria.
Chronology
1913
243
Modern World
Movements
by J.D. Buck, pp.79,
120-125, 131-135
For the last two or three years of his life, a broader aspect than the p.134
T.S. organization was constantly in Mr. Judges mind; and he spoke
of the Theosophical Movement quite as often as of the Society.
July 21,
1913
Alexander Fullerton died in Flushing, New York. (Born Sep. 12, 1841 in
Philadelphia).
He attended school when he was four years old, entered Princeton
University in 1860 and graduated in 1864. He was ordained Deacon
in the Episcopal Cathedral Church, Burlington, New Jersey, in June
1865. In 1875, at his own request, Mr. Fullerton was deposed from the
ministry of the Episcopal Church. He then took up the study of law at
the University of Pennsylvania and graduated in June 1877. He never
applied for admission to the bar.
The American
Theosophist,
Vol. 14, Sep. 1913;
pp.986-989
He joined the T.S. in May 1887. As there was no Theosophical work Theos. Messenger,
for him in New York at the time, he offered his services to Col. Olcott Vol. 10, Nov. 1908;
as his Private Secretary. He sailed for England on August 1888 and pp.33-42
passed some days in London, twice visiting H.P.B. at the odd little
cottage near the Crystal Palace at Sydenham before continuing to
India. His stay at Adyar was very brief due to his physical collapse,
aggravated by a poisonous bite. He returned to New York three
months to the day he had left.
Upon his return he discovered that the Aryan Branch had grown in
membership. He replaced the ailing Mr. Samuel Clapp as Mr. Judges
office assistant. He served in that capacity until the American Section
T.S. declared its entire autonomy, and was from then on called The
Theosophical Society in America.
In January, 1889, he returned to London on business in response to
telegrams from H.P.B. His stay was expected to be indefinite, but in
fact lasted only a few weeks. H.P.B. by then had moved to Lansdowne
Road.
When he returned to New York he discovered that Mr. Judges offices The Theosophist,
had moved to Park Row and a new publication, The Theosophical Vol. 31, Mar. 1910;
pp.781-782
Forum, was started in April 1889. Fullerton was made Editor.
In the autumn of 1895 he was elected General Secretary of the The Elder Brother
revamped American Section of the T.S. He was re-elected year after p.91
year until 1907 when he opposed Annie Besant regarding the
Leadbeater affair. He lost to Dr. Weller van Hook, an ardent
disciple of Leadbeater.
244
Oct. 9, 1915
Julia Keightley (Jasper Niemand) died. (Born in 185[5]?) Julia Wharton BCW, Vol. 9,
Lewis Campbell was the daughter of a prominent Pennsylvania lawyer pp.435-438
and member of the U.S. Congress for several terms.
She married Philip W. Ver Planck of New York in 1871. He died six The Path,
years later and within a year she also lost both her sons suddenly.
Vol. 9, Apr. 1894;
She was invited to hear Mr. Arthur Gebhard speak on Theosophy in pp.14-17
a friends drawing room. The impression made upon her was so deep
that she joined the T.S. within two weeks, in mid 1886.
Theos. Messenger,
Her childhood was mainly spent among the Pennsylvania mountains Vol. 10, Nov. 1908;
and later on the continent of Europe, where she was educated and pp.33, 38
developed her literary talents. Her early writings consisted of
translations from the poems of the Kings of Sweden, in original verse,
tales and descriptions published in Harpers Magazine, the Galaxy
and other periodicals. Her first theosophical article appeared in The
Path, August 1886, under the name Julius. She also wrote under the
names of August Waldensee , J, and later as Jasper Niemand,
as well as unsigned articles. She was invaluable in proof-reading and
other technical jobs, in preparing the numerous publications and
documents for printing, and in other various department activities
such as her assiduous work for the Esoteric Section.
She first met Dr. Archibald Keightley in 1889 on his first visit to the
United States; Mrs. Ver Planck continued to live with her parents in
Pennsylvania until the autumn of 1891 when they married. After a
years residence in New York they were called to England by the
health of Dr. Keightleys mother. During Annie Besants absence in
India in 1893-1894, Mrs. Keightley took up residence and worked at
the London Headquarters for several months.
She was very close to W.Q. Judge and was the recipient of many of Theosophical
his letters, which were published under the title Letters That Have Quarterly, Vol. 13,
Helped Me. These were written for her and for Dr. Keightley, and for pp.220-225
the use of others later on, at the express wish of H.P. Blavatsky. In
response to the instruction she had received from Mr. Judge, she
wrote a series of wonderful articles, of which it may fairly be said
that, for the first time in the history of the Theosophical Society, they
sounded some of the depth of the inner, spiritual life. For many, her
articles were the first impulse in the present life awaking dormant
intuitions of the souls august mysteries.
Chronology
Nov. 3,
1915
245
Miss Katharine Hillard died. She was a member of a prominent Brooklyn Theosophical
family. Her cousin, Mr. Seth Low, was President of Colombia Quarterly, Vol. 7,
University (1890 1901) and served as Mayor of Brooklyn (1882-1885) pp.59-61
and New York City (1901-1903).
She was a very distinguished Dante scholar. After spending four
winters in Italy studying Dante and the mysticism of the middle ages
she visited H.P. Blavatsky in London in May 1888 en route to New
York. She spent two or three evenings with Mme. Blavatsky. She
advised me to settle neither in Rome nor London, but to return to New
York. You could not do better, she said in her emphatic way, than
to go back to New York, and study with W. Q. Judge. He is a good
man. Never shall I forget the stress she laid upon those words, as if
to answer the attacks she doubtless foresaw.
Later that spring she met Mr. Judge, who came to see her in Brooklyn.
She applied for fellowship in the Society and was admitted by the Her Application form
Aryan T.S. on December 18th, 1888.
As a successful writer, she had won a reputation for careful research, Theosophical
for sound judgment, for trustworthy craftsmanship. She worked with Quarterly, Vol. 13,
Mr. Judge and read many valuable papers before the Aryan T.S. She pp.220-221
contributed articles to The Path, The Theosophical Forum (original)
and to The Theosophical Forum, New Series generally signing in
full, sometimes with initials only.
Along with Julia Keightley, Katharine Hillard was an indispensable
worker and strong supporter of Mr. Judge and Theosophy, at the cost
of her reputation as a respected intellectual scholar.
Her translation of the Il Convito into English (Kegan Paul, Trench & Theosophical
Co., London, 1889) is considered one of the best. Among other titles, Quarterly, Vol. 34,
she published An Abridgement of The Secret Doctrine (1907). p.154
[Republished by Edmonton Theosophical Society, 1992.]
246
1916
Dr Jirah Dewey Buck died. (Born Nov. 20, 1838 at Fredonia, New York.)
He graduated from Cleveland Homeopathic College in 1864. He
married Melissa M. Clough in 1865. Dr. Buck was Prof. of Physiology
at Cleveland Homeopathy College (1866-71), became Dean of Pulte
Medical College in Cincinnati in 1880, and President of the American
Institute of Homeopathy in 1890.
Dr. Buck was a 33 Mason and a lifelong student of occultism. He
was one of the first to join the Theosophical Society in 1878 after
reading Isis Unveiled. He was appointed by H.S. Olcott to serve as a
member of the Board of Control of the T.S. in America on May 13,
1884, to consider plans for a Theosophical revival in the U.S. He was
probably one of Judges closest friends and, being a medical doctor,
looked after Judges health. Judge quite often stayed in Cincinnati at
the Buck residence. Buck wrote numerous excellent articles
sometimes using the pseudonym Hiraj for The Path, The
Theosophist, and Lucifer, and Blavatsky quoted him in The Key to
Theosophy. After Judges death, Buck became despondent and
became a follower of TK, an Occult writer with pretensions to
higher Masonic knowledge.
May 17,
1916
BCW, Vol. 3,
pp.498-199
Theos. Movement
1875-1950,
pp.122-123
NOTE: For a list of
some of his books
see BCW, Vol. 3,
p.499
BCW, Vol. 7,
pp.375-377
Reminiscences of
H.P.B. (1976), p.97
Mahatmas and
Their Letters
(1973), p.299
H.P.B. by Sylvia
Cranston,
pp.288-289
Rebirth of The
Occult Tradition,
pp.12. . . .
Chronology
June 25,
1919
Robert Crosbie died in Montery, CA. (Born in Montreal, Canada, Jan. 10,
1849) His parents were both connected with the Hudsons Bay
Company. He married the daughter of one of his partners of a shoe
and leather manufacturing business. (They divorced in 1892.) A
favorable opportunity arose to sell the business in Montreal and start
another one in Boston. Mr. Crosbie then became an American citizen.
He became a member of the T.S. on June 5, 1888 and made his first
contact with Mr. Judge at a talk given by Mr. Judge in Boston. At this
first meeting Mr. Judge told him: Crosbie, you are on my list. Mr.
Crosbie recorded: a veil was lifted . . . a tie was formed which has
never since been broken. When the Esoteric Section was formed Mr.
Crosbie was one of its earliest members. After H.P.B.s death Mr.
Judge put Crosbie in charge of the EST Groups in the seven New
England States. He joined Mrs. Tingley at Point Loma in 1898 but left
in 1904. In 1909, he founded the United Lodge of Theosophists in Los
Angeles, California, and in 1912 founded the magazine, Theosophy.
247
Theosophy, Vol. 7,
Aug. 1919; p.320
NOTE: Crosbie was present in New York at a meeting with Mrs. Besant,
Mr. Judge and others at Astor House. During that meeting, Mrs.
Besant narrated the events that took place at the General Council of
the Inner Group of the E.S. (in London on May 27, 1891) and kept a
record of this meeting. It was at this meeting that a note on which
the Master had written Judges plan is right, fell out of the packet
of tied letters she had in her sole possession, and which she had
brought herself to that meeting.
1921
Herbert Burrows died. (Born in 1845) English civil servant and an active
socialist. Educated at Cambridge University, Burrows was a vocal
partisan of Secularism, Irish independence, and womens rights. He
was a founding member of the Social Democratic Federation and was
active with Besant in leading the Match Girls Strike of 1888. He was
the Secretary of the Matchmakers Trade Union from 1888 to 1889.
Burrows stated that he joined the T.S. a few days before Besant.
She joined on May 10, 1889. Before joining Blavatsky told them,
You had better read what there is against me, and referred us to the
Psychical Report. When he joined he stated that he was a sceptic by
nature and a materialist. He served on the European Section
Advisory Council formed by H.P.B. While Blavatsky was alive he
lectured throughout England spreading Theosophy, helping to create
a strong Section. He was a British Parliamentary candidate in 1908
and 1910.
H.P.B. by Sylvia
Cranston,
pp.363-364
A Short History of
the T.S., pp.269,
282, 347
Isis Very Much
Unveiled, 2nd ed.,
pp.80-81
The Occult World
of Madame
Blavatsky, p.329
248
June 27,
1921
Cdn. Theosophist,
Vol. 2, July 1921;
p.66
In 1872 Sinnett had his great opportunity when Mr. George Allen, the
proprietor of The Pioneer, an Anglo-Indian newspaper of Allahabad,
offered him the editorship. It was while in India that he met Madame
Blavatsky and Col. Olcott (December 4, 1879). He was the recipient
of The Mahatma Letters, which he kept and which are now in the
British Museum. In March 1881 the Sinnetts went to England for a
holiday. It was at this time that he published his first theosophical
book, The Occult World, which described occult phenomena that had
been produced by Blavatsky while staying at the Sinnetts and in the
company of friends. This led to The Pioneer terminating his editorial
contract. The Sinnetts then moved back to London, arriving on April
26, 1883.
The American
Theosophist,
Vol. 54, July 1966;
pp.164-167
Damodar,
pp.270-284
Autobiography of
A.P. Sinnett (1986)
In 1885 Sinnett was elected President of the London Lodge, and held
this office for many years. During this time he published The
Transactions of the London Lodge of The T.S. (forty-four lectures;
republished by Edmonton Theosophical Society in 1997). He was
always drawn to spiritualism, hence to sances. He came to be at odds
with Judge as to who had actually written the famous Prayag Letter.
Aug. 27,
1921
Chronology
1922
249
Notes By Basil Crump on E.S.T. circular of April 3rd, 1896, consisting 5 pages
of B.C.s comments included within the text of a transcribed copy of
said circular.
Note: See April 3, 1896.
Anagarika
NOTE: The Anagarika Dharmapala left the Theosophical Society in 1905. Dharmapala and
The T.S., p.7
Mar. 3,
1922
NOTE: See April 29, 1933 for a biographical sketch on Mr. Dharmapala.
July 18,
1922
Bahman Pestonji Wadia resigned as a member of the Indian Council and Letter from Los
of the Indian Section T.S. [Letter to The General Secretary, Indian Angeles, 1 page
Section T.S. Benares City.]
To all Fellow Theosophists and Members of the Theosophical Pamphlet, 18 pages
Society: A Statement by B.P. Wadia. Constituting his Letter of
Resignation with reasons therefor.
The Theosophist,
Includes Wadias covering Letter (Addressed to Dear Madam and Vol. 44, Oct. 1922;
Colleagues:) tendering his resignation as a member of the General Supp. pp.1-12
Council of the T.S.
250
Sep. 11,
1922
News has been received by todays mail that Mr. B.P. Wadia, a well- The Last Four
known member of the Theosophical Society, who was formerly Lives Of Annie
connected with New India, has severed his connection with the Indian Besant, p.328
T.S., owing to a serious disagreement with the International
Headquarters at Adyar, Madras. Mr. Wadia, however remains a
staunch Theosophist.
NOTE: See March/April 1964 entry for J.M. Prentices book review of
The Last Four Lives Of Annie Besant in The Canadian
Theosophist.
Est. date
early 1920's
Theos. Movement
1875-1950,
pp.297-298
The Last Four
Lives Of Annie
Besant,
p.328
NOTE: Mr. B.P. Wadia, of Bombay, India, for years an active member Theos. Movement
and speaker of the Adyar Society, has supplied the editor of this 1875-1950,
volume with a signed statement giving this account of his interview p.342
with Mrs. Besant.
Sep. 15,
1922
Sep. 18,
1922
Chronology
Oct. 1, 1922
Oct. 1922
Oct. 1922
251
252
Oct. 1922
continued
RESTITUTION
Theosophy,
Referring to Mrs. Besants article in Oct. 1922 issue of the Vol. 11, Dec. 1922;
pp.49-50
Theosophist:
To appreciate the full force of Mrs. Besants confession of the real
nature and work of Mr. Judge, one has but to turn to her Case
Against W.Q. Judge, published broadcast by her in April, 1895, as
the culmination of two years impeachment by her, in public and in
private, of the name, the fame, the reputation and character of Mr.
Judge. The havoc wrought by her false charges and false they must
have been, by her own statements as above that havoc must be
repaired. Every true Theosophist will rejoice that Mrs. Besant has so
far freed herself from the dreadful incubus that has so long clouded
her; will hope that she may go on straight-forwardly to repair the
mischief done so long ago; will aid her and all others who have shared
in and suffer from the consequences of her great folly, to return to the
pure teachings and the pure inspiration of H.P. Blavatsky and William
Q. Judge.
Jan. 8, 1923
The Path,
Vol. 8, Feb. 1894;
pp.351-352
The Theosophist,
Vol. 44, May 1923;
pp.221-222
BCW, Vol. 11,
pp.593-594
He was the last secretary that Madam Blavatsky had during the last Echoes of the
three years of her life and was beside her at the time of her death. Orient, Vol. 2,
Exactly seven months later he arrived in New York. He travelled pp.463-464
about the United States, lecturing and organizing new Branches.
T.N.C.A.B.
Mr. Wright married Leoline Leonard in new York on May 3rd, 1896, Item 278, p.91
which served as the first public appearance for Katherine Tingley in
connection with Theosophy. The Wrights had a son who, The Lamp, Vol. 2,
unfortunately, went insane.
June 1896; p.166
The Wrights accompanied Katherine Tingley and others on the
Crusade around the world. He was present (Feb. 23, 1897) at Point
Loma and participated in the Ceremonies of the laying of the Corner
Stone of the School for the Revival of the Lost Mysteries of
Antiquities. His whole life was devoted to the Theosophical
movement.
Cdn. Theosophist,
Vol. 3, Jan. 1923;
p.168
Feb. 1923; pp.184185
H.P.B. As I Knew
Mr. Wright had been preparing a series of articles on Blavatskys life Her, p.23
and work from his valuable data when he drowned in Pearl Lagoon in
Nicaragua after losing his footing while stepping from a larger to a
smaller boat one late evening.
Chronology
253
1925
Adyar published The Golden Book of the Theosophical Society. Edited pp.131-141
by C. Jinarajadasa, V.P. of the T.S. Gives a brief history on The
Judge Case.
Dec. 3,
1925
254
Oct. 6, 1926
6 page document
prepared by William
Mulliss, dated
October 6, 1926.
Chronology
255
Feb. 15,
1927
Apr. 1927
Apr. 1927
continued
256
May 25,
1927
Frederick John Dick died of apoplexy at his home in Point Loma, CA.
(Born in Ireland in 1856) He was a Civil engineer by profession, a
member of the Institute of Civil Engineers, and for some years Head
of the Harbors and Lighthouse Board for Ireland, Inspector of
Harbors.
Chronology
Oct. 15,
1927
Nov. 27,
1927
Dr. Herbert A.W. Coryn died from complications of pneumonia in The Theos. Path,
hospital in San Diego, CA. (Born in England, 1863)
Vol. 34, Jan. 1928;
The son of a physician, he studied medicine and became a member of pp.89-93
the Royal College of Surgeons of London. He was associated with his
father in a medical practice for many years.
Lucifer,
He was one of the pioneer members of the Theosophical Society, Vol. 6, July 1890;
having joined it in the days of H.P. Blavatskys residence in London. pp.428-249
He was President of the Brixton Lodge when appointed by H.P.B.
(July 1890) to the Advisory Committee of the Theosophical Society
in Europe.
BCW, Vol. 9,
pp.410-411
Dr. Coryn later moved to the U.S.A and worked with W.Q. Judge at
144 Madison Avenue, New York. After the First convention of the
Theosophical Society In America (held in Boston in 1895), Dr. Coryn
published The Pageant of the Fifth Act. A Study of Mrs. Besant
(May 1895).
Shortly after Mrs Tingley moved the headquarters from New York to
Point Loma in 1900, Dr. Coryn applied for resident membership as a
student and worker. Prior to that he served as Physician-in-chief of the
International Brotherhood Leagues medical staff at the time that
Katherine Tingley organized a relief expedition to Cuba directly after
the Spanish-American war, going there on a U.S. Government
transport furnished by the Assistant Secretary of War, Hon. G.D.
Meiklejohn, with the endorsement of President McKinley.
Dr. Coryn was also editor of The New Way, a magazine founded by
Katherine Tingley in 1911 for free distribution to prisons and
hospitals.
Dr. Coryn, who remained unmarried, was the brother-in-law of
Professor Fred J. Dick who married Dr. Coryns sister, Frances.
257
258
June 1929
July 11,
1929
As a child she constantly talked about things which she said she could
see, but which her parents could not. The early period of her life is not
clearly known, but it included schooling in the Villa Maria Convent,
a French Roman Catholic school, in Montreal, Quebec.
Letter from
Neresheimer to
Basil Crump, dated
Feb.27, 1932;
2 pages
The Theos. Path,
Vol. 36, No. 9,
Sep. 1929; p.401
Mr. Crumps notes
on Neresheimers
Paper on Some
Reminiscences of
W. Q Judge, 5 pages
Chronology
July 11, 1929
continued
While living in New York, Mr. Judge came to her after learning that
she was working among the poor. She opened a soup kitchen in 1893,
called the Do-Good mission, on the East Side of New York City.
Some time later Mr. Judge showed her a picture of herself which
Madame Blavatsky had drawn and given to him as of one whom he
should look for, and said that but two years before H.P. Blavatsky
passed on, on the top lefthand corner of one of her letters to him she
had written, Have you found your chela yet? Mrs. Tingley joined
the Theosophical Society on Oct. 13, 1894, and was accepted into the
Esoteric Section two weeks later.
259
Journal of San
Diego History,
Vol. 43, Winter 1997
O.E. Library Critic,
Vol. 19, Aug. 1929
Theos. Movement
1875-1950, p.274
California Utopia,
Early in 1895, Mr. Judge went to Mineral Wells, Texas, trying to pp.12-22
regain his health. Katherine Tingley had rented a house for him, and
by taking care of him and acting as his amanuensis when he was too Echoes of the
ill to write himself . . .
Orient, Vol. 1, p.liii
In 1897 she had already founded the International Brotherhood The Theos. Path,
League, in order to provide a wider field for the educational and Vol. 36, No. 8,
humanitarian work in which she had been engaged for many years in Aug. 1929; p.381
New York City.
On February 13, 1900, Mrs. Tingley transferred the Societys
international headquarters from New York to Point Loma, California.
She was on her Theosophical Lecture-Tour scheduled to be in
Berlin on the 4th of June after her tour of the Netherlands when she
was in a severe automobile accident on May 31st at Osnabrch,
Germany.
260
July 15,
1929
Dec. 29,
1929
Theos. History,
Vol. 8, No. 2, Apr.
2000; p.71
First Five Lives of
Annie Besant, p.333
Theos. Journal,
Vol. 3, Nov.-Dec.
1932; p.7
Lucifer, Vol. 4, Apr.
1889; p.169
Vol. 5, Jan. 1890;
pp.432-436
Vol. 7, Oct. 1890;
p.165
Vol. 8, Aug. 1891;
p.516
Vol. 14, Aug. 1894;
pp.463-464
Chronology
Dec. 29, 1929
continued
261
262
* H.P.B. used to call him the astral tramp, on account of his habit of H.P.B. As I knew
roaming about in his astral body at night, as she put it.
Her, p.24
Mar. 12,
1930
Letter written from Point Loma by Joseph H. Fussell to J.W. Willey. Dear Mr. Willey:
2 pages
Referring to Mrs. Cleathers books he wrote:
Mrs. Cleather had made some egregious blunders in regard to
historical data, which were available to every student. He provides
examples then states:
But there was no foundation for her attack upon Katherine Tingley.
It was, as I see it, a case of attempted self-justification.
Also provided personal information:
In 1892 I had the great privilege of becoming the Private Secretary
of William Q. Judge . . . and afterwards held the same position under
Katherine Tingley.
July 10,
1930
Mrs. Laura Carter (Holloway) Langford died. (Born in 1848) She was an
American author and journalist. Mrs. Holloway was an associate
editor (1870-1884) of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle. In 1884 she met
Mme. Blavatsky in Paris. At that time she had been considered and
recommended for chelaship by Mr. Judge as a suitable candidate to
become trained by the Masters as Their mediator. She was present
when Hermann Schmiechen, a young German artist then residing in
London, produced the portrait of K.H. that summer. Saw K.H.
psychically, who was present and guided the artist.
T.N.C.A.B.
Item 1391, p.404
Mrs. Langford was formerly Mrs. Holloway, one of the Two Cdn. Theosophist,
Chelas who wrote Man Fragments of Forgotten History [1885*], Vol. 11, Sep. 1930;
the other being Mohini Chatterji. . . . She is the Mrs. Lakesby of A.P. p.208
Sinnetts novel Karma. She was a great friend of William Q. Judge
and in later years contributed to The Word, of which Harold C.
Percival was editor.
She resigned from the Theosophical Society after a few years, but Damodar,
retained the friendship of some of the old members. She was a pp.626-628
particularly good friend to Mrs. Mitchell, Colonel Olcotts sister. She
met Olcott himself on his last visit to New York in 1906 and had with
him an historically significant talk about Mr. Judge. . . .
She died of cerebral haemorrhage.
NOTE: See Sep. 23, 1906 entry for Holloway-Langfords chat with
Olcott.
NOTE: * Man Fragments of Forgotten History was reprinted by
Edmonton Theosophical Society in 1991 with three appendixes
including corrections by H.P. Blavatsky from The Letters of H.P.
Blavatsky to A.P. Sinnett and an index.
Chronology
Nov. 18,
1930
263
Theosophical
Quarterly,
Vol. 28, Jan. 1931;
pp.289-293
264
Apr. 17,
1931
Mrs. Ella M. Judge died. Ella Miller Smith was a Brooklyn school teacher
when she married W.Q. Judge in 1874. Mrs. Judge was described as
a very ordinary woman, and a strict Methodist. Their marriage was
very difficult, both on personal and religious grounds, and that only
increased when their daughter died at a very early age. She regarded
him as her lawful property, and so, inevitably, made herself a heavy
burden in Judges life. Yet in her way, she was devoted to him, and
during his illness, never spared herself in her efforts to alleviate his
suffering. When travelling, Judge took her with him as often as he
could. She cared nothing about Theosophy, although she later
came to see the value of the teachings and joined the United Lodge
of Theosophists in 1915.
Theosophical
Quarterly, Vol. 31,
July 1933;
pp.33-35
Echoes of the
Orient,
Vol. 1, pp.xix-xx
Letter to Neresheimer from Basil Crump requesting that he draw up a Two page letter from
clear statement of all the early facts from the beginning of Js Peking, China
[W.Q.J.]s association with K.A.T. [Tingley], and especially of
everything to do with the successorship.
Reply from Neresheimer (Feb. 4, 1932). Retyped with comments by 1 page letter from
B. Crump. Mr. Neresheimer detailed his meeting Katherine Tingley Santa Monica, CA.
for the first time at her home and the messages which she had received
from the Master on March 5th, 1895, which directed the members of
America to split.
NOTE: See March 5, 1895 entry.
Feb. 25,
1932
Neresheimer
Report,
Feb. 25, 1932;
14 pages
Chronology
265
Feb. 27,
1932
Mar. 1932
Mar. 1932
continued
Neresheimer to B.
Crump
2 page letter from
Santa Monica, CA
E.T. Hargrove believed these very early letters were published in an Theosophical
effort to show that Judge looked up to Olcott as a superior, while their Quarterly, Vol. 31,
publication ceased with the letter of July, 1884, because later letters July 1933; p.33
would increasingly have proved the opposite. . . .
Apr. 1932
May 1932
266
May 1932
continued
May 1932
continued
May 1932
continued
Chronology
June 1932
267
June 1932
continued
June 1932
continued
July 1932
July 17,
1932
Theos. Movement
(Bombay), Vol. 2,
July 1932; p.69
Jan. 1933; p.22
268
Aug. 1932
Sep. 1932
The Judge Occult Diary, Vindication of Tingley, Hargrove, Fussell. O.E. Library Critic,
It is claimed by the authorities at Point Loma that they actually have Vol. 22, Sep. 1932;
at least four Judge diaries. Very recently they have unearthed in their pp.4-5
archives a series of loose sheets in Judges handwriting, in which are
found every one of the quotations made by Mr. Hargrove in support
of Katherine Tingley.
. . . I have been furnished with photographs of five of these loose
sheets, the contents of which I give below, containing six of the
disputed quotations.
Chronology
Sep. 1932
continued
269
J. M. Pryse as Debunkist.
O.E. Library Critic,
Criticism of J.M. Pryses article in the Canadian Theosophist of June Vol. 22, Sep. 1932;
1932.
p.12
Mr. Pryse says that he painted a portrait of Mr. X., which Judge saw
and took for a picture of his Higher Self. Judge had a copy made
which he afterwards recopied and it was one of these pictures which
was exhibited at the famous E.S.T. meeting of March 29th, 1896 as the
Rajah or Luminous Youth, the alter ego of Judge. . . . Mr. Pryse is
one of the venerable antiques of the Theosophical Movement, but it
is not too late for him to write a volume of reminiscences
demonstrating that H.P.B. was a liar, Judge a forger and fool, and
indeed, that the Masters made the mistake of their lives in not
selecting him, Pryse, instead of H.P.B., as writer of The Secret
Doctrine.
NOTE: This refers to the article SIDE-LIGHTS ON T.S. HISTORY which
includes The Bogus Rajah Portrait in The Canadian Theosophist,
June 1932, pp.124-125.
Oct. 1932
Nov. 1932
270
Dec. 1932
Dec. 12,
1932
Cdn. Theosophist,
Vol. 13, Jan. 1933;
pp.353-356
Theos. Forum (P.L.)
Vol. 4, Mar. 1933;
pp.204-208
Chronology
271
Dec. 18,
1932
1933
272
Jan. 1933,
continued
Theos. Movement
(Bombay),
Vol. 3, Jan. 1933;
p.22
Apr. 29,
1933
Buddhism in
England, July/Aug.
1933; p.55
Anagarika
Dharmapala and
The T.S., p.1
The Theosophist,
Vol. 54, July 1933;
p.487
Blavatsky Assn.
No. 2, Nov. 13,
1925; pp.13-14
Cdn. Theosophist,
Vol.10, Nov. 1929,
pp.267-269
Chronology
Apr. 29, 1933
continued
273
Buddhism in
England,
Sep./Oct. 1933; p.83
July/Aug. 1933; p.55
The Charter of the Ceylon Section (1880) had been suspended by Col.
Olcott on March 3rd, 1891 until he returned from Australia when I
shall endeavor to group the Branches in a way more practicable,
because of the purely Buddhistic nature of the work in this Island.
With the restoration of the charter of the Ceylon Section in 1891, Mr.
H. Dharmapala was reinstated as Assistant General Secretary.
The Theosophist,
Vol. 12, Apr. 1891;
Supp. p.xliii
Lucifer, Vol. 8,
Aug. 1891; p.511
In 1892 the Buddhist Text Society of India was instituted in Calcutta. Lucifer, Vol. 10,
Mr. Dharmapala was appointed Assistant Secretary.
May 1892; p.252
In 1893 he was elected as delegate from Ceylon to the Worlds Fair
Parliament of Religions where he gave a talk on Buddhism. Leoline Theos. Forum (P.L.)
L. Wright commented on Mr. Dharmapala that: No one who saw him Vol. 13, Dec. 1938;
then could ever forget the noble and Christlike beauty of the noted p.404
Singhalese Buddhist and friend of H.P.B., Dharmapala. Tall and
almost luminously ascetic, robed classically in spotless white, he was
a lodestone to the throngs who swarmed into those meetings. Merely
to look at him was a revelation of character and spiritual attainment.
He was elected a member of the Blavatsky Association at a Council
Meeting on March 24th, 1924. He stated that: I am a member of the
Blavatsky Association and wish to see through it the spread of such
teachings as were given by H.P.B. as she received them from the
Masters.
Blavatsky Assn.
No.1, Nov. 13, 1924;
pp.52-55
Buddhism in
England, Sep./Oct.
In 1925 he first came to England, and later founded in London a 1933; pp.79-80
branch of the Maha-Bodhi Society . . . to propagate the Dhamma in July/Aug. 1933; p.55
the west.
NOTE: See Aug. 3,1922 entry for Mr. A.H. Dharmapalas reasons for his
disillusion with Adyar.
May 1933
274
July 1933
CORRESPONDENCE
Theosophical
To the Editors of the Theosophical Quarterly:
Quarterly, Vol. 31,
Editor, E. T. Hargrove stated:
July 1933; pp.88-89
Mrs. Tingley was Judges successor so far as his non-public position
was concerned. She was intended to serve as a stop-gap.
Mrs. Tingley failed, and then intrenched herself in her failure. . . .
Consequently she was deposed by the order of those whom, from the
beginning, Judge recognized as his Superiors and as the true Founders
of the Theosophical Society.
As Mrs. Tingley refused to accept her deposition and was able to
persuade many that it was invalid . . . . the task of carrying on the
Work of Judge and of H.P.B. and their Masters, fell to those who have
been identified with The Theosophical Society and with the
THEOSOPHICAL QUARTERLY from that time to this.
Cdn. Theosophist,
THE JUDGE DIARY LEAVES
Vol. 14, Sep. 1933;
Excerpts from and comments on Hargroves letter to the pp.212-214
Theosophical Quarterly.
O.E. Library Critic,
The Judge Diary Question Mr. Hargrove Speaks
Vol. 22, Mar. 1933;
pp.6-7
Sep. 20,
1933
Annie Besant died. She was cremated the next day on a pyre lit by C.W.
Leadbeater. (Annie Wood was born in London on Oct. 1, 1847 of an
English father and an Irish mother.) Early in 1866 Annie first met the
Rev. Frank Besant and married him on Dec. 28, 1867 but life as a
clergyman-schoolmasters wife was in contrast to her strong willed
disposition. After her mother died in May 1874 she felt free to follow
her conscience wherever it might lead her.
Chronology
275
NOTE: MRS. BESANT AND INDIAN CIVILISATION. Wm. Emmette Coleman Light, Vol. 14, Apr.
provided a summary of Mrs Besants involvement in India during her 14, 1894; pp.176-177
first visit there. He wrote:
The recent course of Mrs. Annie Besant in India is no trifling matter;
it has its serious side as well as its grotesque. It is probable that the
people in England do not realise the possible great harm that may be
the outcome of Mrs. Besants intemperate zeal in [sic] behalf of
barbarism, idolatry, and nescience. He described how she captivated
the crowds with her enchanting skills as an orator and how she was
enthralled with the Indian people.
Sep. 20,
1933
Sep. 29,
1933
George Robert Stowe Mead died after returning from a holiday in bad BCW, Vol. 13,
health. (Born March 22, 1863 at Nuneaton.) He graduated from pp.393-397
Cambridge with his B.A.,1884 and later obtained his M.A. in 1926.
He also joined the Theosophical Society in 1884. Mead was one of the
best and few true scholars to have joined and worked extensively for
the T.S. As a student of the classics, Mead had gained a knowledge of
Greek and Latin and later studied philosophy at Oxford. He wrote
many books on Christianity, the Gnostics and Hermetic Philosophy,
which provide an invaluable aid for students to do research.
He first met H.P.B. in 1887 and became her private secretary during
the last few years of her life. After Blavatsky died Mead, along with
Annie Besant, took over as Editors of Lucifer, then its successor (The
Theosophical Review) which was edited solely by Mead. He was
Editor of The Vahan and General Secretary of the European Section.
During this period Mr. Mead also served as vice-president and later
as president of Blavatsky Lodge, London.
In 1899 he married Laura Mary Cooper (Mrs. Cooper-Oakleys sister).
She died in 1924. In February 1909, he bid farewell to his readers of
The Theosophical Review stating that he had lost confidence in Mrs.
Besants leadership because of her restoring C.W. Leadbeaters
membership into the T.S. In October that year he started The Quest
and remained Editor until it ceased publication in 1930.
NOTE: The Canadian Theosophist published two short biographies Cdn. Theosophist,
under title In Memory of George R. S. Mead. The first is by James Vol. 14, Nov. 1933;
Morgan Pryse, and the other by Editor, Albert Smythe, which includes pp.265-268
a list of Meads published works.
276
Oct. 1933
Ex Cathedra Hargrove
Theosophy,
Rebuttal to Hargroves letter to the Editors of the Theosophical Vol. 21, Oct. 1933;
pp.569-573
Quarterly.
In connection with the Tingley Succession, Mr. Hargrove says that
those who discuss such papers publicly are outside the pale human
intercourse. He ought to know, for it was he who made the first move
in that direction with his own pamphlet entitled E.S.T., on March 1,
1898, and his immediate associates were responsible for the suit
which lugged the E.S.T. into the Courts of New York State.
Analysed Hargroves letter which appeared in the July 1933
Theosophical Quarterly and showed the inconsistencies with his
April 3rd, 1896 circular.
NOTE: See July 1933 for Hargrove article and also March 1, 1898.
Also in an item titled: More Work for Joseph H. Fussell, Doc.
Theos.
Theosophy [magazine] . . . ventures to suggest to Mr. Hargrove that
the Quarterly publish the text of the original Minutes of the two nightlong sessions held at Mrs. Tingleys home after Judges death
Minutes showing exactly how the Tingley Succession was arrived
at by those there present Madam Tingley, Mr. Hargrove, Mr.
Fussell, and Mr. Neresheimer among them.
Also included item titled:
Mr. Neresheimers Reminiscences praising Neresheimer in that he
had courageously admitted the . . . blunder . . . in the course taken
after Judges death. . . .
NOTE: See Feb. 25, 1932 for SOME REMINISCENCES OF W.Q. JUDGE.
Oct. 10,
1933
Unpublished letter and article titled The Judge Scripts by Margaret 6 pages, including
Thomas, sent to the Editor of the Canadian Theosophist, A.E.S. cover letter
Smythe.
1) showed the discrepancies in Hargroves claims of 1898 and 1933,
2) claimed that Judge did not appoint a successor,
3) claimed Judge had only one occult diary but that there were
other papers by him.
Feb. 1934
Dr. Besant and Mr. Judge (An Important Statement By Mr. Jinarajadasa)
Republished in The American Theosophist from Theosophical
News and Notes of the English Section, January-Febuary,1934, p.3.
I was in England during all the period of the Societys difficulty with
Mr. Judge; long after, I was vice president of the Society for seven
years (1921-28) and in charge of all the documents which form the
material for the case against Mr. Judge. Some of that material has not
yet been published. I, for one, do not in any way desire to open up this
matter, because even though Mr. Judge did break up the Society (I
know that after the secession he claimed he was the original Society,
and H.P.B. and Colonel Olcott merely a kind of colony sent from New
York) he did a magnificent piece of work for Theosophy in the
U.S.A., and, as I have already said, I recognize the value of the
theosophical propaganda done by the various organizations who look
to him as the only successor of H.P.B.
The American
Theosophist,
Vol. 22, Feb. 1934;
p.41
Chronology
Feb. 1934
continued
Mar. 17,
1934
Nov.15,
1934
OFFICIAL NOTES
Cdn. Theosophist,
Mr. Cyrus Field Willard requests me to publish his statement that Vol. 15, Nov. 1934;
Mr. Judge never appointed Mrs. Tingley as his successor, but that she p.272
was hired by Mr. Neresheimer as his nurse in his last illness, and that
when Mr. Judge died she was elected by the Executive Committee of
the T.S. in America, consisting of Messrs. Neresheimer, Spencer,
Griscom, Hargrove and Robert Crosbie, as the new head. Mr.
Neresheimer told me this himself in my house in the presence of my
wife, Mr. Willard writes.
NOTE: See Neresheimers response, Nov. 23, 1934 entry.
Nov. 23,
1934
277
278
Nov. / Dec.
1934
American Section, T.S. (Adyar) Dons Cast-Off Coat of Point Loma O.E. Library Critic,
Society
Vol. 23, Nov./Dec.
Controversy over the claim to the title THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY IN 1934; pp.5-6
AMERICA
For . . . the Convention to adopt the title The Theosophical Society
in America, the cast-off coat of two other still existing theosophical
societies, under pretense that it has been legally granted to it borders
on the ridiculous.
Nov. / Dec.
1934
continued
NOTE: See March 31, 1896 and Appendix G, No. 8, for Neresheimers
letter to A.L. Cleather and for Dr. Stokes details on the relation of
W.Q. Judge to Katherine Tingley.
1934-1935
1934-1935
continued
Chronology
May 30,
1935
279
Daniel Nicol Dunlop, O.B.E. died. (Born in Dec. 1868 in Ayrshire, Cdn. Theosophist,
Scotland and raised as a Quaker.) He entered into the engineering Vol. 16, July 1935;
world as an apprentice with the Howe Machine Company of pp.141-143, 149
Ardrossan. At the age of twenty-six Mr. Dunlop became associated
with the Westinghouse Company in Pittsburgh and also worked in
their New York offices. He returned to England after three or four
years. In 1911 he organized the British Electrical and Allied
Manufacturers Association (BEAMA), edited their journal, and was
active in development and research work in electrical industries. In
1923-1924 he was founder and chairman of the World Power
Conference, and up until the time of his death was chairman of the
executive council.
Mr. Dunlop became a member of the Theosophical Society in Dublin,
Ireland which had been founded by Charles Johnston in 1886. He
associated with George W. Russell, W.B. Yeats, Charles Johnston,
Claude Falls Wright and others of the Society who gave the impetus
to the Irish Literary Renaissance. He, as Editor, contributed to The
Irish Theosophist as did his wife Eleanor (Fitzpatrick) Dunlop, who
sometimes wrote under her pen-name, Freida Dunlop.
While in America he was associated with Mrs. Tingley, as her
secretary for some time after her return from the World Crusade, and
his intimacy with her methods and practices caused him to change his
opinion of her at the time when he was at Point Loma in 1899. He,
along with Mr. Smythe, were expelled from the Universal
Brotherhood, Point Loma, in 1899. He started and edited a
Theosophical publication called The Path with Charles Lazenby, July
1910. He also helped to publish The Open Door as a supplement to
The Path at the Blavatsky Institute, in Hale, Cheshire. Dunlop was
the author of The Science of Immortality, The Path of Attainment,
and British Destiny.
He was also on the Executive Council of the T.S. in England and
Wales, finally resigning in 1922 due to disenchantment with the
uncharitable attitude of officials towards members who disagreed with
their policies. Mr. Dunlop stated, the field of service of free and
independent members is restricted in every direction by the attitude of
those who use their freedom to circumscribe every influence but the
one. After withdrawing from the English Society due to the drift
toward Leadbeaterism, he allied himself with the Anthroposophical
movement of Rudolf Steiner.
Echoes of The
Orient, Vol. 2, p.1
Cdn. Theosophist,
Vol. 3, June 1922;
pp.57-58
280
July 17,
1935
George Russell () died at Bournemouth. (Born at Lurgan Co. Armagh, BCW, Vol. 12,
Ireland on April 10,1867, the youngest of three children.) Irish poet, pp.771-778
painter, economist and journalist and close friend of W.Q. Judge.
The family moved to Dublin when he was ten years old. Being a
student at the Metropolitan School of Art, before he turned thirteen,
he met W.B. Yeats through whom he became acquainted with
Theosophy.
In 1897 he joined the Irish Agricultural Organization Society and
became editor of their publication Irish Homestead (1906-1923) and
later of Irish Statesman (1923-1930) with which it amalgamated. His
interest in economics was evident in his writings. He gained a
reputation in Great Britain and America in this field.
In 1898 he married a fellow theosophist, Violet North, and they had
two sons.
George Russell was a convinced Theosophist who sustained the Irish
branch of the movement. He was one of the most prolific contributors,
in prose and verse, to The Irish Theosophist, a magazine edited by
D.N. Dunlop and founded by the Dublin Lodge of The Theosophical
Society.
Of Judges passing he said: No one ever tried less than he to gain
from men that adherence which comes from impressive manner. I
hardly thought what he was while he spoke; but on departing I found
my heart, wiser than my brain, had given itself away to him; an inner
exaltation lasting for months witnessed his power.
In a letter to Captain P.G. Bowen, dated October 17th, 1922, Russell The Aryan Path,
expressed appreciation for that great and wise man, William Q. Vol. 6, p.722
Judge whose very memory seems to have been forgotten by present
day Theosophists. I think he was a true adept in that sacred lore and
I have never found in those who came after H.P.B. and Judge the same
knowledge, wisdom and inner light.
P.G. Bowen stated: After the death of Judge, found himself less The Aryan Path,
happy in his membership of the T.S., until, upon its merging into the Vol. 6, p.725
Universal Brotherhood under Katherine Tingley, he felt compelled to
resign. He was convinced, he declared, and events have amply
justified the conviction, that with the passing of W.Q.J. the cycle
ended, and the flood of spiritual Light which had filled the world
since 1875 faded into deeper and deeper twilight.
NOTE: Another biography on not included in the above is That
Myriad-Minded Man: A Biography of George William Russell
, 1867-1935 by Henry Summerfield, 1975.
[Continued in next cell]
Chronology
July 17,
1935
continued
281
From 1898 down to 1933 when he [] left Ireland [After his wife Cdn. Theosophist,
died in 1932 he lived mostly in London], kept alive in Ireland a Vol. 16, Aug. 1935;
nucleus of genuine students under the name of the Hermetic Society. p.163
. . . The Hermetic Society was founded by Charles Johnston in 1886,
and is therefore the oldest Theosophical body in Ireland. joined it
on resigning from the Point Loma Universal Brotherhood in 1898, and
led it from that time until he finally handed over his charge to myself
[P.G. Bowen] in 1933.
NOTE: The Canadian Theosophist dedicated most of this issue, Vol. 16,
August 1935, pp.161-200, to George William Russell SS .
July 1935
Aug./Sep.
1935
282
Aug./Sep.
1935
continued
A Correction
O.E. Library Critic,
In the CRITIC, July, page 4, and August-September, page 5, it is Vol. 23, Dec. 1935stated that a letter of H.P.B. to Judge, dated March 27, 1891, naming Jan. 1936; p.2
Annie Besant as her successor, was withheld by Judge at the E.S.T.
Council meeting of May 27, 1891, resulting in his being chosen as
joint Outer Head with Mrs. Besant by the Council. This is an error.
The E.S.T. report of that meeting states distinctly (p.2) that this letter
was produced and read at the meeting, so that our statement that Judge
withheld it is wrong. Who read the letter and whether it was read
entirely does not appear, nor does it appear why, in the face of
H.P.Bs distinct statement that Mrs. Besant was her successor, Judge
was appointed as her equal. A mysterious slip of paper bearing the
words Judges plan is right, supposed to be a precipitated Mahatmic
communication, which appeared among Mrs. Besants papers, would
indicate, whether genuine or not, that Judge had a plan which was that
he, although not mentioned by H.P.B. as a successor, should be
chosen as equal with Mrs. Besant, the plan which was successfully put
through. Nor does this correction invalidate Mrs. Besants repeated
claims that H.P.B. had selected her as her successor in the E.S.T., and
her consequent stand against the later action of Judge in deposing
her.
NOTE: See Nov. 3, 1894, By Masters Direction. See also Dec. 14, 1888
for Special order by H.P. Blavatsky.
1936
The Path,
Vol. 8, Oct. 1893;
pp.204-206
The Theosophist,
Vol. 5, May 1884;
Supp. p.75
Chronology
1936
continued
Apr. 16,
1937
283
On May 4, 1884, he was elected as Secretary of The Rohilkund T.S., The Path,
a branch at Allahabad. In 1893, at the suggestion of Bertram Vol. 8, Oct. 1893;
Keightley, Prof. Chakravarti was invited to attend and participate at pp.223-224
the Worlds Congress of Religions in Chicago. Prof. Chakravarti
arrived in New York on September 2nd. He was invited by the
Manager of the Parliament not only to attend but to speak in the
opening excercises.
Emil August Neresheimer died at his home in Santa Monica, California. Theos. Forum,
(Born Jan. 2, 1847 in Moosburg near Munich.) He graduated from Vol. 10, June 1937;
business college and then learned the silversmiths and jewellery p.454
trades in Switzerland, Augsburg, and Berlin.
The Path,
In 1868 he went to Australia, leaving there in 1870 for California. Vol. 9, Aug. 1894;
After two years in California, he came to New York in 1872 where he pp.145-156
went into business as an importer of diamonds and other precious
stones. He had a reputation in New York Citys Maiden Lane as one California Utopia,
of the ablest diamond brokers.
p.16
From childhood he was fascinated with nursery tales and stories of O.E. Library Critic,
wonderful beings in India. In 1886 Mr. Neresheimer heard of Vol. 24, May/June
Theosophy from reading Esoteric Buddhism. He joined the Society 1937
in January 1889 and quickly became close friends with W.Q. Judge.
He served on the Executive Committee of the American Section, and
from his intimate acquaintance with its work, and working with Judge,
was qualified to know upon what the growth of Theosophy in the
United States depended.
Mr. Neresheimer wrote: During all this time (after the Chicago Neresheimer
Convention in February, 1898, and until 1901) I was still living in Report, p.14
New York, and only received glowing accounts and reports of the
activities going on at Point Loma. I then moved with my family to
Headquarters, remaining there until 1904, when business matters
called me away to Colorado. It was not until March, 1919, that I was
again able to return to Point Loma. . . . I left Point Loma with my
family early in March 1929. From there he moved to Santa Monica.
284
1938
The Theosophist,
Vol. 47, July 1926;
p.457
BCW, Vol. 9, p.78
The Theosophist,
Vol. 3, Feb. 1882;
Supp. p.2
Vol. 50, June 1929;
p.214
General Report of
the 17th
Anniversary of the
T.S.
Dec. 1892; pp.44-45
The Theosophist,
Vol. 5, Sep. 1884;
Supp. pp.128-129
Vania, p.245
Official Report of
the Ninth
Anniversary at
Madras, pp.80, 100
Report of
Investigation, pp.3-4
The Theosophist,
Vol. 11, Jan. 1890;
Supp. pp.lxii-lxvii
Chronology
1938
Khandalavala,
N.D.
continued
285
He then read a letter from Olcott, in London at the time, which was
addressed To Theosophists Present at the Bombay Meeting. Olcotts
good news concerning remarkable activities in the countries of the
West exacerbated their concerns that with the rapidly growing
American Section and the newly formed Esoteric Section, India would
be shut out. The Indian members became more defensive, especially
Judge Khandalavala. They felt that in India every man was naturally,
and by right of descent, a Theosophist and that any attempt to
discredit or weaken the Society in this country was simply suicidal.
Shortly after his arrival at Adyar (Dec. 21st, 1892), Walter R. Old A Short History of
consulted with Col. Olcott, telling him that he thought W.Q. Judge the T.S.,
was allegedly forging messages. At the Annual Convention in 1892 pp.291, 298
Judge Khandalavala was asked to counsel on the evidence gathered.
His advice to Col. Olcott was to prosecute the case against Judge. The
matter was not pursued until a year later when Mrs. Besant arrived at
Adyar on Dec. 20th, 1893. Again Judge Khandalavala was consulted
on the matter. During that years time N.D.K. had taken exception to
Mr. Judges articles, especially An Interesting Letter which he
replied with his own THEOSOPHY IN THE WEST, THE TENDENCY
TOWARDS DOGMATISM. [See July 1893 entry.]
He kept in contact with Mme. Blavatsky after her departure from
Adyar.* He wrote H.P. Blavatsky and Her Masters in October 1898
which included excerpts from letters she had written him. This was
reprinted in the Theosophist as Some Letters of H.P.B. in July
1926. He also wrote Madame H.P. Blavatsky as I knew Her which The Theosophist,
appeared in the Theosophist in June and July 1929. In this article he Vol. 53, Aug. 1932;
quoted from WHY I DO NOT RETURN TO INDIA. He received a letter pp.618-627
from H.P. Blavatsky, dated Nov. 21st, 1889, but it was not published
until Aug. 1932.
In 1929 he contributed to the Archives at Adyar 16 autograph[ed]
letters of H.P.B., hitherto unpublished, several articles by her, and a
number of important letters from W.Q. Judge, B. Keightley, G.R.S.
Mead, etc. He served as a member of the General Council of the
Theosophical Society during the Coulomb crisis and was still a
member in Aug. 1932. In 1929 it was noted that he was one of the
oldest living theosophists in India. There is little mention of him after
the death of Annie Besant.
* See 1890 entry for the NOTE WHY I DO NOT RETURN TO INDIA.
The Theosophist,
Vol. 50, July 1929;
p.303
Vol. 53, Aug. 1932;
p.618
286
Jan-Mar.
1938
CONCERNING BOOKS.
[Basil] Crump corrects some of the statements made in Ryans 1937
H.P. Blavatsky [and the Theosophical Movement] on Mrs. Tingley.
Gives the circumstances of his and Mrs. Cleathers association with
her. Says that Judges circular By Masters Direction deposing Besant
was felt by many at the time to have precipitated the split that
followed.
T.N.C.A.B.
Item 1953, p.536
The Path (Sydney),
Jan.-Mar. 1938;
pp.17-18
May 4,
1938
A BELATED EXPOSURE
[Printers error, title should have been A Belated Disclosure, per note
on p.6]
By Albert Smythe, regarding: A. Besants visit to Toronto in 1893
after attending the Worlds Fair in Chicago.
I happened to see the beginning of it in 1893 when Mrs. Besant came
to Toronto to speak for the Toronto Theosophical Society after her
visit to the Congress of Religions at the Worlds Fair. She had then
begun to follow the tuition of Mr. Chakravarti, and she gave us a setback in Toronto that we did not recover from for a long period. A
reception had been arranged for her at the Rossin House, now the
Prince George, and a large number of ladies had come to meet her.
When she came in and was introduced at the head of the line she
asked, Are you a member of the Society? The answer being Yes,
she shook hands and said a word or two. The next was asked the same
question and answered No, and Mrs. Besant said Oh and passed on
to the next, without a further word and declining to shake hands with
the Philistine. So all down the line of fifty or sixty persons, only
recognizing members as worthy of her notice. Thats your
Brotherhood! Thats your Theosophy! were the comments we heard
for weeks afterwards.
NOTE: On their way from Chicago Mrs. Besant and Prof. Chakravarti
diverged for lectures at Toledo and Toronto, and on Sunday, Sep. 24th,
she lectured in Brooklyn and he in Washington, D.C.
Cdn. Theosophist,
Vol. 19, Mar. 1938;
pp.5-6
The Path,
Vol. 8, Oct. 1893;
p.224
Alice Leighton Cleather died. (Born in late April 1846, England) BCW, Vol. 14,
[Basil Crump claimed that A.L. Cleather was born April 24th, 1854] pp.518- 521
She was the daughter of an Anglican minister and the wife of Colonel
William Barclay Gordon Cleather (died winter 1919, at 81), a British
army officer who had seen active service in India.
Cdn. Theosophist,
Vol. 19, Sep. 1938;
Mrs. Cleather contacted Theosophy through reading Sinnetts Occult pp.230-233
World in 1881, and she joined the T.S. in 1885 while residing at
Eastbourne with her two sons. She met Bertram Keightley, and was The Occult World
introduced to Madame Blavatsky in 1887. She became a member of of Mme. Blavatsky,
the Esoteric Section in 1888 and was admitted to the Inner Group of p.329
H.P.B.s Esoteric School on September 17, 1890. In 1917, with
William Kingsland, she founded the H.P.B. Library, and in 1923, the Fohat,
Blavatsky Association.
Vol. 1, No. 3, Fall
1997; pp.67-68
[Continued in next cell.]
Chronology
May 4, 1938
continued
Mrs. Cleather accompanied Mrs. Tingley on her world tour but after
1899 she separated herself from the theosophical movement, per se.
She resided in Italy from 1911 to 1918. In 1918, Mrs. Cleather, with
her son Graham Gordon Cleather and Basil Crump, went to India, and
in 1925, to Peking, China where they met the Panchen Lama of Tibet.
Mrs. Cleather and Basil Crump republished H.P.B.s The Voice of
the Silence (Peking, 1927), and the Tashi Lama endorsed this edition
with a special sutra written in Tibetan script. Mrs. Cleather and her
party resided in Peking for eleven years.
287
Cdn. Theosophist,
Vol. 19, May 1938;
p.88
June 1938; pp.111114
Dec. 1938
Apr. 6,
1939
Eclectic Theos.
Summer 1993;
pp.11-12
1 page
List of W.Q. Judges pseudonyms and dates used (prepared by Theosophy 1 page
Company, Los Angeles, and loaned to Ottawa U.L.T., March 1970).
NOTE: See Appendix I for compiled list of Judges pseudonyms.
288
Apr. 8,
1939
Ernest Temple Hargrove died at his residence, Chapel Farm, Riverdaleon-Hudson, NY. He was born circa 1870, the second son of James
Sidney Hargrove and his Scottish wife, of the family Aird. His body
was cremated and information obtained from Woodlawn Cemetery in
Bronx, NY indicates his ashes were interred on December 27, 1940 in
the plot of the Order of the Living Christ. Cemetery records show that
he was 69 when he died.
Mr. Hargrove first heard of Theosophy during the time of the great
discussion in the London Daily Chronicle. Being at a seaside holiday
resort, he saw a placard on a wall with the large heading Theosophy
advertising a lecture by Mrs. Besant. He did not go to the lecture, but
by seeing the word Theosophy his whole inner and outer life was
changed. He bought some books on the subject and was admitted as
a member-at-large without ever having met another theosophist. He
spent most of his nights at the London Headquarters, helping in the
General Office with correspondence, with the Vahan, with certain
Lucifer reviews, and lecturing at various lodges.
His father, James Sidney Hargrove, was one of Londons best known
solicitors. He did most of his work through the House of Commons.
Ernest was educated at Harrow, which he left at the age of eighteen to
study for the diplomatic service, following which he chose travelling
abroad over going to Cambridge. He went to Australia, Tasmania,
New Zealand, returning home by way of Ceylon. He then decided to
become a barrister.
Theos. Movement
1875-1950, p.279
Echoes of the
Orient, Vol. 2,
pp.471-472
Theos. Movement
1875-1950, p.279
Echoes of the
Orient, Vol. 2,
pp.471-472
Magic, Vol. 1,
Dec. 26, 1896; p.36,
Theosophical
Quarterly, Vols.
28,29,30,31 and 32.
See Appendix D for
Letters of W. Q.
Since the age of nine he travelled a great deal in Europe and other Judge to E.T.
places, and thus had had most of the edges knocked off his distinctive Hargrove
character as an insular Englishman. To prove this he says he was
a great reader of The Path and that he has learned more from it than
from other sources.
Magic, Vol. 1,
He was recipient of the Letters From W.Q. Judge to E.T. Hargrove Oct. 16, 1896; p.9
which were published in the Theosophical Quarterly, which
Hargrove edited.
Theosophy,
Following the death of William Q. Judge a convention was held on Vol. 21, Oct. 1933;
April 26, 1896, at Madison Square Garden Theatre, where E.T. p.568
Hargrove was elected President of the Theosophical Society in
America. After the 4th Annual Convention of T.S. in America, held
Feb. 18, 1898 in Chicago [at which time the Constitution and name
were changed to Universal Brotherhood], he and a number of others
re-established The Theosophical Society in America, May 29-30,
1898. In 1908 the name was changed to The Theosophical Society.
Mr. Hargrove was the last editor of The Theosophical Forum, (May
1895-Apr. 1905), which Judge had started.
[Continued in next cell.]
Chronology
Apr. 8, 1939
continued
289
Apr. 22,
1942
James Morgan Pryse died very peacefully in Los Angeles. Born August
14, 1859 in New London, a suburb of Cincinnati, Ohio where his
father, James Morgan Pryse, was a Presbyterian minister. His mother
was Mary Morgan. Both had been born in Wales and come to the US
in their teens. Rev. Pryse moved his family to Emporia, Kansas in
1863.
Being a ministers son James went place to place in America, taking
a high-school course and preparing in Latin, Greek, and the like, for
a college in Crawfordsville, Ind. Poor health, overstudy, and trying
to do three years work in a little over one spoiled these plans, and
Pryse began to read law. At 17 he was ready for the bar, but not
caring to spend four years as a clerk he went to Red Cloud, Nebraska,
to the frontier. There for a while he had a photograph gallery, but sold
it and entered a printing office, learned that business, edited a country
paper, and with his brother John published other papers in various
towns. In Jan. 1886, he gave up printing and was admitted to the bar
in the Circuit Court for the Eighth District of the State of Minnesota.
The Path,
Vol. 9, June 1894;
pp.90-91
Echoes of the
Orient, Vol. 2,
pp.472-474
BCW, Vol. 12,
pp.761-765
Cdn. Theosophist,
Vol. 16, Mar. 1935;
p.2
He joined the T.S. in July 1887, after corresponding with Mrs. Julia Cdn. Theosophist,
VerPlank (who married Archibald Keightley). In 1889 he started the Vol. 20, May 1939;
Aryan Press in New York to help Judge print H.P.B.s Esoteric p.75
Instructions. That same year, H.P.B. cabled him to come to London
to start the H.P.B. Press with the capital supplied by Archibald
Keightley. At London Headquarters, Pryse lived under the same roof
as H.P.B., conversed with her daily, and when she grew feeble took
her round the garden in her wheel-chair. After her death the group still
remained and worked at the same place until the break came in 1894.
Mr. Pryse then went to Dublin, Ireland, where he had charge of
printing the Irish Theosophist and contributed articles and poems to
the magazine. After a year in Dublin Mr. Pryse was called to New
York by Mr. Judge who needed him to help with The Path.
In 1901 he married Jessie Mayer. He continued to practise law until
1905. In 1900 he had again taken up writing and wrote Reincarnation
in the New Testament. He continued writing books using his
knowledge of Greek, Latin and Sanskrit.
Mrs. Pryse was stricken with paralysis in August 1928 and passed
away on August 27th.
290
May 7,
1942
* His application form was endorsed by Ron S.(?) Bryan and W.Q. Judge.
Sep. 30,
1942
Dr. Henry Newlin Stokes died. (Born Oct. 1859) Editor of The O. E.
(Oriental Esoteric) Library Critic [Aug. 30, 1911 to Jan. 1942]
This independent periodical was published out of Washington, D.C.
No organization or individual was safe from criticism, as Dr. Stokes
was the watch-dog over the Theosophical Movement. With the slash
of his pen and his tenacious pursuit for uncovering facts, many small
mysteries came to light. To quote Dr. Stokes: No one need resign
from membership because the CRITIC has shocked his feelings or
trodden on his toes. All he has to do is pity the Editor for not having
learned better manners and at the same time to see if he himself is
not wearing corns.
Stokes entered life as a Quaker. Originally a chemist, he took an
interest in occultism, later establishing a library and book lending
business that concentrated on occult subjects. He became a member
of the Theosophical Society (Adyar) on June 4, 1904. Shortly
thereafter he became involved with the Oriental Esoteric Center of
Washington. When it came time to choose between it and the TS he
chose the O.E. Society. However, he became disillusioned which led
him to seek readmission in the TS. He was readmitted June 12, 1915
and he remained a member for the rest of his life, despite his
disenchantment with its leadership after 1917.
NOTE: Dr. Stokes great-grandson, Henry Stokes, supplied the following
information: H.N. Stokes doctorate was in chemistry. He was
considered a specialist in inorganic chemistry concentrating his
research on silicon and phosphorus-nitrogen compounds as well as the
chemistry of ore deposition.
NOTE: For more on Stokes see H.N. Stokes and The O.E. Library Critic
in Theosophical History Vol.1, No. 6, pp.129-139 and H.N. Stokes
Early Contacts With The Theosophical Society in Theosophical
History Vol. 2, No. 1, pp.4-22, both by James Santucci.
NOTE: The O.E. Library Critic (Vols. 1-27 Volumes) was republished
by Edmonton Theosophical Society in 1993.
Cdn. Theosophist,
Vol. 23, Dec. 1942;
pp.319-320
Jan 1943; p.353
Chronology
Oct. 31,
1944
291
The Theosophist,
Vol. 66, Jan. 1945;
pp.99-100
Feb. 1945; p.139
The Theosophist,
Vol. 30, Sep. 1909;
pp.729-730
The Path,
Vol. 8, Aug. 1893;
p.143
292
May 30,
1945
Basil Crump died in Calcutta, India. (Born 1866,est.) At the age of twenty Cdn. Theosophist,
five he first met Alice Cleather, just after the death of Madame Vol. 26, June 1945;
Blavatsky. Mr. Crump was a Cambridge man, a barrister of the Inner pp.115-116
Temple, a freemason, and finally succeeded his father (a K.C.) as
Editor of the Law Times of London.
After Mr. Crumps years of residence in England and Italy he
devoted himself entirely to the growing work that was ever his life
motive (Theosophy) with Col. and Mrs. Cleather and their son,
Graham. The last year of the first World War saw Group work
transferred to India, where it was kept up both on the spot and by
correspondence for many years thereafter. Mr. Crump was of much
help in the spade work part of Mrs. Cleathers inspiration in her three
books on H.P. Blavatsky, published in India. Mr. Crump wrote, in
collaboration with Mrs. Cleather, the larger part of Buddhism the
Science of Life, and he wrote Evolution as Outlined in the Archaic
Eastern Records.
Nov. 1945
Apr. 1946
HARGROVES REPUDIATION
Item denying that Judge appointed Tingley as his successor and
claiming that Hargrove was responsible for the succession.
There is evidence that E. August Neresheimer and Claude Falls
Wright had both been consulting her as possessed of occult powers
before Mr. Judges death, accepting communications through her as
messages from the Masters. One such message, received by Mr.
Neresheimer in 1895, contained the injunction, Under no
circumstances must Mr. Judge know of this a provisio [sic] so
entirely out of keeping with the law of the Guru-parampara chain that
it alone should have been sufficient warning of the questionable
nature of the communication.
Theosophy,
Vol. 34, Apr. 1946;
pp.228-231
Cdn. Theosophist,
Vol. 27, June 1946;
pp.117-119
Chronology
Apr. 1946
continued
Sep. 15,
1946
COVINA EXPLAINS
Cdn. Theosophist,
Charles J. Ryans rebuttal to the April article in Theosophy, which Vol. 27, Sep. 1946;
pp.212-219
had been reprinted in the Canadian Theosophist.
NOTE: See Apr. 1946 entry.
Cited instances in which Blavatsky mentioned looking for possible
successors. Regarding a successor for Mr. Judge he wrote:
There were papers to show that Mr. Judge had been contemplating
for many months an Esoteric successor in the person of Promise
(Mrs. Tingley) through whom he believed that H.P.B. would come and
help. Without having given an explicit nomination in writing . . . Mr.
Judge left notes on this subject which are so plain and showed such
confidence in Katherine Tingley that even had there been no other
reasons for their action the Council could not reasonably have done
anything but accept her as the rightful successor in the E.S.T.
[p.216]. Quoted Julia Keightley from article in Search Light. He also
mentioned that Many Theosophists thought she [Mrs. Julia
Keightley] might well be Mr. Judges successor. [p.216]
NOTE: See May 1898 and Jan. 22, 1900 entries.
293
294
Sep. 19,
1946
Chronology
Dec. 15,
1946
295
Oct. 2, 1947
Albert Ernest Stafford Smythe died. (Born Dec. 27, 1861, at Gracehill,
County Antrim, Ireland, and a graduate in science from Irish
universities.) On Nov. 15, 1884, Smythe sailed from Liverpool to the
U.S.A. on the British steamer S.S. Wisconsin. Judge who was
returning from a trip to India was also on board. On this first meeting
Smythe wrote: Judge was a master of ordinary conditions and could
get the honey out of the merest weed. To know him was to love him.
Cdn. Theosophist,
Vol. 28, Oct. 1947;
pp.177-182
Echoes of the
Orient,
Vol. 1, p.xxvi
296
Oct. 2, 1947
continued
After Mr. Neresheimers death Mr. Smythe explained some of the Cdn. Theosophist,
circumstances which may have contributed to his expulsion.
Vol. 18, May 1937;
Mrs. Tingley cast her spell over Mr. Neresheimer and he followed pp.83-84
her loyally till her death. After this, the spell appeared to be broken
and he began to realize that all had not been as he had thought it was.
I wrote to him an account of the proceedings by which he had superintended my dismissal from Point Loma, having been sent on a
roundabout wild goose chase to execute a bogus mission in New
York, where on arriving I was delayed till Mr. Neresheimer also
arrived with orders to send me back to Toronto as fast as possible.
Why should I not have been sent direct to Toronto, but Mrs. Tingley
had advertised me as a black magician and this was one of her pretty
ways. Mr. Neresheimer wrote me a reply confirming all I had
described and acknowledging that he had acted on her orders. This is
not mentioned in derogation of anyone now living, but it helps one to
understand why Mr. Neresheimer severed his connection with Point
Loma. He became a subscriber to The Canadian Theosophist, which
he said he held in high esteem.
Mr. Smythe joined the editorial staff of the Toronto World in 1903 Cdn. Theosophist,
and went to The Toronto Globe in 1905. Two years later he returned Vol. 8, July 1927;
to the World and was chief editorial writer until 1920. In 1928 he was p.102
appointed Editor of the Hamilton Herald, and resigned from active
journalism in 1934.
By 1909 Smythe was once again an active force in Theosophy. With
the formation of an independent Canadian Section in 1919, Smythe
became General Secretary of The Theosophical Society in Canada,
which title he held until 1945. In 1920, he started The Canadian
Theosophist which he edited until his death.
8 letters from Masters M. and K.H. to W.Q. Judge and Dr. Hbbe Theos. Forum (P.L.)
Schleiden were published; each as facsimile reproductions and Vol. 25, Oct., Nov.
transcriptions.
1947
Vol. 26, Jan., Feb.,
NOTE: See April 1893 and May 17, 1916 entries.
Apr. 1948
Chronology
Nov. 1950
297
Report of
Proceedings T.S. in
America, 1895;
pp.18-24
Tribute issue to W.Q. Judge. Includes quotes from letters by H.P.B. to and Theosophia, Vol. 7,
about W.Q.J.
Mar.-Apr. 1951;
pp.1-16
298
1952
The Editor of Eirenicon, T.H. Redfern, focused on the ORIGINS OF THE Eirenicon, No. 105,
Winter Solstice
PASADENA T.S., he stated:
The work of Mr. Judge is not as well-known to the Adyar 1952; 16 pages
membership as it should be. When Col. Olcott and Mme. Blavatsky
left America, where the T.S. had been founded, and went to India, Mr.
Judge was the only one remaining who staunchly and steadily carried
on with the work there. He went through his personal difficulties and
private trials, failing and succeeding as all do who persist in occult
work. He missed one major opportunity, but he went on. When others
were fearful and half-hearted, W.Q. Judge was faithfully loyal to
H.P.B.
Also stated that the growth in power of W.Q. Judge was due to his
occult training, according to Mme. Blavatsky. Writing to him in 1886
she said he had not realised the change that had taken place in him a
few years before, when a Nirmanakaya had blended with his astral
nature.
Redfern examined the successorship after Judges death, from
Katherine Tingley to William Hartley. He claimed:
In adopting the title of Leader, Mrs. Tingley imposed this title also
on H.P. Blavatsky as Leader from 1875-1891, and W.Q. Judge as
Leader from 1891-1896. This was unwarranted. Can anyone familiar
with her work doubt that H.P.B. would have repudiated it? . . . It is
hard to conceive of the democratic W.Q. Judge approving an
autocratic constitution which Mrs. Tingley adopted starting with
the Feb. 18, 1898 Chicago Convention.
NOTE: H.P.B. held the position of Corresponding Secretary for the
Society and W.Q.J. was elected President for Life of The T.S. in
America. They never held the position of Leader.
1955
Victor Endersby did a point by point historical analysis of the Judge Case. Theosophical Notes,
Jan. 1954, Jun. 1957NOTE: See July 1963 entry for Victor Endersbys comments regarding July 1958; Feb.,
The Judge Case.
May, July, Dec. 1959
Chronology
Mar. 15,
1957
Edward Toronto Sturdy died at the age of 97. (Born in 1860.) He was the
last surviving member of H.P.B.s Inner Group. He joined the TS in
January 1886. Mme. Blavatsky appointed him to the Advisory Council
of the Theosophical Society in Europe in 1890. He was a resident at
Avenue Road and was present when Mme. Blavatsky died. He was
present at the Consultative Council meeting held at Headquarters,
London, May 23rd, 1891. By late Fall that year he had published a
small, 8 page, pamphlet entitled Theosophy and Ethics.
With the great success of the H.P.B. Press, started by James M. Pryse,
the Theosophical Publishing Society decided in the Fall of 1891 to
expand their printing operation. Sturdy was appointed as one of its comanagers. On October 3rd, 1891, Sturdy was elected as Treasurer of
the Blavatsky Lodge, and at the first Annual Convention of the
European Section of the T. S. he was elected as its Treasurer. He was
present on July 15th, 1892, at 19 Avenue Road, London, in the front
room called H.P.B.s Room, when he witnessed the placing of the
ashes of H.P. Blavatsky within a copper Indian vase.
299
300
1958
HISTORY
Chapter 2 in Theosophists: Reunite! by F. Pierce Spinks.
Assessment of the Judge case as a contributory factor to the present
divisiveness of the Theosophical movement. The author, a member of
the group that followed Judge in America suggests that Judge relayed
psychically received messages in good faith, but questions the source
based on subsequent results: the split in the Society.
T.N.C.A.B,
Item 1996, p.547
Aug. 20,
1958
To All Fellow
Theosophists and
Members of the
Theosophical
Society: A
Statement by B.P.
Wadia, p.1
1960
Theosophists:
Reunite!
pp.31-105
Chronology
1960
301
302
Apr. 2,
1962
Extracts from
meeting held at
Dempsters Home,
3pages of recorded
notes
Dr. Smith tried to restore an attitude at national headquarters that The Progressive
would respect the contribution of all noted figures in the history of the Theosophist, Vol. 1,
movement. For this reason a picture of W.Q. Judge was hung there. June 1966; pp.4-5
His brotherly act caused shock among the bigoted staff.
Dr. Smith wished to activate the Research Department on a national
basis. It was his hope to establish a nucleus that would link various
groups, produce literary works, create effective outlets for such efforts
in the world at large. . . . In Jan. 1965, control over the department
was wrested from him.
Henry Arthur Smith, M.D., joined the Society on July 1st, 1919 and The Theosophist,
was National-President of T.S. in America from 1960 to 1965. He Vol. 101, Dec. 1979;
died on September 10th, 1979.
p.170
NOTE: Dr. Smith was eventually asked to resign, request a leave of
absence for the remainder of his term, or stay and possibly face recall
action. He chose an unconditional leave of absence in July 1965.
Chronology
July 1963
303
March/April Book review by J.M. Prentice of The Last Four Lives of Annie Besant Cdn. Theosophist,
1964
by Arthur H. Nethercot.
Vol. 45, Mar./Apr.
Nethercot brings out . . . the belated admission by Annie that she had 1964; pp.20-23
been wrong in her attitude to Judge and in her acceptance at the time
that he gave a misleading form to genuine messages from the Masters,
(he was never overtly accused of forgery, remember) but such an
admission was made privately and never publicized at the time.
March/April
1964
continued
Book review by J.M. Prentice of The Last Four Lives of Annie Besant Cdn. Theosophist,
by Arthur H. Nethercot.
Vol. 45, Mar./Apr.
Following the above Prentice added:
1964; pp.20-23
This recalls to your reviewer a long interview which he had with
G.R.S. Mead in 1916. Mead said he had often wondered if he had not
gone astray in refusing to support Judge, who had called on him
during the 1894 crisis and implored such support. Mead was ill in bed
with a severe attack of influenza and his normal judgment was not
functioning.
NOTE: See Sep. 11, 1922.
Theosophical Activities
Lucifer,
We regret to say that the General Secretary, G.R.S. Mead, is still Vol. 14, June 1894;
extremely weak, his recovery from the breakdown caused by p.347
overwork being exceedingly slow.
NOTE: See NOTE in July 7, 1894 entry and May 20, 1894.]
304
January 18,
1966
A private letter addressed to Boris [de Zirkoff] from Hildor Barton, an Letter addressed
early Point Loma student who was present and witnessed Katherine Dear Boris, dated
Tingley handing over one of Judges Diaries to August Neresheimer. Jan. 18, 1966
The Diary was turned over as J.H. Fussell recounts. Nere used to go
over, duly, each evening, though he preferred to stay at home with his
wife. There were no consultations, but only KTs endless recountments of events in the old days. And all the elderly gentlemen would
sit there and go to sleep one after another. But Nere would sit bolt
upright, like Amen Ra. And one evening KT came with the Diary in
her hands and said, I am going to give this to Nere, because I know
it will be well taken care of. Both Marguerite and I are strongly of
the thought that this was in 1928. We all thought it strange at the time;
for there had been some conflict of ideas between her and Nere. He
and Emily left early in 1929.
NOTE: See June 1932 for THE POINT LOMA VIEW, and Dec. 12, 1932.
Nov. 14-20,
1975
The Centenary Congress of the Theosophical Society was held in New Cdn. Theosophist,
York City in celebration of the Societys 100th Anniversary.
Vol. 56, Jan.-Feb.
1976; pp.121-127
The following was reported in The Canadian Theosophist by Ted G.
Davy, the official representative for the Canadian Section, as its The Theosophist,
General Secretary and Editor of the magazine. The then International Vol. 97, Jan. 1976;
President of the Theosophical Society was John B.S. Coats (1973- pp.213-215
1979) who made the reported announcement.
After having been virtually in exile these many years, the Congress
paid special tribute to William Quan Judge. With full approbation of
the Society, his name was at last relinked with those of H.P.B. and
Olcott, his colleagues of 1874 and after.
This restoration of dignity, if not of honour, was the source of
considerable joy at the Congress. Those many students who, over the
years, have endeavoured to defend Judges integrity and to
continuously make available his valuable writings, must have felt that
justice has been done at last. We in the Canada Section have always
recognized William Q. Judge as a founder of the Society and as a
student of Theosophy who made a special contribution to our
understanding of the Ancient Wisdom. It is gratifying to know that as
a result to the wider recognition initiated at the Congress, his work
will become know to a much larger segment of the Theosophical
Movement, and that hereafter he will be identified as one of the
Founders of the Society.
[Continued in next cell]
Chronology
Nov. 14-20,
1975
continued
305
Documents in the
Archives of
Edmonton
Theosophical Society
Nov. 15,
1976
Sep. 15,
1977
306
July 1988
Theos. History,
Vol. 2, July 1988;
p.229
Vol. 3, Jan. 1989;
p.3
Jan. 1989
Theos. History,
Vol. 3, Jan. 1989;
pp.4-12,14
May-June
1989
T.N.C.A.B.
Item 1997, p.547
April/May
1998
Spring 2000
Sunrise,
Vol. 47, No. 4,
Apr./May 1998;
p.101
Chronology
307
Winter
2000 &
Spring 2001
Summer &
Fall 2003
Fall 2003
308
Edge, S.V.
NOTE:
Date of
death
unknown.
In January 1893, S.V. Edge was involved in a meeting which included Old Diary Leaves,
W. Old, (who had recently arrived at Adyar), Bertram Keightley, Col. Fourth Series, p.508
Olcott and Judge Khandalavala, where evidence against W.Q. Judge
was presented. It was at this time that it was decided to prosecute
Judge. In a meeting held December 1893 which also involved Col. Ransom, pp.298-299
Olcott, Judge Khandalavala and Annie Besant (who had also just
recently arrived on her first visit to India), among others, charges were
formulated.
[See Dec. 29, 1929, for Walter Olds biographical sketch regarding
Mr. Edges involvement in the THEOSOPHIC FREETHOUGHT article
which resulted in both of them getting suspended from the E.S. in
August 1893 for violating their pledge of secrecy.] Mr. Edge had
joined as a member of the Esoteric School of Theosophy after Mme.
Blavatskys death. In late 1893 S.V. Edge, then Acting General
Secretary of the Indian Section T.S., was placed in charge of
arrangements of the programme for Mrs. Besants India tour.
In a letter to G.R.S. Mead on November 1st, 1894 from Madras, Mr.
Edge mentioned that he was continuing to sub-edit The Theosophist.
By April 1895 he had given his notice to resign his position as SubEditor of the Theosophist. There is very little mention of him from
this point on.
To All Members of
E.S.T. p.2
The Theosophist,
Vol. 14, June 1893;
Supp. p.ix
Lucifer, Vol. 15,
Dec. 1894; p.337
The Theosophist,
Vol. 16, Mar. 1895;
Supp. p.xviii
Chronology
Harte, R.
NOTE:
Date of
death
unknown.
309
Richard Harte. (Date of birth unknown and no application form to join the
Theosophical Society has been found.) No known biography exists
about Mr. Harte. The following facts have been gathered.
Mr. Harte was a long-time active member of the Aryan T.S. in New
York and also served as its President. He joined the T.S. in 1877. Mr.
Harte attended the Convention of the American Section of the T.S.
held at Mott Memorial Hall in New York City on Sunday, April 24th,
1887. At that Convention he was elected as a member of the General
Council for the newly formed American Section of the T.S.
Practical
Occultism, p.67
A Short History of
the T.S., p.252
The Theosophist,
Vol. 10, Dec. 1888;
Supp. p.xxvii
Chronology
311
312
SUPPLEMENT
TO
Contents
Chapter 1
The Early Years . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Chapter 2
Judge in London and Paris . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Chapter 3
Judge Goes to India . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Chapter 4
Judge at Adyar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Chapter 5
Back In America . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Chapter 6
Bertram Keightley . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Chapter 7
Richard Harte Troubles at Adyar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Chapter 8
Struggles in India . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Chapter 9
The Wills of H.P.B. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Chapter 10
Olcott is Tested Suspicions Mount . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Chapter 11
The Poison Letter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Chapter 12
Suspicions Begin to Sprout . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Chapter 13
Bertram Keightley Returns to Europe and America . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Chapter 14
Fears of Dogmatism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Chapter 15
Suspicions Take Root The September 1884 Letter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Chapter 16
Indians Summoned to the CAUSE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Chapter 17
W.Q. Judges Initiation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Chapter 18
Convention of 1893 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Chapter 19
G. N. Chakravarti . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Chapter 20
The Proceedings Begin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Chapter 21
Delays and Withholdings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Chapter 22
Khandalavala and Besant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Chapter 23
The Judicial Committee Pre and Post . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Chapter 24
Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Addendum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Index to Supplement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
317
320
325
329
337
339
343
347
350
355
361
365
367
370
373
382
384
390
393
396
401
405
408
415
422
425
445
Supplement
317
Chapter 1
At the Boston Convention in 1891 Judge apparently made it known that the indwelling Ego in the body was
a Hindu.4
Judges mother died giving birth to her seventh child. Frederick H. Judge, described as a Mason and a
student of mysticism,5 moved his family to the USA when William was thirteen years old. They arrived
in New York on July 14th, 1864, on the Inman Liner, City of Limerick. The family stayed briefly at the Old
Merchants Hotel on Cortlandt Street, then on Tenth Street, New York, finally settling in Brooklyn, NY.
Judges father died before Williams twenty-first birthday.
Judge had a number of siblings although we are not quite sure what became of all of them. We know his
younger brother, Frederick C. Judge, named after his father, was born in 1865 and also donated his time to
theosophical work. He died of cirrhosis of the liver at age thirty-two in Calcutta in 1888. Another brother,
John H. Judge, was born circa 1859. John first met H.P. Blavatsky when he was seventeen. W.Q. Judge had
two sisters who had been residing with him when he died. One of them was a well known organist; one was
named Emily.
Judge managed to finish his schooling and eventually went to work in a Law Office, which led him into the
legal profession. He became a naturalized American citizen in April 1872 and was admitted to the State Bar
of New York in May of the same year. He specialized in Commercial Law.
* Early biographical information has been summarized from William Q. Judge, The Irish Theosophist, Vol. 4, February 1896, pp.90-92, and
from William Quan Judge 1851-1896, Theosophical Pioneer, compiled by Sven Eek and Boris de Zirkoff, pp.5-7.
318
Judge married Ella Miller Smith, a school teacher and strict Methodist from Brooklyn, in 1874. It was shortly
after his marriage that he came in contact with Helena Petrovna Blavatsky** and pursued his theosophical
interests, which his wife did not share for personal and religious reasons at the time.6 This was not conducive
to a pleasant marital situation, which further deteriorated with the loss of their only child, a daughter, who
died of diphtheria at the age of five.7
It was following the publication in the New York Daily Graphic of Colonel Henry Steel Olcotts accounts
of Spiritualistic seances at the Eddy Farm in Chittenden, VT, in late 18748 that Judge wrote to Olcott
requesting an introduction to Madame Blavatsky. H.P.B. and Judge seemed to recognize each other upon
meeting. He once stated, It was as if but the evening before we had parted, leaving yet to be done some
detail of a task taken up. . . .9 They maintained a close association from that point on.
Judge was a founding member of the Theosophical Society which was first proposed in Blavatskys
apartment at 46 Irving Place, New York on September 8th , 1875, following a lecture by New York architect,
George H. Felt, on The Lost Canon of Proportion of the Egyptians, Greeks and Romans.
Judge was a frequent visitor to H.P.B.s apartment. He mentioned some years later having been involved with
the preparation of H.P.B.s Isis Unveiled, which was published September 29th , 1877. In 1884 he wrote to
a friend how H.P.B. acknowledged his contribution of the term elemental during the writing of it. His
younger brother, John H. Judge, apparently rendered valuable service in the matter of preparing H.P.B.s
manuscript for the printer, by copying a good portion of the work. This was not an easy task, for typewriters
were [not very practical] in those days, and it was necessary to prepare manuscripts for publication by means
of handwritten copy.10
For some reason, a short time before the publication of Isis Unveiled, there apparently developed a
disruption in relations between H.P.B. and Judge. One theory is that this was possibly due to an occult test.
In Olcotts words:
During that year of interregnum Mr. Judge did not visit us, owing to a difficulty between Mme.
Blavatsky and himself, nor did she write to him nor he to her, his only letters being addressed to me.
. . . W hen Mr. Judge reappeared at Headquarters, the old cordial relations between us three were reestablished, and continued down to the death of H.P.B.11
On December 18th , 1878, Blavatsky, Olcott, and Edward Wimbridge, an English architect, left New York on
board the British steamship Canada, en route to India. W.Q. Judge and his brother, John C. Judge, saw them
off.
Olcott himself admits that the organization that was left behind was alive in name only.
W hen the interest of the members had become so weakened as to prevent meetings being held, the
work of the Society was carried on in Council, up to the point when all executive functions had
practically been concentrated in the Presidents hands and Council ceased to meet.12
Touching upon events leading up to his and H.P.B.s departure, Olcott stated:
There were no meetings of the Society for two years before our departure. . . .W e made no attempt to
revive the meetings knowing it would be useless.13
Major-General Abner Doubleday, of Civil War fame, became Acting President of the Theosophical Society.
Judge was then a young man, twenty-[seven] years of age, newly married, poor, and at that time obscure,
not of robust health, soon to have the future of an infant child added to his responsibilities, . . . was left
**
Supplement
319
virtually in charge of the interests of the Theosophical Society14 in the United States. Most of the Societys
affairs had been conducted around Blavatsky. The void left following her departure was immense and for
some years thereafter it appeared that Judge was left very much alone by both H.P.B. and the Masters.15
Over the years, his desire to become more active in the Society grew stronger. Judge was not a rich man; at
times he was quite poor. He once mentioned that he had to borrow a nickel for a ferry crossing. His despair
both in his finances and in the promoting of Theosophy were almost too much for him to bear. He wrote
rather despairingly to Olcott, complaining that he was being left out in the cold. This situation was
undoubtedly connected with his trials as a probationary chela. He asked for news about the Masters, just
anything.16 His letters seemed to fall on deaf ears.
During this period (1879-1882) Judge corresponded with Damodar K. Mavalankar.17 Judge had mining
interests in Venezuela at the time and some of these letters were written from there, where he spent the
greater part of 1881-1882. The replies of Damodar revealed to Judge a more intimate relationship between
Master and pupil than he had ever hoped for himself, and this made Judge his fervent admirer and lifelong
friend. In the series titled A Hindu Chelas Diary, Judge paraphrases Damodars mystical experiences as
described in his letters to him.18
320
Chapter 2
Judge really wanted to go to India and to stay indefinitely, but was torn by his sense of obligation to his wife.
This note was all it took for Judge to take action; he must have also been looking forward to fraternizing with
his pen colleague Damodar. By early 1884 he felt able to go to India, although just how he adjusted his
financial difficulties and provided for his wifes support is not known. He left New York in February, to
remain away permanently if necessary, stopping in London to receive further instructions and to meet with
the two other Founders.
It appears that Judge arrived in London on February 27th, 1884.3 He stayed at a hotel while awaiting word
from Olcott as to what to do next. Weeks went by and he found himself in despair, waiting for orders. He
wrote to his friend in America, Laura Holloway: The magnetic atmosphere of London is horrible, every one
here drinks ale and eats chops eternally.4 He was invited by the Sinnetts for dinner a few times and to Miss
Francesca Arundales also all members of London Lodge (L.L.). No doubt conversations after meals were
focused on London Lodge. Sinnetts return to London from India in the spring of 1883 had created many
problems for Dr. Anna Kingsford, the President of London Lodge. A serious dispute had arisen between Dr.
Kingsford (M.D. of the Faculty of Paris), Edward Maitland and their party, and Sinnett and his party. Sinnett,
author of The Occult World (1881) and Esoteric Buddhism (1883), valued the Indian/Tibetan teachings
while Kingsford and Maitland, authors of The Perfect Way; or, the Finding of Christ (1882) preferred the
Hermetic, Christian-Egyptian teachings. The Chohan, one of the Chief Dhyanis, the Guru of the Adepts,5
had indicated that he wanted Dr. Kingsford in the Society but did not want to influence the members of the
L.L. for their consent.6 Olcott was ordered to look after the affair. The matter was somewhat resolved when
Olcott arrived in London on April 6th, 1884, and granted Dr. Kingsford a charter for a separate Branch.7 On
April 9th a meeting was held in Charles Carleton Masseys law chambers and the Hermetic Lodge of the
Theosophical Society was established.8
From his hotel in London, Judge could walk over to visit his old friend C.C. Massey. Massey was an English
Barrister-at-law and writer. After his fathers death, which left him wealthy, he gave up his short and
successful law practice to devote himself to the study of philosophy, psychology and Spiritualism
especially the investigation of psychic phenomena. While in America in 1875 he went to Chittenden, VT,
to verify for himself Olcotts accounts of the Eddy phenomena.9 Massey was one of the first to join the T.S.
He was also a founder of the British Theosophical Society (June 27th, 1878) which Dr. Kingsford renamed
the London Lodge of the T.S. after her return to England from the continent on May 20th, 1883.10 Massey was
also one of the founders of the Society for Psychical Research in 1882.11
A refuge for Judge was spending time at the British Museum investigating the wonderful Greek Gallery and
the Assyrian and Egyptian collections. He also found solace in writing letters and most of his evenings were
spent alone in his hotel reading or writing. He mentioned writing a paper on his acquisitions in South
America. He had been hired by a mining company to do some work in Venezuela from which he was
receiving a small monthly compensation for what he called his South American speculations.12 Every extra
Supplement
321
penny he managed to save went toward theosophical work. Most often he found himself underdressed and
short of money compared to his friends in England. One day he ordered a pair of trousers for Z4 from a tailor.
To him this was great in New York it would have cost him Z10.
Judge was growing weary and despondent with London. He called London a horrid place. To pass the time
away he read The Theosophist and probably also the local newspapers. He had an inclination for mysteries
of the world and the new sciences. The English were known explorers and the local papers would have
carried many articles about their exploits. Judge must have found himself unproductive at this time. He had
previously expressed his hope of finding temporary work, stating: The possibility of working my passage
instead of being unpleasant is quite pleasant.13
An anonymous but interesting book review, titled The Hollow Globe, appeared in the July 1884
Theosophist. Judge more than likely wrote this article while he was waiting in London. It is a review of The
Hollow Globe; or the Worlds Agitator and Reconciler, sub-titled A TREATISE ON THE PHYSICAL
CONFORMATION OF THE EARTH, Presented Through the Organism of M.L. Sherman, M.D., and Written by
Professor Wm. F. Lyon. The book was published in Chicago in 1871. Its central theme is that the Earth is
hollow and contains an interior world which is accessible through a navigable aperture in the Polar Sea.
Among the topics included are fragments of history and information on the open Polar Sea, the igneous
theory, volcanoes, earthquakes, and electro-magnetism that can produce earthquakes. Interestingly, Judge
later wrote a similar article in The Path, October 1889, titled The Skin of the Earth under the pseudonym
of Bryan Kinnavan.14 Judges review of The Hollow Globe ends abruptly as though he had to drop it
suddenly and move on to something else. The review article concludes with a comment that some of the
material had been to some extent corroborated in recent theosophical articles such as Fragments of Occult
Truth and other teachings given in The Theosophist.15 Judge may have delayed sending his review until
he had a chance to discuss the contents of the book with Blavatsky (after all The Theosophist was still being
conducted by her as Editor) while in Paris. The Hollow Globe was apparently written as a spirit
communication (through Dr. Sherman) and the reviewer wondered if the Spirit may have been an Adept.
Perhaps due to how this book had been written, elementals and mediumship versus mediatorship were
discussed with Blavatsky, as will be pointed out later.
There may have been underlying friction between Judge and Sinnett at the time. From his correspondence
it appears that Judge seemed uncomfortable visiting them. When Sinnetts Esoteric Buddhism was
published he had claimed that this knowledge is now being given out for the first time. Judge had stated
this was a mistake and pointed out in The Theosophist, that Nearly all the leading portions of the doctrine
are to be found broadly stated in the Bhagavad Gita.16 On the occasions that he was invited to the Sinnetts
for dinner Judge would be informed as to the travels of Olcott, Blavatsky and party who embarked on a
French steamer for Marseilles on February 20th, 1884.17 Finally, once they reached Nice, France, on March
15th, Judge telegraphed Olcott for instructions. He received a telegram the next day telling him to go to Paris
and meet them there on their arrival on March 27th. Judge called himself the weary pilgrim, feeling blue, and
he was glad to get out of London. He stated, I walk about in a mental cloak, and do not care either to see
or hear.18 Judge arrived in Paris on March 25th, 1884.19
The group of travellers consisted of Olcott, Blavatsky, Mohini M. Chatterji, a personal pupil of Master
K.H.,20 B.J. Padshah, a clever Parsi graduate from the University of Bombay, and Babula.21 Blavatsky was
ill at the time and Babula came along as her personal servant. A few days after arriving in France, they were
invited to go to Nice to visit Lady Caithness, Duchesse de Pomar, and to stay at her Palais Tiranty. Mohini
and Padshah went ahead to Paris where they were greeted by Judge. On March 28th at 11P.M. Judge, Mohini
and Dr. Thurmann, F.T.S. met Blavatsky and Olcott at the station and were conducted to their apartments
322
at 46, Rue Notre Dame des Champs, which Lady Caithness had provided for their use for the next three
months.22
As soon as Judge arrived in Paris he wrote to Holloway about his change of address, the American Exchange,
Paris, where she could reach him. In a letter sent a few days earlier he had included a most interesting and
foretelling message which he had received from Blavatsky:
I have not been able to have any long private conversations with her. I have had some talks with her
and can tell you now that I have confirmation of much that has occurred. She told me independently
and voluntarily that the Master had told her in India, that he [Master M.] was doing, or about to do
something with and for me.23
Judge had obviously been having occult experiences which he discussed with H.P.B. Not much is mentioned
about what eventually happened. What was the Master about to do? A change of plans occurred soon after
H.P.B. arrived in Paris and she was ordered to go to London.
Judge was determined that he had to go to India and that was what he was going to do. He did not appear to
know the particulars as to why he had to go to India. It seems his thirst for communion with H.P.B. and the
Masters and his willingness to serve the CAUSE were all he required. Judge explained his delay in leaving
for India by stating, again in a letter to Laura Holloway: I am ordered by the Masters to stop here [Paris]
and help Madame in writing the Secret Doctrine. . . .24 In his next letter he wrote:
To resume with coherency. After the first hurry was over here, I said I had to go to India at once.
Olcott thought I had better stay with H.P.B. and so did she. But I said that all the orders I had were
to go to India and without further ones I was going, and so she said I was probably right and then it
was decided that I would wait here until O. could get me a steamer in London where he went on the
5th. All was thus arranged definitely. But the next morning, as I was sitting in the bedroom with
Mohini, in which he and I slept, and after we had been there about an hour after coffee, Olcott came
from his room, which was at the other end of the hall, and called me out, and told me privately that
the Master had been then to his room and had told him that I was not to go yet to India, but to stay
and help H.P.B. on the Secret Doctrine. By the way my fate is mixed up with Isis Unveiled. I
helped her on that, and, as she reminded me yesterday, I suggested the use of the word elemental
to make the distinction clear between them and the elementaries. As she said, that was your word,
Judge. It shows she is not ungrateful nor like so many who are unwilling to concede what they are
indebted to others for.
Mohini and I had not yet left our rooms and H.P.B. was still in bed. Perfectly convinced after a few
minutes that O. was right, especially as the afternoon before I had had an intuition of it in the street,
I returned to our room and told Mohini nothing. But after about half an hour he looked up and said,
Judge, I believe your Master has been in the house this morning for some purpose. I then told him
of the change of plan, and he said, it must be right.
So then, here I am for how long or short I do not know, and I am to make suggestions and write upon
the work. So see my fate again linked with the second working up of Isis. In this place you will
remember her letter of last June that my fate was indissolubly linked with that of theirs (the ).25
[Italics added]
In a letter, dated October 23rd, 1889, H.P.B. referred to Judge as being part of herself since several aeons.
On April 5th, 1884, Olcott and Mohini left for London. Olcott had been ordered by the Master to go there and
settle the problems that had arisen in the London Lodge. H.P.B. was to stay in Paris and work on The Secret
Doctrine with Judge, who was about to receive valuable occult training. Judge relates what happened shortly
after Olcotts departure:
As we sat there I felt the old signal of a message from the Master and saw that she was listening. She
said: Judge, the Master asks me to try and guess what would be the most extraordinary thing he
could order now? I said that Mrs. K[ingsford] should be made the President of the London Lodge.
Supplement
323
Try again. That H.P.B. should be ordered to go to London. That was right and he ordered her to
take the 7:45 express, giving the exact hours it would arrive at the different stations and in London.26
Although Blavatsky was ordered to stay in London only 24 hours,27 she ended up staying at the Sinnetts
until April 15th.28 Judge stayed behind working with Babula as his servant. Judge had his thirty-third birthday
two days before Blavatskys return to Paris.
____________________
There are few details of what happened between H.P.B. and Judge after her return but a glimpse of what
occurred during his Paris stay can be found in a letter to Holloway. Here he described how for several days
he was in the most awful blues that he had ever had and that H.P.B. had actually been worried. He wrote:
It seemed impossible to stave them off, and as they were accompanied with an uncontrollable desire
to weep, I was in a bad way. [H.P.B.] said I had got into my past current, and, also that in going about
I had absorbed some old elementaries which she saw about me. She gave me to wear all day her
talisman ring which is of great value and strength. It has a double triangle and the Sanscrit for life
on it. This helped me, but all the while I felt that something was to be done by me.
. . . This point in my career I feel is a turning point and I hope to turn it with advantage.29
With all the delays and mental anguish Judge had suffered it was finally time for him to be prepared for
initiation. When he received the note Better come M on the back of Damodars letter, Judge had not
hesitated. Unknown to him at the time, some of his past karma was waning and it was an opportune time for
action to be taken. Either H.P.B., or Master M through her, exercised the power needed to drive those
negative energies away from Judge and to rid him of those affinities, his past currents, which were still
attracted to him. In The Mahatma Letters to A.P. Sinnett there are hints as to what an Adept can do for
a chela who has gained the right to be liberated from the few remaining bad magnetic emanations or even
worse, elementaries and imperfect Intelligences, and have his constitution cleared up.30 It may have been
at this time that Judges globes (planets or chakras) were cleansed (operated upon31) by H.P.B. or the
Masters.
One thing becomes apparent from this moment onwards Judge gained in confidence and his Will appeared
to gain in strength. He also became more aware of the positive energies around him. As indicated earlier,
H.P.B. tested his ability to pick up on messages coming to her.
____________________
It was a very busy time and many visitors from all classes were constantly calling. Among them was the
Countess dAdhmar, who at once professed a profound admiration for H.P.B. On May 13th, 1884, Blavatsky
and Judge went for a visit to Count and Countess Gaston dAdhmar de Cransac at their Chteau cossais
situated at Enghien, not far from Paris.32 Bertram Keightley from London had also expressed interest in
meeting Blavatsky so he was invited for a few days.33
In connection with their stay there, Judge wrote:
At Enghien especially, H.P.B. wanted me to go carefully through the pages of her copy of Isis
Unveiled for the purpose of noting on the margins what subjects were treated, and for the work she
furnished me with what she called a special blue and red pencil. I went all through both volumes and
made the notes required, and of those she afterwards wrote me that they were of the greatest use to
her. . . .
. . . The subject of elementals came up, and I asked her if she intended to give much on it. Her reply
was that she might say something, but it was all sub judice as yet and must wait for orders, as it was
not a quiet or harmless part of the thing.
324
She then asked me to write down all I knew or thought I knew on that head, and she would see if that
much coming from me would be allowed to pass the unseen critics. A long chapter on Elementals was
then done, nearly all by my pen, and she put it away for some time. The day that it was finished was
warm and pleasant, and in the middle of the afternoon she suddenly grew absorbed once more. The
air of the room at the same time was turned to the temperature of much below freezing, to judge by
sensation, and I remarked on the fact. It was not a change of the weather at all, but seemed to blow
out from H.P.B. as if she was an open door from some huge refrigerating store. I again drew her
attention to it and said, It feels as if a door was open on the Himalaya Mountains and the cold air was
blowing into this room.
To this she replied: Perhaps it is so, and smiled. It was so cold that I had to protect myself with a
rug taken from the floor.
In about three days she announced that my small and inadequate chapter on Elementals had been of
such a sort that it was decided she would not put much, if anything, into The Secret Doctrine on the
subject, and mine was either destroyed or retained. It certainly is not in any part of the published
volumes.34
While in Enghien, Judges mail was forwarded to him. Inside his mail he found messages from the Masters.35
____________________
Judge knew that the Masters were interested in others to whom they could give occult training. During his
conversations with H.P.B. he mentioned that Holloway might be a suitable individual. H.P.B. stated: The
Master will marshal a procession before us containing good and bad, leaving to our Karma to make the
proper selection. . . . he says She may come.36 Mrs. Holloway, an American, was a widow and a
wonderfully gifted clairvoyant. Judge informed Olcott in his letter of April 24th, 1884, that she has money
and will be no expense and that he was writing to tell her to come as soon as she can.37 Also, he thanked
Olcott for the 5 which he received and told him I am not going to London, my dear, just to buy a coat.
Judge was ashamed to go out with my rags and in a previous letter had let out a wishful thought toward
Londons cheap coats.38 Judge had been told that he could stay with Miss Francesca Arundale at 77 Elgin
Crescent, Notting Hill, London.
On April 30th, 1884, Judge, in Paris, wrote to Olcott who was still in London: I have got now a magnificent
coadjutor, if not a successor to H.P.B. and one who has trained scientific methods of literary work, as well
as psychical abilities of the kind that makes H.P.B. so remarkable.39 Although Holloway failed, it was
Sinnetts bungling of events that caused her to leave London and eventually leave the Theosophical Society.
Master K.H. wrote to Sinnett:
She is an excellent but quite undeveloped clairvoyante. Had she not been imprudently meddled with,
and had you followed the old womans and Mohinis advice indeed, by this time I might have spoken
with you thro her and such was our intention. It was again your own fault, my good friend.40
In a letter to Miss Arundale, K.H. wrote: Deeds are what we want and demand. L.C.H. [Laura Holloway]
has done poor child more in that direction during two months than the best of your members in these
five years.41 As demonstrated by his assessment of Holloways potential, Judges occult judgment was
proven time and time again.
Supplement
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Chapter 3
326
The second part of Judges lecture focused on the Destiny of India. He earnestly exhorted his hearers to
let politics alone, and to turn their thoughts to their real destiny, to the intellectual, moral and religious
regeneration of India. He further explained:
The history of all conquered countries, of England herself after the Norman conquest, of Spain, of
Mexico, when Spain over-ran her, showed that in every case the conquered have been too apt to give
up their manners and customs, their habits of thought, their religion and their nationality, for those
of the conquerors. India, alone, of all conquered countries, has resisted the shock of invasion, and
remains to this day as thoroughly Indian in thought, in manners and in religion, after years of
subjection to a foreign rule, as in the days when her own sons ruled the land. The lecturer called upon
his hearers to rouse themselves, to study their own books, and to translate them for the benefit of the
world. He believed that translation by western authors, although not without merit in some cases, were
at best unreliable interpreters of Indian modes of thought, and that a genuine Indian, with a fair
knowledge of the language in which his books are written, could do much towards enriching
European minds with the treasures of Indian philosophy and religion.
Judge then went to Poona, arriving on the evening of July 20th, 1884, where he was greeted at the station by
several members of the Poona Branch. It is not clear where Judge stayed while in Poona but he most likely
stayed with Khan Bahadur Nowroji Dorabji Khandalavala (N.D.K.), a Magistrate with the Small Cause Court
in Poona and the first President of The Poona Theosophical Society. The Poona Branch, established,
January 25th, 1882, was one of the first theosophical centers in India. It was formed while Olcott and H.P.B.
were still in Bombay. N.D. Khandalavala was an enthusiastic member and quite fond of Blavatsky.
Supplement
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On the evening of July 23rd,1884, Judge gave a lecture to 300 people at the Poona Town Hall on The West
and what India can give it and which was heard with great attention and created an extremely favourable
impression as Mr. Judge is an excellent speaker. Judge Khandalavala filed his report, on Judges lecture,
with The Theosophist and stated:
He gave a brief description of life in America, particularly with reference to the education and
prospects of young men in that country, and pointed out how the West had progressed in material
civilization a part of which India would do well to follow, but other portions of Western
civilization would prove injurious to this country where the intellectual part of the brain seemed to
be more developed than the part referring to material progress. He said that this country had an
immense store of learning in religion, philosophy and certain sciences called psychical, and that if
those stores were unearthed and properly brought to light, they would be the means of giving to
humanity the principles of that one true religion which is the highest science and the highest
philosophy. That the destiny of India was to teach the people of the West spirituality, and that the
learned sons of India ought to work in that direction to rehabilitate themselves in the eyes of the
whole world, which would then look up towards India with the respect which it has the means to
command.13
At least two members present expressed their gratitude towards Judge. Rao Bahadur Mahadev Govind
Ranade, scholar and reformer, made a long speech14 and stated that he knew of no one amongst the
Hindoos of the present generation in the city of Poona that were worthy to sit by the side of these Founders
who had so unselfishly worked to promote a good cause. The other was M.M. Kunte, who occupied the
chair. He stated that the rising generation of scholars were ignorant of the beauties of the old literature of
India, and that an effort should be made to enlighten the young men about the excellencies of their
religion.15
On July 25th, 1884, Judge arrived at Hyderabad16 where he was greeted by members of the Society and
escorted by the President, Dorabjee Dasabhy, to the lodging arranged for his stay where he received many
visitors and discussed philosophical questions with them. On the 27th experiments in psychometry were
conducted by Judge and he gave some instructions to a few who appeared capable of continuing the
experiments and developing their powers.
On July 29th, 1884, he once again lectured on Theosophy and the Destiny of India, this time at the
Mahboob College Hall at Secunderabad.17 Approximately 500 persons of all nationalities, castes and
creeds were in attendance. A lengthy report by C.V. Loganada Moodr included the following:
He stated that he had come all the way from America, to help in the work of the Theosophical Society.
He said that, as the organisation of the Society in New York was made under the auspices of the
venerable Mahatmas, the Theosophical Society really had its rise in India, or, as he called [it], The
Land of Mysteries. He gave a short and interesting account of the circumstances under which it was
organised, and said he was one of the founders with Madame H. P. Blavatsky and Colonel H. S.
Olcott. . . . He impressed upon the minds of the public the fact that freedom of thought led men to
practise Universal Brotherhood, to some extent, in the same way as persons engaged in trading
transactions, cultivate a kind of brotherhood with persons in foreign countries, forgetting the artificial
differences imposed by caste, creed and color. . . . He gave the literal meaning of Theosophy as
derived from two Greek words Theos (God), and Sophia (wisdom or knowledge), and he said that
since God includes the Universe, the object of the Theosophical Society is to study the laws of the
Universe. . . . [H]e asserted that the laws of Nature require Universal Brotherhood which the
Theosophical Society declared to be its first and chief object.
328
. always was to preserve this great mine of truth and to give the West and the world, the system of
philosophy, religion and science that it very much needs. . . .
In the evening Mr. Judge made experiments in Psychometry with ostrich eggs and old Indian coins. The
attention of the members was next directed to Crystal reading.
The next evening, July 30th, 1884, he delivered another lecture at the same Hall, titled Is There a Soul in
Man? He stated that
He regretted very much that the young Indians have become the disciples of Mr. Bradlaugh without
studying deeply the literature, philosophies and sciences which their own ancestors had bequeathed
to their children and without a due investigation of the truths therein contained. . . .
He concluded his lecture by refuting some malicious and ill-founded charges against the Society
which were published and circulated in pamphlets, by some self-opinionated and narrow-minded
atheists and Christians, and showing how the Theosophical movement has been wilfully
misrepresented, and how utterly ignorant the authors of those publications were of the declared
objects of the Society. . . .18
From Secunderabad Judge went to Adoni19 and then to Gooty20 where he arrived on the evening of August
4th, 1884. On the morning of the 5th approximately fifty invited guests assembled in the bungalow of the
President of the Gooty T.S. to listen to Judges message. The Branch Secretary reported that he explained
some passages in the Hindu sacred books, that the West had laughed at and that the destiny of India was
to furnish the world again with true philosophy and a true system of morals to be found in her ancient
literature.21
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Chapter 4
Judge at Adyar
Before continuing it is important to point out who was in charge while the Founders were away from Adyar
for an extended period. On January 21st, 1884, Colonel Olcott, issued a Presidential Special Order
appointing the following members of the General Council to an Executive Committee to cover the financial,
executive and supervisory affairs of the Society during his absence in Europe: Messrs. R. Raghoonath Row,
Diwan Bahadur; G. Muttuswami Chetty, Garu; P. Sreenivasa Row, Garu; and T. Subba Row, Garu.1 On
February 19th, the day before leaving Bombay, he added three more names to his Executive Committee: St.
George Lane-Fox, Dr. Franz Hartmann, W.T. Brown, declaring and the whole will be known as the Board
of Control.2
____________________
Judge reached Adyar on August 10th, 1884. Before he arrived Dr. Hartmann had received a letter from Master
M instructing him to Be friendly towards W.Q. Judge. He is true, faithful and trustworthy. . .3 When
Judge arrived he learned that the Coulombs were just out of the place,4 having been evicted only recently.
Judge, a well trained lawyer, immediately took charge of the investigation. He at once opened a register,
calling a number of witnesses to examine the handiwork of the Coulombs and then closed Blavatskys
quarters to the public. Judge wrote:
Over three hundred people examined the place, who signed their names to a declaration of the
condition and appearance of things; and then a resolution prohibiting further prying by the curious
was passed. The very next day Missionary Patterson, expert Gribble5 & Co., came to examine. It was
too late. The law was already in existence; and Mr. Gribble, who had come as an impartial expert,
with, however, a report in full in his pocket against us, had to go away depending on his imagination
for damaging facts. He then drew upon that fountain.6
T. C. Rajamiengar was one of the individuals who had examined the Shrine, before Blavatsky left for Europe
as well as after. He wrote:
It was in September 1883 that I had actually an opportunity of closely examining the structure of the
shrine, so as to see whether the trickery, now pretended to be exposed, had ever any existence. . . .
Madame Blavatsky had her sleeping apartment in the hall up-stairs in the Adyar premises. There is
a door-way leading from this hall to a room where the shrine is suspended, the shrine itself (a cupboard as they call it) being on the wall about four feet above the ground. I opened the doors of this
shrine and found in it some photos and a silver cup and a few other things. I clearly examined every
portion of this shrine from within, tapping with my hands every part of it, and nowhere could I find
room for suspicion. Not satisfied with this, I examined the outside of the shrine, the front and the
sides, and the top; and they stood the test. For fear of disarranging the things, I did not move the
shrine about, but what was more satisfactory, I examined the back portion of the wall on which rested
the shrine (which was inside the hall containing Madame Blavatskys sleeping apartment) and found
that there could not be the slightest room for suspicion in any direction, so far as the matter of the
structure of the shrine is concerned. . . .
I shall now give an account of the so-called trap-door. I found this trap-door in an incomplete state
for the first time in June 1884, a few months after the departure of the founders. It is so small a door
that a thin spare boy of 10 or 12 years could hardly enter through it. It is intended to be understood
the phenomenal letters were ushered into the shrine through this passage, but any one seeing the
passage for himself, would be convinced of the impossibility of the thing being done.7
330
One important testimony as to the condition of the Shrine and the Occult Room was that of Babula,
Blavatskys personal servant for the previous five years. He arrived at the Theosophical headquarters on the
evening of September 20th, 1884,8 and his statement was signed and witnessed the next day by Judge and four
others.9 It read in part:
[W]hen I went away all the walls of the rooms upstairs at said Head-quarters, at Adyar, were
unbroken, and not one of them had any holes or trap-doors of any kind whatever, and that Madame
Blavatsky never used any such things in those rooms for any purpose, and I never was asked by
Madame Blavatsky or Mrs. Coulomb at any time to aid in or perform any trick. That the holes and
panels now to be found in the walls of those rooms are quite new to me, and have been constructed
since I left India with Madame Blavatsky.10
This appears to be the last documented duty that Judge discharged in connection with his stay at Adyar.
Judge later wrote to the Boston Index a few words regarding the so-called expos of Madame Blavatsky and
the Report of the Society for Psychical Research of London upon theosophic phenomena. He wrote:
I found that Mr. Coulomb had partly finished a hole in the wall behind the shrine. It was so new that
its edges were ragged with the ends of laths and the plaster was still on the floor. Against it had been
placed an unfinished teak-wood cupboard, made for the occasion, and having a false panel in the back
that hid the hole in the wall. But the panel was too new to work and had to be violently kicked to
show it was there. It was all unplaned, unoiled, and not rubbed down. He had been dismissed before
he had time to finish. . . .
All these things were discovered and examined in the presence of many people, who then and there
wrote their opinions in a book I provided for the purpose, and which is now at headquarters. The
whole arrangement was evidently made up after the facts to fit them on the theory of fraud. That it
was done for money was admitted. . . .11
Judge had removed the Shrine from the Occult Room and moved it to Damodars room. Hartmann
apparently took it from there and burned it. Interestingly Hartmanns name was not among those who
witnessed Babulas Statement. Richard Hodgson,13 the investigator selected by the Society for Psychical
Research to go to India and investigate the charges made by the Coulombs against Blavatsky, stated in his
Report:
The ultimate fate of the Shrine, according to a statement made by Dr. Hartmann to Mr. and Mrs.
Cooper-Oakley, Mr. Hume, and myself, was as follows. . . . The Shrine was therefore first removed
openly to Mr. Damodars room, and, on the following night, was thence removed secretly by three
Theosophists, concealed in the compound, afterwards broken up, and fragments burned piecemeal
during the following week. Dr. Hartmann had only retained two portions of the back of the Shrine,
which he had enveloped in brown paper and kept carefully concealed in his room. . . .14
Blavatsky, in a letter to Judge dated May 1st, 1885, wrote that Hartmann had
testified to [Hodgson] that the shrine had been stolen from Damodars room; seriously & earnestly
in the presence of numerous witnesses, he asked Hodgson to look about him when he went to the
Coulombs, to see whether he would not find it hidden somewhere, for it was surely either Coulomb
or the missionaries who had stolen it. He even went so far in his lying as to show Hodgson the imprint
of feet & hands on the walls under Damodars window.15
There is no doubt that Hartmanns behavior left an unfavorable impression with Hodgson.
Supplement
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In this same letter, Blavatsky explained that from information she had received from her Master she learned
that Hartmann began by setting Hodgson against Subba Row, Bawajee, Damodar and others by telling him
that they were all awful liars, thus prejudicing Hodgson against the chief witnesses. Hartmann was
described as a maverick, a liar, one who enjoyed using deceit to confuse others. Blavatsky wrote: The man
is most intelligent, or rather intellectual, cunning, crafty and having no feeling for any one, or anything &
is hundred times more dangerous than the Coulombs.16
Hartmann later admitted that he had dropped a bogus Letter on Judges head, ordering him back to
America, though Judge maintained that his departure was in no way influenced by Hartmann, and that he had
his own reasons for leaving. In his letter of May 16th, 1885, Judge wrote to Blavatsky,
I tell you neither you, nor Olcott, nor Holloway, nor deceit, nor trick, nor message, nor devil, nor
Hartmann, had anything to do with my departure from India, and perhaps someday that departure will
be of benefit to the Society and the Cause.17
The Masters later indicated to Blavatsky that Judge showed intuition by leaving India18 that is, that Judge
had taken the correct course of action. Judges response to Blavatsky provokes even more perplexing
questions, which are dealt with in Chapter 17.
In her letter of May 1st, 1885, to Judge, Blavatsky wrote that Hartmann confessed to Mrs. Oakley that he had
burned the shrine. However, he told Hodgson that it was Judge and Bawajee, along with him who burnt it.
According to other theosophical historians the Shrine was either burnt by Judge or he had it burnt. Historian
Michael Gomes maintains that it remains a matter of conjecture as to whether Judge assisted Hartmann
in burning the Shrine.19 Kirby Van Mater, long time archivist with The Theosophical Society (Pasadena),
also agrees that the Shrine had been burnt before Judge left India.20 Gertrude Marvin Williams, in Priestess
of the Occult: Madame Blavatsky, claims Judge admitted taking the initiative to destroy it and that in
the presence of Hartmann and another unnamed Theosophist, Judge hacked the magical cabinet apart and
they patiently burned it, one small piece at a time.21 Victor A. Endersby, author of The Hall of Magic
Mirrors, states: In 56 years of familiarity with the literature I have not seen or heard of any such
statement.22 According to testimony, the Shrine was removed to Damodars room on September 20th, 1884,
but nothing is said about it being seen thereafter. Judge has given no indication that he had anything to do
with its disappearance from Damodars room.
One interesting point which weighs heavily against Richard Hodgson is that none of Judges observations
were ever incorporated in his Report. Judge tells Blavatsky, You must have observed that Hodgson has left
me out. And yet I am an important factor. I was there. I examine[d] all, I had all in charge, and I say there
was no aperture behind the shrine.23 One important point which has not been emphasized is that Judge had
left the Occult Room as he had found it, except for the Shrine which he had carried to Damodars room.
When Hodgson arrived at Adyar on December 18th, 1884, he demanded to see the Occult Room and the
Shrine, but Damodar refused. Two days later, when Blavatsky arrived from Ceylon with Olcott who had
gone there to greet her, Hodgson again requested permission. On entering the Occult Room he noticed that
the wall where the Shrine once stood had been considerably altered and that its walls were covered with
fresh plaster . . . all traces of the alleged machinations of the Coulombs in connection with the Shrine had
been obliterated.24
Olcott somewhat explains what happened to the Occult Room. H.P.B. had requested him to shift his
quarters from his one-story brick bungalow to her new room which the Coulombs had built for her while she
was in Europe in 1884.25 Upon his return to Madras from Europe26 (November 15th, 1884) Olcott found that
with the arrival of the rainy season the new roof was leaking like a sieve. Apparently, being anxious to have
a place to display the new portraits of the Masters which he had received in London,27 without thinking of
the consequences, he ordered the Occult Room torn down and rebuilt. This complicated Hodgsons
investigation and, coupled with Hartmanns strange behavior, Hodgson was easily persuaded to find guilt
332
rather than innocence. When Hodgson saw the fresh plaster his suspicions became more acute, which in turn
caused him to interpret this act as tantamount to a confession of guilt as conspirators.
The theosophists had failed to see, perhaps due to hysterical confusion, or possibly simple mindlessness or
mischief, that by re-plastering the wall they had destroyed crucial evidence that might have completely
exonerated Blavatsky of alleged tomfoolery and cleared the Society of this whole matter.
With Judges departure, Hartmann, as Chairman of the Board of Control was left in charge once again. St.
George Lane-Fox, a member of the Board of Control, had returned to London, arriving September 14th, 1884,
to report to Olcott what had happened at Adyar. Hartmanns strange behavior complicated Hodgsons
investigation even more. Considering Hartmanns conduct it is no wonder that Blavatsky was so infuriated
with him, as per her letters to Judge. Blavatsky was greatly disappointed with both Hartmann and Olcott.
It becomes obvious that Judge and Hartmann did not get along while Judge was at Adyar. Master M easily
recognized Hartmanns bte noire (he was jealous of Judge coming to Adyar to take over the
responsibilities28) and had tried to warn him of it. He had been at Adyar since December 1883, was a good
friend of Olcott, and had been in charge until Judge came along. Besides, Judge was his junior by thirteen
years, so why should he not, at the very least, cause a little trouble to show his resentment? Hartmann was
jealous of Judge and he wanted to be the man in full control of the problem developing at Adyar. His actions
demonstrated that he resented Judges sudden appearance, with full authority no less. When Judge decided
to return to America he later explained Hartmanns reaction to the news: When I announced my intended
return he was pleased as a hen with an egg and almost cackled, but pretended to be sorry and tried to dissuade
me.29
Although the mischief caused by the Coulombs and the subsequent Hodgson Report did not destroy the
Theosophical Society as had been planned by the Coulombs and the missionaries, it did create considerable
difficulties which could have been avoided had the Members of the Society maintained calmness, such
as Judge had demonstrated while he was there at Adyar. The Coulomb plot was not the death-knell of the
Society at all. In fact if it had not been for the machinations of certain individuals and the doubting
Thomases, coupled with those members who were suspicious, the whole of the nefarious Coulomb plot could
easily have been convincingly managed at the time. It appears that up to that point the situation had been
managed well by Judge at Adyar. He was not overly concerned, trusting that Blavatsky would eventually be
cleared of any wrongdoing and that the Society would recover from the bad publicity. Even Blavatsky, up
to this point, was not overly concerned. St. George Lane-Fox, one of the members of the Executive
Committee, evaluated the situation from London on October 5th, 1884, in a letter to the Editor of The Times:
I myself attach very little importance to this new scandal, as I do not believe that the true Theosophic
cause suffers in the slightest degree.
The Theosophical movement is now well launched, and must go ahead, in spite of obstacles.30
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333
September 11th, 1884, is the date that the Christian College Magazine, a sectarian journal of Madras, printed
its first installment of the articles titled The Collapse of Koot Hoomi, written by its Editor, Rev. Mr.
George Patterson. Advance proofs had been sent to the Press all over India before the issue was published.
Two days later he sent to the Press a Postscript to his advance proofs, written by Mr. Coulomb. The article
was based mainly on fifteen letters alleged by the Coulombs to have been written to them by Blavatsky
during her absence from the headquarters of the Society, at Bombay and Adyar, giving them instructions to
produce occult phenomena fraudulently. In October another batch of letters was published. The Coulombs
claimed that they were Blavatskys sole confederates in showing spurious phenomena and that all the rest
of the members of the Society had been played as dupes and been cleverly deceived for the previous nine
years.
These articles generated much excitement in India, particularly in Madras and at Adyar (by then the
headquarters of the Theosophical Society), in Poona and in Bombay, the previous headquarters of the Society
where some of the alleged phenomena had occurred. Blavatsky and Olcott were both in Germany at the time.
Judge, having been given full authority by Olcott to look after the affairs at Adyar while he was there, was
left to answer the questions generated by this controversy which was creating anxieties in some Indian minds.
It was at this time that Judge received a letter from Judge Nowroji Dorabji Khandalavala (N.D.K.), a Parsee
from Poona, asking him to look at the originals of the published letters, if possible, and also asking Judge
to give his opinion as to whether or not those letters could have been tampered with.31 Judge, apparently
still at Adyar or at least in the Madras area, responded to his request on Adyar letterhead paper on September
17th, 1884. It was Judges response to this letter upon which much of the Judge Case was based some years
later. This is examined in detail in Chapter 15.
Shortly after Judges response to Judge Khandalavalas questions, Khandalavala wrote an article titled
Madame Blavatsky and Her Slanderers which was published in the November 1884 Theosophist on pages
48 and 49. His article more or less summed up the slanderous attacks of the missionaries and answered the
two articles in the Christian College Magazine.
We do not have Khandalavalas letter to Judge but can surmise that he was ambivalent about the authenticity
of the letters supplied by the Coulombs. It would seem that, at the time, he was developing doubts and
wondering if Blavatsky possibly had committed this unthinkable act, and that he may in fact have been
duped. It appears Judges reply had more than satisfied Khandalavalas concerns and brought great relief to
him, and peace of mind to the members of the Poona Branch. Judges letter gave them the encouragement
they needed, the will and determination, to come out from the shadows into the light and provide the
necessary support for the Theosophical Society and for H.P. Blavatsky. Judge Khandalavala in particular,
an active Magistrate in a Court of Law, would have been extremely vigilant about whom he associated with
and would have been equally careful not to prejudice his status in the community. On September 21st, 1884,
he and fourteen members of the Poona Branch of the Theosophical Society, including A.D. Ezekiel, wrote
a letter to Olcott expressing their support for the Founders and the Society.32
A.D. Ezekiel had been mentioned in some of the letters in the articles, The Collapse of Koot Hoomi. Franz
Hartmann described him as a great sceptic and stated he made me promise that if any occult phenomena
should happen after my return to headquarters, I would let him know it.33 In one of the letters forged by the
Coulombs, Blavatsky had allegedly made reference to a telegram, implying that fraudulent phenomena had
been involved with regards to it. Ezekiel was there when the said telegram was received by Blavatsky. He
immediately wrote letters defending her against the accusations which had been brought forward. His first,
dated September 13th, 1884, was addressed to the Editor of The Times of India, as was another on the 18th
explaining the events as he knew them.
334
Madame Blavatsky and several others knew too well what an inveterate doubter I am regarding these
phenomena, and she must have been a thorough simpleton, and not the clever imposter she is
represented to be if she called for the telegram to make a tremendous impression as alleged. . . . but
she knew my nature too well to expect anything out of me. She did not make any the least attempt to
produce an impression of any sort upon my mind. . . .34
After the September 17th letter from Judge, A.D. Ezekiel must have been thoroughly convinced of
Blavatskys innocence.
Another Poona member, Pestanji Dorabji Khandalavala, brother of Judge N.D. Khandalavala, wrote a long
letter which was published in the Bombay Gazette on September 19th, 1884, to disprove the authenticity of
the letters published in the Christian College Magazine. He stated:
Madame Blavatsky had put up at my home during her last visit to Poona, and I pass by with contempt
the spurious letter that is made to hang upon a telegram which Mme. Blavatsky cared nothing about
after reading and which telegram was never attempted to be placed before anybody. . . . I shall content
myself by giving only one instance to show how utterly untrustworthy the alleged letters are.35
The above examples are cited not to provide a defense of Blavatsky but to show that Judges September 17th,
1884 letter generated much enthusiasm. The genuine responses at the time by the members of the Poona
Branch inspired others to also support and defend Blavatsky and the Theosophical Movement in India. The
Movement in India was not vibrant at the time and could have easily been discredited. Judge had become
fully aware that the Indians were not embracing Theosophy en masse with enthusiasm, that they were
skeptical, hesitant and it was very difficult for them to break from tradition. These realizations encouraged
him to return to America.
____________________
No further documentation has been found to date regarding Judges stay at Adyar after September 21st, 1884,
the day after Babula, Blavatskys servant, arrived from England. Most historians have assumed that Judge
left India sometime in October but no attention has been paid to what he did in the interim. There appear to
be approximately twenty-eight days which cannot be accounted for while he was there. Other so-called
important members of the Society have had their history recorded and examined closely, for example,
Blavatsky, Olcott, and others who came after. It would seem that it has not been worth anyones time to even
speculate as to what Judge might have done for those weeks. It has been generally assumed that he was either
sick or could not wait until he had his chance to return to America, when in fact he had first decided to go
to India, permanently if necessary, and work for Theosophy.
One of the few to comment on this subject is historian Josephine Ransom who summarized Judges stay at
Adyar in one short paragraph in which she states that he spent time with Damodar K. Mavalankar and other
members of the Council:
But Judge was not happy at Headquarters. He was ill and restless, and, in October, decided to return
to the United States. He and Hartmann did not readily get on together. Hartmann afterwards admitted
that he had dropped a bogus Letter on Judges head, ordering him back to America, though Judge
averred that his departure was in no way influenced by Hartmann, and that he had his own reasons
for leaving. In later years he often harked back to this brief visit, but always with a sense of
uneasiness that he had not made the most of it. He began to feel that the strength of The Theosophical
Society was not in India, but in the West, and that the West should not be neglected as in the past.36
The United Lodge of Theosophists (ULT) in Theosophical Movement 1875 - 1950 briefly states:
Mr. Judge remained in India only long enough to attend to his duties in connection with the Coulomb
conspiracy, but during this period he strengthened the bond of fraternity with Damodar and other
Hindu members whom he knew only by correspondence.37
Supplement
335
The Madras Mail of September 29th, 1884, reported that Judge had addressed some Madras students,38
presumably within a day or two of this published item. This is the last record of Judges activities in India.
Judge had his own personal reasons for being at Adyar, reasons which had not been clear to him in detail,
but he was determined that he would follow his intuition. We can assume that while Judge was at Adyar
taking care of business concerning the Coulombs, which was the primary reason authorized by the President
of the T.S., H.S. Olcott, his personal reasons for being at Adyar were becoming clearer to him. He was there
to be tested by the Masters and possibly initiated. This is detailed in Chapter 17.
Judge had executed all the correct and necessary duties when he arrived at Adyar to ensure that the Coulombs
and the missionaries could not succeed in their endeavors to destroy the Society and Blavatskys reputation.
His actions exhibited that he was not worried about the Coulombs and their conspiracy that he had done
all that was required of him to ensure that this affair would be easily resolved by Olcott and Blavatsky when
they returned to Adyar. He had come to the conclusion that he was no longer as needed in India as he had
first thought and that he must return to America where his duty, more accurately his dharma, lay before him
awaiting his return.
Judge had clearly expressed that he wanted to be useful to the CAUSE; he did not want to be a burden on the
Society he wanted to work for his passage. However, to leave India he needed money so he asked
Damodar for 500 or 600 rupees. At first Damodar refused to give Judge the money because he was in despair
that Judge should leave at that time. Damodar was a reticent self-sacrificing, hard-working and devoted soul,
whom H.P.B. described as trembling at the thought of saying more than was permitted. He had found comfort
in Judges presence at headquarters, as opposed to Hartmanns. Damodar did not have the sum of money
requested by Judge but did manage to get it for him. Blavatsky later explained to Judge that Damodar had
later told Olcott that he felt obliged to furnish Judge the money because he was one of the Founders, had
worked loyally in defending me [Blavatsky] & the Society, and that you were entitled to it. Blavatsky added:
Neither Olcott nor I look upon the transaction as borrowing but as something due to you.39
Historians have based their knowledge on information supplied by Albert E.S. Smythe, the first General
Secretary of the Canadian Section of the T.S., and Lloyds of London records which show that Judge was
on board the British steamer S.S. Wisconsin40 on November 15th, 1884, sailing from Liverpool to New York.
It took approximately three weeks to sail from Bombay to Liverpool in those days, unless the seas were rough
in which case a few more days would have been required for the journey. The same journey sometimes only
took two weeks. Presuming Judge sailed from Bombay, and allowing an average of eighteen days for the
journey, it can therefore be estimated that he left India on or near Sunday, October 26th, 1884. He might have
left from Colombo as well, but likely not as there are no records indicating that Judge ever set foot in Ceylon
at that time. Questions come to mind: Where is the documentation of Judges activities from approximately
September 28th to October 26th, 1884? What was he doing? Where was he? Records were kept at Adyar of
people coming and going at the time. Why has that information not been released?
It has been chronicled that before Judge sailed from Liverpool he went to London for at least a day or two
after buying his ticket to return to America. In his May 16th, 1885, letter to H.P.B., in follow-up to his arrival
from India, he wrote,
When I left India I left letters for you & Olcott fully explaining & also assuring you of my continued
affection & friendship. . . . Then from London I wrote you again assuring you that I was all right.41
He possibly also visited the Arundales for he mentions in this same letter having seen Holloway once since
his return to deliver a pair of (drawers?) which Miss Arundale bought her in London.42
336
It was on this voyage from Liverpool to New York on board the S.S. Wisconsin that Judge first met Albert
E. S. Smythe, the future General Secretary of the Canadian Section of the T.S.43 Smythe later recorded their
meeting in the pages of The Canadian Theosophist. The effects of the last seven years of trial, for that they
truly were, on Judges physical being were obvious to Smythe during their journey on the steamer to New
York: He looked old and pallid and had I been told his age was 33 I would have said it was 20 years out.44
Little did Smythe realize that part of the reason Judge looked so tired was that he had undergone a most
exhausting initiation which had taken a lot of his energy, of which he did not possess much in the first place.
Damodar had also undertaken initiations earlier which at times either had to be delayed due to lack of
physical stamina, or left him grasping for energy. Judge was to also later discover that he had contracted
Chagres disease through his earlier business trips to South America.45
Before he left India Judge wrote two articles which were later published in The Theosophist. The first article
was Thought Transference or Mind Reading and the other was Chirognomy and Palmistry. Both were
published in the 1884 November and December issues respectively. These two articles were likely drawn
from information he gathered and from the talks he delivered when he first arrived in India and may have
been a follow-up to his earlier review of The Hollow Globe.
____________________
Judge was keenly aware that the soil was fertile for the growth of the Theosophical Movement in the West
and that it partly rested on him to make the concepts of the Aryan Philosophy available to it. However, his
innate affinity to India never abated. Although Judge felt compelled to return to America where his future
lay, his feelings for India were never far from his heart. He was obviously quite drawn to it and felt that he
could have a positive impact on the Movement there as well. Two years later in a letter to Olcott, dated
August 3rd, 1886, Judge wrote:
I dont get on here with these . . . Westerners. I am a Hindoo in Irish form, and . . . can do more for
the cause in India than I can here.46
Supplement
337
Chapter 5
Back in America
Upon his return to New York on November 26th, 1884,1 Judge found his financial prospects greatly improved.
He joined the law firm in which Olcotts brother worked, and was thus able to devote more time to the
Society. Olcott later described the inner change that had taken place in Judge.
Mr. Judge felt what you may call the divine afflatus to devote himself to the work and to pick up
the loose threads we had left scattered there in America and carry on. The result shows what one man
can do who is altogether devoted to the cause.2
Judge had immediately started work to build a strong Theosophical Society based on the Original Program
with the continued guidance of the Masters.3 He was not one to boast about his position in the Society or
explain his actions he was a modest, unassuming man who worked hard and was completely devoted to
the CAUSE.
Soon after Judges return, Olcott wrote him letters of abuse and H.P.B. wrote him a letter of distress. Both
were upset that Judge had left Adyar before Olcotts return. On May 1st, 1885, H.P.B. wrote:
There was a time that I regarded you as a true friend, & after your short note, or postal card, from
London I have no reason yet to regard you otherwise. Still everything you said, say & did, would give
me the right to think that there is a great change in you.4
We have to understand H.P.B.s disappointment and her frustrations she had been very sick and was still
convalescing from the fiasco at Adyar where she had been asked to resign her office as Corresponding
Secretary of the T.S.,5 then ousted from headquarters by the very people she trusted, and told to go to Europe
where she would not be seen for a while and where she could write her Secret Doctrine. No doubt she was
very upset, but she was about to find out information that would please her tremendously information
about Judge of which she was not yet aware.
Judge replied to H.P.B. on May 16th, 1885, and expressed his concern over her situation. I am sorry indeed.
Humanity seems to never get any better but steadily worse. He then tells her, My dear HPB if Master will
not enlighten you about me then I must say nothing and remain to work out my own salvation as I can.6 It
is obvious that the Masters had not yet informed H.P.B. what had happened to him while he was in India,
but she was soon to find out from them for Judge never personally told her.
On October 3rd, 1886, while she was in Ostend, H.P.B. wrote to Judge telling him of the changes that
occurred to him while he was in India in 1884.
The trouble with you is that you do not know the great change that came to pass in you a few years
ago. Others have occasionally their astrals changed & replaced by those of Adepts (as of
Elementaries) & they influence the outer, and the higher man. With you, it is the NIRMANAKAYA not
the astral that blended with your astral. Hence the dual nature & fighting.7
From H.P.B.s letter, it can be deduced that the Masters eventually explained to her the extent of Judges
initiation, although it appears that she thought Judge did not fully understand the complexities of it. This
might be true but, as will be outlined in the evidence to be presented, Judge was certainly aware of his
initiation although he might not have fully understood all the intricate details at the time. From this moment
onward one thing becomes evident from H.P.B.s correspondence to him, and that is she had more confidence
in his abilities as an occultist and treated him more as an equal colleague for the CAUSE than any other
individual.
338
There is no doubt that Judges abilities grew and he gained in confidence. Judges despondency and
insecurities of earlier years seemed entirely gone. His will appeared to have gained in strength and he had
become more aware of the energies around him. He revitalized the New York work, reorganizing it under
its original Charter and name, The Aryan Theosophical Society of New York. He held regular meetings,
started a theosophical lending library, and launched the printing of inexpensive literature.8 He quickly
attracted to himself devoted workers who gladly carried out his plans.
In reviewing the situation in America, Judge realized that a radical change was needed in the administration
of the Society. He wrote to H.P.B. and Olcott suggesting that an American Section be formed to replace the
American Board of Control.9 In June 1886 the Council of the T.S. at Adyar dissolved the Board of Control
and in October Judge was elected as permanent General Secretary. The new Section soon prospered under
his dynamic leadership and new branches were chartered all over the country. In April 1886 Judge had
started a new monthly magazine called The Path which later became the official organ of the American
Section of the T.S. In the first issue it was stated:
THIS MAGAZINE is not intended either to replace or to rival in America The Theosophist, nor any
other journal now published in the interest of Theosophy.
. . . To us it appears that there is a field and a need for it in this country. No cultivating of the field
is necessary, for it is already ripe.10
H.P.B. wrote to Judge from Ostend on July 27th, 1886, regarding his new magazine:
. . . I will begin to work from this day to bring Olcott to let you have 50 monthly for your Path. They
must be found for if we were three original ones to this day, very soon we will be two . . .11
As there were few qualified writers in America at the time, Judge wrote many of the articles himself under
a number of pseudonyms.12 His style was simple and focused, and he dealt with a variety of theosophical and
associated subjects. In a letter to Judge, H.P.B. remarked in admiration of his Path magazine that it was
pure Buddhi.13
Under Judges guidance, moves were made to unite in thought and action the membership scattered across
the United States. With himself at first as primary speaker, he eventually placed three full-time traveling
lecturers in the field to aid struggling groups and to support established centers. The Path, leaflets, and
specialized small magazines were regularly circulated among the membership, keeping them in touch with
one another and with the headquarters in New York.* Local speakers were encouraged to start new centers
in nearby communities. With only about a dozen Branches in 1886, by 1896 there were over one hundred.14
While chronicling his memoirs and the history of the Society, Olcott comments about the changes he had
observed in Judge:
His brain was fertile in good practical ideas, and to his labors almost exclusively was due the rapid
and extensive growth of our movement in the United States; the others, his colleagues, but carried out
his plans.15
A Bibliography of Works by and about William Q. Judge is included in this book, The Judge Case: A Conspiracy Which Ruined the
Theosophical CAUSE, Part 1. It details books, pamphlets and periodicals only. Judge also contributed articles to other publications, such as The
Theosophist, Lucifer and The Irish Theosophist, among others, which are contained in various compilations of his articles and letters. These
compilations are also included in this bibliography, as well as titles of an historical and biographical nature.
Many of his other important contributions to the evolution of the Theosophical Movement are found within these pages. Also included, in Part 2,
are Judges letters to Ernest T. Hargrove from the Theosophical Quarterly, which have been republished in Appendix D. Hargrove came from
England on March 31st, 1894, to help Judge during his time of need. He gave talks on theosophical subjects in towns and cities across North America.
These letters touch the hearts of many as they are guided through much of the turmoil surrounding the Movement and the accusations leveled against
Judge while he was trying to carry on with the work of promoting the Theosophical CAUSE until his death in March 1896.
Supplement
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Chapter 6
Bertram Keightley
By the fall of 1888 H.P. Blavatskys The Secret Doctrine was published. Both Bertram Keightley and his
step-nephew1 Dr. Archibald Keightley, had spent much time helping Blavatsky in reviewing the manuscript
and preparing it for publication. Within a year of its release Blavatsky had decided to offer the services of
Bertram Keightley, her private Secretary at the time and the co-Secretary of the newly formed Esoteric
Section of the T.S., in London, to Judge in America. But one has to wonder why H.P.B. made the offer,
as Judge wrote that Keightley had come to New York in the fall of 1889 according to a request by H.P.B.2
Judge had first met Bertram Keightley in 1884 while in France and considered that his experience working
with H.P.B. qualified him as a respectable speaker to deliver theosophical lectures across the country on
behalf of the Society thereby relieving Judge of the responsibilities of revisiting all the branches he had
started.
Bertram Keightley, a man of means, arrived in New York in late November 1889. He delivered his first
lecture before the Aryan T.S. on The Second and Third Objects of the Theosophical Society as Related to
the First. This lecture was published in June 1890 as Paper No. 1 in Judges new publication, Department
of Branch Work, established to assist branches by providing suggestions for theosophical work and study.
Some years later Judge sent copies of these Papers to Keightley in India where they were read to Branch
members there.3
After a short visit to, and several talks in New York, Washington, Boston and Hartford, Keightley
proceeded to California, where for three months he travelled far and wide, delivering public lectures on
Theosophy, invigorating the existing Branches and founding new ones, filling the press of California with
Theosophic fact and truth.4
Before heading for California Bertram Keightley attended the Annual Meeting of the Chicago Branch on
December 8th, 1889, where he spent several days. He then lectured in Nebraska then went west to San
Francisco, San Jos, Los Angeles and San Diego before returning north again to Sacramento, CA, the State
Capital. He then headed east reaching Omaha on March 31st, 1890, very much broken down from over-work
and the effect of an illness in California, and was laid up until the 6th of April. He then lectured in Lincoln,
Nebraska and, on his way east, in Tekamah and Sioux City, Iowa, expecting to reach Cincinnati on the 25th.5
On April 27th - 28th he attended the T.S. American Section, 4th Annual Convention in Chicago as H.P.B.s
special delegate. On the afternoon of the 27th he delivered H.P.B.s message to the American Convention.
He stayed in Chicago until May 8th, then proceeded to Muskegon (Michigan), Darlington (Wisconsin), and
St. Paul and Minneapolis (Minnesota). He visited Niagara Falls briefly before reaching New York on
Sunday, May 25th, becoming the guest of E.A. Neresheimer, a member of the Executive Committee of the
T.S. American Section. The next eighteen days were spent in and around New York resting and visiting and
giving the odd lecture. On May 27th, 1890, he attended the Aryan T.S. and gave a brief account of his tour.
On June 3rd, he lectured at the Aryan T.S.6 on The Theosophical Doctrine of Evolution.7
An interesting incident occurred on Monday, June 9th, 1890.
When [Bertram Keightley] arrived at The Path office he was told there was a cablegram for him, and
he found it lying on the table in the inner office; as it was addressed Judge, New York, it had of
course been opened. This cablegram bore the word Right, and the cryptograph of Mahtm M., with
a seal impression, at once recognized by him as that of the seal he had seen in H.P.B.s possession
early in 1888. This was the first time that B.K. had seen an impression of that seal, and he at once
asked Mr. Judge whether he knew anything of the seal or writing on the cablegram. Mr. Judge denied
340
all knowledge of either, and the presence of the seal and cryptograph had a decisive influence in
causing Bertram Keightley to obey the instructions given in the cablegram.8
Judge later stated: It is quite possible that if this message was sent to my name over the cable I opened it
first. But, I emphatically deny placing those marks upon it.9 At the time, Bertram was satisfied with Judges
explanation as to what had happened and he looked upon it as just another phenomena, such as he had
witnessed before while working with H.P.B. in London; but his mind had seeds of doubt which soon
germinated and later grew to fill his entire mind with suspicions directed towards Judge.
On Thursday, June 12th, 1890, Bertram left for Baltimore, Maryland, and lectured on Friday night to 150
people assembled at Lehmanns Hall. On Saturday he went to Washington D.C. where he held two meetings
and gave interviews to reporters. On Sunday evening he left for New York in consequence of business there
and arrived during the night or morning of June 16th. He delivered his farewell address on Tuesday night
before the Aryan T.S. On June 17th he boarded the City of New York and sailed for England the next
morning.10
Before Bertram Keightleys return to England Judge wrote a very interesting prophecy of coming events
which appeared on the fifth Anniversary of The Path in April 1890.
Let us press forward with new energy in the work of the next four years, for when the second fifth
is reached an important era for theosophists and the world will be at hand, when the result of again
being weighed in the balance of events will be more serious than it is now.11
This prophecy turned out to be so accurate that one can only speculate Judge had been told about these future
events by his Teacher and Initiator, Master Morya. This prediction would account for Judges exhaustive
campaign to spread Theosophical ideas as fast and as wide as possible in order to have a strong established
organization in America able to sustain the Movement through those troubled days ahead.
It appears that the cablegram Bertram Keightley received was an order from H.P.B. to return to London.
H.P.B. had received several letters from American members of the E.S. who had misconstrued what was said
to them by Keightley.12 She immediately wrote a letter to Judge marked private and E.S.:
I answer your question re E.S. and Bert. If he has informed all the E.S. groups . . . that they are to
form the auric egg & are to do this by means of colors, and are to do this 7 times a day & so as until
formed then he has said that which has no more meaning than an order to form a sheep out of a
gooses egg. If he added to this that this was by my order then he was either insane or he fibbed,
not to use a worse word.13
Bertram Keightleys imprudent behavior prompted H.P.B. to issue a response to his personal speculative
utterances in E.S. meetings which were taken by many members to be H.P.B.s teachings and, therefore,
authoritative. In order to rectify the situation that I have never dreamt of giving any such absurd & idiotic
orders15 she issued a circular Notice on August 9th, 1890. It was marked Strictly Private and
Confidential, E. S. T. S. and stated in part:
1. I have neither written, issued, nor sent through Bertram Keightley any orders or instructions
whatever respecting the above matter. . . .
3. The only orders in Instructions which I issue in the U.S. are through Mr. William Q. Judge, or
those which I myself sign my name to with my physical hand.
4. Any report or statement by any one of orders or instructions alleged to be by me in any other form
than as stated in the foregoing paragraph are and shall be false; and any member acting on any other
Supplement
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sort of order and without first sending the same to Mr. William Q. Judge, will be expelled from the
Section.16
Many have simply overlooked this very important Notice from H.P.B. where she clearly asserts Judges
status within the Esoteric School, Theosophical Society. H.P.B. made similar statements on numerous other
occasions but not with as much firmness and authority as this.
When Bertram Keightley returned to London H.P.B. wanted to prove a point to him and demanded to see
the telegram she had sent him in New York. The subsequent event was described and signed by Claude Falls
Wright:
In my presence and that of B. Keightley, Countess Wachtmeister, and Kenneth Austin, H.P.B. at
London, immediately after the arrival of Bert Keightley, took a piece of cigarette paper and looking
Bert in the face, while blowing him up for his loss of the telegram, suddenly said with a half smile,
Bert, would you like a telegram; wouldnt you like a telegram, Bert? She rubbed the piece of paper
between her fingers as she spoke and then unfolded it into the lost telegram! On it were several of the
very seal marks about which there has been so much dispute. Bert Keightley claimed the telegram,
but she insisted upon its being handed around to the rest of us, desiring us to examine it closely
saying, Look, those are the Masters marks, look, you may have some day to know them again.
Then she went on to say that we might mention the matter to anybody we chose, except Judge, for,
she said, he does not want to be associated in any way with phenomena.17
On August 9th, 1890, the date that she issued her Notice, H.P.B. also appointed Bertram Keightley to act
as my personal representative in India and Ceylon in all matters relating to the Theosophical Movement.18
Madame Blavatskys instructions to Bertram Keightley were To change his [Olcotts] attitude & bring him
back into touch with HPB & Masters. She reiterated this in her letters to him and in her letter of September
5th, 1890,19 reminded him, Do what you are bid & if you do it well you may atone for much. In her letter
to Judge in August 1890 she wrote,
If he succeeds in saving the situation in India where Theosophy is falling into dreamless sleep &
decay well & good. If not he will have to work until he has atoned for his sins.
Just before leaving England for India Bertram Keightley wrote a note (August 9th, 1890) to Judge stating: In
reply to your questions; I never said that they are to form the auric Egg &c &c &c by HPBs orders.21
Keightleys note to Judge was an attempt to justify his actions and it also implicated him with ample motive
to hold Judge accountable for his being reprimanded by H.P.B.
Bertram Keightley reached Bombay on August 31st, 1890, and visited, on his way . . . to the Head-quarters,
the Bombay, Surat, Baroda, Poona, Hyderabad, Bellary, Gooty and Cuddapah Branches.22 To convey to the
Indian membership the hard work needed to start Branches, he recounted that Judge had no easy task in
America and at first had the greatest possible difficulty in getting three members in order to form a quorum
adding that Judge went through the form of meeting by himself, week after week, and magnetized his act
of will afresh into a centre of attraction to make it a success.23
Bertram Keightley was one of the idealistic, well-meaning and well-educated individuals sent by Blavatsky
to help Olcott. Although highly intellectual he was deceived by appearances and easily influenced by those
Indian members who considered themselves by right of descent natural Theosophists not prepared to look
beyond their caste and their old superstitions to assert themselves as true Theosophists, as Damodar had
done. Keightley easily made friends with them and accepted their customs and ways as easily as Annie
Besant did when she went to India a few years later. One who soon became one of his best friends was
Professor Chakravarti. Although Chakravarti had not been active theosophically and was not a member of
342
the Esoteric Section, Bertram Keightley soon came to believe him to be, if not a Mahatma, at least an
Occultist of high rank and one directly connected with the Masters of H.P.B.
____________________
On November 17th, 1890, Bertram Keightley had been appointed General Secretary of the Indian Section,
subject to the approval of H.P.B., and by January 1st, 1891, his appointment took effect, as did the Charter
for the consolidated Indian Section.24
Supplement
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Chapter 7
Part of Judges article of response was published by Olcott, after his return from his tour, in Centres of The
Theosophical Movement but with the comment:
The criticism of Mr. Judge is marked by his usual force and directness, but at the same time contains
passages of a far too personal character for me to admit them. To do so would be to depart from the
policy of editorial dignity, which I have promised myself to follow out so long as I am the responsible
Editor of this Magazine.5
Although Olcott, President of the Theosophical Society, denies taking sides in this issue, it becomes evident
that he is supporting Hartes ideas regarding Adyar.
H.P.B. had also responded to Hartes articles published by him as acting Editor of The Theosophist. In her
article, A Puzzle from Adyar6 in the August Lucifer, she furiously and personally attacked Harte, charging
him of abnormal fancies and that he might be, owing to the relaxed climate of Southern India, ill and
then defended herself. She also objected strongly to Harte publishing extracts of a private letter to him as a
member of Olcotts Commissioners in India. This letter from Bertram Keightley, Secretary of the Esoteric
Section of the T.S., was never intended to be published. In A Disclaimer in the July 1889 Supplement of
The Theosophist, Harte published the following:
Mr. Keightley tells this Commissioner that he must not believe that the Esoteric Section has any,
even the slightest, pretension to boss the Theosophical Society or anything of the kind. Again he
says: We are all, H.P.B. first and foremost, just as loyal to the Theosophical Society and to Adyar
as the Colonel can possibly be. And yet again he says: I have nothing more to say, except to repeat
in the most formal and positive manner my assurance that there is not a word of truth in the statement
that the Esoteric Section has any desire or pretension to boss any other part or Section of the T. S.
344
In A Puzzle from Adyar Blavatsky wrote that he, as acting Editor, had no right to publish it, as had been
indicated in the letter itself. As Judge had stated, she also declared:
It is pure nonsense to say that H.P.B. . . . is loyal to the Theosophical Society and to Adyar (!?).
H.P.B. is loyal to death to the Theosophical CAUSE, and those great Teachers whose philosophy can
alone bind the whole of Humanity into one Brotherhood. . . . [T]he degree of her sympathies with the
Theosophical Society and Adyar depends upon the degree of the loyalty of that Society to the
CAUSE. Let it break away from the original lines and show disloyalty in its policy to the CAUSE and
the original programme of the Society, and H.P.B. calling the T.S. disloyal, will shake it off like dust
from her feet.8
Blavatsky had obviously personally written to Harte on these matters as, in a letter dated August 26th, 1889,
addressed to My dear H.P.B. he responded: I receive your scolding in all humility; no doubt I deserve it
or worse. . . . Seriously my dear teacher, superior and friend, I think you do me a little injustice. . . . He then
proceeds to justify his comments regarding the Esoteric Section:
But I confess that the moral effect of belonging to the E.S. seems to me disastrous in the extreme. To
say nothing of the larger wrecks, look at Judge! He used to be truthful and unselfish, and, I think,
moderately large-minded; but now . . . he does not seem to be able to tell two words of truth, he has
become filled with personal ambition to rule or ruin, and if you do not pull him up by the coat-tails
he will in six months have utterly disgusted the majority of the Fellows in the American Section.9
In a P.S. he stated his objection to the idea of succession for the Presidency: [I]f I find that the idea gets
currency that the Vice-Presidency carries a presumptive right or an understood right to succeed the PresidentFounder I shall contradict it in the largest type in the Theosophist.10
In her response, a letter dated London, Sept 12 1889", Blavatsky wrote:
You ruin systematically the T.S. ever since you took charge of the Theosophist; and by your tactless
and indecent attack in it on the E.S. and the British Section you force me to wash publicly our dirty
linen in Lucifer.
Harte persisted, however, and in January 1890 he wrote an article, Muddled Rule-Makers, which focused
on the policies adopted by the American Section. He wrote, The rules and by-laws fabricated by Branches
for their own government are sometimes rather excentric [sic]. He ridiculed some of the by-laws of a newly
formed Branch in Washington in which Olcott was designated as the Chief President of the government
of the International Theosophical Society adding, And we call upon Mr. William Q. Judge, General
Secretary of the American Section of the Theosophical Society, for some explanation thereof.13
This infuriated Blavatsky and in the February Lucifer she chided Harte for his very untheosophical and
undignified attack made by one officer of the T.S. on another officer of the same. She stated that: Such
harsh expressions . . . are not only objectionable on account of their offensive character, but detrimental and
dangerous to the T.S.14 When Olcott was called to London in the fall of 1889, following publication of
Hartes two articles, Applied Theosophy and The Situation, Blavatsky scolded him and demanded that
Olcott relieve Richard Harte of his position as acting Editor of The Theosophist.
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345
Olcott returned to Adyar on February 5th, 1890. On February 27th, he issued a Special Notice:
The undersigned resumes the responsible direction of the Theosophist; at the same time thanking Mr.
Richard Harte most sincerely for his valuable services during the period of the absence of the
undersigned from India.15
Richard Harte gave his letter of resignation from the office of Secretary of the Theosophical Society to Olcott
on September 23rd, 1890.16 His editorial relation with The Theosophist ended with the March 1891 issue.
On February 15th, 1891, the day before leaving for Australia, Olcott appointed Bertram Keightley as
Managing Editor of The Theosophist, in place of Harte who, due to supposed private matters obliging,
returned to England.17
During the three years Richard Harte was at Adyar he singlehandedly probably did more harm to the
Theosophical Movement than any other person, other than the Indian members themselves. He originally was
sent there as a representative of the American Section to support ideas which he had been given a mandate
to support by the members in America. He became one of Judges and Blavatskys greatest enemies. Here
is a letter from Judge to Harte which explains their position. The letter is dated October 23rd, 1890.
Dear Harte:
I have your note enclosed in Col. Olcotts, and by the same mail I have copies of your interviews
about Bert in India, and also of your telegrams to him. Inasmuch as these documents are precisely in
line with the stuff you have uniformly been sending me for the last year or two, I believe they are
authentic. At any rate, if they are not authentic, it remains for you to publicly deny them. You refer
to Mme. Blavatskys occult nose being wrong. I should consider it right, especially in your case, as
years ago she told me what harm you would do us and how you would create trouble. Inasmuch as
many people think your intentions are good, I am forced to the conclusion that your definition of
kindness is spitefulness, and that your power to distinguish right from wrong is absolutely atrophied.
In these interviews you have gone to the trouble not only to misrepresent facts but also to make new
obstructions and to set in motion false ideas which will have a tendency to involve the Society with
the government in India. Col. Olcotts reply to your insane drivel is altogether too mild. He ought to
let everybody know that your attack is unworthy of notice, as is that of a man who persistently twists
the right into wrong and makes black white. I sincerely trust that you will be deprived of all official
position, so that in the future whatever you may choose to say will be devoid of the slightest official
sanction. Very truly you are secretary in partibus infidelium. You have hitherto sent me very plain
language about myself, and I now give you some about yourself. The best plan for you to pursue is
to leave India; leave the Theosophical Society alone. Become a Tipperary Nationalist, anything but
to interfere with concerns which you cannot understand. You are a worse enemy to us than Coues is:
Coues is no enemy, he is only an outside lunatic who has no power except what we give him, and we
give him none; whereas, you have a semblance of authority, remain in the Society, and persist in these
outrageous attacks and insinuations, which spring either from lunacy or deliberate malice you can
take your choice. I am writing this way because I know the harm you are doing in India. You can do
no harm here, hence, I have no personal concern as to this country in respect to yourself, although you
have caused me much annoyance and increased my correspondence by the manner in which you have
done some official business with this country. I am,
Sincerely yours,
[Italics added]
WILLIAM Q JUDGE18
Interestingly there have been more articles written about the exploits of Elliott Coues than about Richard
Harte. Most historians have only focused on Hartes relationship with H.P.B. and ignored the main target
of his attack, which was Judge.
The incidents briefly described above involving Richard Harte and his articles, combined with Bertram
Keightleys letter to Harte, and Olcotts naive stance on the whole matter, was the beginning of a lot of
animosity regarding the status of Adyar and that of Judge as well. The issues raised then and the problems
346
which ensued from these incidents have never been fully addressed even to this day. Harte planted the seeds
which created confusion, doubt, and suspicion in the Indian members. He was somehow influenced by the
aura at Adyar and, in turn, became infectious. These ideas regarding Adyar have generated much resentment
and divided the Movement into different sects, each following different loyalties, while claiming to be the
rightful heirs.
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Chapter 8
Struggles in India
Olcott had been in London in August 1888, so his visit there in the fall of 1889, within a year of his last,
created much inquiry. He had received a cable asking him to come and make a two-month lecture tour of
Great Britain. However, there were more compelling reasons for his visit. Olcott was upset with the set-up
of the Esoteric Section and with the formation of the British Section of the T.S. the year before.1 The stresses
and strains created many problems between Adyar and London. He felt that H.P.B. interfered too much in
his executive matters but conceded that he did not always perceive that esoteric reasons were frequently
involved.2 H.P.B. apparently wanted full Presidential powers as his representative in her area.3 Additionally,
as part owner of The Theosophist, Blavatsky was extremely upset about the way the magazine was being
edited. It was at this time she told Olcott that Richard Harte had to go.
On December 25th, 1889, the day before Olcott left London for Colombo, H.P.B. placed in his hands a
document appointing him as her confidential agent and sole official representative for the Esoteric Section
in Asiatic countries.4 H.P.B.s confidence was such that she trusted him without any Pledges,5 although
Olcott never was a member of the E.S.6
____________________
The T.S. in India had been struggling to keep up with the growth being reported in Europe and America. As
Olcott was in Europe on official business he decided that no Convention would be held at Adyar, as usual,
in December 1889. He did, however, grant permission to the Presidents Commissioners to meet at
headquarters on December 27th for a conference and lectures. Because a number of members would be in
Bombay for other reasons, the General Secretaries of the four Indian Sections7 unanimously decided to hold
this Conference meeting in Bombay during Christmas 1889 instead. One of the General Secretaries, a
prominent Parsee member of the T.S. since November 25th, 1879, Khan Bahadur Nowroji Dorabji
Khandalavala (N.D.K.), took the chair and stated:
For various reasons the work is lagging behind in India. We meet this evening with a view to impress
upon the minds of members the necessity of taking such steps as may put it on better basis. This large
gathering will bring us into contact with those members who have confounded the movement itself
with the phenomena and will afford an opportunity of giving them a correct idea of the significance
of this movement.
Large ideas of philosophy viewed in their true light give us the only right conception of the great work
of the Theosophical Society.8
The underlying concern of the Indian members was the fact that other countries were progressing at a much
faster rate then they were, including Japan where Olcott had spent much of his time of late. They may have
thought that because of all the travels the President had undertaken they were being neglected and had better
do something to revitalize their situation or be left out altogether.
One circumstance which greatly contributed to the good feeling and cheerfulness of the Brothers in
Conference was the news that New York, London and Adyar were in future to pull together in unity
and unison, and that, for the present at least, the disintegrating forces those tending to the breaking
up of the Theosophical Society into a number of separate Theosophical Societies had been
overcome and silenced. It is felt here in India, where it is a common saying that every man is naturally
and by right of descent a Theosophist, that any attempt to discredit or weaken the Society in this
country is simply suicidal. Whether rightly or wrongly, the idea has latterly sprung up among many
of the Fellows here that our European and American brethren were willing to decry Theosophy in
India, in order to enhance their own importance in the movement. This suspicion is happily passing
away, and when the Indian Fellows become fully persuaded that England and America really
348
appreciate the great value of a strong India as a base of operations in other lands, it will undoubtedly
be clearly perceived that it is the duty and should be the delight of the Indian Fellows themselves to
make Theosophy in this country a really impregnable fortress, from which shall issue forth
expeditions into yet unconquered countries, and from which all the younger Sections may be able to
draw moral support in times of need.9
Part of their concern was the fact that unlike India, America and Britain had united all their Branches each
under their respective Section. France, Germany, and Australia were organizing themselves as well. The
newly formed Esoteric Section in London (with Judge as H.P.B.s Representative in America), left the Indian
members seriously concerned that its formation was intended to diminish Indias role as the birthplace of the
very philosophical wisdom the Theosophical Society was advocating. This concern had further been
exacerbated by Richard Hartes publishing of extracts of Bertrams letter in A Disclaimer in the July 1889
Supplement of The Theosophist.
When Olcott returned to India from England he was greeted by the Indian members. He had been struggling
to encourage the Indian members to become more involved with the Society. In November he had asked them
to reorganize the Rules of the Society in order to fulfil their needs, to make them feel that they were
appreciated and an integral part of the whole Movement. Olcott had requested that by February 1st, 1890, they
present him with changes they recommended be made to the code of rules, for review by Olcott and the
General Council. These resolutions had been read, discussed, amended and adopted at the Bombay
Conference. One of the ten resolutions proposed was:
That the division of the Society in India into four different Sections, does not appear to be convenient,
and for the present there should be only one Section for the whole of India, managed by a General
Secretary (with an Executive Council) who will carry on his duties separately from the General work
and management of the Theosophical Society.10
____________________
When Bertram Keightley was sent to India in August 1890 at H.P.B.s special request as her intermediary
and to render Olcott any needed assistance and attend the December Convention as European Delegate,11
she had written an Open letter for him to bring to India to be read by the Indian members and then possibly
handed over to Olcott. April 1890 had marked the fifth anniversary of H.P.B.s departure from India. Her
letter, which has since been printed under title, Why I Do Not Return To India, was addressed To My
Brothers of ryvarta. She wrote:
In Europe and America, during the last three years, I have met with hundreds of men and women who
have the courage to avow their conviction of the real existence of the Masters, and who are working
for Theosophy on Their lines and under Their guidance, given through my humble self.
In India, on the other hand, ever since my departure, the true spirit of devotion to the Masters and the
courage to avow it has steadily dwindled away. At Adyar itself, increasing strife and conflict has
raged between personalities; uncalled for and utterly undeserved animosity almost hatred has
been shown towards me by several members of the staff. There seems to have been something strange
and uncanny going on at Adyar, during these last years. No sooner does a European, most
Theosophically inclined, most devoted to the Cause, and the personal friend of myself or the
President, set his foot in Headquarters, than he becomes forthwith a personal enemy to one or other
of us, and what is worse, ends by injuring and deserting the Cause.12
H.P.B. was not accusing any one individual but from her message it was clear she was quite upset about the
status of Indian members, that their belief in the Masters had steadily dwindled after she had departed from
India. Judge had also recognized this problem while in India in 1884 and had come to the realization that he
could do more for the CAUSE if he returned to America. Judge never saw nor read this Open Letter. When
he addressed this very same problem after Blavatskys death he was met by strong opposition, receiving
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349
disparaging letters arguing and opposing his views. The protection provided by the Mahatmas at Adyar had
dwindled away and much of it was now under the grip of evil influences.
Meanwhile, Olcott felt it was more difficult to do business with H.P.B. in London. On September 2nd, 1890,
Olcott learned in a casual announcement received from G.R.S. Mead that Bertram Keightley had sailed for
India, without a word to me from anybody that he was coming. This is characteristic of their way of doing
business in London.13 In Old Diary Leaves Olcott wrote:
[H.P.B.] was driving me almost to desperation at about that time, even to the extent of sending out
Mr. Keightley to India with a sort of letter-of-marque, apparently intended to destroy the prestige of
Adyar, and concentrate all exoteric, as well as esoteric, authority in London. Fortunately for all
concerned, he showed this document to one of our strongest Indian members, who begged him not
to show it to another person, for it certainly would give a deathblow to H.P.B.s influence in India.
This was the prickly side of my dear chum.14
There is little doubt that the letter Olcott is referring to is Why I Do Not Return To India and that one of
our strongest Indian members was Judge N.D. Khandalavala from Poona.15
____________________
There was another Indian magistrate who was influential in the affairs of The Theosophical Society: S.
Subramania Iyer, who later became Chief Justice of Madras.
In Theosophical matters he has had great influence, but has exerted it so silently and with such selfeffacement that it is but little known to The Society at large.16
Upon his arrival in Madras in 1885 (from Madura, where he had joined the Society in 1882),
he was at once a member of the inner committee of seven who really managed all the affairs of The
Society, and . . . the President-Founder was always careful to consult him upon all points requiring
decision, and placed great reliance upon his judgment. He was also a member of the committee
appointed to investigate the affair of the Coulombs, and it was largely owing to his advice that
Madame Blavatsky was dissuaded from prosecuting them.17
S. Subramania Iyer was a staunch supporter and very close friend of Swami Vivekananda,18 who was quite
antagonistic to the Theosophical Society following his experiences in America at the time of the Parliament
of World Religions in 1893.
350
Chapter 9
This is the Will and Testament which is being kept at Adyar to this day, and considered Blavatskys official
Will. But it was not the Last Will and Testament she executed.
A second Will was drawn up in March 1887 while Blavatsky was living in Ostend with Countess
Wachtmeister, who looked after her needs. Ten days before leaving Ostend she lost consciousness while
sitting in her chair. Sylvia Cranston recounts from Wachtmeisters notes:
When the lawyer, doctor, and consul arrived, they found a joyous party. The doctor kept repeating,
But she should be dead, . . . she should be dead. He had never known a case in which a person in
such condition recovered. The drawing of the will went smoothly until the lawyer learned HPB had
left all her worldly goods to the countess and nothing to her relatives. Fearing the countess had
exercised undue influence on her mind, he objected, but HPB vehemently opposed. Madame
Gebhard, to avoid a scene, gently informed the lawyer, perhaps when you know the amount which
Madame Blavatsky has to will away, you will have no further objections to making the will as she
desires, for had Madame Blavatsky died, there would not have been sufficient money to pay for her
funeral expenses.
The party broke up several hours later. Departing, the American consul laughingly said: Well, I think
this is enough fatigue for a dying woman!3
Wachtmeister continued:
I will add that I never saw that will again. After HPBs death at Avenue Road, London, on May 8,
1891, I went to Ostend to see the lawyer and asked him what had been done with the will. He told me
that after my departure he had given the will to HPB. I suppose that she must have destroyed the deed,
as it was never found among her papers.4
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351
Blavatskys second Will, although very different from the first in content, has one element of similarity
both Wills were drawn up at moments of her pending death.
At the end of March 1889, a few months after The Secret Doctrine was published, according to Cheiro, a
famous palm reader who was in London at the time, Blavatsky invited him to visit her one evening at Avenue
Road. Blavatsky had deduced from evaluating her own palm that her life was nearing its end. She apparently
contacted Cheiro to verify her conclusions and give her a time frame in which she could expect the
inevitable. Again according to Cheiro, Blavatsky thanked him after his reading and said, Your warning will
do me good, for I will now put my papers in order and prepare in earnest for the short time that lies before
me.5 Although a third Will has never been acknowledged, it can be assumed from Blavatskys supposed
comments that she was taking this seriously and that she would take the time to draw up another Last Will
and Testament.
In her 1887 Will, Blavatsky had apparently left nothing to Olcott and nothing for Adyar either; all was to go
to Countess Wachtmeister who was looking after her night and day and receiving no compensation in return.
H.P.B.s circumstances had changed drastically since then and a very different Will was needed to reflect
this new status. Judge had become her most trustworthy supporter and the most dedicated to the CAUSE.
Blavatsky eventually came to realize that her own Master had initiated him in 1884 and she depended on
Judge for the many tasks she needed done. In one of her letters she wrote: I trust Judge more than anyone
in the world. . . .6
Recognizing Blavatskys involvement with Judge in all aspects of theosophical work, and the fact that Besant
had only recently joined the Society, it would seem reasonable to assume that Blavatsky would not have
designated Besant as the main benefactor in her Will. Olcott mentioned that when he had arrived at the
London headquarters on September 4th, 1889, he found Mrs. Annie Besant living in the house, having just
come over from the Secularists into our camp, with bag and baggage.7 Besant claimed, and declared some
months after Blavatskys death, that she was the person who arranged H.P. Blavatskys business affairs in
England8 during that time. It would be reasonable to expect, therefore, that Besant was the person in charge
of Blavatskys Last Will and Testament and would have known where to find it after her death.
It is reasonable to deduce that Blavatsky drafted a new Will sometime after Cheiros visit and also to assume
that Blavatsky drew up her Last Will and Testament circa August 1890 when a Deed of Trust was executed
in which Annie Besants property at 19 Avenue Road was officially vested into the hands of trustees as a
headquarters for the British Section.9 It was agreed at the time that
On the one hand, it was not right to have left the house in Mrs. Besants name, and on the other,
Madame Blavatskys health precluded it being in her own name.10
352
5.
When Olcott, a lawyer, finally declared six months after Blavatskys death that there was a Will, he
carefully worded his speech at the Sixteenth Convention and Anniversary of the Theosophical
Society at Adyar. He stated:
In the will that she executed here, she left me everything and offered her sister the
copyrights to her books. . . .12 [Italics added]
6.
7.
8.
9.
He not only omitted any reference to the 1887 (second) Will, he carefully avoided mentioning the
words Last Will and Testament when proclaiming Blavatskys Will. (Years later in Old Diary
Leaves he did write that she executed what proved to be her Last Will and Testament. . . . 31st
January 1885.13). Also, in the published transcript of this Will there is no mention of copyrights
being offered to her sister.
Blavatsky had subsequently made arrangements regarding her share of the net profits from the sale
of her books (in 1888 and 1890) and they did not include monies going to Adyar.14
In the interview by William Mulliss in October 1926, Besant claimed that she had been appointed
H.P.B.s literary executor. [See Appendix H for full text.] In Rebirth of the Occult Tradition, Boris
de Zirkoff wrote: As far as English Law is concerned, a Literary Executor can be appointed only
in a Will.15 It is possible that Besant was in fact appointed Literary Executor in a Will that would
have been executed after she became associated with Blavatsky.
It would have been out of character and imprudent for Blavatsky not to have had a new Will
executed to reflect changed circumstances.
If Blavatsky did destroy the second Will, as Wachtmeister speculates, she would not have done so
without another Will to replace it, as it is obvious after reading Why I Do Not Return To India that
she would not leave everything to Olcott and Adyar as stipulated in her first Will.
The interesting question which arises is, what was Judge so concerned about that he would send a telegram
from New York, on May 9th, to 19 Avenue Road telling the members there to Do nothing till I come?16 This
was done shortly upon receiving word of Blavatskys death and only a few days after Besants departure from
New York on May 6th, 1891.
Blavatsky had appointed Judge as my only representative for [the Esoteric] section in America on
December 14th, 1888. On December 25th, 1889, she appointed Olcott as her Sole official representative for
the Esoteric Section in Asiatic countries, although Olcotts position appeared to be mostly in an
administrative capacity. Neither was in England at the time of Blavatskys death. Judge, who H.P.B. claimed
had been a part of herself and of the Great Lodge for aeons past,17 felt very responsible for preserving
the integrity of the E.S. materials. H.P.B. had reinforced this in her circular Notice of August 9th, 1890, in
which she stated that all orders in E.S. Instructions issued in the U.S. would only be through Judge or directly
by herself. This would have been reason enough to spring Judge into action and immediately send that
telegram. Edmund Garrett, Editor of the Westminster Gazette and a friend of Besant, reported that
Avenue-road was at first inclined to resent this ukase,18 that is, an official order, having the force of law.
Interestingly, this telegram of Judges is mentioned by various authors19 but it never appeared in any official
theosophical periodicals of the time. The telegram appears to have been expurgated.
By the time Judge arrived in London on May 21st, Besant was already wearing Blavatskys ring and
Blavatskys body had been cremated. Was Judge the one who was supposed to receive H.P.B.s ring after
her death? There is sufficient information included in the Chronology and Appendix A to cover the details
surrounding this ring. It will not, therefore, be repeated here.
No Will was ever presented to Judge while he was in England. He may not have known at that time that there
was a Will but likely expected there would be. Judge had represented Blavatsky in other legal matters before
and would therefore have found it strange that he was not presented with her Will while in London. Some
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years later, Besant admitted that she destroyed very important documentary evidence in her possession
related to the Judge Case stating, I destroyed all the letters I had received from Mr. Judge, as I could not
carry them with me round the world. . . .20 Could it be that Blavatsky did have a third Last Will and
Testament and that it suffered the same fate?
The Mystery Will
Olcott did not arrive in London until nearly two months after Blavatskys death. Upon word of her death
Bertram Keightley went to Colombo on May 21st, 1891, where he was to meet Olcott on the 28th.21 However,
Olcott only arrived in Colombo on June 10th, from Adelaide, met Bertram and sailed on to Bombay. They
left Bombay on a French steamer on June 15th and reached Marseilles on July 2nd. When they arrived in
London, on July 4th, they were greeted by Judge who took them to headquarters at 19 Avenue Road where
[Olcott] had an affectionate greeting from Mrs. Besant and other residents of the house.22
Olcott described what happened shortly after he arrived:
Mrs. B. and I visited the bedroom of H.P.B., and, after a time of solemn meditation, pledged ourselves
to be true to the Cause and to each other. The death of my co-Founder had left me as the recognized
sole centre of the movement, and it seemed as if the hearts of all our best workers warmed towards
me more than they had ever done before.23
There are no reasons to not take Olcotts description of events at face value, although the incident does seem
rather strange. A few days later he stated:
I passed some time alone in her room, and I received there what was necessary for my guidance in
the future; I may simply say, in one word, the gist of it was that I should continue the work as though
nothing whatever had happened. . . .24
One does wonder if Olcott gave all the details of the event or did he purposely leave out some very important
information information that would have undermined Olcotts authority and the whole Adyar organization
that he had built. Apart from the loss of his chum, could the contents of a possible third Will have
contributed to Olcotts melancholy after her death while he was in London? Judge realized a few months
later, when the two of them were in California, that something was troubling Olcott. He included in a cable
to Besant on October 26th, 1891: There is something wrong with H.S. Olcott.25
Serious questions arise concerning what occurred in H.P.B.s bedroom. Why wasnt Judge included in this
little private parley? Why were none of the other residents at headquarters invited into Blavatskys room with
Olcott and Besant? Why Blavatskys room at all?
Olcott first met Besant the night of his arrival in London, September 5th, 1889, when he came to settle his
differences with H.P.B. regarding the E.S. and other matters. Besant, a Secularist at the time, had just joined
the ranks of the Movement. Olcott immediately took to her and thought she was a natural Theosophist. Ten
years later he recalled an incident that transpired that evening:
She had not, I believe, made one public discourse in support of Theosophy, nor had she said one word
of the sort during the conversation between her and H.P.B. and myself. . . . I recollect taking her then
by the hand and saying, just at parting: I think you will find yourself happier than you have ever been
in your life before, for I see you are a mystic and have been frozen into your brain by your
environment.26
Olcott quickly became an admirer of Besants lecturing abilities after listening to her on a number of
occasions.
Now, after having met barely two years prior, they forged an alliance that was only jeopardized once, shortly
after Blavatskys death. What kind of tte--tte did they have to suddenly come out from Blavatskys
bedroom pledging allegiance to each other and to be true to the Cause? Which Cause? Based on the premise
354
that there was a third Will, this would have been the most opportune time for Besant to hand it over to Olcott.
Besant, living in the same house as Blavatsky and looking after her business affairs, may well have been the
only person who knew of the existence of Blavatskys Will. Perhaps when she arrived in London from New
York she immediately read the Will, pondered upon its contents, and wondered what to do with it.
Again presuming the third Will existed, in all probability after reading it Besant was determined to show it
to Olcott first, since he was the President of the Society, and let him decide what to do. Besant must have
felt it her duty to personally hand over Blavatskys Will to him. She appeared to believe at the time that the
Esoteric Section was part of the whole Society and that Olcott as its President was, therefore, the only one
who represents the mission from the Masters themselves.27 This belief becomes even more evident when
reading her statement and resolution at the Annual Convention at Adyar in 1894.28
Supposing that in Blavatskys Will there was nothing bequeathed to Olcott or to Adyar, would that not have
been of concern enough to Besant for her to wait until Olcotts arrival to determine what to do next? And
she was not about to question her perception her truth.
Shortly after joining the Society Annie Besant gave two lectures at the Hall of Science, August 4th and 11th,
1889, on Why I Became A Theosophist. There she described her loyalty to truth as she saw it.
An imperious necessity forces me to speak the Truth, as I see it, whether the speech please or
displease, whether it bring praise or blame. That one loyalty to Truth I must keep stainless, whatever
friendships fail me or human ties be broken. She may lead me into the wilderness yet must I follow
her; she may strip me of all I love, yet I must pursue her; though she slay me yet I trust in her; and I
ask no other epitaph on my tomb but She tried to Follow Truth.29 [Italics added]
Following up on the possibility that there was a third Will, could the Cause that Olcott and Besant both
adopted following their tte--tte have been to maintain the status quo of the Theosophical Society as she
envisioned it was and to which Olcott had dedicated his lifes work? The premise that in this probable third
Will Blavatsky made Judge one of her benefactors, but not Adyar, would have been reason enough for Besant
and Olcott to have pledged allegiance to each other. This Will was their little secret. If Besant did hide the
supposed Will until Olcott saw it, would Olcott not have felt a deep sense of gratitude toward her? How
could Olcott ever repay her for having saved the Society Adyar, which he considered to be the center of
the Theosophical Movement. Olcotts actions certainly lend credence to this probability and he certainly
supported Besant as much as anyone could thereafter. As mentioned earlier, Olcott would likely have found
some very disturbing information in Blavatskys Will information he decided would never be revealed
and it never was, but there is sufficient evidence to establish the probability that a third Will existed and that
Olcott chose to withhold it.
Judge might have suspected that Blavatsky had another Will when he sent that telegram on May 9th, but he
apparently never made a fuss about it. Judge may not have cared much about a Will; his main concern was
the CAUSE.
Like H.P.B., Judge was fully aware that Olcotts Executive responsibility was centered from the first on
being the President and that his authority was mainly exoteric. Judge, on the other hand, although closely
involved with exoteric matters, was mainly concerned with the Esoteric and was loyal to the Theosophical
CAUSE and to its great Teachers. Olcott was always concerned with promoting and sustaining the
headquarters as the center of the organization. He seemed to lose track of the original CAUSE and of the main
objectives while still believing that he was following orders from the Masters and was loyal to H.P.B. In a
letter to Olcott in April 1885 she paraphrased K.H. as saying that Olcott had managed to save the Societys
body but had lost its soul.
Supplement
355
Chapter 10
Olcott had received very few messages from the Masters after H.P.B. left India and was not expecting to
receive any more after her death. Judge had been aware of Olcotts message drought and had written letters
to him claiming that he had not received many either. He was hoping that would somehow help to keep
Olcotts spirits up and encourage him. Judge had actually been in contact with the Masters a lot more
frequently than he had been letting on. Olcott had absolutely no idea that Judge had undergone an initiation
in 1884 and he never found out either. Olcotts mind was suspicious and he did not believe that Judge had
any occult abilities. He assumed that Judge knew very little about occultism.
During this time, in London, Besant was a fervent believer in the Masters. She had received letters she
thought to have been written by the Master himself, through Judge, and had no difficulties accepting this as
fact for she claimed she could recognize their well-known script.2 She even boasted in public lectures about
having received letters, which was a violation of the Rules of the Esoteric Section.3 Olcott later published
that once H.P.B. had gone, the precipitated writings must alter,4 which Judge claimed was incorrect and
provided examples to prove otherwise.
A most interesting incident occurred in London between Olcott and Judge which tested Olcotts occult savvy,
his faith in Judge, and his ability to detect if Judge had in fact developed occult abilities. According to Judge,
he had been developing occult powers since the early days in New York without Olcotts knowledge. This
incident also provides information as to whether Olcott respected Judge as a co-Founder and was willing to
work with him. Upon reading the following Statement by Olcott the reader should keep in mind that it was
written from memory, likely in December 1894 or January 1895, when Besant was in Adyar collecting all
she could in preparation for her Case Against W.Q. Judge (see the Compilers Analysis of same in
Appendix A). Most historians know that Olcotts recollection of facts is not always accurate, especially his
Old Diary Leaves, but his records are in fact still used as long as they can be verified by other sources. It
is more difficult to brush aside his known biases against Judge when reviewing the facts, especially his article
Centres of The Theosophical Movement and his negative review of The Ocean of Theosophy,5 along with
all other subsequent conflicts between him and Judge.
If the following incident is read with the idea, using Olcotts own words, that he was being tested by the
Masters, many interesting ideas and facts can be deduced. His loyalty and dedication to the Theosophical
Society and to Adyar are not in question here, but his respect and loyalty towards Judge certainly are as they
had been skewed for whatever reason. In his Statement in The Case Against W.Q. Judge, Olcott provides
an example of his reservations about Judge.
While at London in July, 1891, some conversation occurred between W.Q.J. and myself about the
expenses of the European Convention, and I proposed that as H.P.B.s legatee I should sell some
valuable articles of hers and give the money as her contribution towards those expenses. Judge then
356
told me as from the Master, that I need not trouble myself about it as they would see that the
money was forthcoming, and that I would get a message about it. As I did not get any message soon,
I spoke to W.Q.J., who replied that what he had already told me was all that he had heard from the
Master.
The same day on returning from town and sitting down to my writing-table, I lifted a piece of blottingpaper, and under it found the following message written on paper. I withhold the message until later
(cryptograph and illegible impression of seal).
Upon searching I found in the ordinary envelope of a private letter, which I had previously received
and which after reading I left open with other letters on my table, a piece of paper bearing writing in
red pencil with cryptograph and a legible seal impression. This at once put me in mind of the Panjab
Seal.6 I showed the paper to Bertram Keightley and gave him a history of the seal. I then put back
the paper in the envelope in which I had found it, and placed it on my table. The substance of this
Mahtm note was to the effect that there was no need to sell H.P.B.s jewels as money would be
provided.
I thereupon spoke to W.Q.J. and asked him if he had seen among H.P.B.s effects a certain seal
(describing the Panjab Seal and telling the circumstances of its making in the Panjab, but not
naming the exact place). Judge said he had not seen the seal, whereupon I remarked that I hoped no
scoundrel would get possession of it, and use it to give colour to bogus Mahtm messages, and
I added that if ever I should see a message which bore the impression of that seal, I should of course
know it to be fraudulent. (I did not at the time inform Judge that I had got the message about which
he had written to me.)
After two days I again looked into the envelope for the paper (which I had replaced) but found that
it was not there.7
Supplement
357
In a letter to Olcott dated August 30th, 1893, which was also included in The Case Against W.Q. Judge,
Judge responds to what he claims are wrong notions about him that Olcott has held for many years. Judge
does not deal with this particular incident in great detail but does correct Olcotts errors concerning it.
You are in error when you say I told you you would find a message from M. on the table at Avenue
Road. I did not. I showed you in the cab a note of his on your letter I sent him a message. It is
signed. After that I said he told me he had written you and I so stated. You have added to it about the
table. That I did not say. And once more I deny all you said and think of me in respect to the seal.
That is all I will say.8
In the first paragraph of his relating this incident, Olcotts first concern was money that the expenses for
the European Convention would be met. He was continually concerned about expenses coming out of the
Adyar budget. He was equally concerned that Adyar should get its fair share of revenues royalties from
the publications, mostly through H.P.B.s efforts, were continually diverted to Adyar for their expenses, for
Olcotts tours and for other lecturers coming to India. The second point he mentions is his reaffirmation that
he is H.P.B.s legatee. This may be so, but who was the legatee in Blavatskys second Will when she was
in Ostend? If Olcott was not the legatee to that second Will why should he have been the legatee in the
presumed Last Will and Testament drawn up shortly before Blavatskys death? It was not until after
Wachtmeister could not turn up the second Will that the first one was accepted and Olcott became legatee.
Suspicions that Judge had allegedly been writing red missives on letters to members only surfaced after the
death of H.P.B., although it is believed rumors were circulating at Adyar during the time Richard Harte was
there as acting Editor of The Theosophist. Bertram Keightley, who had reached Bombay on August 31st,
1890, likely became aware of the rumors circulating in India that Judge was allegedly forging Mahatmic
messages. By the time Olcott arrived in London on July 4th, 1891, his perception of Judge may have been
somewhat tainted by what Keightley likely imparted to him during their voyage. Olcott remembered that he
also had heard rumors about Judges alleged talent for imitating handwriting and that he had done some while
at Adyar in 1884.9
The evidence that there were suspicions in India about bogus Mahtm messages being produced by Judge,
at that time, came from a letter Judge had sent to Tookaram Tatya on May 30th, 1891, from Avenue Road,
London. Tatya, suspicious of a seal impression on it, returned the letter to Judge for verification. Tatya
claimed that when he received the letter the impression was perfectly clear but when it was returned by
Judge, the seal impression had been rubbed out. If there had not been suspicions concerning Judge circulating
forged messages in India before Blavatskys death, there would have been no reason to return the letter to
Judge in the first place. From Judges letter to Tatya it will be shown that the rumors about Judge had
originated on the West coast of India and that these rumors had been initiated by the same people who at first
had come to Blavatskys defense in 1884 but who had quickly lost their faith in the Masters.
When Olcott showed the cryptograph to Bertram Keightley, and gave him the history of the Seal, it was as
if he was saying to him I now know what you mean about suspecting Judge. From this point onward it
becomes evident that both Olcott and Bertram Keightley were developing suspicious minds about Judges
abilities to communicate with Master Morya. The matter of the Punjab Seal will not be of primary focus here.
This one episode coupled with the cablegram involving Bertram on his return to London from America in
1890 are sufficient to show that suspicion was slowly developing into a malignancy. This would have been
the opportune time for Bertram Keightley to admit to Olcott that he had seen this cryptograph and seal
impression before and that H.P.B. had demonstrated it by reproducing a lost cablegram, with several seal
marks on it, in his and others presence.
____________________
358
Matters having been settled following H.P.B.s death, Judge left London on August 6th, 1891, and returned
to New York.
Bertram Keightley left London with Sydney V. Edge on August 21st, 1891, to return to Adyar. Bertram was
most excited about his trip to England. He stated: My trip to England has been successful beyond
expectation. He had managed to obtain a promise from Besant to make a rapid tour in India this Christmas,
if the necessary funds can be raised.10 Sydney V. Edge became Bertrams assistant Editor of the new
magazine, The Prasnottara, and assistant General Secretary of the Indian Section.
Olcott left Liverpool on September 16th, 1891, on his way to Japan via USA. He arrived in New York on the
evening of September 23rd, and spoke to reporters at Astor House the following day.
On September 28th, 1891, Olcott took the train from New York to California. Judge had gone ahead and was
lecturing and conversing with inquirers, when Col. Olcott arrived in San Francisco. They were together on
the platform when Col. Olcott lectured, October 7th, the evening before he sailed over the Pacific Ocean for
Japan.11 Judge continued his tour of California and other western centers.
Olcotts suspicions were further piqued when he reached
Colombo on November 29th, 1891, en route for Madras on his
way back from America and Japan. He received a packet of
letters which had been forwarded to him. Among the letters was
one dated October 17th, 1891, from Abbott Clark, of Villa Park,
Orange County, California. Olcott describes what he found:
Inside the letter I found a slip of paper bearing a
message in handwriting resembling that usually
attributed to Mahtm M. and his cryptograph. The
paper employed was Cashmere paper, identical with
a certain sample lot bought by me in Jammoo,
Cashmere, in 1883, to be used in the Theosophist
Office for packing books, being cheap and strong. It
is hand-made paper and some of it was taken by
H.P.B. with her to Europe in 1886.
The message, which is written in red pencil and partly
in black (and has no seal), runs thus, part being
illegible:
Judge is not the forger you think and did not write
Annie. My seal is with me and he has not seen it,
but would like to. Both are doing right, each in his
own field. Yes, I have been training him and can
use him when he does not know; but he is so new, it
fades out often as it may in this letter from an
enthusiast (here follow some illegible words). [Olcott
does not mention the words which follow: it for you
____ know] Facit per alium applies to the Lahore
Brass. No; it is not pencil.
(Signed with Mahtm M.s cryptograph).
Supplement
Clark later supplied a statement from San Francisco, California on April 21st, 1894.
I, ABBOTT CLARK, a member of the THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY, do hereby state and affirm as follows:
I have seen it stated in the newspapers that it is charged that I wrote Col. H.S. Olcott in 1891 to India
and that in that letter was some message not known to me and that Col. Olcott replied asking where
William Q. Judge was at the time and that I replied he was in my house.
359
360
The facts are: That in 1891, Mr. W.Q. Judge was lecturing in this State and I was with him at Santa
Ana and that I had no house, and never had, being too poor to have one. Bro. Judge stopped at the
hotel in Santa Ana, where he came from my home, my fathers house, at Orange, where he had been
at dinner, and at Santa Ana I arranged his lecture, and I stayed at my Aunts in Santa Ana; while in
the hotel a conversation arose with us in which I spoke of Theosophical propaganda among the
Chinese on this coast, and Bro. Judge suggested that I write to Col. Olcott as he knew many Buddhist
Theosophists and might arrange it better than Bro. Judge, and I then myself wrote to Col. Olcott on
the matter showing the letter after it was done to Bro. Judge to see if it should be improved or altered
and he handed me back the letter at once. I put it in my pocket and kept it there for several days
waiting for a chance to buy stamps for postage as I was away from any post office. Bro. Judge left
by himself the morning after I wrote the letter and went to San Diego and the only time I saw him
again was in the train, just to speak to him on his return, after about four days and the letter was not
mentioned, thought of, nor referred to.
I assert on my word of honor that Bro. Judge said nothing to me about any message pretended to be
from Masters or otherwise, and so far as any reports or statements have been made relating to me
herein different from the above they are absolutely false.
From India I got a reply from Adyar T.S. Office from one Charlu saying he had opened my letter in
Col. Olcotts absence, and had forwarded it to him; and Dharmapala told me he had seen letters from
me to Olcott on the matter, received in India away from Adyar. The said Charlu in reply also asked
me where Bro. Judge was when the letter was written, and I wrote that he had been at my house on
that date, which is true as above stated, Orange being but three miles from Santa Ana, as I thought
Charlu wished to have Bro. Judges dates, but thought also the questions were peculiar from such a
distance. I never got any reply to my sincere first question in that letter about propaganda from him,
and never any reply of any sort from Col. Olcott. When Dharmapala was here he did not bring any
message in reply from Olcott, but referred to recollecting speaking with Olcott about a proposal from
California to work with the Chinese. And Charlu did not speak of any enclosure in said letter. A year
later I again wrote on the same matter to Col. Olcott which was answered by Gopala Charlu, now
dead, saying but little if anything could be done by him. To all this I affirm on my honor.14
(Signed) ABBOTT CLARK.
WITNESS SIGNATURE,
(Signed)
ALLEN L. GRIFFITHS.
E. B. RAMBO.
Olcott was obviously becoming ever more suspicious and, indeed, more convinced that Judge was adding
a seal impression to bogus messages to insinuate authenticity, that is, as coming from the Masters. Even
though Abbott Clark insists that Judge had no opportunity to add anything to his letter and indicated this in
his response to Olcotts query (albeit not as clearly as he might have), once again Olcott chose to presume
guilt rather than allow Judge the benefit of the doubt.
Supplement
361
Chapter 11
This incident generated more suspicions in Olcotts mind of Judges guilt. Olcott by then believed that Judge
was indeed writing missives on letters as coming from Master M to persuade others. Olcott came to the
conclusion that Judge was doing this to undermine Olcotts authority as President of the T.S. in order to step
in and take control of the whole organization at Adyar.6
362
A few more details will help clarify the confusion that occurred surrounding this episode at the time and
which created some misunderstandings which developed into many presumptions regarding Judge.
When detailing her case of moral indecency against Olcott, Besant also confided to Judge under plea of
secrecy about a perfectly harmless conversation Olcott had with an intimate friend on the properties of
certain poisons.7 Judge explains what happened to the letter he wrote to Olcott:
The words of the message, which are in red, are I might tell him of your poison interview with . . .
(name omitted here). The explanation thereof is this. There is not the slightest doubt in my mind that
sentence was precipitated in that letter, through me, without my knowledge at the time. It is
unfinished, but would have been completed but for the alteration of conditions at the time and various
hindrances unnecessary to relate. It grew out of the fact of Mrs. Besants explicit statement to me that
a certain person (whose truthfulness we had no reason to doubt) had thrown out hints about Col.
Olcotts being a man capable of administering poisons, and her further averment, at the same time,
that Madame Blavatsky had hinted the same thing to her. This is not the first time Mrs. Besant has
made to me accusations of a serious character against other persons. The statement did not command
my credence, but at the same time I was disturbed by it and it caused some grave questions to arise
in my mind. It influenced me to endeavor to procure from occult sources information on the subject,
and I did obtain at least partial information. All this caused the precipitation of that incomplete
message in the letter, which would have been finished and been a good deal longer were it not for the
disturbance of the conditions necessary for its completion. It would then show that the Master might
tell, or explain, to me about the poison interview which had been a weight on my mind but that the
doubts and suspicions then existing on both sides prevented any useful messages being sent for
mutual use. The person who should have least reason for surprise at the revelation in this explanation
is Col. Olcott, for I have a letter from him in 1892 in which he says:
What do I mean by poison? well you will learn in time; the simple fact is that certain people had
the damnable wickedness and impudence to hint that I might use it on third parties. Damn them. The
people he referred to were in England.8
Besant inadvertently supports Judges claims by explaining facts that the Westminster Gazette had gotten
wrong about the October 26th, 1891 letter she received from Judge.
The message dealt with E.S.T. matters partly, but chiefly with my journey to India. The danger
was a predicted turning of Col. Olcott against the T.S. and H.P. Blavatsky. It had nothing to do with
the idea, rightly characterised by the W. G. as astounding nonsense, that Col. Olcott intended to
poison me. Mr. Judge knew nothing of this absurdity until I told him of it myself when I visited
America later in the year, after my journey to India had been postponed in deference to the above
message. So the W. G. is mistaken in alleging that I was warned not to imperil myself in the
neighbourhood of Col. Olcott, and in supposing that this story, never heard of by any of us till after
the Indian visit had been given up, had anything to do with its postponement.9
In Isis Very Much Unveiled (p.54), Edmund Garrett included what he called The poison threat missive
which had appeared on the letter to Olcott and which is included below:
Supplement
363
The [name given] in Besants Case Against W.Q. Judge is here identified as Mennell, that is, Dr.
Mennell, who had been Blavatskys physician and whom Besant was advised to see regarding her health
during the time of her proposed visit to India.
According to Besants statement above, this intimate friend had a follow-up dream in regard to this poison
question. But Besant had received another warning against her going to India then. Vera Johnston, living in
London at the time, had forwarded a message from her mother, Vera Petrovna Jelihovsky, H.P.B.s sister,
to Annie Besant. Vera Petrovna Jelihovsky describes that she had a feeling, impression, conviction you
may call it whatever name you like came to me in night time. She wrote to Judge:
This was not a dream. . . .
. . . So, according to reason, I did my best to destroy the impression and to get rid of my strange
feeling, the notion that I was obliged to warn her. But it gave me no rest; it positively obsessed and
persecuted me! I felt a painful depression, accompanied by an ever-increasing conviction that I had
better act, as I was prompted to from the beginning, for such was my moral duty.
At last I came to the conclusion that the consciousness under which I felt myself obliged to warn Mrs.
Besant came from my sister; that it was her will to keep Mrs. Besant from going to India and had no
other possibility to act except through me.11 [See Oct. 1891 entry in Chronology for more details.]
After marrying, in the late summer of 1888, Vera and her husband, Charles Johnston, sailed to India with
Olcott, Richard Harte and others on October 22nd, 1888. They stayed in India for a while but had returned
to England before Blavatsky died. It is quite plausible that Vera Johnston, H.P.B.s niece, along with a
number of other people, had heard Olcott speaking about the properties of certain poisons at that time or
later in 1891 when they were all together again in London. As Judge stated, the person who should have
least reason for surprise at the revelation in this explanation is Col. Olcott. It appears that the whole of the
incident was entirely innocent in the first place but suspicion and doubt were stronger than truth. As it turned
out both Olcott and Besant chose to sway suspicion towards Judge rather than simply describe the facts as
they knew them, and then ask Judge directly to explain how the message came to be on the letter to Olcott
in the first place. They chose to see guilt rather than innocence and acted accordingly.
At first Judge indicated that he knew nothing about the missive but he later discovered through Master M
what had actually happened. When Judge asked M why he delayed Annies trip, the Master replied that
Judge would see, that in 1893 a necessity for it would come. In his August 30th, 1893, letter to Olcott,
Judge explained:
That necessity is here, a breach in the ranks not led by you, but not prevented, for you are an older
man on the spot and are the chief officer. It is a breach of interest to the T.S. and not to the E.S., and
you have not dealt well nor wisely in it with me nor with the thing itself.12
In this letter Judge also explains about his occult development and that
In 1875 and up to 1879 the Masters spoke with me and gave me teaching both that way and in writing
and also told me how I was to regard you and act to you. They explained to me many things and
showed what would happen. I have tried to follow the directions but do not pretend to have made a
complete success of it.13
364
____________________
In an undated letter received by Judge from Master M some time after the passing of H.P.B. is the
following statement:
I have spoken to Heliodore in the West, and she may go to India in 93.15
(See the Compilers Analysis of The Case Against W.Q. Judge in Appendix A for details regarding
Heliodore, a name given to Annie Besant.)
Supplement
365
Chapter 12
In the above quotation from Old Diary Leaves, Fourth Series, Olcott mentions that he and W.R. Old
exchanged confidences. By the time he started writing his Fifth Series, these confidences had become
notes and memoranda. On page 1 Olcott writes:
As previously shown, the rumblings of the coming tempest about Mr. Judge were beginning to be
heard. Towards the end of last year the arrival of Mr. Walter G. Old of the London staff, with the
budget of notes and memoranda which he had taken, enabled me by comparing documents to see the
depth and fullness of the treachery which Mr. Judge had long been planning. I find from my Diary
of 1893 that the greater part of the first day was spent by Messrs. Keightley, Old, and myself in
summarising the evidence in the case; and needless to say, all our hearts were filled with sorrow, for
this was almost if not the very first case of downright perfidy in our Societys history.3
Here again is a case where Olcotts statement cannot be depended upon for accuracy. His bias against Judge
is most damaging if not questioned and investigated further.
Bertram Keightley and Col. Olcott credit Old with supplying evidence which, in addition to what was
gathered at Adyar, led to the decision to take action against Judge. It appears, however, that Old had very
little of his own evidence, if any, to present when he arrived at Adyar other than innuendoes and suspicions
gathered through friends. Herbert Burrows claimed that what really happened was that
After Mr. Old had been some time in India he came to the conclusion that certain charges against Mr.
Judge, which up to then had been vaguely floating about, were true, and he said so.4
366
Old later supplied a lot of the information which was serialized in The Westminster Gazette beginning in
October 1894, and which Edmund Garrett eventually published as a book, Isis Very Much Unveiled. Old
justified this action by claiming:
The published facts are just those which came into the evidence of Col. Olcott and Bertram Keightley,
and upon which the charges were based and action taken; and they are, moreover, part of a body of
evidence, which, from the outset, it was decided to publish.5
The body of evidence he refers to is the material which was gathered over the following year and of which
Old made copies prior to handing it over to Besant shortly after her arrival in India in November 1893. Olcott
acknowledged that the copies and facsimiles made by Mr. Old were taken while [the materials] were in his
custody, in the earliest stages of the inquiry.6 This was also the material which Judge claimed open enemies
of mine had copies while he was never provided with any, to which Old had responded:
I am the only person who holds certified copies of the documents. I was not allowed to make such
copies; I secured such in self-defence at the time of my handing over the originals to Mrs. Besant; for
it must be remembered that I had already brought charges against Mr. Judge, which at that date I had
not had an opportunity of proving. . . .7
Olcott claimed to have been shocked to discover [Judges] lack of principle, and to find that my previously
more or less vague suspicions fell far short of the reality. He felt vindicated his unsubstantiated doubts
were now confirmed. But he may well have been genuinely shocked by a letter that Walter Old uncovered
from among the papers at Adyar in December 1892. This was the letter Judge had written to Judge N.D.
Khandalavala in 1884, which became Exhibit A, and which contained samples of imitations of
handwriting.
It is interesting to note that although Exhibit A was the prosecutions strongest piece of material evidence
it was not mentioned openly by the main characters, other than Judge himself who brought attention to it in
his Reply By William Q. Judge. There is no doubt the intent was to use it against him. In The Case Against
W.Q. Judge Besant never refers to it, although copies of other letters from Judge are included. In the above
quotation, Olcott instead dwells on the poison letter. There appears to have been a concerted effort to
discredit Judge by misleading people to believe that he would stoop to such treachery as to imply Olcott
would poison Besant.8 This leads one to hypothesize that perhaps the individuals involved were unsure about
the Exhibit A letter actually working in their favor.
Supplement
367
Chapter 13
At the December 1892 Annual Convention Bertram Keightley issued a letter to the members of the Indian
Section announcing:
As many of you know, I am an only child, and my widowed mother has now passed the three score
years and ten of ordinary life, and her health is failing rapidly. It is now some eighteen months since
I parted from her, and she has passed through a very severe illness since then. Under these
circumstances, you will, I am sure, recognise that imperative duty obliges me to visit and spend some
time with her in the coming year. My intention is to start from India shortly after the Convention and
return, I trust, after the close of next hot weather, to resume among you the work which I have
undertaken, and which I have not the smallest intention of abandoning.2
Bertram was not always this considerate towards his mother. Some years earlier, in 1884, in France:
Mme. Blavatsky was listening to a young guest . . . , Mr. Bertram Keightley, bitterly complaining
about his mother who was insisting that he either return home to Liverpool, or continue on his journey
through the Continent, undertaken for health reasons. Mother is afraid that I might leave everything
and follow you to Madras, he said. . . . It was then that the postman rang, and among other letters,
there was one from Mrs. Keightley to her son. He opened it without much urgency, but suddenly his
face reddened, and he looked both stunned and frightened. In the letter, his mothers words
concerning the respect and obedience that children owe their parents were underlined in red ink, with
a familiar signature. . . .3
Before leaving Bertram Keightley made arrangements with his Assistant Secretary, S.V. Edge, to look after
The Prasnotarra and his other duties. Besides seeing his mother he had other reasons as well. He also
wanted to persuade Besant to reschedule her trip to India which had been postponed a year earlier. He had
also made all his traveling arrangements, his plans and his excuses, to visit America once more. He had made
friends there during his tour in 1889-1890 and this gave him ample reasons to return, and investigate and
observe Judge through different eyes. All the trappings of a conspiracy were now afoot.
The steamer, S.S. Neiman, that Bertram Keightley boarded from Madras capsized just off the Eastern Coast
of Ceylon near Trincomalee, sinking within a few hundred yards of shore on January 22nd, 1893.
The passengers passed the night in crowded boats, unable to cross the surf till daylight, and then were
obliged to walk many miles through sand, marsh, mud and jungle to the nearest village, the sun
blistering them and hardly any food or water being attainable. Mr. Keightley was barefoot. A few
articles were washed ashore, but almost all of his luggage was totally lost, money, letters, personal
souvenirs, worst of all, the notes collected during two years for a work on Indian literature, and
the cherished letters from H.P.B. Mr. Keightley was well upon arriving in England, but later gave
evidence of the climatic effects of India, and will need no small treatment before entire restoration
to health. To be robbed and then shipwrecked within a few months is certainly Karma in severe form,
368
and Bro. K. would seem now entitled to a long stretch of uninterrupted bliss. Perhaps this may include
his attendance at the American Convention in April!4
Keightley was forced to spend time in Ceylon waiting for another ship. The S.S. Yara was to have taken
him from Colombo to Marseilles, but, owing to its having been detained in salvage work, Bro. Keightley was
not able to leave Colombo till the 6th [of February]. . . .5 He stated:
I then returned to England to take action; but on my arrival found that several of the most material
links in our chain of evidence broke down utterly. Hence I felt compelled in justice and fairness to
refuse to proceed further in the matter and therefore advised my colleagues, Colonel Olcott included,
to wait for further evidence.6
Shortly after arriving in London and spending some time with his mother he boarded another ship and sailed
for New York. He attended the American Convention, held on April 23rd and 24th, 1893. He read letters of
greeting from the Indian and European Sections. Numerous other messages were received from abroad,
among them an official letter from Olcott, the President-Founder his first to a Convention of the American
Section. This letter is important as it shows the position he assumed and the means he took to express his
personal views. He also wanted to send a strong and direct message to Judge. Olcotts message, dated March
23rd, 1893, was addressed to The Delegates of the American Section in Convention assembled.
Brethren:
During the past year you have been giving abundant proofs of the tireless zeal with which you have
pursued the work of our Society. The results prove the truth of the oft-repeated statement of our
Masters that their help is always given to the earnest and unselfish worker. We have but one danger
to dread and guard against. This is the subordination of general principles to hero-worship, or
admiration of personalities. I shall not excuse myself for frequent recurrence to this theme, for I am
convinced that, if the Society should ever disintegrate, this will be the cause. The Masters wrote in
Isis that men and parties, sects and schools are but the mere ephemera of the Worlds day; and,
following the precedent of their great recognized exemplar, Buddha Sakyamuni, they taught me to
believe nothing upon authority, whether of a living or a dead person. I pray you to keep this ever in
mind; and when I am dead and gone to recollect that the admission of the microbe of dogmatism into
our Society will be the beginning of its last and fatal sickness.
Wishing you for the coming year a continuance of prosperity, and expressing a hope that I may
sometime personally attend a Session of your Convention, I am fraternally and affectionately yours,
H.S. OLCOTT,
President Theosophical Society.7
While the central message was a warning against hero-worship and admiration of personalities, Olcotts
underlying message was to assert his official authority as President of the T.S. over the whole of the
Theosophical Movement. He indicated that he would not tolerate any other authority (that is, alleged
messages from the Masters) or anyone who chose to regard H.P.B. as a Teacher par excellence. Olcott was
promoting a view similar to that of Richard Hartes that his exoteric authority was supreme and that Adyar
was the headquarters for all of the Movement. This was an attempt to reduce H.P.B.s status. He was also
by now convinced that Judge was sending bogus messages to bolster his own standing in the Movement in
order to replace Olcott as President.
At the American Convention George W. Wright, President of the Chicago T.S., read his report, showing
that the Theosophical Society had been assigned to the fifteenth and sixteenth days of September, 1893, in
the Parliament of Religions at Chicago.8 This announcement created much excitement at the Convention
and it would seem, for a moment, that a lot of the problems which concerned Bertram Keightley suddenly
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became obscure. He was praised as a great man9 and appointed as chairman of the Committee on the
Parliament of Religions matter. A telegram received from London (23rd) was read declaring the approval and
support of the European Section to the plan and announcing that Annie Besant would attend the Conference
in Chicago on her way to India.10 After a number of resolutions were adopted the Committee was
discharged. Bertram Keightley then addressed the Convention at length on India and the Theosophical
Society. Upon Bertram Keightleys suggestion Gyanendra Nath Chakravarti, a Brahmin from Allahabad,
was invited to be a delegate from India at The Theosophical Congress in Chicago.
370
Chapter 14
Fears of Dogmatism
Olcott had issued warnings against hero-worship of H.P.B. two years prior to his strongly worded letter to
the 1893 Delegates of the American Section. He had made reference to this at the Annual Convention at
Adyar in December 1891, warning then against idolatry of H.P.B. The incident which prompted Olcotts
initial warning originated with an article which appeared in The Path [See Chronology, Aug. 1891 entry]. The
article attributed to Jasper Niemand was published while Judge and Olcott were in London the summer of
1891. Olcott had taken exception to the message from the Mahatma in the article, accusing Judge of having
written it under the pseudonym Jasper Niemand and expressing fears the article encouraged dogmatism and
fanaticism in the Society.
When Besant re-visited America (November 30th, 1892 to February 25th, 1893) Judge showed her some of
his correspondence with Olcott, including an unpublished letter written by Judge in reply to questions raised
by Olcott on the message in the Niemand article. Besant seized the opportunity and asked if she could
publish the letter. Upon her return to London she included it in Lucifer, April 1893. This letter was not
published as having been addressed to Olcott because of the restriction imposed by Judge. It was titled An
Interesting Letter and subtitled Written to an Indian Brother.
Olcott published two responses to An Interesting Letter in the July 1893 Theosophist. One was titled
Theosophic Freethought and was supplied by Walter R. Old and Sydney V. Edge. The second was by N.D.
Khandalavala (N.D.K.) and titled Theosophy in The West: The Tendency Towards Dogmatism. One of
N.D.K.s objections was to Judges statement that our true progress lies in fidelity to Masters as ideals and
facts. He implied that Judge was no better than the missionaries in India with their attempts to convert the
Hindus. Another of his objections centered on Judges statement: a very truism, when uttered by a Mahatma
has a deeper meaning for which the student must seek. N.D.K. wrote: In the first place, however, we must
have evidence to convince us that the alleged truism was actually written by a Mahatma.1 In his letter
Judge had also written: my means of proof and identification are within myself, a statement to which
N.D.K. took equal exception. Judge had alluded to the fact that no external evidence was required for one
who knew and no amount of proof was sufficient for the disbeliever.
N.D.K. also quoted from H.P.B. on the great need for unbiassed and clear judgment in all matters, but
apparently forgot, or never read, her article Lodges of Magic (Lucifer, October 1888), in which she
discussed this very question of the evidence of messages from the same standpoint as Judge.2 Judge wrote:
If you have not the means yourself for proving and identifying such a message, then signature, seal, papers,
watermark, what not, all are useless.3
The other article, Theosophic Freethought, by W.R. Old and S.V. Edge, was also published to repudiate
An Interesting Letter with the full endorsement of Olcott. After quoting Tennyson, There is more faith
in honest doubt, Believe me, than in half the creeds as justification for their actions, they stated that it calls
for the frankest possible criticism. They wrote:
Certain statements made therein appear to us so far-reaching in their tendency, and at the same time
so contrary to the spirit which has hitherto animated the T.S., that to pass over them without comment
or protest would amount to a consent we are by no means inclined to yield to them.4
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After consultation, Judge and Besant jointly suspended Walter R. Old and Sidney V. Edge in August 1893
from their membership in the E.S.T. for violating their pledge of secrecy. In a jointly issued Circular, Judge
and Besant wrote:
The article was given to public printers and sent in advance to many persons in Europe, but it was not
sent in time in London, where Brother Judge was in July, to permit our cabling to India, and no
previous notice was given Brother Judge, nor was he asked his views.
This footnote is, first, a violation of the pledge of secrecy made by Brother Old, in that it published
to the world a statement by him in relation to a private E.S.T. Council meeting, and second, is a
violation of honor and confidence as a member of the Council of the E.S.T. By reason of the above
we are compelled to take action.7
This was a most interesting position for Besant to take and raises suspicions about her motives and integrity.
Apparently Besant had already been made aware within the last year by a member of the Bombay Branch
about certain innuendos and their suspicions of Judge committing acts of fraud, but she was still publicly
supporting Judge and his policies as before, equal in her eyes to the policies of H.P.B.8
Another article by E.T. Sturdy contributed much to malaise within the Society. He had asked Besant, Editor
of Lucifer, to publish his article, Gurus and Chelas, which she did in the August 1893 issue. However she
expurgated three paragraphs at the end of the article, without disclosing so, which were aimed at Judge.
Sturdy was a close follower of Olcott and a great admirer of Besant. Upset with the results, Sturdy asked
Olcott to re-publish his article in The Theosophist. Olcott obliged and reprinted it in the October 1893 issue
with the formerly removed paragraphs. Here are Sturdys expurgated paragraphs, which he considered the
pith of his argument:
[Of concrete things and persons we need concrete proofs. Of concrete letters and messages from
living men, we need concrete evidence; not metaphysical or mere argumentative proof. Yet you can
never disprove these claims. If I choose to send a letter in green, blue, or red or any other coloured
ink or pencil and tell you I received it from a Mahatma for you, or merely say nothing and enclose it
in a letter to you; you may be very much astonished, but you can prove no lie or forgery against me.
If you are wise you will act as if you had never received it; unless indeed you make a mental note or
two against me; one of folly for my having done such a thing and given no proofs, and another of
watchfulness as to my character generally.
Nor does it seem probable that the Mahatmas, who, as far as we know, teach no dogmas, but always
act by the amount of understanding an individual has, would encourage a system of mere statement
and claim without accompanying proof; for this would be to lay the seeds in mens hearts of a faith
in the statements of other men quite outside their experience and quite unsupported, men whose hearts
they had not fathomed. This would lead back to all the evils of the past, not forward into light and
knowledge.
All such is glamour: there is no false mystery in chelaship; all nonsense about developing intuition
is merely making excuses for what cannot be proven and is about the same in the end as the Christian
372
faith. Let a man go on his path acting sternly by what he knows, not by what he is asked or
persuaded to believe. Let him act by no directions which may be merely the thoughts of others no
wiser than himself. How does he know? He does not know. Then let him be quite clear and
straightforward in this, that he does not know.]9
Within a few weeks of returning to England from America following The Theosophical Congress in Chicago,
Besant left for her first visit to India, accompanied by Countess Wachtmeister. They reached Colombo on
November 10th, 1893. Walter R. Old who had been at Adyar for one year by then must have been excited with
Besants arrival in India. He documented that at Tuticorin Mrs. Besant set foot on Indian soil on the 16th
Nov. at 10h. 24m. A.M.10 There were a number of issues he wanted to confront her with.
Old, a professional astrologer, was working on Besants astrological chart at the time. He likely wanted to
discuss a few details about her horoscope which he was planning to publish under his pseudonym, Sepharial,
in the January issue of The Theosophist. When preparing the progression part of her chart he recognized
that there were evil influences which appeared to be affecting her.
From the present year (1893) till the close of the century, a series of evil primary directions are
formed in the horoscope, and it is to be hoped that the effects signified thereby severe illness, loss
of friends, changes in life, severed links, home troubles and losses, will lose some of their keen
edge when working out their destined purpose in a life already charged with so much sorrow and
hardship.11 [Italics added]
In August that year he and Sidney V. Edge had been suspended from their membership in the E.S.T. for
violating their pledge of secrecy governing this body. This was the crucial issue Old was particularly
concerned with and he wanted to justify his actions to Besant. Old later explained what happened in a letter
to the Westminster Gazette:
For this act of mine, I was suspended from my membership in the Esoteric Section, under the
authority of the joint signatures of William Q. Judge and Annie Besant, Outer Heads of the E.S.T.,
and my name was dishonourably mentioned before the members of the E.S., among whom I numbered
many an old colleague and friend. The mandate somehow found its way into the public Press.
However, there was one advantage. After her official action in suspending me from membership Mrs.
Besant was, of course, bound to hear my justification. This happened at Adyar in the winter of 1893.12
There is sufficient information in the Chronology to enable one to undo the significant knots being tied
during this time 1893.
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Chapter 15
Judge Khandalavala brought it with him to Adyar for the Ninth Annual Convention held at Adyar
on December 27th to 31st, 1884.
Judge Khandalavala gave it to Bertram Keightley in September 1890 shortly after Keightleys arrival
in India or when, as General Secretary of India, Keightley visited Poona from January 31st until the
morning of February 3rd, 1892,2 and was his guest.
Judge Khandalavala gave it to someone in his Branch and they brought the letter to Adyar.
In December 1889 during the time of the Bombay Convention, Judge Khandalavala handed the letter
over to Richard Harte.
The first option is highly unlikely. If the letter had been brought to Adyar at that time then Olcott would have
seen it. It could have been brought to Adyar and left there for Olcott to review whenever possible but
Olcott apparently did not see it then.
At first Judges 1884 letter was comforting to Khandalavala and induced him to write letters in Blavatskys
defense. But Khandalavalas nature was such that he quickly began to doubt Judge, which aroused in him
doubts and suspicions about Blavatsky as well. He pondered the possibility that she was not what he had first
been convinced she was, and that she was in fact a medium and the Mahatmas were only a figment of her
imagination. Although he liked Blavatsky very much and kept in contact with her after she left India, he
began to doubt the involvement of the Masters. It is also possible that he brought the letter to Adyar shortly
after receiving it and that he used it to influence other members of the 1885 Committee to cast suspicion and
doubt about Blavatskys innocence, which contributed to the Committees recommendation that Madame
Blavatsky should not prosecute her defamers in a Court of Law.3
The second possibility is also unlikely. Although Bertram Keightley had just delivered Blavatskys Open
Letter (later published as Why I Do Not Return to India), Khandalavala did not know him well
Keightley having just arrived in India for the first time. N.D.K., therefore, would not likely have entrusted
him with such a responsibility. Nor would it have been convenient to give it to Keightley in early 1892 as
he was on a tour and was not returning to Adyar for some time. Both of these possibilities are further negated
since it appears Keightley initially found out about the letter only after it was uncovered by Walter Old.
The possibility of Judge Khandalavala having given it to a Poona member to bring to Adyar is also unlikely,
considering the perceived significance of this document.
374
The most likely scenario is the letter having been handed over to Richard Harte. He had demonstrated
through his articles in The Theosophist that he had a certain affinity toward the Indians. Hartes two main
articles, Applied Theosophy and The Situation, were certainly supportive of the Indian psyche. They
encouraged the membership from all over the world to look upon Adyar as a holy place deserving recognition
as the giver of life to the rest of the Theosophical Society. Once again there is sufficient information
elsewhere within these pages to follow what occurred as a result of Hartes articles. Richard Harte, who was
acting Editor while Olcott was away in Japan, would have attended the Bombay Conference in December
1889 to report on activities and fraternize with members. Judge Khandalavala likely felt secure in trusting
Harte and gave him the 1884 letter from W.Q. Judge to bring to Adyar. Olcott, being away in Japan, would
not have seen it then.
Although Judges 1884 letter to Khandalavala was now at headquarters in Adyar, Olcott did not see it until
Old uncovered it. Bertram Keightley was busy touring and lecturing and had started the first Indian Section
journal, The Prasnottara (Questions and Answers).With Harte having brought the Judge letter to Adyar the
rumors which had been circulating around Poona and Bombay were now also being circulated around Adyar.
Richard Harte returned to England after his editorial relation with The Theosophist ended in March 1891.
Walter Old left England in late fall of 1892, and arrived at Adyar on December 21st, 1892 where, on
December 22nd the letter was uncovered. The most likely scenario is that Harte informed Old about the letter
and where he could find it once he got to Adyar. This Old did and showed it to Olcott first then to the other
conspirators, as described by Olcott.
There is yet another alternative as to what may have happened with the 1884 letter. When Richard Harte
returned to England he could have brought the letter with him to London and later given it to Walter Old.
Old left some time in late fall of 1892 and would have had plenty of opportunity to show it to Besant before
they were both in Adyar in December 1893. There is only a very slight possibility this could have occurred
as Besant did not see the evidence until she reached India. If Harte had indeed brought the letter to London
he could have used it to confront Blavatsky and justify his actions against Judge. Had this in fact transpired,
a record of Blavatskys reaction to such an event would surely have surfaced; this is something she would
not have ignored. Also, if the letter had been in Olds possession for any great length of time he would have
had a duplicate made and it would have surfaced either in Isis Very Much Unveiled or in some other
medium. Following its discovery it was always kept by Olcott and then belonged to the Archives at Adyar.
____________________
Judge had not been supplied with copies of the documents as legally required in order for him to prepare a
defense, nor was he granted an inspection of them prior to the Judicial Committee hearing in London July
7th and 10th, 1894. He persisted with his request to at least be shown the documents before returning to
America. (See Chapter 21 for details.) As far as can be determined, of the documents Judge was shown July
19th, 1894, in the presence of Dr. Buck, only one crucial piece of material evidence has surfaced.
A document came into the hands of the writer in spring 1989. It was a single sheet of paper; a letter that was
hard to read except for the header and the date. It was handwritten on Adyar letterhead paper, 10 inches
by 8 inches, folded in half, thereby making four pages, each measuring 5 inches wide by 8 inches. Page 1
is on the right hand side of this sheet; page two on the left hand side and, when folded in half, page 2
becomes page 4, leaving the opposite side (inside) of the sheet blank. The paper was very thin and the writing
on the opposite side could easily be seen through it. When the back of the letter was inspected more closely,
a date was discovered written at an angle across the first page. The note was Seen by W.Q.J. July 19/94.
Doris and Ted Davy were asked to transcribe it and my wife and I did likewise. A copy of the letter and the
transcript are included here.
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376
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377
378
A
SECRETARYS OFFICE OF THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY
ADYAR, (MADRAS) INDIA
Sept. 17,
1884
It is not at all like her handwriting. Your amateur is not expert; I can do better
myself, witness these by a [friend].
H.S. Olcott
H.P. Blavatsky
A.D. Ezekiel
N Dorabji
So you see that forgery can be committed. And if you saw Coulombs clever
forgery of Dr. Hartmanns letter you would begin to be sure that to forge Mme
Bs writing would be childs play to her.
We have an explanation of the telegram. You know it was not for [Jacob] Sassoon. It was
for Madam.
At the proper time R[amalinga] Deb will be produced and it will be shown how Mrs. C.
got the telegram. So do not be distressed nor in a hurry. As for phenomena they have
happened here since H.P.B. went away and they have happened in N.Y. to me. Hereafter
let philosophy and not phenomena be spoken of because this is not spiritualism where
phenomena are produced for money under conditions.
You must have the pamphlet by this time. HPB is sick in London with rheumatism. Olcott
will be returning as soon as he meets Lane-Fox who will be there in a few days.
Regards to Ezekiel
Fraternally
William Q. Judge
See First Report: Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research, p.211 and Appendix I, pp.318-321.
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Examining Exhibit A
The A at the top right hand corner of this letter must have been placed there to indicate that it was the
primary material evidence to be used against Judge at the July 1894 Judicial Committee. Judge explains
the significance of this letter (Exhibit A):
The last item brought forward by the prosecutor should, if a good piece of evidence, have been
produced in the beginning of the charges. It is a letter written by me when I was in India in 18[84]4,
to the Parsee Judge Khandalavala, at the time of the Coulomb charges against Madame Blavatsky.
He had written to me asking me to look at the originals of the published letters, if possible, and give
him my opinion. I did see some of those letters and wrote to him on the subject, which was whether
any of the letters could have been tampered with. In the middle of the letter I gave him four samples
of imitations of handwriting which I say are written by a friend, the words being witness these, by
a friend, after which follow bad imitations of Col. Olcotts, Madame Blavatskys and other
signatures. I also refer to a clever forgery, by Mme. Coulomb, of Dr. Hartmanns handwriting. This
letter proves nothing whatever except that I wanted to show this man that forgery could be committed.
The prosecutor has hoped to make it appear by this letter, that the execution of a forgery was nothing
to me. But if it be put forward to sustain that view, it is weak, because the imitations in it are poor,
whereas the prosecutors say that my alleged imitations in messages are perfect. It could be used
against me by suppressing the words, witness these, by a friend.5
Let us analyze some of Judges statements. First, he admits to having written the letter. Second, he states that
a friend has supplied the imitation signatures. The question then arises, who was the friend? This will be
explored later. Third, that for the prosecutors to use this material evidence effectively against him, they
would have to suppress the words witness these, by a friend. With the words a friend missing, in this
case covered up with a note, the letter reads witness these by H.S. Olcott, H.P. Blavatsky, A. D. Ezekiel,
Dorabji, which makes it look like Judge wrote the four sample imitations.
The next obvious question is, who wrote the added note? The note is in a different handwriting and is
certainly not Judges. Another question is why would the note have been positioned where it was when it
could have been placed at the top, above the Adyar letterhead or just below it? Interestingly, part of the a
was not fully suppressed. This in itself supports Judges statement that if words were suppressed, it could
be used against me. This only leads to the conclusion, as explained above, that the note was purposely
placed there in order to conceal the words a friend to give the reader the impression there were no other
words after by in the sentence. This would make the sentence read as indicated above. By purposely
suppressing the words a friend it not only implicated Judge as capable of forging other peoples signature
but it could be used to claim that he was a fraud as well.
After hours of painstakingly trying to sort out this whole situation the signs keep pointing to the recipient
of the letter: Khan Bahadur Nowroji Dorabji Khandalavala (N.D.K.). It is here suggested that after receiving
the letter from Judge in 1884, it was Khandalavala who wrote the note which reads: Do not show these to
anyone but Ezekiel. . . . We can only imagine, because there is no strong evidence to support our claim, that
the note was added to the letter and handed over to Pestanji Dorabji Khandalavala, Judge Khandalavalas
brother, who in turn, as requested, showed the letter to A.D. Ezekiel, an elderly member of the Poona Branch.
Ezekiel was mentioned in some of the letters in the articles, The Collapse of Koot Hoomi, and therefore
had a strong interest in the whole situation at the time. As a result of having been shown Judges letter by
his brother, Pestanji Dorabji Khandalavala had also written a letter in support of H.P.B., dated September
19th, 1884, to the Bombay Gazette, at the time of the Coulomb controversy.
There are a number of issues involving Judge Khandalavala which lead us to question his integrity and his
trustworthiness as a member of the Theosophical Society and true friend of the Founders. Perhaps the most
troubling incident occurred after Walter Old arrived at headquarters on December 21st, 1892, and uncovered
380
Judges 1884 letter. After the letter was paraded about to the members at Adyar, Olcott requested
Khandalavalas legal advice as to how to proceed in handling this seemingly difficult matter regarding Judge.
According to Olcott:
On the arrival of the Delegates to the Convention at the usual time, we submitted the papers to our
respected colleague Judge Khandalavala, of Poona, who decidedly advised me to prosecute the case,
as it was too serious a menace to the Societys prosperity to allow it to go on.6
Khandalavala was repeatedly consulted on the matter, not only by Olcott but also by Annie Besant, a full
year after the initial legal consultation requested by Olcott.
Khandalavala was regarded as a highly respectable member of the Theosophical Society and was involved
very closely with Olcott and Blavatsky. He had been a member of the special Committee which in 1885
advised Blavatsky not to prosecute her defamers in a Court of Law. He was especially close to Olcott after
H.P.B. left India and never returned. Khandalavala could organize and influence large groups of Indians to
join and support the efforts of the Theosophical Movement in India. In a letter to Blavatsky regarding The
Collapse of Koot Hoomi articles in the Christian College Magazine, he wrote:
I made the best of the situation and sent two letters signed by Ezekiel to The Times of India which
greatly restored the peace of mind of our fellows and sympathisers. It was the Poona Branch that did
the most to restore confidence and at best a hundred members if not more have been kept perfectly
steady by me.
Khandalavala was the person who received one of H.P.B.s most important letters, Why I Do Not Return
To India, hand-delivered by Bertram Keightley in August 1890. This Open Letter, addressed To My
Brothers of Aryavarta, was kept hidden for many years before it was ever published. His influence on the
Society and in particular on Olcott is hard to ascertain for he kept himself in the shadows, but enough
information has surfaced to cast a large black cloud over his head a cloud of machinations.
The most troubling question is, why did Khandalavala not admit that the words a friend had been
suppressed from Judges 1884 letter when asked by Olcott in December 1892 for his expert legal advice
regarding the matter? Why did he not reveal that there were words missing in the letter which altered the
message? He was a provincial Magistrate in a Small Cause Court in Poona and was, therefore, a lawyer well
acquainted with the Law. Being a lawyer and a Magistrate he would have possessed a keen mind for details
and should have remembered the specifics of Judges letter. One would think that he would have known the
legal consequences of tampering with what became known as Exhibit A, the prime piece of material
evidence supporting the allegations against Judge. The suppression was so accurately done that no one even
suspected the strangeness of the sentence as demonstrated earlier. It leaves us to wonder why he would have
suppressed the words a friend unless he had a change of heart.
In July 1893 Khandalavala wrote Theosophy in The West: The Tendency Towards Dogmatism, in response
to Judges article, An Interesting Letter. [See previous Chapter for details.] In this article N.D.K. wrote:
In the early days of the Society, much vagueness, and inaccuracy, and many hasty assertions, found
their way into the movement. A part of this was excusable at the time, but now the most jealous regard
for truth, accuracy of statement, and a banishment of everything tending in the remotest degree to
mislead or delude, are peremptorily needed. Eager enthusiasm showing the maximum amount of
boldness with a minimum amount of evidence, is scarcely commendable.8
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I leave to those who seek further answers to digest for themselves the reasons why those words were
suppressed, and how.
Who Wrote the Imitation Signatures?
It has been explained why Judge wrote the September 17th, 1884, letter, which became known as Exhibit A,
to Khandalavala. It is here proposed that it was in Madras that Judge wrote the letter, using the letterhead
paper from Adyar. It is important to note that Judge did not carry his own paper with him; it was customary
for him to take letterhead paper from one headquarters and use it to write letters from another location. He
did this in numerous instances and Olcott even tried to use this against him after Blavatskys death. It is
further proposed that the friend9 Judge referred to in his Reply by William Q. Judge, dated April 29th,
1895, was Master M and that he was present at the time of writing.
Prior to September 17th, 1884, in all likelihood Judge wandered off from Adyar. As he had done while in
London, he would have explored Madras, the nearest city. Judge had a quiet, placid nature and other sensitive
qualities, combined with a propensity to work for Theosophy. He was perhaps even influenced to get away
from the tension and swarming activity at the headquarters compound and go to Madras which was a
relatively short distance from Adyar. It may have been in Madras that he met Master M for the first time
while in India as this was the most logical place for them to meet. There is also a less likely possibility
that they met in solitude as Judge sketched the buildings of headquarters. See Chapter 17 for evidence that
Judge did have contact with Master M while he was in India.
____________________
Interestingly, Khandalavalas ability to imitate her handwriting shocked even H.P.B. In a letter to Sinnett she
wrote the following regarding a letter (dated December 29th, 1885) she had received from N.D.K.
I send you a funny thing. Read the 3rd, 4th, & 5th & 6th lines. This is undeniably my handwriting.
Kandhalavala copied it from my letter to him. When I received and saw it I was positively startled.
Let me write it staunch fearless friends whose devotion to the Master and yourself has not wavered
one hairs breath I wrote it without looking at it, so as not to be impeded by the desire of copying
it. Now I ask you, were such a letter a whole letter written in the same handwriting as these two
lines wouldnt [you] swear it was my handwriting? Please put it carefully away and keep it. Why
Khandalavala should have copied that sentence in my handwriting I do not know. Once he had written
three letters copied from my own and brought them to me and I swore to them myself, not knowing
what he meant. . . . I tell you these lines are in my handwriting and I, the first, would swear to them
in any Court.10
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Chapter 16
In 1883 the Mahatmas had a plan in place for Sinnett to return to India after his visit in England to start a new
project, the Phnix journal, which would have been devoted to the interest of my [K.H.s] benighted
countrymen2 and would have been a strong voice supportive of theosophical thought. Mahatma K.H.
continues: Our paper once established I will never concern myself any more with any worldly enterprise.3
The letter to Khandalavala, by Judge and Master M, was the last attempt to see if the Indians were willing
to declare their support. K.H. wrote:
Moreover, we are permitted to reward those who will have helped the most effectually to realize this
grand idea (which promises in the end to change the destiny of a whole nation, if conducted by one
like yourself).4
Had the Phnix project been undertaken by Sinnett the whole of the Coulomb affair would have been
minimized to a great extent and could possibly have been averted altogether had there been a friendly
newspaper in India supporting the Theosophical CAUSE. Before the Christian College Magazine published
The Collapse of Koot Hoomi in September 1884 proofs had been circulated among other papers in India
in order to mount support. Much of what ensued could have been avoided if Sinnett had accepted the offer
from the Mahatmas to start this newspaper venture.
Khandalavala had come to realize by 1889 that the situation in India needed to be revitalized. He arranged
to host a Conference in Bombay in December to see what could be done. He stated:
For various reasons the work is lagging behind in India. We meet this evening with a view to impress
upon the minds of members the necessity of taking such steps as may put it on better basis. . . .
Large ideas of philosophy viewed in their true light gives us the only right conception of the great
work of the Theosophical Society.5
The Bombay Conference concluded with a Vote of Confidence and Thanks To The Founders. The
statement read as follows:
The Conference further wishes to convey to both of the Founders of the Society, the assurance of its
most cordial and grateful recognition of the great services they have rendered to India and are now
rendering to the world at large.6
The Indian members were flush with their adulation but always fell short with their total commitment to the
Theosophical CAUSE and to become true theosophists. Very few Brahmans would ever commit themselves
to adopting the teaching of Theosophy. Although their system had degenerated they still preferred promoting
their own rather than adopting Theosophy, which would have explained theirs. Master Morya stated it
plainly:
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They join the Society, and though remaining as stubborn as ever in their old beliefs and superstitions,
and having never given up caste or one single of their customs, they, in their selfish exclusiveness,
expect to see and converse with us and have our help in all and everything. . . . Their forefathers have
driven away the followers of the only true philosophy upon earth away from India and now, it is not
for the latter to come to them but to them to come to us if they want us.7
The Indian members came to the realization that they were losing their Aryan advantage now that The Secret
Doctrine was published and, with the formation of the Esoteric Section, their belief that in India every man
is naturally and by right of descent a Theosophist8 was in danger of being depreciated. Their salvation came
when Besant arrived on Indian soil in 1893 and adopted Hinduism and their system of beliefs.
In his letter to Olcott on August 30th, 1893, Judge summarized the words of Master M:
Now as to the general matter of India, here is what he has said to me in substance: India is spiritually
proud, that is why the Indian section is the weakest in the T.S.; the pioneer work of the past should
have been followed up by using native agencies to get hold of devotion and devoted work in Hindu
members. . . .9
This statement also gives us clues as to why Judge decided to leave India. When Judge was in India,
headquarters was being looked after by Indian members of the T.S. Both Subba Row and Damodar held
major positions while other Indians were there in minor positions. Master Morya must have mentioned to
Judge at that time that his services to the CAUSE would be put to greater use if he returned to America where
his true destiny lay. However, as a result of the Hodgson investigation into the Coulomb conspiracy Damodar
left headquarters in frustration within the year, never to be seen again, and Subba Row resigned in 1886 on
account of differences with H.P.B. and Judge in the publishing of The Secret Doctrine.
Olcott was always so busy with administration, and attending to his lecture circuit and touring various
countries, that he took the easy way to replenish his staff by convincing members from abroad to come to
India and serve the CAUSE at Adyar headquarters. This to a great extent discouraged Indian members from
dedicating themselves to the Society in such a way as to encourage others to rally together, as might have
occurred had they been given the opportunity to serve in major positions at the time.
384
Chapter 17
Amulets or talismans were quite often used by the Brothers of White Magic, in this case by the Mahatmas
of the Theosophical Society. H.P.B. wore her signet ring as a talisman, as well as other jewelry. As detailed
in Chapter 2, Judge wore H.P.B.s ring for a day while in Paris to stabilize his constitution. Judge explained
that she gave me to wear all day her talisman ring which is of great value and strength. It has a double
triangle and the Sanscrit for life on it. This helped me. . . .5
Another example of the use of amulets was the case of Dharbaghiri Nath. As a youth, before the formation
of the Theosophical Society, he had been visited by the Master who gave him an amulet for protection for
his wanderings through the jungles. In telling his story he claims that he had been attacked by Dugpas and
other Black Magicians and the amulet helped to save him from harm.
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As there is the law of perfect justice and equilibrium which pervades nature,6 and by the law of analogy
and correspondence, Adepts of black magic and Dugpas also have their ways of magnetizing objects, others,
or even themselves in order to captivate their intended victim. Such was the case with Chakravarti on Annie
Besant during the summer of 1893. That summer Besant had removed H.P.B.s signet ring from her finger
to have it fitted with another ring on the inside so it would fit better on her finger and reduce the risk of her
losing it. Chakravarti arrived in London in July and was there for two months7 before leaving with Besant
for the Parliament of Religions in Chicago. It was at this time that Archibald Keightley and others observed
Chakravartis frequent magnetization of Besant.
It is not known whether Judge was given an amulet or talisman before going to Adyar to wear as protection
against evil influences but we do know that he was being closely watched by Master M. In her Open Letter
addressed To My Brothers of Aryavarta and later published as Why I Do Not Return to India, mentioned
earlier, H.P.B. recognized that after her departure from Adyar in early 1885 there had been an increase in
strife and conflict among personalities there. It becomes obvious that the Adyar headquarters was under
constant supervision by the Adepts of Black Magic in order to take advantage of opportunities to influence
the people working there. Headquarters was a very busy place, with known visitors as well as unknown, in
both physical and other forms. It is no wonder that Judge would have gone off on his own to seek refuge from
all the activity.
Sparse documentation concerning the activities of Judge while he was in India has led to certain deductions
having to be arrived at. For example, it was earlier determined that Judge would have had to leave India on
or around October 26th, 1884, in order to be in England for a day or so, as he indicated in a letter to H.P.B.,
then board the British steamer S.S. Wisconsin on November 15th, 1884, for New York. Unfortunately, Judge
became very silent about what happened to him in India after September 21st. Sometimes this in itself can
prove to be most revealing. In a letter to Jasper Niemand Judge explained:
[T]he true chela does not talk much of his Master and often does not refer to that Masters existence.
It has almost become the same as unnecessarily waving the red flag at a bull. Those of us who have
experience do not do it; but the younger ones do.8
One has to look hard to find clues as to what happened during this time. By also studying Judges behavior
before and after 1884 it becomes apparent that he experienced something of great significance at that time.
We know that Judge was living at the Adyar headquarters while he was attending to business. At times the
place was crowded with visitors coming there as witnesses or simply out of curiosity. The Visitors Book, the
record that can provide information regarding Judges comings and goings from headquarters, has not been
produced. As explained earlier, none of the reports published at the time depict Judges involvement at any
functions, ceremonies, writing or signing any documents at headquarters after September 21st, 1884, the day
Judge witnessed Babulas Statement after his return from Europe.
To show that Judge was not present at Adyar headquarters after September 21st, 1884, it is important to note
that certain functions occurred at which he should have been present or at the very least have his name
mentioned since he was the person in charge at the time. The following incident is one such event, but there
is no mention of his name. It is provided below as it was recorded.
THE THEOSOPHICAL EXPOSURE
(From our own correspondent.[Bombay Gazette])
Madras. Sept. 27, [1884]
This morning the Rev. Mr. Alexander and the Rev. Mr. Patterson, both connected with the Christian
College Magazine, with Mr. Gribble of the Madras Civil Service, and Mr. Padfield, visited the
Theosophical Headquarters and compared the alleged letters of Madame Blavatsky with some in the
possession of the Theosophists. In a letter to this evenings Mail, Dr. Hartmann says: As would
386
naturally be supposed, the handwriting of the letters produced by our visitors resembled to a certain
extent the handwriting of Madame Blavatsky; but the general appearance of them, as well as other
minor details, make it appear plain to us that Madame Blavatskys letters have not been altered in the
original, but that they have been copied, and that such additions have been made as were considered
necessary to answer the purpose for which they were intended, while some of the most aggravating
letters may be entirely spurious. But it is impossible to arrive at any definite conclusion before we
hear from Madame Blavatsky. We have been requested to exhibit the occult room to our visitors,
which during the past two weeks, has been visited by many people, who were unanimously astonished
at the absurdity of the tricks prepared by Mr. Coulomb.9
It was reported in the Madras Mail, September 29th, 1884, that Judge had addressed some Madras
students10 presumably within a day or two of the published item. Some of Judges activities can be traced
up to this point, but where was he until the estimated time of his departure from India circa Sunday, October
26th, 1884? When did he leave Adyar? What was he doing? Who was he with?
It has been pointed out that Judge was likely with Master M on September 17th, but there are approximately
twenty-eight days, from September 28th on, which cannot be accounted for. Fortunately, H.P.B. gives us the
best possible explanation as to what occurred to Judge during those days when he went missing. In a letter
from Ostend on October 3rd, 1886, she stated:
The trouble with you is that you do not know the great change that came to pass in you a few years
ago. Others have occasionally their astrals changed & replaced by those of Adepts (as of
Elementaries) & they influence the outer, and the higher man. With you, it is the NIRMANAKAYA not
the astral that blended with your astral. Hence the dual nature & fighting.11
At the time of the Mystery Schools the initiated, under penalty of death, would never reveal any of its great
secrets to the uninitiated or profane. Judge did not mention his initiation at all, not even to H.P.B., his mentor
in this incarnation since 1875. H.P.B. had to inquire through her Master (Morya) to obtain any
information regarding what had happened to Judge while he was in India. Judge most likely took initiations,
in general, very seriously and would not even mention any aspect of his own initiation directly; but he could
not hide the fact that he had been initiated for through his writings the secret is revealed. His style of writing
was simple and direct, much different from that of H.P.B.s. She stated regarding his magazine, The Path:
Once that the Masters have proclaimed your Path the best, the most theosophical of all theosophical
publications, surely it is not to allow it to be rubbed out. . . . [Lucifer] is the fighting, combative
Manas; the other (Path) is pure Buddhi. . . . Lucifer will be Theosophy militant and Path the shining
light, the Star of Peace. If your intuition does not whisper to you IT IS SO, then that intuition must
be wool-gathering. No, sir, the Path is too well, too theosophically edited for me to interfere.12
From this letter of H.P.B.s, and from Judges own writings, we can determine with some confidence what
kind of preparation Judge underwent, what kind of initiation ensued and how it affected him. As there are
myriad initiations we confine our attention to what is available through the writings of H.P.B. mainly. If
initiations are associated with the five elements, plus two more, and in relation with the sevenfold
constitution of man, then the candidate or chela would be initiated with his corresponding element. The
candidate would be tested shortly after having his aura cleansed and that test would determine where the
candidate ranked and which initiation he or she was qualified to undertake. For example, H.P.B. states that
for the third initiation, the candidate must have the capabilities to use his Will to produce effects associated
with feeling, hearing, and seeing. The chelas power is always proportionate to the intensity of his Will.
While Judge was in Paris in the spring of 1884 his astral was destabilizing his constitution. There was a need
to drive away the negative energies which were the cause for his mental anguish, hence, the blues he was
suffering at the time. H.P.B. gave Judge her talisman ring to help him, which it did. When Judge received
a copy of the Prayag letter in 1893 from an Indian correspondent, he quickly recognized the authenticity
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of the letter. He was able to determine its genuineness not only from his intuition but also from his own
experience of similar incidents which had occurred to him while in France. This in itself is an indication that
the Master must have done something else to or for Judge at that time which he recognized in the content of
the letter.
In a biographical series titled, William Q. Judge, which ran in The Irish Theosophist in 1896, Jasper
Niemand (Julia Keightley) wrote:
It is a matter of record that, when the seven years probation of this life were over, the Master best
known in connection with the T.S. sent to Mr. Judge, through H.P.B., His photograph, inscribed upon
the back to my colleague, with a cryptogram and signature; and, a little later, a letter of thanks and
advice, delivered to Mr. Judge in Paris by H.P.B. A message sent to him through H.P.B. in writing
from the Lodge at about this time ends by saying: Those who do all that they can and the best they
know how do enough for us.13
While they were in Paris, H.P.B. had informed Judge that the Master had told her in India, that he [Master
M.] was doing, or about to do something with and for me.14
Judge gained in confidence and his Will appeared to gain in strength following his experiences in Paris. As
indicated in Chapter 2, H.P.B. tested his ability to pick up on messages and impressions coming to her, and
he became more aware of the positive energies around him. It was also during this time that he was instructed
on how elementals and elementaries affect ones constitution. What Judge went through during his stay in
France were simply preparations that all chelas have to undergo prior to the actual event. The initiation took
place later that year while he was in India.
A few years later H.P.B. stated that for Judge it was the Nirmanakaya which blended with his astral.
Nirmanakayas of the Path of Compassion are:
[D]eceased Adepts who refuse Nirvana and prefer doing good to the world by remaining present and
alive in the astral body in the sphere of the earth. They differ from the astral shades of ordinary
mortals in so far that the Mayavi Rupa remains whole, and with the exception of the physical body
they have all the other principles.15
There are many different degrees of Nirmanakayas. Judge gives us a hint as to what happened to him by
using Napoleon as his example of an historical person who had been overshadowed and influenced by a
Nirmanakaya. Judge states:
Nirmanakayas constantly engage in this work deemed by them greater than earthly enterprises: the
betterment of the soul of man, and any other good that they can accomplish through human agents.
. . . Nirmanakayas . . . work behind the veil and prepare the material for a definite end.16
The complexities of Judges initiation appear to have been very substantial and must have taken the Masters
some time to conduct. We can only surmise that Judges body was placed somewhere and protected from any
influences while his consciousness underwent this initiation. Judges body was presumably laid in a
comatose state and his consciousness extricated for initiation. The other option was for Judge to have
personally gone to Tibet, as had Blavatsky years before, but this was unlikely.
Having an initiation is comparable to having surgery a certain amount of time is needed to convalesce.
Sometimes it takes months or years depending on the operation required. In Judges case the blending of the
Nirmanakaya with his astral may have taken a substantial amount of time. A noticeable change occurred in
him at about the time he started his Path magazine in the spring of 1886.
388
H.P.B. also indicated the high level of confidence and respect she had in Judges abilities by acknowledging
Judges initiated status, stating:
W.Q.J. is the Antaskarana between the two Manas(es) the American thought & the Indian or
rather the trans-Himalayan Esoteric Knowledge.17
This declaration by H.P.B. in itself indicates that he had been initiated by the Masters of Esoteric Buddhism.
After his initiation Judge decided, or was advised, that there were no reasons for him to stay in India. The
Coulomb affair was under control and Olcott and Blavatsky were expected back at Adyar soon. Judge left
letters behind for them, fully explaining and assuring his continued affection and friendship. After his return
to New York Judge received letters from Olcott criticizing him for leaving early, accusing Judge: you left
India because you have 2 children and Ah! you left because Hartmann palmed off on you a pretended
(directive?) so to do.18 At first, not knowing that Judge had been initiated, H.P.B. was quite upset with Judge
for leaving early or even at all. Judge says that Blavatsky wrote to him to grieve over my backsliding. The
idea had been that Judge might even stay in India for good he had made arrangements for his wife in the
event that he did not return. After his initiation all changed. In his letter of May 16th, 1885, to Blavatsky,
Judge gives clues as to what happened. He states:
I did not leave India because I got a message from a Mahatma. I never got any message from any
Mahatma either pretended or real while I was in India. That disposes of Hartmann. . . . My dear HPB
if Master will not enlighten you about me then I must say nothing and remain to work out my own
salvation as I can. . . .
I tell you neither you, nor Olcott, nor Holloway, nor deceit, nor trick, nor message, nor devil, nor
Hartmann, had anything to do with my departure from India, and perhaps someday that departure will
be of benefit to the Society and the Cause.19
At first glance it appears that Judge had covered all the bases but by analyzing his statement some interesting
information is discovered. He mentions what did not make him leave India but left out the real reason why
he did, and implies that he must say nothing. Hence, H.P.B.s letter from Ostend dated October 3rd, 1886,
which clearly reveals that Judge had been initiated while he was in India. Both were initiated by Master
Morya and both fell under his direct responsibility.
Judge specifically mentions that he did not leave India because of any messages but this excludes the fact
that he had direct contact with Mahatmas. The only logical conclusion which can be drawn from his letter
is that he met with Master Morya leading up to his initiation. As explained earlier, Judge met with Master
Morya on September 17th, 1884, when the letter which included the four samples of imitations of
handwriting . . . written by a friend20 was penned, and then sent to Judge Khandalavala in Poona.
Another significant passage is perhaps someday that departure will be of benefit to the Society and the
Cause. This again alluded to his initiation but it also had other significance. This meant that he had to return
to America where the duty rested upon him to establish the Theosophical Movement in the West, in
particular North America. Although India had maintained the Ancient Wisdom, much had deteriorated into
superstitions, beliefs and rituals. Many of the books of Occult treasures were disintegrating and were badly
in need of a revival in order to preserve the Aryan philosophy. H.P.B. stated:
Without the revival of Aryan philosophy, for which we are labouring, the West will tend towards the
grossest materialism. . . .21
Judges responsibility, in part, was to encourage the Indian theosophists to cooperate with him to release their
treasures for the western world. After returning from India Judge made it one of his priorities, and in 1891
founded the instrument for publishing a large number of Oriental Department Papers consisting of Sanskrit
and other Oriental Scriptures. (See: Bibliography of Works by and about William Q. Judge.) In the
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Supplement to the March 1891 issue of The Theosophist, (pp.xxx-xxxii), Bertram Keightley, in his General
Secretarys Report quotes extensively from a circular received from Mr. William Q. Judge, the General
Secretary of the American Section, which bears the official endorsement of the Executive Committee of that
Section, and a strong recommendation, both personal and official, from our revered H.P. Blavatsky. Judge
proposed a cooperative effort to translate and publish Hindu texts to give to the world the impression that
this work is the united work of the entire Society. His plan was to make this a distinct department of the
American work, giving, however, to the Indian Section . . . full credit for the matter printed. He proposed
printing uniform pamphlets of these translations and papers. . . every month or oftener as occasion may
require, and in quantity sufficient to distribute them freely to all our American members, and to send back
to India enough to meet the needs there.
Judge understood and expounded the value of the Aryan literature. His adaptations and commentaries are
highly valued in some theosophical circles and are used in various universities as references.
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Chapter 18
Convention of 1893
One year after the arrival of Old and Sturdy at headquarters and the uncovering of allegedly incriminating
evidence against Judge, the Annual Convention held at Adyar, December 27th to 30th, 1893, appears to have
been the opportune time to discuss and sanction the previous years decision to proceed with the case against
Judge. A number of skillful lawyers who were on the various Boards and Committees, for example, G.N.
Chakravarti, were in attendance and, according to Besants Diary for December 20th and 22nd, 1893, Judge
Khandalavala of Poona was also present for consultations.1
Besant, who had arrived in India for the first time on November 16th, 1893, was scheduled to be in Madras
from December 19th, 1893, leaving January 7th, 1894, and expected in Calcutta on the 10th. The much
anticipated gifted orator, as she had been promoted by Bertram Keightley, was received by huge crowds
wherever she went. It was no wonder that the attendance was exceptionally large2 for the Anniversary
meeting held at Adyar from December 27th to 30th. There she met Tookaram Tatya from Bombay, Judge
Khandalavala from Poona and her new guru, G.N. Chakravarti, from Allahabad.
Olcott opened the Adyar convention with his Annual Address. After welcoming his brothers, friends and
colleagues, he stated:
The nights blackness is rolling away, the dawn of a happier day is breaking. Thanks as I believe
to the kind help of those whom I call my Masters and the Elder Brothers of the race, our patient
and loyal persistence is about being [sic] rewarded by help of the most valuable kind, for they have
sent me Annabai [Annie Besant] to share my burden, relieve our mental distress, and win the
respect and sympathy of good people. While she is not yet able to quite fill the void left by the
departure of my co-Founder, H.P.B., she will be in time, and meanwhile is able to render service that
her Teacher could not, by her peerless oratory and her scientific training. This meeting will be
historical, as marking her first appearance at our Annual Conventions: her first, but not her last,
for I have some reason to hope that she will devote a certain part of her future years to Indian work.
(Great applause.)
Mrs. Besants and my close association in the Indian tour now in progress, and the consequent mutual
insight into our respective characters and motives of action, has brought us to a perfect understanding
which, I believe, nothing can henceforth shake. She and I are now at one as regards the proper scope
and function of the E.S.T. as one of the activities carried on by our members. . . . Whatever
misunderstandings have occurred hitherto with respect to the exact relationship between the Society,
as a body, and the Esoteric Section which I chartered in 1888, now known as the Eastern School
of Theosophy and of which she is the sweet spirit and the guiding star, have passed away I
hope, forever.3 [Italics added]
The reader should bear in mind the specific declaration of H.P.B. that the E.S.T. (Eastern School of
Theosophy) has no official connection with the Theosophical Society4 as a body, and the historical fact that
its formation was opposed and its conduct under H.P.B. disapproved by Olcott. By this time Olcott had
become reluctant to ever allow Judge to become President of the T.S. and had in fact declared his preference
for Besant. She had already committed her support to Judge as Olcotts successor pending his retirement
(announced January 21st, 1892) and had issued a Circular to this effect on March 11th, 1892. Upon withdrawal
of his resignation, Besant expressed complete support for Olcotts ideas, his plans and his policies.
Olcott, fully hoodwinked by the maleficent influences at Adyar and by his Hindu and Parsee friends, either
did not realize that Besant had never been accepted as a chela by the Masters or he simply assumed she had
been because of her recent position as joint head of the E.S. After Blavatskys death, and before Olcott
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arrived in London, a Council Meeting had been held on May 27th, 1891, in which Judges plan had been
endorsed by the Masters. They had inserted a message, W.Q. Judges Plan is right, which Besant found
amongst her papers. This message only endorsed Judges suggestion that he and Besant be co-heads of the
E.S.,5 but was never intended as a message of their acceptance of her as their chela. H.P.B. never stated nor
insinuated, and no records were ever published to indicate that Besant had been accepted as a chela of the
Masters. Yet Olcott boldly states:
Annabai will in time become to me what H.P.B. was, and I shall try to prove as staunch and loyal
a colleague to her as I think you will concede I have been to my lamented co-Founder of this Society.
In her bright integrity, her passionate love of truth, her grand trained intellect and her unquestioning
altruism, I feel a strength and support which acts upon me as the elbow-touch of the comrade to the
soldier in battle. Disciples of the same Master, devoted to the same cause, and now friends who know
and trust each other. . . .6
The President-Founder had considered retiring but as a result of his infatuation with Besant decided to stay
on as President, determined to fight it out and rid the Society of Judge. While Judge was promoting harmony
and good-will among all Theosophists, Olcott and Besant were plotting against Judge in secrecy. But they
were not the only ones.
Both Judge Khandalavala and G.N. Chakravarti were members of the T.S. but neither was ever a member
of the Esoteric Section. These two were part of Olcotts eminent counsel whom he depended upon for legal
advice. They were members of the Committee which, at the Convention in December 1884, unanimously
recommended that no defense be made on behalf of H.P.B. against the Coulomb charges. They were also
among the powers behind the President who influenced his decision-making. Both were in favor of having
Adyar as the spiritual center for all of the Theosophical Movement around the world and both felt indignant
about Judge, each for their own reasons.
The Brahmans in India were suspicious that the Theosophical Society was losing its impartiality as equal
friend to all religions and was becoming distinctly Buddhist in its sympathies and affiliations. The Brahmans
hesitated to enter its membership and to cooperate in its work by withholding aid in bringing out priceless
literary treasures to make available to the West. Judge was aware of this problem and sent out an Open Letter
on April 5th, 1893, to as many Brahmans as he could reach. The letter was marked To The Brahmins of
India7 and its purpose was to encourage a revival of their confidence in the Theosophical Society.
Shortly after Judges Open Letter, he received a note along with a copy of a letter from Benee Madhad
Battacharya, at one time the president of the Prayag T.S. in Allahabad. It was a message which Sinnett was
directed by one of the Brothers, writing through Blavatsky in November 1881, to convey to the native
members of the Prayag Branch of the Theosophical Society. Professor G.N. Chakravarti arrived in New York
on September 2nd, 1893.8 When Judge showed him the copy of this (the Prayag) letter, Chakravarti declared
it a forgery and a humbug, as did Besant. The letter was later published by Judge in The Path under title,
A Mahatmas Message to Some Brahmans, as a genuine message. Judge stated that its philosophical
and occult references are furthermore confirmed by the manuscript of part of the third volume of the Secret
Doctrine, not yet printed.9 This letter added to Chakravartis reasons for resenting Judge. Khandalavala had
similar reasons for resenting Judge as well.
In the April 1895 Theosophist Olcott added a presidential Postcript, dated March 27th, 1895, to denounce
A Mahatmas Message to Some Brahmans published by Judge.
The message is one of the most transparently unconvincing in the history of Mahatmic literature. It
bears upon its face the seal of its condemnation. It is an ill-tempered attack upon the Brahman
gentlemans orthodoxy, under the guise of a general threat that none of his caste can approach the
392
Masters save by giving up entirely caste . . . old superstitions . . . faith in the gods or god, etc.
. . .10
Franz Hartmann had received a letter from Olcott in which Olcott called his attention to the Postscript in
The Theosophist. Hartmann was aghast and wrote to Judge on April 25th, 1895:
What is the matter? Has the world become struck with blindness, and does the President of the T.S.
not know what Theosophy is? Have all the lectures of Mrs. Besant been after all nothing but
eloquence mixed with gush? Do our own Theosophical writers only repeat parrot-like what they hear,
but without understanding?
. . . I never imagined it possible that anybody could not see the plain meaning of that letter to some
Brahmans, in which the Master asks them to strive to outgrow their orthodox beliefs and superstitions,
faith in gods or a (separate) god, and to attain real knowledge.11
For a conspiracy to transpire the fewer people involved the better, and in this case only one person was
needed to create enough suspicion and doubt for the entire case against Judge. Once the dominoes were in
place, with the proper evil influences to fan the doubts and suspicions, they fell as intended. The plan was
to regain Indias heritage as the rightful birthplace from which all Spiritual wisdom came and from which
it was to disseminate, with Indians at the controls.
One of the difficulties of proving a conspiracy is knowing who the conspirators are and finding the
documentation to support the claim. Strategies planned behind closed doors are not usually revealed to the
general public, but because as in this case only one individual had the key, others were needed to
naively release information in order to substantiate the allegations against Judge. One of those naive persons,
one of the easiest to manipulate, was Olcott. Although as mentioned earlier, Olcotts Old Diary Leaves
cannot be unquestioningly trusted for accuracy, they do provide a valuable source from which to glean
important details, sometimes mentioned only in passing in the telling of an unrelated story. Also, whether
a topic is included or left out is sometimes equally telling. When pertinent information is sifted properly it
can also produce details to implicate the one who conveniently avoided publicity, and thereby prove that
Judge Khandalavala had ongoing involvement in the case against Judge.
____________________
By December 1893, Olcott, President, and his obedient General Council had changed all the original Rules
of the Society since its inception in 1875. Olcott governed with absolute autocracy, by decree and Executive
Notice. The newly Revised Rules proclaimed by Olcott were drawn up specifically to shift power from
the general membership to a much more manageable group, a Judicial Committee, whereby the authorized
few could divest themselves, with a three-fourths majority, of censurable officers of the T.S. namely
William Q. Judge.
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Chapter 19
G. N. Chakravarti
Shortly after the invitation was sent to Gyanendra Nath Chakravarti asking him to be the delegate
representing India at The Theosophical Congress (at the Worlds Fair in Chicago) a discouraging reply was
received and at first it seemed that he could not come.1 He was apparently too busy, having only
completed his law degree from the University of Allahabad in January 1893, and joined the Bar at Allahabad
in April. After the American Convention Bertram Keightley returned to England and waited for further word
from his friend. Judge also left for England to attend the Third Annual Convention of the European Section
held on July 6th and 7th, 1893. Judge arrived at Southampton June 24th, where Dr. and Mrs. A. Keightley met
him, and he got to Headquarters on the evening of the same day.2
Sometime in June [Chakravarti] consented at the risk of losing his caste, and started for London.3 Having
researched the meaning of the words at the risk of losing his caste some interesting explanations have been
elicited regarding the Hindu religion but more specifically the high-caste system of some Brahman families
at that time. These words have little significance in todays world but had great importance to some Hindus
even fifty years ago. The religious implication of losing caste to a distinguished Brahman such as Chakravarti
would have been devastating.
Theosophy (ULT) magazine explains the dilemma.
Serious difficulties at once supervened, for while Mr. Chakravarti was very agreeable to the proposed
plan, grave objections were raised among the Brahmins. Such a mingling with Mllechhas
(foreigners) was offensive to their teachings and traditions, and it was a violation of caste for a
Brahmin to cross the seas. Thus, if he attended at all, Chakravarti would be outcaste for the time
being and would be compelled upon his return either to renounce his caste or to submit to
purificatory rites which, to Western minds, would be superstitious and degrading, and to an
orthodox Brahmin extremely humiliating.4
The above comment goes a long way in explaining the Brahman belief system but Chakravarti provided, in
his first speech at the Theosophical Congress, the deeper philosophical reasons for his dilemma that the
East is Spirit and the West is Matter.
To the East is given the sacred satisfaction of having given birth to all the great religions of the world,
and to the West belongs the proud privilege of having supplied the world with all that can make
physical life comfortable and even luxurious.5
A study of the states of consciousness (lokas and talas), reveals the following definition for the word Ptla:
The nether world, the antipodes; hence in popular superstition the infernal regions, and philosophically the
two Americas, which are antipodal to India.6 In The Secret Doctrine H.P.B. writes of Ptla as undeniably
being America. Pt or Pd means foot in Sanskrit, and is associated with the earth, therefore ptla is
something under the feet.7 Before The Secret Doctrine was published the interpretation of Ptla had
degenerated to insinuate the unclean, the Brahmans interpretation for beneath the feet. Some Brahmans have
related to the writer that many wishing to come to America in the last century were faced with the same
dilemma as Chakravarti.
It was partly for this reason that Subba Row, he being an initiated Brahmin and holding to the Brahmanical
esoteric teaching8 refused to help H.P.B. with The Secret Doctrine.
He was greatly disturbed by the vulgar profanation of the Masters names which had then taken place,
and, as a Brhmana, he strongly disapproved the fact that H.P.B. revealed to the public some of the
inner meanings of the Hind Scriptures, concealed until then in the secrecy of the inner temples.9
394
H.P.B. says: Such as Subba Row uncompromising initiated Brahmins, will never reveal even that
which they are permitted to. They hate too much Europeans for it.10
To continue Theosophy (ULT) magazines comments:
Nevertheless, the difficulties were resolved and all objections overcome. Mr. Chakravarti formally
accepted the invitation to attend the Parliament as the guest of the Society and three Brahminical
associations were induced to countenance his mission by appointing him to represent them. They
were: the Hari Bhakti Prodayini of Cawnpore; Varnashrama Dharma Sabbha of Delhi, and the
Sanatan Dharma Rakshani Sabbha of Meerut. All this, as may be inferred, occupied several months
in its accomplishment.11
The American Section had always been very generous with donations going to Adyar. Being the hosts and
having the responsibilities for bringing these Delegates to The Theosophical Congress stretched the budget
of the American Section to the point that it was necessary to borrow a part of the needed money in order
that Prof. Chakravarti might sail in time.12 Judge added a note in the August Path earnestly inviting the
members from Europe and America to send whatever money they could spare for this object.
Chakravarti arrived in London in July and on August 10th, 1893, the occasion of Bro. Bertram Keightleys
interesting lecture on India and the Theosophical Society, the [Blavatsky] Lodge had, for the first time, the
pleasure of hearing Bro. Chakravarti.13 On the 17th Bro. Chakravarti again spoke, as also did Bro.
Dharmapala, who is likewise passing through London on his way to represent the Buddhists at the Parliament
of Religions.14 The former stayed at headquarters on Avenue Road while the latter stayed with Sir Edwin
Arnold.
Many Theosophists who met Chakravarti at the Parliament of Religions in Chicago were not impressed with
his demeanor. Although he spoke well they considered him condescending. Professor Arthur H. Nethercot,
in The First Five Lives of Annie Besant, wrote the following:
Chakravarti, a light-complexioned, rather fat-faced, sleepy Brahmin, originally from the sacred city
of Benares, with a small, drooping, pointed black mustache, a black, observing eye, a shiny black
turban and a flat white necktie, had taught physical science and mathematics at various Indian
colleges and now held the chair of mathematics at Allahabad University. He had also just passed the
bar examination there and had a great reputation as a mystic, a student of the great Indian religious
literature, and a skilful hypnotist. He spoke a soft, classical English, with a slight accent but with
much expressiveness. He had gentle, dignified manners, and yet withal looked rather contemptuously
at those about him. Annie Besant was at once fascinated by both his manner and his words. She knew
immediately that she would gladly become a chela of this new guru, even if she was old enough to
be his mother.15
Besant was completely bewitched by Chakravarti who was also the President of the Prayag Students
Theosophical Association at Allahabad.16 Chakravarti had made it his duty in life to study the psychic
realms and to develop occult powers. He was a member of the Prayag Society in Allahabad which the
Mahatmas had warned about. The members of that Lodge were mostly Orthodox Brahmans who indulged
in these practices. From the time Chakravarti arrived in London in July 1893 until their return from America
to London on October 4th, 1893, when he went to stay with [his friend] Mr. Bertram Keightley and his
mother,17 Besant traveled and lectured with him.
In response to a letter from Jasper Niemand (Julia Keightley) Judge explained why he had been cold to
Besant at the time.
It is true Annie suffered through my cold and hard feelings. But it was her fault, for I say now as then
to Annie, that she, absorbed in Chakravarti, neglected my members, who are my children, and for
whom I wanted her best and got her worst. That made me cold, of course, and I had to fight it, and
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didnt care if Annie did not like it: I have no time to care. I am glad she has gone to India. It is her
trial and her chance, and when she gets back she can see for herself if she is able to prevent the big
head from coming on as has happened with others.18
Besant had been taking occult instruction from Chakravarti, as her new guru. During conversation with Dr.
J.D. Buck and Dr. Archibald Keightley in 1894, Besant confided [t]hat she took orders through Mr.
Chakravarti as coming from the Master.19 Many of Besants friends in England had come to realize that
since she had met Chakravarti her behavior had changed. Judge wrote, in a letter to Edmund Garrett:
But you were right when you say that Mrs. Besant made a remarkable change in respect to me. That
is true, and Mr. Chakravarti whom you name is, as you correctly say, the person who is responsible
for it. Before she met Chakravarti she would not have dreamed of prosecuting me. . . .
. . . But by the influence of the Mr. Chakravarti whom you mention the whole power of the society
was moved against me. . . .20
Albert Smythe recounted an episode in Toronto during Besants visit there following the Congress of
Religions at the Worlds Fair where he noted the beginnings of change in Besant. At a reception in her honor
Besant specifically asked each person she was introduced to whether or not they were members of the
Society. If the answer was yes she shook their hand; if the answer was no she said Oh and passed on to
the next, without a further word and declining to shake hands. . . . Smythe wrote that this gave us a setback
in Toronto that we did not recover from for a long period.21
Ten days after returning to London from America urgent business compelled Chakravartis return to India
and on October 20th, 1893, Besant proceeded overland to Marseilles, where Countess Wachtmeister joined
her for their voyage to India Besants first. Bertram Keightley stayed in London with his mother.
396
Chapter 20
However, once the letters which Olcott mentions are understood and placed in their proper context it is
believed that they actually enhance Judges position rather than damage it. It was felt among Judges
supporters that it was not very commendable of his accusers to make public correspondence between Judge
and H.P.B. (pupil and teacher) and between him and Damodar (his fellow-disciple) written during Judges
period of probation. H.P.B. described this period as one of mental suffering and that at such times the pupil
feels utterly alone, deserted, even though the Master might actually be quite near. These letters of Judge were
eventually published in The Theosophist starting with the January 1931 issue but were quickly stopped
when they started showing Judge in a brighter light. Quotations from some of the letters are included in the
Chronology.
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After consulting one more time with Khadalavala on how to handle the case against Judge, Besant left Poona
with Olcott for Bombay where they consulted again with Tookaram Tatya and Muncherjee M. Shroff before
she boarded her ship which sailed at 5 P.M. on March 20th,4 bound for England.
M.M. Shroff was the Secretary of the Blavatsky Lodge T.S. in Bombay and one of the oldest members of
the Society, along with Kavasji Mervanji Shroff who was its Vice-President. Both were very instrumental
in the development of the Branch in Bombay. M.M. Shroff, concerned with the rumors circulating around
the west coast of India at the time, had written a letter to Besant on April 2nd, 1892, in which he stated that
Judge was strongly suspected of having forged all along letters in the name of the Masters after H.P.B.s
departure. H.S. Olcott, B. Keightley, and Edge are absolutely convinced that Judge forged these letters, and
has been duping and deceiving poor Annie!5
Besant had written back on April 22nd, 1892, I know that Col. Olcott has made random statements to that
effect (that Judge forged the letters), as he made random statements about H.P.B. committing frauds.6 M.M.
Shroff also wrote to Judge about this matter and was told that he should ask Olcott for the proof of the
charges against him for he is the one who has given them out and is their sole author.7 The plot was
thickening and Besant, now convinced that Judge had acted inappropriately, was willing to carry the torch
all the way and confront him. For example, in a letter from Calcutta, dated January 11th, 1894, she wrote:
You must resign the outer headship (of E.S.T.) held jointly with myself, or the evidence which goes
to prove the wrong done must be laid before a committee of T.S. . . . And you must resign the position
of President-elect.8
She wanted to confront Judge not because she wanted to find the truth, for she was convinced she had that,
but to trap him into admission of guilt.
In documenting the details for this sensitive Case one is often misled with information incorrectly
documented by other authors works on the history of the Theosophical Movement. For instance, in A Short
History of the Theosophical Society, Josephine Ransom states on page 299:
A copy of the demand for investigation was posted 7 February, to Mr. Judge. Mrs. Besant also sent
him copies of all the papers upon which she based her statements, an action to which the President
strongly objected.
This is a prime example of skewing information. The author leads the reader to believe that Besant sent
Judge the February 7th letter along with the complete set of copies for him to prepare for his defense. In fact,
after Besant had written to Olcott on the 6th from Allahabad, Olcott was the one who sent Judge a letter on
February 7th, 1894, giving Judge his options to resign or defend himself, but with no papers. Also, according
to evidence, Besant did not send Judge copies of all the papers but did send him much later a copy of her
statement of her complaint and the six charges against him. Besant never sent Judge any documentation at
that time either for him to prepare his defense against the accusations. An analysis of the facts by Dr.
Archibald Keightley is presented in Chapter 21.
Judge received Olcotts February 7th letter on March 10th and cabled his reply the same day. Charges
absolutely false. You can take what proceedings you see fit; going [to] London [in] July.9 In his circular of
March 15th, 1894, Judge stated:
The accused person has the right to fix the place of trial. When the President calls the committee, I
shall fix on London as the place for its meeting, as I am going to attend the European Section
Convention next July.10
In her Statement at the European Convention of the T.S., July 12th, 1894, Besant stated: I offered to take on
myself the onus of formulating the charges against [Judge].11 In the published version, Olcott added the
following Note:
398
I cannot allow Mrs. Besant to take upon herself the entire responsibility for formulating the charges
against Mr. Judge, since I myself requested her to do it. The tacit endorsement of the charges by
persistence in a policy of silence, was an injustice to the Vice-President, since it gave him no chance
to make his defence; while, at the same time, the widely-current suspicions were thereby augmented,
to the injury of the Society. So, to bring the whole matter to light, I, with others, asked Mrs. Besant
to assume the task of drafting and signing the charges.12
Olcott had resigned from the Presidency on three separate occasions at this point. Each time it had been
either arranged or implied that Judge, as Vice-President, would inherit the position or be designated as the
next President and each time, Olcott withdrew his resignation. At the time of Olcotts latest resignation,
January 1st, 1892, Judge had the support of the members of the Theosophical Society to replace him. In
February 1892 Olcott revoked his resignation, with Judge encouraging him to do so. Olcott later stated, in
his Address at the Annual Convention at Adyar in December 1893:
With the formation of my present close acquaintance with Mrs. Besant, my course has become very
clearly marked out in my mind. Unless something unexpected and of a very revolutionary character
should happen, I mean to abandon the last lingering thought of retirement and stop at my post until
removed by the hand of death.14
By then it had been decided that Besant should become the next President, and the perceived threat of Judge
succeeding to the Presidency had to be resolved, even though that year the General Council had revised the
Rules. Olcott stated:
The only radical alteration has been in the term of the Presidential office, which we have fixed at
seven years, in the belief that a satisfactory incumbent will be indefinitely re-elected, while an
unsatisfactory one should not be immovably fixed in office.15
This was not applicable until after Olcotts death as he had been deemed President for life. It did, however,
establish that any future President was to be elected.
Walter Old (Sepharial) did Judges astrological horoscope. Sepharial. . . in India in 1893 calculated that
Judge would not live long and that Olcott need not worry about him that Mr. Judge could not live more
than three years.16 But still, Olcott plotted and planned just in case.
In 1895, summarizing the conspiracy against him, Judge wrote:
The design from the beginning was to get me out of the way to the Presidency of the T.S. Mrs. Besant
was to demand my resignation, after that Col. Olcott was to resign his office, then Mrs. Besant was
to be nominated as President; Vice-Presidency probably to go to Bert. Keightley, though on that the
outer proofs are not yet definite. In London last July [1894] Mrs. Besant said several times that the
object of the proceeding was to prevent my succeeding to the Presidency. . . .
In July [1894] she [Annie Besant] told me the first day, as explaining the sentence above quoted about
a high example [referring to Besants letter dated Feb. 14th, 1894 to Judge where she stated: That
you had made an intellectual blunder, misled by a high example.] and another, that I was largely
a victim, that her theory was first, that H.P.B. had committed several frauds for good ends and made
bogus messages; second, that I was misled by her example; and third, that H.P.B. had given me
permission to do such acts. She then asked me to confess thus and that would clear up all. I
peremptorily denied such a horrible lie, and warned her that everywhere I would resist such attack on
H.P.B. These are the facts, and the real issue is around H.P.B.17
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Although Olcott had received Judges March 10th, 1894, denial of the charges, he was confident that with
Besants prestige and Bertram Keightleys status with the American members that given the facts, Judge
would be removed. If the matter came to a tribunal hearing before a Judicial Committee, Olcott was
convinced that he held that Committee by a majority. If the matter should go before the Sections they
controlled two out of the three absolutely. Olcott was sure of India, sure of Britain, and sure that he had
nothing to fear in America as, at best, Judge could count on nothing more than a division and a split in the
American Section.
Upon becoming aware of Olcotts February 7th ultimatum to Judge, G.R.S. Mead and Bertram Keightley
(who was still in England), General Secretaries of European Section and Indian Section respectively, issued
an official joint response, dated March 27th, 1894. Olcotts situation was reversed. Both condemned Olcotts
procedures and the highhanded way in which he had proceeded against Judge. They felt that even if Judge
were guilty, he was entitled to the preliminary assumption of his innocence until that guilt was conclusively
established. It was evident that both Mead and Keightley saw at once that Olcott and Besant had grossly
violated the principles of universal brotherhood as well as the constitution of the Theosophical Society. In
addition, although Mead and Keightley were likely not aware when they sent Olcott their official response,
by then Olcott had sent Judge two more letters, both dated March 20th, 1894, in follow-up to Judges response
of March 10th. In the second letter, addressed To William Q. Judge, Esq., Vice President T.S., Olcott wrote:
Pending the decision of the Judicial Committee, I hereby suspend you from the office of Vice
President T.S. as required by our Revised Rules.18
Another unexpected disappointment for Olcott was Judges four page circular dated March 15th, 1894. Judge
had sent 5000 copies to as many theosophical members as he could, stating:
It is disagreeable to talk much of oneself, but sometimes it is necessary, and in this case it has been
made a necessity by the action of others, as also by the existence of many vague and suppressed
rumors which have been flying about in quarters not public but sufficiently active to compel action
on my part. Hence I now make known in advance that which has been spoken obscurely for some
time, and which is now before me officially from the President, Col. H. S. Olcott, to the end that all
members of the Society and friends of my own in all parts of the world shall be in possession of facts
so that surprise and perhaps confusion may be prevented.19
Two of Olcotts strongest allies and co-conspirators, Annie Besant and Walter Old, were on their way to
England, therefore, Olcott was left with the influential members of his General Council (among them,
Khandalavala, Chakravarti, and Subramania Iyer) to plan the next strategies. Olcott knew that if the matter
were to go before the Sections, he and his allies had the control they needed, except perhaps in America. It
was therefore decided that another section was needed to ensure that his plans would come to fruition. On
April 27th, 1894, Col. Olcott, P.T.S., in his usual autocratic way, dispensed another Executive Notice. It
is reprinted here in its entirety:
The undersigned avails of Mrs. Annie Besants forthcoming visit to the Australasian Colonies, to
invest her with the functions of Presidents Commissioner, with authority to represent him in all
current Society business during her tour, and act for him and in his name in disposing of the same,
as perfectly as though it were his individual act. Mrs. Besant is empowered to organize a Section or
Sections; to authorize the formation of Branches; to admit persons to Fellowship; to regulate
disagreements and disputes within the Society; to remit at her discretion in cases of great poverty the
whole or any part of any fee or other pecuniary contribution chargeable as a condition of membership;
and, generally, to exercise the same powers as are constitutionally enjoyed by the undersigned in his
Presidential capacity.
Mrs. Besant will, of course, make or cause to be made to the undersigned a full report of her official
actions under the above special commission and according to the Revised Rules of the Society.20
400
Besant had been in the Society barely five years by this time and yet Olcott willfully empowered her with
full authority to represent him in all business functions. Along with Olcott, she had visited the sacred places,
attended religious festivals and proclaimed herself an Indian at heart, as well as taking the Brahmanical
thread. Olcott had forged a strong accord with Annabai, her given name by the Hindus, and praised her highly
in The Theosophist with a long personal tribute and extensive articles covering her tour. Annie Besant, he
declared, was to share his burden.
Olcott had also ordered his General Council to revise the Rules of the Society to take into consideration
the disposing of Officers of the T.S. for misconduct. Section 2 of Article VI was changed to read:
[T]he President may be deprived of office at any time, for cause shown, by a three-fourths vote of the
Judicial Committee hereinafter provided for (in Section 3). . . .
Section 4 of Article VI declares that the same procedure shall apply, mutatis mutandis, to the cases
of the Vice-President and President; thus making the former, as well as the latter, amenable to the
jurisdiction of the Judicial Committee for offences charged against him.
It was under this customized clause that the Vice-President [was] arraigned.21
Olcott officially ratified and proclaimed the changes himself on December 31st, 1893.22 In reality, however,
there is substantial evidence to support the legal opinion that Olcott had no actual power and the Society he
operated was a de facto organization, and that the General Council of the T.S. was based on wholly illegal
proceedings.23 With this latest procedure, all the original Rules of the Society had been changed since its
inception in 1875.
Olcott had no plans to attend the Judicial Committee in London but circumstances quickly changed and he
was compelled to go. But Olcott was confident he had made all the correct changes necessary that the
plot to rid the Society of Judge would eventually be accomplished.
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Chapter 21
Dr. Keightley first quotes Annie Besant in her article Should Mr. Judge Resign?
Let me say I had drawn up six charges to lay before the committee. Under each of these charges I had
drawn up the evidence on which the charge depended. I had made what would be called a brief; the
charges were the indictments, and the evidence was practically the speech of the counsel stating what
the charges were. My only deviation from the legal action was this that I sent a complete copy of
the whole statement that I proposed to make, to Mr. Judge; that, I knew, was outside the legal duty,
but I did it in order that the case might be met upon its merits, that he might know everything I was
going to say, every document I was going to use, and every argument I was going to employ.2
402
5. At least six weeks, sometimes six months or more, are allowed before the trial for the
preparation by the parties of their respective evidence and witnesses. It has been forgotten that the
genuineness of all documents has to be proved on oath unless admitted to be genuine by the opposite
party. If evidence is required from abroad the Court will postpone the trial until it can be obtained.
The fact is that Mrs. Besant delayed taking procedure No. 2 until Mr. Judge was actually leaving the
U.S.A. to attend the trial, the date of which had already been fixed. This was a flagrant injustice
which would not be tolerated in any Court of Law. No opportunity whatever was given for inspection
and copying documents before the trial. This also is a gross breach of even legal procedure.
Besant boarded ship at Bombay on March 20th, 1894, at 5P.M. Besants document of so-called charges was
dated March 24th, 1894, on board the S.S. Peninsular, Indian Ocean.3 A letter mailed from India would
generally take approximately five to seven weeks for delivery to New York. By the end of April Besant had
arrived in London.4 It only took seven days for mail, via ship, to go from England to New York. Judge and
Dr. Buck arrived in London on July 4th which means they left New York on June 26th or 27th. If Judge
received Besants papers just before sailing, as stated above, Besant would have had to mail her papers
around June 15th or 16th or later for Judge to have received them on June 23rd, giving him three or four days
to prepare a defense. Besant held on to those papers for nearly two months before mailing them to Judge.
WHY? Did she purposely delay mailing her so-called charges to Judge to allow him the smallest possible
window of opportunity to prepare his defense?
Judge stated regarding the so-called charges, that:
It follows no rule of legal, military, or ecclesiastical procedure with which I am familiar. The real
charge was the one sent me by Col. Olcott of misuse of Mahtms names and handwritings; these
so-called charges should have been in the form of proper specifications under the main charge.5
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specification were the official documents to be used before the T.S. Judicial Committee, not one of
which could subsequently be withdrawn by Mrs. Besant, or anyone else, at their own discretion. I
have not seen this brief, as Mrs. Besant required Mr. Judge to give his word of honour that he would
show it to no one (Dr. Buck having previously seen it), and told several of us that she had ordered it
to be burned when the matter was supposed to be settled. It now appears that Miss C, who is not
a T.S. official, has it in charge and has shown it to members. Three members who have seen it pledge
their honour to the statement that it contains under a dozen of the pieces of evidence.
Moreover, Mr. Judge has not even seen all the evidence. None of that which is the property of Mr.
Bertram Keightley was even shown to him!
Furthermore, Mrs. Besant at Richmond, in July, 1894, promised Mr. Judge, in the presence of Mr.
Mead, Dr. Buck, Mr. B. Keightley, Mrs. A. Keightley and myself, that he should have copies of all
the evidence. Why did she so promise if, as is now said, Mr. Judge had knowledge of every document
and copies of the evidence before leaving America? As a portion of this conversation is now being
used against Mr. Judge and is distorted, I here give the real context. Other parts of that conversation
have yet wider bearing.
Mr. Judge asked Mrs. Besant if she would then give him back his letters, which were the so-called
evidence, seeing that the closing of the matter was under consideration. It was evidently useless to
talk about bringing the matter to a conclusion, if the alleged evidence was to be promptly handed over
to one of his avowed enemies, who would naturally have continued the office of prosecutor, even if
that office had been laid down by Mrs. Besant. In reply to Mr. Judges question, Mrs. Besant said that
they were not all hers to give. The question was not so strange as it is made to appear, as Mrs. Besant
and Mr. B. Keightley were, with Colonel Olcott, owners of the bulk if not all of the evidence socalled. Colonel Olcott had been and was consulted on this head. Mr. Judge then said, in almost these
exact words:
Well, Annie, if the case was reversed, I would take the consequences of returning you your letters
under the same circumstances. However, will you give me copies?
Mrs. Besant consulted Mr. Mead by a look and Mr. Mead said:
Why, yes, Annie, I think Judge ought to have copies.
Mrs. Besant then agreed that the copies should be given. Four of the seven persons present
remember this as here set forth. The copies NEVER have been given, and the statement made by Mr.
Judge in his letter, published by Mr. Mead in The Vhan,[March 1st, 1895 issue] and in The Irish
Theosophist for February, 1895, is in every particular correct.
Mr. Judge is being asked to reply to charges based upon letters and telegrams beginning 1875 down
to the present day, often very vaguely specified, as in the extract above, part of which he has not even
seen. And when he makes his very natural and necessary demand, untrue statements are made in
regard to him.
In any case it is not only unjust, but contrary to every code of common fairness, to endeavour to prove
charges such as those brought against Mr. Judge on the strength of brief extracts from supposed
letters. Everyone must know that carefully selected extracts can be made to prove almost any villainy.
It is significant that Mrs. Besant admitted to many persons in July, 1894, that she was aware these
charges could not be actually proven against Mr. Judge.
Mr. Judge has not at his command the lists of the Theosophical Society kept at Adyar, as have his
accusers, the statements even of Mrs. Besant and my step-uncle, Mr. Bertram Keightley, being
circulated all over the world by those lists, so that I must ask members who receive this statement of
Dr. Buck and myself to circulate it as widely as possible.
Included next is a shorter version of the same principal details, written by Judge, which was published in the
February 1895 issue of The Irish Theosophist, pp.85-86.
404
Supplement
405
Chapter 22
Judge Khandalavala, himself a Parsee, had placed Annie Besant on such a high pedestal and revered her so
much that it would be hard if not impossible for her to disregard such adulation. In fact, however, while he
was praising her he was also misleading her. In actuality, convincing Besant was easy once one appealed to
her ego and her sense of perceived moral justice. The prominent Indian members needed to convince
someone special (a dupe) with their concerns about Judge, whose influence they seemed to perceive as a
threat to the status quo of both Indian culture and religion. Khandalavala used her by encouraging her into
believing that Judge was guilty of fraud. Why? Besides his correlation between Hypatia and Besant, they
needed someone whom they could take advantage of one who would be in sympathy with them, their
religious beliefs and their culture. Most Indian members were not prepared to become a thorough
theosophist i.e. to do what D[amodar] Mavalankar did, give up entirely caste, his old superstitions and
show himself a true reformer. . . .2 Besant had become Indian, having adopted the Hindu religion, the
Hindu culture, their creed and their ethical values and teachings instead of being neutral as Olcott had
expressly warned the members who attended the Congress of the Parliament of Religions in 1893. Olcott,
still somewhat cognizant of Blavatskys teachings at the time, had emphasized to the Theosophical Members
attending the Congress the importance of remaining totally impartial that the Society was completely
neutral of any creeds. He stated:
Of course, it is to be distinctly understood that nothing shall be said or done by any Delegate or
Committee of the Society to identify it, as a body, with any special form of religion, creed, sect, or
any religious or ethical teacher or leader; our first duty being to affirm and defend its perfect
corporate neutrality in these matters.3
Blavatskys message since the inception of the Society had always been that:
Theosophists have no dogmas, exact no blind faith.5
Our mission does not consist in spreading any dogmas, whether Buddhist, Vedic or Christian; we are
independent of any formula, any ritual, any exotericism. . . . [T]he essential attitude of the
Theosophical Society is to declare and maintain the Truth common to all religions, the real Truth,
unsoiled by the inventions, the passions, and the requirements of the ages, and to invite all men to
partake of it, without distinction of sex, colour or rank, and, which is much more, of beliefs.6
406
With Besant adopting the Hindu Brahman culture and willing to defend and promote it as her own, why
would any Brahman, or any Indian for that matter, object? The Theosophist reported that during Besants
tour, under the title of The Battle of the Gods, the Amrita Bazar Patrika wrote:
[S]he extolled the Hindus, confessed herself a Hindu, and appealed to her countrymen and countrywomen, nay, to the world at large, to adopt the Hindu method, for the regeneration of the race.
The Calcutta paper, Hope, devoted no less than three columns of its leader to Mrs. Annie Besants arrival
in Calcutta, and Mrs. Annie Besants place in the movement of Hindu Revival. The Editor remarked:
Mrs. Annie Besants acceptance of the cardinal principles of Hindu Religion and Philosophy marks
a new epoch in the history of the development of the Theosophic Movement in India.7
In his Annual Address at the 20th Anniversary Convention held at Adyar in December 1895, Olcott stated:
I am most happy to tell you that the restraint formerly used towards myself as to the work in the
Eastern School of Theosophy has all passed away with the American crisis. I am now in a position
to cordially testify to the value of the teachings given by Mrs. Besant, to her personal competency,
and to recommend such as incline towards the study and practice of Indian Esotericism to place
themselves under her. There is no sign of dogmatic assumption nor of desire to interfere in the
practical working of the Society. And in every one of her relations with us Mrs. Besant has won our
love, confidence and respect.8
The Hindus had found the perfect person they could trust to help them keep their traditions as well as their
caste system while professing themselves true theosophists. After all in India it was a common saying that
every man is naturally and by right of descent a Theosophist.9 Because of the adoration Besant received
from the Hindus the whole of the Theosophical CAUSE was severely compromised.10
H.P. Blavatsky described the Indian members situation well in her Open Letter (Why I Do Not Return To
India) addressed To My Brothers of Aryavarta.
In India, . . . ever since my departure, the true spirit of devotion to the Masters and the courage to
avow it has steadily dwindled away. At Adyar itself, increasing strife and conflict has raged between
personalities; uncalled for and utterly undeserved animosity almost hatred has been shown
towards me by several members of the staff. There seems to have been something strange and
uncanny going on at Adyar, during these last years. No sooner does a European, most Theosophically
inclined, most devoted to the Cause, and the personal friend of myself or the President, set his foot
in Headquarters, than he becomes forthwith a personal enemy to one or other of us, and what is
worse, ends by injuring and deserting the Cause.11 [Italics added]
The fact is that many Hindus involved with the Theosophical Society were Orthodox Brahmans who did not
want to change. They resisted encouragement to change their attitude regarding caste, old superstitions and
beliefs and were particularly resistant to any attempts from Judge, who remained true to the original CAUSE
and continued to expound the same philosophy as H.P.B. The Hindus were not willing to be true
Theosophists as outlined in the Prayag Letter. Master M stated their position quite well in this Mahatma
Letter when he stated:
What have we, the disciples of the true Arhats, of esoteric Buddhism and of Sang-gyas to do with the
Shasters, and Orthodox Brahmanism?12
The objective at the time was to humiliate William Q. Judge before his peers and before the world, pressure
him into a confession of guilt as a fraud, just as had been attempted with his teacher and colleague, H.P.
Blavatsky. By destroying Judges reputation, H.P. Blavatskys reputation was being tarnished by association
she had supported him until the very end when she died on May 8th, 1891. Judge once wrote that she
always signed off her letters to him Yours till death and after, H.P.B.13
Supplement
407
Madame Blavatskys reputation had already been damaged by the Coulomb conspiracy. Not because she had
been denounced as being an imposter or allegedly having performed so-called Occult Phenomena by
alleged fraudulent manner, but because she was not supported or permitted to defend herself in a Court of
Law. The fifteen men of the Committee formed by Olcott were too embarrassed and would not support
her. They bought her a ticket and shipped her to Europe, away from the media, despite her being in terrible
health at the time. Blavatsky stated:
But the loyalty and courage of the Adyar Authorities, and of the few Europeans who had trusted in
the Masters, were not equal to the trial when it came. In spite of my protests, I was hurried away from
Headquarters. Ill as I was, almost dying in truth, as the physicians said, yet I protested, and would
have battled for Theosophy in India to my last breath, had I found loyal support.14
In his Historical Retrospect, Olcott focused only on H.P.B.s health when he touched upon her departure
from India. He wrote:
Madame Blavatsky falling ill to the point of death, at Adyar, was ordered by her physician to return
to Europe, and settle herself in a genial climate where she would for some time enjoy perfect solitude
and freedom from worry. So I overcame all her opposition, bought her tickets, and sent her away by
the French mail steamer of the 31st March, 1885. She had to be hoisted aboard in a hospital chair. Dr.
F. Hartmann, Miss Flynn, and Bawaji, a Madras Brahmin yogi, accompanied her.15
A few weeks later H.P.B. wrote to Olcott, expounding on the consequences of the actions taken. In her letter
of April 11th, 1885, she quotes Mahatma K.H.:
The Society has liberated itself from our grasp and influence and we have let it go we make no
unwilling slaves. He [Olcott] says he has saved it? He saved its body, but he allowed through fear its
soul to escape; it is now a soulless corpse, a machine run so far well enough, but which will fall to
pieces when he is gone. Out of the three objects the second alone is attended to, but it is no longer
either a brotherhood, nor a body over the face of which broods the spirit from beyond the Great
Range. His kindness and love of peace are great and truly Gautamic in their spirit; but he has
misplaced that kindness.16
408
Chapter 23
Both protested that Olcott was abusing his power as President of the T.S. and that if the inquiry were to take
place it would set a precedent from which the Society might not recover.
As this is the first time that any official proceedings against an officer of the Society have been
inaugurated, it is evident that the precedents thereby created will be of extreme importance in the
future history of the Society. Moreover the nature of the allegations involved is such as to cause
danger that the free and unsectarian basis of our organization may be compromised, by the
proceedings in relation thereto amounting to an official declaration by the Society of a dogma, to wit:
either belief or disbelief in the existence of Mahatmas.
Hence it is very necessary that every step taken in the premises should be strictly constitutional and
impartial, and should be most carefully considered both as making a precedent and as involving
constitutional questions of grave importance. It is therefore our plain duty as the General Secretaries
of two out of the three Sections of the T.S. and members of its General Council, to call your attention
officially to the following points with a view to safeguarding (1) the Constitution, (2) the nonsectarian character, and (3) the impartiality of the Theosophical Society.2
The Mahatmas certainly did not choose Olcott to become part of the T.S. for his proficiency as an attorney,
as in accounts of incidents researched Olcott does not come across as very effective. One must acknowledge
that he did do a lot for the Movement at first, but on the other hand, after being separated from H.P.B. he
became confused and easily swayed by the people who surrounded him and he ruled the Society as an
autocratic dictator, dispensing Executive Notices. A number of examples of his ineptitude appeared at the
meeting which took place in London in July 1894.
Olcott had suspended Judge as Vice-President of the Society pending disposal of the charges by an official
enquiry, a committee set up to investigate the accusations. At the July 7th, 1894, Council Meeting Judge
protested that he had never been legally elected as Vice-President of the T.S. and could not be charged as
such. In his March 15th, 1894, Circular Judge declared:
Supplement
409
The only charges that could be made against the Vice-President would be those of failing to perform
his duties, or misusing the office when there were any duties attached to it.3
Olcott objected saying that as far back as December 1888 at the Adyar Convention he had appointed Judge
as Vice-President in open convention. The choice was approved by the Delegates assembled. At another
Convention of 1890, with a new set of Rules, Bertram Keightley moved nomination of Judge, with Olcott
supporting it, and he was duly elected Vice-President. Judge claimed that although these things may have
occurred he was never officially given notice of the appointment, to which Olcott admitted that Judge was
correct. Nevertheless, because his name was duly published in the Official List, Olcott ruled that Judge was
in fact the Vice-President of the T.S.4
Judge raised another point, that even if he were Vice-President he
was not amenable to an enquiry by the Judicial Committee into certain alleged offences with respect
to the misuse of the Mahatmas names and handwriting, since if guilty the offence would be one by
him as a private individual, and not in his official capacity; he contended that, under our Constitution,
the President and Vice-President could only be tried as such by such Committee for official
misconduct that is misfeasances and malfeasances. An opinion of council in New York which he
had taken from Mr. M.H. Phelps, F.T.S.,5 was then read by him in support of this contention. The
matter was then debated. Bertram Keightley moved and G.R.S. Mead seconded:
That the Council, having heard the arguments on the point raised by William Q. Judge, it declares
that the point is well taken; that the acts alleged concern him as an individual; and that consequently
the Judicial Committee has no jurisdiction in the premises to try him as Vice-President upon the
charges as alleged.6
Olcott had to concur with the motion and it was declared carried. Judge did not vote. On Mr. Meads
motion, it was then voted that above record shall be laid before the Judicial Committee.7 Again Judge did
not vote.
The President then laid before the Council another question mooted by Mr. Judge, to wit: That his
election as successor to the President, which was made upon the announcement of the Presidents
resignation, because ipso facto [by the fact (or act) itself] annulled upon the Presidents resumption
of his office as President. On motion, the Council declared the point well taken, and ordered the
decision to be entered on the minutes. Mr. Judge did not vote.
The President called attention to the resolution of the American Convention of 1894, declaring that
his action in suspending the Vice-President, pending the settlement of the charges against him was
without the slightest warrant in the Constitution and altogether transcends the discretionary power
given the President by the Constitution, and is therefore null and void. Upon deliberation and
consideration of Sections 3 and 4, Article VI, of the General Rules, the Council decided (Mr. Judge
not voting) that the Presidents action was warranted under the then existing circumstances, and that
the said resolutions of protest are without force.
On motion (Mr. Judge not voting) the Council then requested the President to convene the Judicial
Committee at the London Headquarters, on Tuesday, July 10th, 1894, at 10 a.m.8
At the Judicial Committee Olcott admitted that he had made a number of errors. What he neglected to say
is that these errors were strategic ones which impeded him from gaining advantage over Judge. Olcott also
made errors in his legal proceedings against Judge. He admitted that when he sent Judge the February 7th,
1894, letter to either retire from all offices of the T.S or have a Judicial Committee convened to proceed with
the alleged matter of misuse of the Mahatmas names and handwritings, he had omitted to mark the letter
Private. With the letter addressed to Dear Sir and Brother, Judge perceived it as being an Open Letter
as well as a breach of the Constitution, and vehemently protested in a public circular addressed To all
Members of the Theosophical Society. Judge stated in his circular:
410
Hence the Presidents alternatives, offered as above, are mistakes, and are the initial steps to the
promulgation of the dogma of belief in the Masters.9
Olcott at first wanted to keep these accusations against Judge within the reach of his own supporters only,
but by making these errors Judge was enabled to take advantage of the situation and reach out to as many
people as he could so that
. . . all members of the Society and friends of my own in all parts of the world shall be in possession
of facts so that surprise and perhaps confusion may be prevented.11
Judge stated:
At that meeting of the Council it was decided that it would be a breach of the Constitution and of the
neutrality of the T.S. to try the question raised, because involving the existence or non-existence of
Mahatmas, and that I could not be tried by the Committee because that can only deal with the VicePresident for acts done as such.13
It was agreed that statements would be read by the accuser and the accused, Annie Besant and W.Q. Judge,
before the membership at the July 12th, 1894, Third Session of The European Convention of the T.S. Besant
stated: We come to you, our brothers, to tell you what is in our hearts. She then immediately shifted the
blame from herself onto others and denounced that all this mass of accusations against Judge was inspired
largely by personal hatred for Judge and hatred for the Theosophical Society, adding:
The charges were not in a form that it was possible to meet, a general denial could not stop them, and
explanation to irresponsible accusers was at once futile and undignified. . . . [Italics added]
Supplement
411
. . . [T]he charges themselves were repeated with growing definiteness and insistance [sic], until they
found expression in an article in The Theosophist signed by Messrs. Old and Edge. At last, the
situation became so strained that it was declared by many of the most earnest members of the Indian
Section that, if Mr. Judge became President with these charges hanging over him unexplained, the
Indian Section would secede from the T.S.
. . . I agreed to intervene, privately, believing that many of the charges were false, dictated and
circulated malevolently, that others were much exaggerated and were largely susceptible of
explanation, and that what might remain of valid complaint might be put an end to without public
controversy.15
Walter Old immediately wrote a letter to the President-Founder in London in which he objected to the two
paragraphs in the Statement of Mrs. Besant and asked for his letter to be published.
I . . . am greatly disturbed by the mention of my name (in conjunction with that of Mr. Edge) in what
appears to me, and must appear to all others, I think, as an invidious connection. . . .
The circular having now gone out to the public and to members of the Society, it is too late to request
that my name be withdrawn entirely from the proceedings, as I certainly should have done had I
known of it earlier; but I must ask you to kindly take such steps as will set it forth clearly to all to
whom this publication of the General Council may have gone, that neither Mr. Edge nor I are to be
regarded as in the category of persons referred to in the paragraph immediately preceding the mention
of our names. . . .16
Besant continued shifting the responsibility from herself by claiming that she was not responsible for her
actions. She stated: my vision is not always clear in these matters of strife and controversy which are
abhorrent to me.17 In biographies about Annie Besants life it is easy to come to the conclusion that her
whole life, up to this point, was a constant struggle in strife and controversy. One is left to wonder about
her clarity of vision in, for example, the accusation of grave immorality against H.S. Olcott which she
brought before Judge and E.A. Neresheimer in November/December 1891. A few years later Judge wrote
regarding this episode and the letter he subsequently sent to Olcott, against my inclination and judgment,
under great pressure and being also somewhat convinced by Mrs. Besants arguments:
I found for myself that Mrs. Besant had acted hurriedly, impulsively and injudiciously, and that no
such letter should have gone from me to Col. Olcott.18
Perhaps Besants great need for moral justice and exactitude blinded her from being an objective and fairminded individual.
As in many other instances she portrays herself as having sacrificed herself for the greater good of the
Society, all the while generating great strife against others by attacking and therefore breaking many of the
Rules of the Esoteric Section.
Besant then stated:
I did my utmost to prevent a public Committee of Enquiry of an official character. I failed, and the
Committee was decided on. And then I made what many of Mr. Judges friends think was a mistake.
I offered to take on myself the onus of formulating the charges against him. I am not concerned to
defend myself on this, nor to trouble you with my reasons for taking so painful a decision; in this
decision, for which I alone am responsible, I meant to act for the best. . . .
412
In due course I formulated the charges, and drew up the written statement of evidence in support of
them. They came in due course before the Judicial Committee, as you heard this morning. That
Committee decided that they alleged private, not official, wrongdoing, and therefore could not be tried
by a Committee that could deal only with a President or Vice-President as such. I was admitted to the
General Council of the T. S. when this point was argued, and I was convinced by that argument that
the point was rightly taken.19 [Italics added]
and that:
I regard Mr. Judge as an Occultist, possessed of considerable knowledge and animated by a deep and
unswerving devotion to the Theosophical Society. I believe that he has often received direct messages
from the Masters and from Their chelas, guiding and helping him in his work.21
One cant help but feel that she only acknowledged Judge as an Occultist because she wanted to include
herself as a recipient of messages from the Masters and could, therefore, be also regarded as an Occultist.
What was most disturbing to Judge about Besants statement before the Delegates of the European
Convention was that she once again broke the Rules of the Esoteric Section. Rule seven states:
If a member, whether falsely or truly, asserts that he has received letters or communications from
Masters, unless directed to divulge the same, he will ipso facto cease to derive any benefit from the
teachings, whether the fact be known or unknown to himself or to others. A repetition of such offense
gives the Head of the Section the right to expel the offender in discretion.22
Three years earlier, in her public lecture at the Hall of Science in August 1891, Besant declared that she had
received messages from the Masters.
Judge must have approached Besant about her statement, telling her that she had just broken one of the Rules
of the E.S. This in all likelihood infuriated Besant for she immediately prepared a statement condemning the
righteousness of Judge over her moral virtues and circulated it to all the London papers. Judge wrote:
Statements were made at the local Convention by Mrs. Besant and by me, and a resolution to close
the whole matter was passed, and these were included in the pamphlet [Neutrality of the
Theosophical Society]. This was intended in good faith to stop the whole thing in the T.S., but
almost the next day Mrs. Besant issued a circular to the world, sending it to all the London papers,
entitled Occultism and Truth, as a direct attack on me, asserting that the doctrine of the end justifies
the means must not be allowed to prevail in the T.S., though she did not name me. Since then she
has admitted that it was intended for me. With such a spirit, and after such an immediate going-back
upon a solemn resolution declaring the matter closed, it was plain that the matter was not closed.
Shortly afterwards The Westminster Gazette reopened the whole matter with additional and elaborate
charges of fraud and duplicity in the matter of messages from Masters, and this was immediately
seized upon by prominent English members, by Mrs. Besant and B. Keightley, as a reason for
reopening the disgraceful persecution of a fellow-member. Since then the attacks have been incessant,
and the end and purport of them all was to secure a vacancy in the Vice-Presidency. Mrs. Besant and
B. Keightley attended Indian meetings and, proposing and seconding, had carried a set of resolutions
reiterating charges and requesting the President to demand my resignation as Vice-President.23
This seeming about-face of Annie Besant and her flippant, castigating and snide remarks directed towards
Walter Old resulted in keeping the case against Judge before the public. By making it appear that she was
conciliatory, deflecting the strife onto others, she plotted the course of action without missing a beat. The
plan by the conspirators was to rid the Society of Judge and she was determined to achieve that goal. Olcott
and Besant, along with the Indian members, considered him a threat to their ideas of what the Society should
be. Each for their own reasons felt threatened by Judge. The Brahmans of India were particularly worried
Supplement
413
that the Society was promoting Buddhist ideals and they wanted to maintain and promote their own religious
creeds. The accusers were intent on destroying Judges reputation, and by doing so damages would also be
inflicted upon the reputation of Mme. Blavatsky. This assault on Judge was encouraged by the black forces
at work behind the scenes whose objective was to discredit the messengers of the Society and thereby also
desecrate the Teaching.
____________________
After the European Convention the accusers felt confident that at least they had achieved a small victory over
Judge. They did not obtain a confession but did end up getting him removed as the successor to Olcott. In
her editorial remarks On the Watch-Tower for the August 1894 issue of Lucifer Besant stated:
This number of LUCIFER contains the text of the Enquiry into the charges made against Mr. W.Q.
Judge. The statement appended to it, read by myself at the evening meeting of the Convention on July
12th, gives succinctly my own position in the matter, and contains all that I need say on the past. The
future lies before us, and the Society will go forward unbroken; it has surmounted imminent danger
of disruption, which threatened it. Had Mr. Judge succeeded to the Presidency, according to the
election of 1892, with these charges hanging over him, India would have rejected him and the Society
would have been rent in twain; but in the course of these proceedings, that election has been declared
null and void, and the choice of the Society of its future President remains unfettered.24
Besant continued her assault by fueling the flames of suspicion and doubt towards Judge. Following her
editorial she published her declaration in Truth Before and In All Things. This was meant to be the
introduction to her article Occultism and Truth. In it she stated:
The following declaration is aimed at an opinion too often finding expression among would-be
Occultists of an untrained type, that what is falsehood on the material plane may in some Occult
way be truth on a higher plane, and that the plea of Occultism excuses conduct inconsistent with
a high standard of righteous living. The spread of such views would demoralize the Society, and
would tend to degrade the lofty ideal of Truth and Purity which it has been the effort of every great
religious teacher to uphold and to enforce by example.25
In her statement at the Convention on July 12th, 1894, although she acknowledged the fact that Judge had
done nothing wrong officially, Besant personally believed that he was guilty of giving a misleading material
form to messages received psychically from the Master in various ways, without acquainting the recipients
with this fact.26 She stated she had been misled:
I believe that Mr. Judge wrote with his own hand, consciously or automatically I do not know, in the
script adopted as that of the Master, messages which he received from the Master or from chelas; and
I know that, in my own case, I believed that the messages he gave me in the well-known script were
messages directly precipitated or directly written by the Master.27
At the T.S. Convention in Boston in 1895, Judge made the following statement (read by Dr. A. Keightley
on his behalf):
I have to state, that during all the years since 1875 I have been taught much about occultism by the
Masters and their friends, and have been shown how to produce some phenomena, among others the
precipitation of writing for the Masters at certain times. . . . And, from that time on, . . . I have been
in communication with the Master and friends of his, receiving help and direction from him and them
in my Theosophic work and sending for him, very frequently, I may say hundreds of times
messages to friends and correspondents, without identifying them all as such.29
414
Blavatsky wrote in Lodges of Magic that, unless the individual has been given the key by which to test the
communication:
The inevitable consequence of applying his untrained judgment [to determine the genuineness of a
precipitated letter] would be to make him as likely as not to declare false what was genuine, and
genuine what was false.31
Blavatsky once wrote about Besant, She is not psychic nor spiritual in the least all intellect. . . .33 One
is led to conclude that, while she seemed to understand the process, and considered herself trained as an
Occultist (under the tutelage of Chakravarti), she lacked the intuition to discern their authenticity for herself
and wanted to be told directly. As Mahatma K.H. explains, the key to occult knowledge is intuition.34
Supplement
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Chapter 24
Summary
After careful examination of the available documents for The Judge Case it becomes evident that the
Orthodox Brahmans and the Shasters then associated with the Theosophical Society, because of their cultural
and religious degeneration over the years, had become influenced by Dugpas and Black Magicians.1 This was
the cause of most of the troubles for the Theosophical Society. The first objective of these Black Magicians
was to get H.P. Blavatsky away from Adyar and out of India forever. This they managed to do with the
accusations of fraud brought against her by the Coulombs in complicity with the missionaries in 1884 and
1885. With Blavatsky physically gone from Adyar the door opened wider and wider for them to invade and
influence the atmosphere there the Masters beneficent influences progressively dwindled and were
replaced proportionately by evil influences. Judge became aware of such incursions at the time he was at
Adyar and chose to return to America where the influences of the dark forces were not as pervasive and
penetrating, and where Theosophy could take root and do the most good for humanity.
The Adepts of the dark forces knew well what Judge was capable of accomplishing. They therefore
encouraged some of the Brahmans to discredit his work and his strong support for H.P.B. and the
Theosophical CAUSE. The Brahmans were easily convinced by occult means that they had to protect their
cultural heritage, their identity. With their tools of deception, doubt and suspicion, the evil forces also
managed to confuse the western men and women who went to work at Adyar. Their ideals became distorted
and backbiting became commonplace. Separateness in ideals became the focus, and unity of purpose became
simply an impossible dream. The Masters had made it clear that the men and women first chosen to work
for the CAUSE had no prior religious convictions or biases. Unfortunately the Indians were difficult to sway
from their predispositions.
Western orientalists, from the ancient Greeks to our more modern philosophers, have all drawn from the
abundant wealth which India possessed. The world is indebted to India for preserving much of the ancient
wisdom. Unfortunately, her people became indifferent, the caste system became enclosed and segregated
leaving only those of fortunate birth with access to their ancient wisdom. The have-nots, although
outnumbering the haves, were excluded from this knowledge, creating much suffering. With the advent of
Theosophy the Masters of Wisdom, the true keepers of that Knowledge, chose H.P. Blavatsky as their agent
to reintroduce the ancient wisdom, Brahma-Vidya, to the West. As with all things esoteric, those who were
infected with the old system refused to change and mounted a defense to destroy the new movement.
In his Presidential Address, on the growth of the Society, Olcott reported that by December 27th, 1893, there
were 322 living Branches. Of those branches, 175 were in Asia, 86 were in America, 48 in Europe and 13
in Australasia.2 With the excitement surrounding Annie Besants visit to India in 1893 the Indian section
only managed to increase the number of branches by 3 while in America the increase jumped by another 23
and Europe by 10. The problem was that although India reported a large number of Branches many were
inactive or basically dead. Sometimes statistics can be deceiving.
In Judges General Secretarys Report for the Ninth Annual American Convention, 1895, he exposed the
problems with the statistics reports of the Indian Section.
I beg to report that in accordance with your direction of last April I requested of the General Secretary
of the Indian Section information as to the rule prevailing there in regard to voting by members or
Branches. To this I have not received any reply; but unofficially I was informed by an F.T.S. who
spent eight months there lately that dues were collected direct from members because if attempted to
be collected though Branches there would be no collection; and he also stated that of the whole
alleged list of Branches dues were paid by members of only 90, and that not 40 of those 90 were
416
active. Recent official report shows that only 70 Branches voted on the question of removal of their
Headquarters.3
The facts became clear to Judge that India was not pulling its own weight when it came to collecting dues
to maintain its own expenses. In fact, Judge became aware that although the Indian Section reported a large
number of branches most of them only existed on paper. Of those active branches only a small minority of
members actually participated in the movement, which resulted in only a few who actually controlled the
movement in India. Few of the natives participated in lecturing from center to center most of that was
performed by foreigners. Therefore few Indians saw the virtues of becoming dedicated to Theosophy or to
the Theosophical CAUSE. On the other hand America had grown to 102 active branches by April 1895. In
his report from the American Section to the Adyar Convention for 1894 Judge reported:
There has been no diminution of the work in this country, no loss of interest with the public, but an
increase of public knowledge and inquiry, and of steady effort on the part of members, both new and
old, since last year. The largest meeting of the year was that at San Francisco, where in April we held
our Convention. It was fully attended by members and the public.4
Both in the Western and Eastern parts of America lecturers were going from center to center holding
meetings expounding the teachings of Theosophy.
As demand grew for funds the American section decided to change their method of accounting and record
keeping. Demands on the American Section to send more and more money each year to Adyar became
economically unfeasible and unattainable. At the Convention in San Francisco the membership changed the
Sections constitution by striking out the clause which required them to send Adyar 25% of their receipts,
most often leaving them unable to meet their own expenses. Judge explained:
For instance, much money paid out for lecturing is entered in the books, but as it often equals in
expense what comes as receipt, it would be hardly fair to consider that a basis for 25% to Adyar. And,
again, donations are made to us for particular purposes, and neither should those enter into the
calculation.5
Judge explained to Olcott that this was in no way a notice that the Americans intended to stop helping Adyar
but that the current practices could no longer be sustained as in the past. Sending 25% off the top was
considered unreasonable. This may have contributed significantly to Olcotts resentment towards Judge.
After the 1895 American Convention in Boston, Judge, now President of T.S. in America, sent Olcott
information of the action taken, along with copies of the Resolutions regarding the formation of the T.S. in
America. Albert Smythe, a fellow Irishman and friend of Judge, was present at the American headquarters
when Judge received word from Olcott. Smythe explained what happened.
The splitting of the Society was the act of Colonel Olcott who hated Judge. Judge had expected that
the Colonel would recognize the autonomous T.S. in America and affiliate it with Adyar, but Olcott
changed his mind and refused to do this, and Judge, who had apparently been advised to the course
taken in Boston in 1895 by Mrs. Tingley, was much disappointed with the Colonels refusal. I was
in the office at 144 Madison Avenue when Judge received a letter from Olcott postmarked and
stamped from Spain, and Judge remarked Now everything will be all right. But the letter was not
what Judge expected and his disappointment was very obvious. This phase of the situation has never
been explained, and I have never been able to learn whether Judge counted with warrant on Olcotts
support, or whether it was really a right-about-face on Olcotts part, for Judge certainly expected
Olcott to support him.6
Judge expected Olcotts support that Judge would be President of the American Society with Olcott the
International President of the Society. Legally this made a lot of sense, but Olcott did not see it that way. As
with his other interpretations of the laws, Judge was always one or two steps ahead of Olcott. This could
account for Olcotts acrimonious attitude towards Judge, in addition to his resentment of Judges close
association with H.P.B. and involvement with the Esoteric Section. Olcott always perceived that the E.S. was
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417
a threat to his authority and was chided for having those thoughts by Master K.H. himself.7 This, along with
the fact that he eventually lost contact with the Masters made him more resentful and bitter.8 Unfortunately,
he was being influenced by the forces which took control over Adyar after 1885. This can be easily
established by reviewing the people Olcott hired as managing editors of The Theosophist and for other
office duties.9 Olcotts demeanor towards Judge can be easily followed in the Chronology and in letters
included in some of the Appendices.
When Judge and the American members democratically voted to reform the American Section into one less
dependent on Olcott, he took exception to the American action. His response in this instance was similar to
that in 1889 when Blavatsky formed the Esoteric Section. Over the years Olcott had always been extremely
slow in his response to Judges requests when it came to organizing the movement in America. By this time
it appears the Masters could no longer communicate with Olcott because his mind was filled with suspicions,
resentments towards Judge and strongly influenced by other forces.
It seems that over the years Olcott, although well-meaning, got caught in delusions of his own making. For
example, in her response to a letter from Hartmann, H.P.B. wrote:
As to . . . that portion of your letter where you speak of the army of the deluded and the
imaginary Mahatmas of Olcott you are absolutely and sadly right. Have I not seen the thing for
nearly eight years? Have I not struggled and fought against Olcotts ardent and gushing imagination,
and tried to stop him every day of my life? Was he not told by me (from a letter I received through
a Yogi just returned from Lake Mansarovara) in 1881 (when he was preparing to go to Ceylon) that
if he did not see the Masters in their true light, and did not cease speaking and enflaming peoples
imaginations, that he would be held responsible for all the evil the Society might come to? Was he
not told that there were no such Mahatmas, who Rishi-like could hold the Mount Meru on the tip of
their finger and fly to and fro in their bodies (!!) at their will, and who were (or were imagined by
fools) more gods on earth than a God in Heaven could be, etc., etc., etc.? All this I saw, foresaw,
despaired, fought against; and, finally, gave up the struggle in utter helplessness. . . .
. . . Olcott to this day is sincere, true and devoted to the cause. He does and acts the best he knows
how, and the mistakes and absurdities he has committed and commits to this day are due to something
he lacks in the psychological portion of his brain, and he is not responsible for it. Loaded and heavy
is his Karma, poor man, but much must be forgiven to him, for he has always erred through lack of
right judgment, not from any vicious propensity.10
Annie Besant, although very intelligent, was quite naive about occult matters until she received some training
from Chakravarti. Unfortunately his psychic training drew her away from the true Theosophical CAUSE as
set out by the Masters and drew her into a world of fancy and mediumship which H.P.B. had tried to draw
people away from in the first place. We only have to review her later associations, for example with C.W.
Leadbeater, to realize that she took the Theosophical Society in a completely different direction.
Besant summarizes and ties in her own moral convictions as well as the Indian position quite well while
describing Chakravarti.
Among his own people he is honoured and trusted, not only as a Brhman, but as maintaining the
Brhman traditions in a careless and loose-living age.11
G.N. Chakravarti was fearful of Judges theosophical influence; he was concerned that through Judges
efforts Brahmanism in India would be eroded. Using his occult influence and his constant magnetization over
Besant he was able to work on her linga sharira to release it out of her body. With Besants strong desire
(strong kamic forces) for justice, he was able to take advantage of these needs and thereby assist her to harass
Judge astrally and physically12 in order to get a confession from him. She thought that she could frustrate
Judge, hence, confuse him. Judge was aware of these techniques but in addition to this, and his health
418
problems (he suffered from Chagres fever, a malignant type of malarial fever which often leaves a
predisposition to tuberculosis in its trail), he also faced the efforts of the Dark Powers to kill him, the
venomous hatred of his persecutors and slanderers, once his close associates, supplying the lines of contact
for the major onslaught.13 He was too tired to keep up the fight by staying where he could be found. This
intrusion created many problems for Judge which further affected his vitality.
To rehabilitate his health he decided to move around so that his enemies could not trace him down. He wrote
from Cincinnati on May 20th, 1895, I am away from home for my health [which is] much hurt by others
hate.14 Secrecy became necessary. Judge wrote to Hargrove, June 14th, 1895, There was no need for me
to write you because we communicate other ways. He added:
Claude [Falls Wright] is now running the T.S. office in my absence, as it appears I shall have to stay
away a considerable time. I am on the move like a pilgrim. But I am better a little each day. Been with
Dr. Buck for a month. Dont give away the address. Address will remain 144 Madison Avenue for
all.15
By this time Judge could only trust a few of his friends, one of whom was E.T. Hargrove who looked after
many of Judges needs until he died.
In his May 20th, 1895 letter Judge stated the following about Annie Besant:
I wish we could all ignore Mrs. B. once and for all. She lives by fighting or flattery now. But what
blasphemy to say that, even be I guilty, the Master would stoop so low as to bid her hound me over
the world trying to murder my character. I pity her in her next life. It will not be I who will then annoy
her but the hundreds who have been insulted and outraged by her acts and words agst me. Instead
of one she will then have hundreds of enemies and obstructions.16
Years of fighting Chagres fever, and after 1894 the evil influences and the hatred sent towards him, Judge
could no longer sustain the fight and died at 9:00 a.m.17 on March 21st, 1896.18 The Masters of the
Theosophical Movement did not intervene as they had done with Blavatsky on many occasions. It is
presumed by some that the Masters withdrew their direct influence following the deaths of Blavatsky and
Judge, and that the Movement was left to karma and to those who could find the true spirit upon which it had
been founded. Judge died with a longing to continue to serve the Theosophical CAUSE. His accusers and
those who influenced them cast a large shadow of doubt and suspicion, a spell, over Judges work in the
Theosophical Movement. This created a rift which has never healed and most likely never can because of
the divisions of philosophy which transpired. These divisions, likely orchestrated, have given people the
choice between True Wisdom and pseudo wisdom.
Those who followed Judge also broke into factions, each believing they had captured the true spirit of the
Movement and had the proper leader in place to continue Judges endeavors. With Judge barely dead his
followers reorganized themselves and quickly became at odds with one another, some believing at first that
Judge had found his successor while others recanted. With all these organizations in place, each believing
they had the approval of the Masters and unable to move the other into reconciliation, Judge remained unvindicated, and basically forgotten by those who had cast him aside as a fraud. Judge was a Founding
Member of the original Theosophical Society. H.P.B. on at least one occasion referred to him as My CoFounder, W.Q. Judge, General Secretary in America.19 He was also the only North American initiated by
the Masters, in 1884.
Franz Hartmann, who H.P.B. once thought she could train as an occultist, and who had been exposed to the
astral influences of the black magicians at Adyar, expressed succinctly when reviewing Edmund Garretts
Isis Very Much Unveiled:
To me it appears that the author is a clever and sharp reasoner, but without a great deal of intuition,
or to express it in theosophical language, one in whom Kama-Manas has been excessively
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419
developed at the expense of Buddhi-Manas, as is generally the case among the higher classes of
educated Englishmen, whose principal characteristic is superficiality of thought with a great
knowledge of insignificant details but absent of profundity of intelligence.20
Hartmanns comments were specific and to the point. He made sure that his perception of the facts not only
included those outside Theosophical circles but also those highly intellectual persons, many of whom were
in complete support of Besants actions. Among these were Bertram Keightley, G.N. Chakravarti, Walter
Old, N.D. Khandalavala and others with strong intellectual capabilities. One interesting note is that all the
persons involved with the writing of Besants The Case Against W. Q. Judge were lawyers. It is amazing
that this document, which was intended to be her prosecutors brief, was such a dud. That alone indicates
that Besants actions to bring Judge before the Judicial Committee were not the real reason in mind at the
time. The real reason was to bring accusations against Judge in order to discredit him before his peers, ruin
his reputation and prevent him from ever becoming President or hold office in the Theosophical Society ever
again.
Ruining a mans reputation is worse than killing his body for the body is dissipated after death but the
thoughts of injury to a mans character may continue to affect that Ego for a long time thereafter. Such
harmful actions condemn that Ego to be subjected to resentment and prejudice in subsequent lives. Persons
bringing about or executing accusations based on unsubstantiated innuendoes will also suffer (seemingly)
great injustices as a result of their previous actions.
In 1906, while in America and away from the influences of Adyar, Olcott confessed shortly before he died
that he had wronged Judge, not wilfully or with malice; nevertheless, I have done this and I regret it.21 This
admission in itself indicates that Olcott was not in full control of his own mind at the time his actions were
taken against Judge that his mind was being influenced by external forces.
Annie Besant although not as forthright in her reflection did admit:
As I said, I too have made many mistakes, and that in regard to Judge, I was young in the Movement
then, impetuous, and in my zeal did things that I would not think of doing to-day. Judge did a great
work in the West and although I still believe that some of his claims are untenable, he did a splendid
work for Masters and for Theosophy in America.22
As for the others involved in conspiring to formulate unsubstantiated accusations against W.Q. Judge, there
are no records available to show that any effort was made by them to make amends. Most of these people
became less and less involved with the T.S. Bertram Keightley had given H.P.B. a promise that he would
never leave the T.S. and he never did, but he found himself so utterly out of touch with it in India . . . that
he took no part in its activities.23 He became very demoralized with the Society after Besant took it over.
He lived out his last years near his friend, G.N. Chakravarti, in Allahabad and surrounded himself with a
number of highly educated Hindus and developed a good understanding of the Advaita Vedanta.24
After about eleven years, Annie Besants association with Gyanendra N. Chakravarti came to an end. It was
reported that she had been disappointed in her expectations from her association with him.25 Little is
recorded of Chakravartis involvement with Besant and the T.S. but his influence over her is quite noticeable
in her writings which
were tinged with Brahmin thought and dogma, and she never recovered the independence and purity
of Theosophic thinking, for she had barely escaped from the Guruship of Mr. Chakravarti until she
fell under the spell of Mr. Leadbeater and his psychic revelations.26
420
N.D. Khandalavala remained with the Theosophical Society and served on the General Council of the T.S.
well into the 1930s. He maintained possession of much archival material, especially the most famous letter
from H.P.B., Why I Do Not Return to India, which was published for the first time in 1932.
The Dugpas and Black Magicians who acted upon the naive and the weak-minded theosophists achieved their
goal of destroying what they could of the Theosophical Society. They played with members best virtues and
ruined much of the Theosophical CAUSE, to the extent that most theosophists today are still caught in the web
of Maya which was spread over the Society. Some maintain and believe that they are following the Original
Program as set up by the Masters, but how can they be sure when there are more enemies within the
Theosophical Movement than there are without? These members still believe that if they follow their leaders
and remain loyal to these organizations, salvation and help will come from the Masters that if they join
certain Esoteric groups they will be the ones chosen to achieve enlightenment while those outside will not.
Although there is more theosophical literature available today than at any time prior, the amount of
dogmatism has increased in proportion.
During a series of crises in 1889-1890 H.P.B. wrote what appear to have been prophetic words regarding both
Judge and the Society. In the Preliminary Explanations to E.S. Instruction No. III she affirmed that Judge
has ever remained faithful to his original pledge. She claimed that although he was being targeted, Brother
Judge refuses to defend himself, then stated the following:
Is it the part of a Brother-Fellow to remain indifferent and inactive when one who has done so
much for the noble and sacred CAUSE is vilified for its sake . . . when he is selected by the enemy as
the mark of all the lying and damaging attacks of those who wish to destroy the Society in order to
build on its ruins another, a bogus Body of the same name, and to enshrine therein an idol with feet
of clay and a heart full of selfishness and evil, for the admiration and worship of credulous fools? Can
we allow them to achieve this object when they seek to ensure success by ruining the character of this
most unselfish champion of our T.S.?27
Those who really knew Judge had a great deal of respect for the man. One incident worth noting is the
following, which appeared in The Irish Theosophist.
In the Convention of 1895, some ninety persons out of four thousand or thereabouts, were found,
after six months active work and search, to sign a species of memorial unfavorable to Mr. Judge. Not
half a dozen of these were active workers. With a single exception they could not be said to be
persons of any marked standing. They had, as against them in judgment, men and women whose
names are as well known in foreign cities, or upon the great foreign exchanges, or through the United
States, as they are known in the cities of their residence. Commenting upon this fact, a party of such
men were lunching in New York, just after the Convention, 1895, and said to an English guest: Here
are we, whose word is our bond in the communities where we live and beyond them; we can raise
thousands of dollars upon our mere word at half an hours notice, and that financial test is the great
test of the present time. We know Judge intimately; we have seen him almost daily for years. He can
have anything he wants of us, and he wants nothing for himself. We know his character and daily life;
the whole community knows it, and we know these charges are untrue. A man is known where he
lives as he is known nowhere else. We are by no means fools, as our business contemporaries can tell
you, and we stand by Judge to a man.28
If we judge a tree by its fruit then we should judge William Q. Judge by his deeds. He stated:
We have entered on the dim beginning of a new era already. It is the era of Western Occultism and
of special and definite treatment and exposition of theories hitherto generally considered. We have
to do as Buddha told his disciples: preach, promulgate, expound, illustrate, and make clear in detail
all the great things we have learned. That is our work, and not the bringing out of surprising things
about clairvoyance and other astral matters, not the blinding of the eye of science by discoveries
impossible for them but easy for the occultist. The Masters plan has not altered. He gave it out long
ago. It is to make the world at large better, to prepare a right soil for the growing out of the powers
Supplement
of the soul, which are dangerous if they spring up in our present selfish soil. It is not the Black Lodge
that tries to keep back psychic development; it is the White Lodge. The Black would fain have all the
psychic powers full flower now, because in our wicked, mean, hypocritical, and money-getting people
they would soon wreck the race. This idea may seem strange, but for those who will believe my
unsupported word I say it is the Masters saying.29
The End
421
422
ADDENDUM
Certain issues need to be addressed today regarding the failure by those who have controlled the information,
namely the Presidents of the Theosophical Society in Adyar, to make public important documents relating
to the Judge Case. Olcott charged Judge of alleged misuse of Mahtms names and handwritings, which
was immediately followed by Besants brief of six so-called charges. Since then most theosophical
historians have ignored this controversial case. Adyar has maintained that Judge was guilty, and historical
records have been kept in check to reflect this. Because Adyar had control over most of Blavatskys papers,
Olcotts papers, Judges letters to H.P.B., Olcott and others, it has been relatively easy to maintain the status
quo. Most people who came to the Society after this whole affair were sincere students who blindly followed
their leaders (who were hoping that it would just be ignored). But, to quote Judge, sincerity does not confer
of itself knowledge, much less wisdom.1
Accurate history is important and its study by any would-be theosophist should be encouraged. It should not
be distorted to protect a Societys image. Responsibility to protect and defend historical archives from
corruption falls upon officials entrusted with this obligation. One is left with the impression that the powers
controlling Adyar policy may not want certain truths exposed.
History is never totally forgotten and can sometimes rise from the ashes, Phoenix-like, to punish those who
have ignored it. Theosophical organizations have a responsibility to release historical documents to its
membership so they may be made aware of the karmic ties they are associating themselves with. It is
incumbent upon the membership to request that these documents be released.
Among the items listed below are records covering the time period of Judges stay in India. These are
valuable documents which could supply pertinent information to clear up many controversial details.
Some of the important historical documents that should be in the Archives at Adyar include:
1.
Exhibit A, which H.S. Olcott, Annie Besant, Judge Khandalavala, Walter R. Old, W.Q. Judge and
Dr. Buck, and others have seen.
2.
The Register in which Judge kept a record of all the witnesses who viewed the Shrine and the
Occult Room at Adyar.
3.
The Visitors Book kept during the time Judge was at Adyar. All persons coming and going had to
sign in and out.
4.
According to Josephine Ransom in A Short History of the Theosophical Society, Annie Besant
kept a Diary of events when she traveled during the years 1893, 1894 and 1895 in which she
recorded details of important incidents involving her.2
5.
The letters from W.Q. Judge to H.S. Olcott which were not published in The Theosophist. The
letters published were the ones where we find Judge struggling during his years of probation, before
he went to India where he was initiated by Master M.
6.
All the documentation mentioned in Annie Besants The Case Against W.Q. Judge, which was
never supplied with her document.
7.
Before leaving India in 1884 Judge left letters behind to Olcott and to H.P.B. explaining and
assuring them of his continued affection and friendship.
8.
Documents, Records, and Private Letters in connection with the Coulomb, Judge, Leadbeater and
other Cases, and with many other incidents; all in the Archives of the Theosophical Society
according to Josephine Ransom in A Short History of the Theosophical Society, p.563.
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423
In 1889 Richard Harte wrote Applied Theosophy in which he equated Adyar to the Rome of
Theosophists. This statement3 was and is still accepted and promoted by Adyar as their philosophy,
attributing it to Olcott all these years. But Adyar is not the centre of the Theosophical Movement and true
theosophists do not need Adyar in their hearts in order to aspire to the true CAUSE as established by the
Masters and H.P. Blavatsky, and sustained and promoted by William Q. Judge.
Notes
425
426
7. Old Diary Leaves, Third Series (1904), pp.90-94, and Michael Gomes Blavatsky Lecture 2001, pp.19-21.
8. Old Dairy Leaves, Third Series, 1895, p.94. But the problem was not settled, as the members of the Hermetic Branch wished
to belong also to the London Lodge, so as to benefit by the course of instruction being given there. This Col. Olcott disallowed, and
made a Provisional Rule forbidding multiple membership. This decision upset the plans for the Hermetic Lodge. The Colonel
suggested that Mrs. Kingsford return her Charter and form her friends into an independent Society, and thus make it feasible for them
to belong to both. This was done. A Short History of the Theosophical Society, Josephine Ransom, 1938, pp.198-199.
9. BCW, Vol. 1, (1977), p.438.
10. Creating the New Age: Theosophys Origins in the British Isles. Michael Gomes Blavatsky Lecture 2001, p.19.
11. BCW, Vol. 1, (1977), p.498.
12. The Word, Vol. 14, March 1912, p.328.
13. Damodar, Sven Eek, p.76.
14. Judge had written other mystical articles before, such as The Wandering Eye, The Tell Tale Picture Gallery and A Weird
Tale. All of these articles were later republished in a small and very rare 86 page book titled Occult Studies. It was privately printed
and published in Boston, Mass. by W.W. Harmon most likely after Judges death in 1896.
15. The Theosophist, Vol. 5, July 1884, pp.251-254.
16. The Theosophist, Vol. 5, Feb. 1884, p.122. An Editors Note following Judges comments states he was not justified in these
remarks and that Sinnett had most decidedly for the first time clearly explained to the world of the profane the allegories that lay
scattered in the Hindu sacred literature.
17. Report of Investigation, p.59.
18. The Word, Vol. 14, March 1912, p.332.
19. The Word, Vol. 15, April 1912, p.17.
20. Mahatma Letters, Letter No.LXXXIV [84], pp.397-398. Mohini had been selected by the Masters to accompany Blavatsky on
this European trip to impress the French and to educate the English. He had been sent notes by K.H. just prior to H.P.B.s arrival in
Paris one of which stated: Appearances go a long way with the Pelings. One has to impress them externally before a regular,
lasting, interior impression is made. Remember and try to understand why I expect you to do the following: When Upasika [H.P.B.]
arrives, you will meet and receive her as though you were in India, and she your own mother. You must not mind the crowd of
Frenchmen and others. . . . it is the interior man, the indweller you salute, not H.P.B. Letters from the Masters of the Wisdom,
Second Series, Letters 62 and 63, pp.111-113.
21. Babula or Baboola. His real name was Vallah Bulla. Report of Investigation, p.133.
22. Old Diary Leaves, Third Series (1895), pp.79, 86.
23. The Word, Vol. 15, April 1912, p.17.
24. The Word, Vol. 15, April 1912, p.18.
25. The Word, Vol. 15, April 1912, pp.18-19.
26. The Word, Vol. 15, April 1912, pp.22-23.
27. The Word, Vol. 15, April 1912, p.22.
28. Vania, p.180.
29. The Word, Vol. 15, April 1912, p.18.
30. Mahatma Letters, Letter No. CXXXIV [134] (The Prayag Letter), pp.461-464.
Notes
427
31. Experiencing such occult powers is often equated to undergoing surgery. As with any operation the patient has to convalesce,
therefore, Judge would have gained in strength and confidence over time. The old axiom applies here also: one has to learn to walk
before one can run.
32. Rebirth of the Occult Tradition, Boris de Zirkoff, p.5. and BCW: The Secret Doctrine, Vol. 1, as Historical Introduction,
p.5.
33. Lucifer, Vol. 8, July 1891, p.359.
34. Reminiscences of H.P.B., pp.102-104. Much of Judges conversations with H.P.B. while they were in France centered around
Elementals and Elementaries. After Judge started The Path and his other magazines to answer questions for students, he included
some of his knowledge which he received through his experiences and that which was imparted to him by H.P.B. at that time, in 1884.
To mark the fiftieth anniversary of Judges passing the Bombay Company (ULT) in India published a small book, Vernal Blooms,
which included much of that occult knowledge.
35. LBS, Letter from Judge to H.P.B. dated Feby. 5, 1886, p.313.
36. The Theosophist, Vol. 53, November 1931, p.197.
37. The Theosophist, Vol. 53, November 1931, p.197.
38. The Theosophist, Vol. 53, November 1931, p.196.
39. The Theosophist, Vol. 53, November 1931, p.201.
40. Mahatma Letters, Letter No. LXII [62], p.355.
41. My Guest, Francesca Arundale, p.49.
428
Notes
429
430
Notes
431
12. See Appendix I ~ Judges Pseudonyms and Words of Wisdom, for a list of William Q. Judges pseudonyms.
13. WQJ T. Pioneer, p.14; Irish Theosophist, Vol. 3, June 1895, p.156.
14. Sunrise, April/May 1996, p.105. See Report of Proceedings for the Second Annual Convention of the Theosophical Society
in America, New York, April 26th and 27th, 1896, Presidents Report, pp.10-13.
15. Old Diary Leaves, Fourth Series (1910), p.508.
432
Notes
433
434
p.7.) In December 1896 Olcott named some of the prominent financial supporters: The Blavatsky Lodge acquired permanent
premises in Avenue Road, through the abundant generosity of Mrs. Besant, the Countess Wachtmeister, the Messrs. Keightley and
others. . . . General Report of the 21st Anniversary of the T.S., 1896, p.15, and A Historical Restropect 1875-1896 of the
Theosophical Society, p.14.
10. General Report of the 15th Convention and Anniversary of the TS, 1890, p.59. In A Short History of the T.S., p.257, Ransom
writes this as having taken effect in August 1889. The General Report, however, states that in the early part of this year [1890] .
. . the Theosophical Society had become possessed, through Mrs. Annie Besants generosity, of the lease of her house as its HeadQuarters . . ., p.58. Alterations were undertaken and additions built. The headquarters were inaugurated July 3rd, 1890. The
Theosophist, Vol. 11, August 1890, pp.661-662.
11. Old Diary Leaves, Third Series (1904), p.379.
12. General Report of the 16th Convention and Anniversary of the TS, 1891, p.49.
13. Old Diary Leaves, Fourth Series (1910), p.418.
14. See Chronology, Apr. 4, 1888 and March 9, 1890 entries.
15. Rebirth of the Occult Tradition, pp.65-66.
16. See Chronology, May 9, 1891(est.) entry.
17. Irish Theosophist, Vol. 4, March 1896, p.115.
18. Isis Very Much Unveiled, 2nd ed., p.28.
19. For example: Arthur H. Nethercot mentions this telegram on p.357 in The First Five Lives of Annie Besant. His references are
The Theosophist, July 1891; Bright, pp.20-21; Williams, The Passionate Pilgrim, p.204. We do not have the reference for Bright
and the latter is mentioned on p.205 not 204; the first reference does not exist in The Theosophist.
20. The Case Against W.Q. Judge, p.82.
21. The Theosophist, Vol. 12, June 1891, Insert in Supp. at p.lxxi.
22. Old Diary Leaves, Fourth Series (1910), pp.301-303.
23. Old Diary Leaves, Fourth Series (1910), p.303.
24. The Theosophist, Vol. 12, September 1891, p.707.
25. The Case Against W.Q. Judge, p.42.
26. Old Diary Leaves, Fourth Series (1910), p.172.
27. Annie Besants Address of Welcome to the President-Founder at the First Annual Convention of the T.S. in Europe, held in
London, July 9th and 10th. 1891. The Theosophist, Vol. 12, September 1891, pp.705-706.
28. General Report of the 19th Anniversary of the TS, 1894, pp.39-46.
29. A Short History of the T.S., p.257.
Notes
435
436
Notes
437
438
Notes
439
Chapter 19 ~ G. N. Chakravarti
1. The Path, Vol. 8, October 1893, p.205.
2. The Path, Vol. 8, August 1893, p.155.
3. The Path, Vol. 8, October 1893, p.205.
4. Theosophy, Vol. 10, May 1922, p.203.
5. Theos. Congress Worlds Fair 1893, p.14.
6. Theosophical Glossary, ULT, 1973, p.251.
7. Inner Group Teachings of H.P. Blavatsky, compiled and annotated by Henk J. Spierenburg, 2nd and revised edition, 1995, p.46.
8. Mahatma Letters, Letter No. LXXVI [76], p.376.
9. BCW, Vol. 5, (1950), p.270.
10. BCW, Vol. 5, (1950), p.270.
11. Theosophy, Vol. 10, May 1922, p.203.
12. The Path, Vol. 8, August 1893, p.159.
13. The Vahan, Vol. 3, August 1, 1893, p.7, and September 1, 1893, p.7.
14. The Vahan, Vol. 3, September 1, 1893, p.7.
15. First Five Lives of Annie Besant, pp.390-391.
16. Lucifer, Vol. 12, August 1893, p.605. Chakravarti explained where he was from in his first address at the Theosophical
Congress. He stated: I come from the city of Allahabad, the capital of the Northwestern Provinces of India, the Hindu name of which
is Pryaga. It is called the Tvitha-raja, or the king of the different places of pilgrimage, as it is situated on the confluence of two of the
most sacred rivers of the Hindusthe Ganges and the Jumna. (Theos. Congress Worlds Fair 1893, p.13.) The Prayag
Theosophical Society was established on November 6th, 1881, and was renamed Prayag Psychic Theosophical Society effective
January 1st, 1883.
17. The Theosophist, Vol. 15, December 1893, p.194. They left New York on the City of Paris on September 27th, 1893. (The Path,
Vol. 8, October 1893, p.224.)
18. Theosophical Quarterly, Vol. 29, July 1931, p.40. See Appendix D ~ Letters From William Q. Judge to E.T. Hargrove.
19. The Path, Vol. 10, June 1895, pp.97-98.
20. Isis Very Much Unveiled, 2nd ed., pp.124, 129.
21. Cdn. Theosophist, Vol. 19, March 1938, pp.5-6.
440
Notes
441
4. The Vahan, Vol. 3, May 1, 1894, p.6. The Vahan came out on the 1st of the month. In the May issue there is an announcement
by Besant about a new policy at Headquarters, and a list of her forthcoming lectures. Also Alice Cleather mentions Annie Besant as
having returned by the time Cleather posted her May report to The Theosophist.
5. Reply by William Q. Judge, p.6. See Appendix A. ~ The Case Against W.Q. Judge, for full text.
442
8. Neutrality of the T.S., pp.9-10, and Lucifer, Vol. 14, August 1894, p.456.
9. Charges Against William Q. Judge, To All Members of the Theosophical Society, (4pp.), p.3.
10. Neutrality of the T.S., p.4, and Lucifer, Vol. 14, August 1894, p.450.
11. Charges Against William Q. Judge, To All Members of the Theosophical Society, (4pp.), p.1.
12. Neutrality of the T.S., p.7, and Lucifer, Vol. 14, August 1894, p.454.
13. Report of Proceedings, 1895, p.10.
14. Neutrality of the T.S., p.8, and Lucifer, Vol. 14, August 1894, p.454.
15. Neutrality of the T.S., p.11, and Lucifer, Vol. 14, August 1894, p.458.
16. Lucifer, Vol. 14, August 1894, pp.463-464. See Dec. 29, 1929 for a biographical sketch of Walter Old in the Chronology.
17. Neutrality of the T.S., p.12, and Lucifer, Vol. 14, August 1894, pp.458-459.
18. Reply by William Q. Judge, p.11.
19. Neutrality of the T.S., p.12, and Lucifer, Vol. 14, August 1894, p.458.
20. Neutrality of the T.S., p.12, and Lucifer, Vol. 14, August 1894, p.459.
21. Neutrality of the T.S., p.13, and Lucifer, Vol. 14, August 1894, p.460.
22. BCW, Vol. 12, (1980), p.494.
23. Report of Proceedings, 1895, pp.10-11.
24. Lucifer, Vol. 14, August 1894, p.441.
25. Lucifer, Vol. 14, August 1894, p.441. Truth Before and In All Things.
26. Neutrality in the T.S., p.13, and Lucifer, Vol. 14, August 1894, p.460.
27. Neutrality in the T.S., p.13, and Lucifer, Vol. 14, August 1894, p.460.
28. Neutrality in the T.S., p.13, and Lucifer, Vol. 14, August 1894, p.460.
29. Reply by William Q. Judge, p.15.
30. The Path, Vol. 8, November 1893, p.233, and Echoes of the Orient, Vol. 1, p.370.
31. Lucifer, Vol. 3, October 1888, p.93.
32. Neutrality in the T.S., p.14, and Lucifer, Vol. 14, August 1894, p.461.
33. Cdn. Theosophist, Vol. 27, January 1947, p.340. (See Chronology, Dec. 15, 1946 entry.)
34. Mahatma Letters, Letter No. XLVIII [48], p.279.
Chapter 24 ~ Summary
1. The Masters of the T.S. were well aware of the impending problems the Shasters and Orthodox Brahmans could cause to the
Theosophical Movement. In 1881 Master Morya dictated, through H.P.B., what became known as the Prayag Letter. (See Mahatma
Letters, 2nd edition, pp.461-463). This letter was a forewarning of the problems which could arise with the Allahabad members who
were involved with psychism and the influences they were opening themselves up to. Throughout the Societys history some members
and detractors have been influenced by dark forces to create disharmony and discord, to attack, distract and derail those members
and groups working in unison to promote the Movement as a Universal Brotherhood. All strong, focused groups have found
themselves under attack at one time or another and most have been destroyed. As a result, numerous organizations calling themselves
Notes
443
theosophical have deviated from the Original Program and become very political, dogmatic, and followers of ritualistic worship.
2. General Report of the 18th Anniversary of the T.S., 1893, p.10.
3. Report of Proceedings, 1895, p.10.
4. General Report of the 19th Anniversary of the T.S., 1894, p.22.
5. General Report of the 19th Anniversary of the T.S., 1894, p.23.
6. Cdn. Theosophist, Vol. 10, July 1929, pp.156-157.
7. See Appendix H ~ Miscellaneous Letters, Item No. 4.
8. Cyril F. Willard, an experienced newspaper man, claimed that Franz Hartmann had told him in 1896 that Olcott complained to
him, with tears in his cross eyes, that the Masters had deserted him after all he had done for Them. Cdn Theosophist, Vol. 13, May
1932, p.66.
9. Mr. A.J. Cooper-Oakley, although a fine scholar, was the first in a long list of people who exhibited much bitterness in his attitude
and was the cause of unfortunate friction and disharmony at Headquarters. BCW, Vol. 12 (1980), p.733.
10. The Path, Vol. 10, March 1896, pp.368-369, 371.
11. The Theosophist, Vol. 15, December 1893, Supp. p.xi.
12. See Appendix F ~ W.Q. Judges Last Messages.
13. Theosophical Quarterly, Vol. 30, July 1932, p.31.
14. Letters That Have Helped Me, p.185. This letter is also included in Appendix D ~ Letters From W. Q. Judge to E.T. Hargrove.
15. Appendix D ~ Letters From W. Q. Judge to E.T. Hargrove, June 14th, 1895.
16. Letters That Have Helped Me, p.185. Letter dated May 20th, 1895. This letter is also included in Appendix D ~ Letters from
W. Q. Judge to E.T. Hargrove.
17. The Lamp, Vol. 2, April 1896, p.130.
18. See What Killed William Q. Judge?, Fohat, Vol. 7, Summer 2003 (Part I), pp.29-34, and Fall 2003 (Part II), pp.60-64, 69-70.
See also Appendix J ~ Astrological Observations.
19. Irish Theosophist, Vol. 3, June 1895, p.155.
20. Lucifer, Vol. 15, January 1895, pp.427-428.
21. The Word, Vol. 22, October 1915, p.10.
22. Mulliss interview with Annie Besant in 1926. See Appendix H ~ Miscellaneous Letters, for full text.
23. Eirenicon, Dec. 1944/Jan. 1945, p.4; Cdn. Theosophist, Vol. 25, January 1945, p.339.
24. Eirenicon, Dec. 1944/Jan. 1945, p.4; Cdn. Theosophist, Vol. 25, January 1945, p.339.
25. Cdn. Theosophist, Vol. 17, December 1936, p.323.
26. Cdn. Theosophist, Vol. 17, December 1936, p.324.
27. BCW, Vol. 12, (1980), pp.594-595.
28. Irish Theosophist, Vol. 4, March 1896, p.116.
29. Irish Theosophist, Vol. 3, January 1895, p.56.
444
Addendum
1. By Masters Direction. E.S.T. Circular. November 1894, p.4.
2. In A Besant Diary of Principal Events which appeared in The Theosophist, (Vol. 69, October 1947, pp.84-88), one of the three
entries listed in 1894 is Engaged in the Judge case.
3. The following statement by Richard Harte was criticized by Judge in his article Centres of The Theosophical Movement and
by H.P.B. in A Puzzle from Adyar.
Adyar is not a place only, it is a principle. It is a name which ought to carry with it a power far greater than that
conveyed by the name Rome. ADYAR is the centre of the Theosophical Movement. . . . Every loyal Fellow has
in his heart a little ADYAR, for he has in him a spark of the spiritual fire which the name typifies. ADYAR is the
symbol of our unity as a Society, and so long as it exists in the hearts of its Fellows, the powers of the enemy can
never prevail against the Theosophical Society.
(The Theosophist, Vol. 10, June 1889, p.523, and The American Theosophist, Vol. 69, June 1981, p.170.)
Index to Supplement
A
Adhmar (see dAdhmar)
A Disclaimer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 343, 348
Adyar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 325, 329-335, 337-338, 343-355,
. . . . . . . . . . 357-361, 365-366, 368, 370, 372-375 [378],
. . . . . . . . . . 380-381, 383-386, 388, 390-391, 394, 396,
. . . . . . . . . . . 398, 403, 406-407, 409, 415-419, 422-423
animosity toward H.P.B. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 348
looked upon as a holy place . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 374, 391
spies, enemies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 348, 359, 361, 385
under the grip of evil influences . . . . . . . 349, 385, 390,
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 415, 417-419,
Alexander, Rev. Mr. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 385
A Puzzle from Adyar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 343-344
A Mahatmas Message to Some Brahmans . . . . . . . 391
An Interesting Letter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 370, 380
Antaskarana . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 388
Applied Theosophy . . . . . . . . . . . . . 343-344, 374, 423
Arundale, Miss Francesca . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 320, 324, 335
Astor House . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 358
Astral . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 337, 384, 386-387, 417-418, 420
446
Index to Supplement
D
dAdhmar, Count Gaston . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 323
dAdhmar, Countess Marguerite Josphine . . . . . . . . 323
Daily Graphic, New York . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 318
Dasabhy, Dorabjee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 327
Damodar (see Mavalankar):
Davy, Doris and Ted . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 374
Deb, Ramalinga . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 375 [378]
de Zirkoff, Boris . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 317, 352
Dharmapala, A.H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 360, 394
Dogmas or dogmatism . . . . . . . . . . . . . 368, 370-371, 380,
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 405-406, 408, 410, 419-420
Doubleday, Major-General Abner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 318
Dublin, Ireland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 317
Dugpas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 384-385, 415, 420
I
E
E.S. or E.S.T. (see also Esoteric Section) . . . . . 340, 344,
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 352-353, 362-363, 371-372,
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 390-391, 397, 412, 416, 420
Eek, Sven . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 317
Eddy Farm (Chittenden, VT) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 318, 320
Edge, Sydney V. . . . . . 358, 365, 367, 370-372, 397, 411
Elementals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 318, 321-324, 387
Elementaries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 322-323, 337, 386-387
Endersby, Victor A. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 331
Enemy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 345, 348, 406, 420
Enghien, France . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 323-324
Esoteric Section (see also E.S. or E.S.T.) . . 339, 342-344,
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 347-348, 350-352, 354-355, 371-372,
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 383, 390-391, 411-412, 416-417
Ezekiel, A.D. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 333-334, 376, 378-380
imitation signature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 375 [378]
F
Felt, George H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 318
Flynn, Miss . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 407
Fraud . . . . . . . . . . . . . 325, 330, 333, 356, 359, 371, 373,
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 379, 397-398, 405-407, 412, 415, 418
G
Garrett, Edmund . . . . . . . . . . . . . 352, 362, 366, 395, 418
General Council . . . . . . . . . 325, 329, 334, 338, 343, 348,
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 392, 398-401, 408, 410-412, 420
Gomes, Michael . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 331
Griffiths, Allen L. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 360
Gribble, Mr. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 329, 385
Gurus and Chelas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 371
H
Handwriting . . . . . . . . 357-358, 366, 375 [378], 379, 381,
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 385-386, 388, 396, 402, 408-409, 422
J
Jelihovsky, Vera Petrovna . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 363
Johnston, Charles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 363
Johnston, Vera . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 363
Judicial Committee . . . . . . . 374, 379, 392, 396, 399-401
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 403, 408-409, 412, 419
Judge, Alice Mary Quan:
Mother . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 317
died giving birth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 317
Judge, Frederick C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 317
Judge, Frederick H.:
Father . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 317
Judge, John H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 318
brother of W.Q.J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 317
met H.P.B. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 317-318
Judge, W.Q. (W.Q.J.):
admitted to State Bar in 1872 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 317
American citizen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 317
arrived at Adyar (Aug. 10th, 1884) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 329
arrived at Bombay (July 15th, 1884) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 326
arrived in London (July 4th, 1894)
for Judicial Inquiry & European Convention . . . . 402
arrived in New York (Nov. 26th, 1884) . . . . . . . . . . . 337
arrived in Paris (Mar. 25th, 1884) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 321
arrived in Southampton (June 24th, 1893)
for European Convention . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 393
asked to go to Adyar by H.S.O. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 325
asked to go to Adyar by M . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 320
born (April 13th, 1851) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 317
died (March 21st, 1896) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 418
elected General Secretary of American Section . . . . . 338
Index to Supplement
expected Olcotts support re: T.S. in A. . . . . . . . . . . 416
founding member of T.S. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 318
initiation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 336-337, 351, 355, 384-388
in London (1884) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 320-321, 350, 352
left India (Fall 1884) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 335, 383, 385
left for India (June 1884) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 325
left Liverpool for N.Y. (Nov. 15th, 1884) . . . . . . . . . 335
left Liverpool (August 6th, 1891) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 358
left New York for London (May 13th, 1891) . . . . . . 350
lectures in India . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 326-328
letter of Sep. 17th, 1884 . . . 333-334, 357, 373-382, 388
married . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 318
met H.P.B. (Fall 1874) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 318
shrine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 329-331
sent telegram to London after H.P.Bs death . . . . . . . 352
started The Path (Apr. 1886) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 338
status in E.S. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 340-341, 348, 352
suspended from Vice-Pres. (Mar. 20th, 1894) . . 399, 408
W.Q. Judges Plan is right (message) . . . . . . . . . . . . 391
works on The Secret Doctrine . . . . . . . . . . . . 322, 324
447
M
Madame Blavatsky and Her Slanderers . . . . . . . . . . 333
Madras Mail . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 335, 386
Mahatma(s) . . 325, 327, 339, 342, 349, 358-359, 370-371,
. . 373, 382, 384, 388, 394, 396, 406, 408-410, 414, 417
Master M (see Morya):
Massey, Charles Carleton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 320
founder of SPR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 320
Mavalankar, Damodar K. . . 319-320, 323, 325, 330-331,
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 334-336, 341, 343, 383-384, 396, 405
Maitland, Edward . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 320
Mead, G.R.S. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 349, 399, 402-403, 408-409
Mennell, Dr. Z. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 361, 363
Moodr, C.V. Loganada . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 327
Morgan, E.H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 350
Morya (M) . . . . 322-323, 329, 332, 339-340, 357-359,
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 361, 363-364, 381-388, 406, 412, 422
Better come M . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 320, 323, 384
Muddled Rule-Makers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 344
Mller, Miss Henrietta . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 361
Mulliss, William . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 352
K
Karma . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 323-324, 367, 410, 417-418
Khandalavala Khan Bahadur Nowroji (N.D.K.) . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . 325-327, 333, 347, 349, 366-367, 370, 373-374,
. . . 379-382, 388, 390-392, 396, 399, 405, 419-420, 422
doubts and suspicions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 373
imitation signature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 375 [378]
Khandalavala, Pestanji Dorabji . . . . . . . . . . 325, 334, 379
Keightley, Dr. Archibald . . . . . . . . . . 339, 385, 393, 395,
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 397, 401-402, 413
quotes Besant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 401-403
Keightley, Bertram (B.K.) . . 323, 339-343, 345, 348-349,
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 353, 356-359, 361, 365-369, 373-374,
. . . . . . . 380, 389-390, 393-399, 403, 408-409, 412, 419
Managing Editor of The Theosophist . . . . . . . . . . . . 345
Keightley, Julia (Jasper Niemand) . . . . 387, 393-394, 403
Kinnavan, Bryan (Pseudonym of W.Q.J.) . . . . . . . . . . 321
Kingsford, Dr. Anna . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 320, 322
Koot Hoomi (K.H.) . . . . . . . . . . . 321-322, 324, 333, 355,
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 373, 379, 380, 382, 414, 417
Kunte, M.M. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 327
L
Lane-Fox, St. George . . . . . . . . . . . . 329, 332, 376 [378]
Leadbeater, C.W. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 417, 419, 422
Lloyds of London . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 335
Lodges of Magic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 370, 414
London . . . . . 320-325, 331-332, 335, 337, 339-341, 344
. . . . . . . . . . 347-355, 357-358, 361, 363, 365, 368-371,
. . . . . . . . . . . . . 374-375 [378], 381, 385, 391, 393-395,
. . . . . . . . . . . 397-398, 400-402, 404, 408-409, 411-412
London Lodge (L.L.) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 320, 323
Loyal / loyally / loyalty . . . . . . . . 335, 343-344, 354-355,
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 390-391, 407, 420
loyalties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 346
Lucifer . . . . . . . . . 338, 343-344, 370-371, 386, 402, 413
Lyon, Professor Wm. F. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 321
N
Napoleon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 387
Nath, Dharbaghiri . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 384
New York . . . . . . . . . . 317-318, 320-321, 327, 335-341,
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 343, 347, 352, 354-355, 358, 361, 368,
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 385, 388, 391, 402, 404, 409, 420
Niemand, Jasper (see Keightley, Julia)
Nirmanakaya . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 337, 386-387
Neresheimer, Emile August . . . . . . . . . . . . . 339, 361, 411
O
Occult Room . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 325, 330-331, 386, 422
Occultism and Truth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 412-413
Ocean of Theosophy, The . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 355
Olcott, Colonel Henry Steel . . . . 318-322, 324-327, 329,
. . . . . . . . . . . 331-338, 341, 343-345, 347-363, 365-368,
. . . . . . . . . . . 370-375, 379-381, 383-384, 388, 390-392,
. . . . . . . . . . . 396-400, 402-413, 415-417, 419, 422-423
admitted to errors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 409
alleged immorality . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 361, 411
arrived in London . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 320, 353, 357
Besant to share his burden . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 390-391
confessed he wronged Judge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 419
first met Besant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 353
gives Judge two options . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 396-397
imitation signature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 375 [378]
lack of right judgment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 417
left Adyar for France (Feb. 20th, 1884) . . . . . . . . . . . 320
left Paris for London (April 5th, 1884) re: L.L. . . . . . 322
left Bombay for London (June 15th, 1891) . . . . 350, 353
left for Japan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 343, 358
left Liverpool for USA / Japan (Sep. 16th, 1891) . . . . 358
left London for Colombo (Dec. 26th, 1889) . . . . . . . . 347
left New York for India (Dec. 18th, 1878) . . . . . . . . 318
loyalty to Adyar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 343, 355
448
Index to Supplement
P
Padfield, Mr. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 385
Padshah, B.J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 321
Paris, France . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 320-325, 384, 386-387
Parliament of Religions . . . . . 349, 368-369, 385, 394, 405
Path, The . . . . 321, 338-340, 370, 386-387, 391, 394, 401
Patterson, Rev. Mr. George . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 329, 333, 385
Phelps, Myron H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 409
Phenomena . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 320, 326, 329-330, 333-334
.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 340-341, 347, 376 [378], 407, 413-414
Phnix, The . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 382
Poison . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 361-363, 365-366
Poona, India . . . . . . . . . 326-327, 333-334, 341, 349, 365,
.. . . . . . . . . . . 373-374, 379-380, 382, 388, 390, 396-397
Prasnottara, The . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 358, 374
Prayag Letter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 386, 391, 406
Prayag T.S. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 391, 394
Precipitated / precipitation . . . . . . . . . . 355, 362, 413-414
Priestess of the Occult: Madame Blavatsky .. . . . . . . 331
T
Tatya, Tookaram . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 326, 357, 367, 390, 397
The Situation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 343-344, 374
Theosophic Freethought . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 370-371
Theosophist:
true . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 341, 382, 406, 410, 423
The Theosophist .. . . . . . . . . 321, 326-327, 333, 336, 338
.. . . . . . 343-345, 347-348, 351, 357, 370-372, 374, 389,
.. . . . . . . . . . . 391-392, 396, 400, 405-406, 411, 417, 422
Theosophy in the West, The Tendency Towards
Dogmatism .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 370, 380
The Times of India .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 333, 380
The Times (London). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 331
Thurmann, Dr. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 321
To The Brahmins of India . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 391
Trap-door . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 325, 329-330
Truth and Occultism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 401
Truth Before and In All Things . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 413
R
Rambo, Edward B. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 360
Ransom, Josephine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 334, 397, 422
Rajamiengar, T.C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 329
Ramiah, C. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 350
Ranade, Rao Bahadur Mahadev Govind . . . . . . . . . . . . 327
Reply by William Q. Judge to the Charges . . . . 366, 381
Revised Rules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 392, 398-399, 408
Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 343, 423
Row, T. Subba (Rao). . . 329, 331, 343, 350, 383, 393-394
Row, P. Sreenivasa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 329, 350
Row, R. Ragoonath . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 329
Rumors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 357, 361, 374, 397, 399
S
Sassoon, Jacob .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 375 [378]
Seal (Masters seal or Punjab seal) .. . . . . . . . . . . 339-341
.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 356-360, 370-371
Secret Doctrine, The . . . . . . . . . . . . . 322, 324, 337, 339,
.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 350-351, 383, 391, 393
Sepharial (see Walter Old):
Sherman Dr. M.L. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 321
Should Mr. Judge Resign? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 401
V
Van Mater, Kirby . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 331
Venezuela, South America . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 319-320, 336
Vivekananda, Swami .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 349
W
Wachtmeister, Countess . . . . 341, 350-352, 357, 372, 395
Westminster Gazette, The . . 352, 362, 366, 372, 404, 412
Why I Became A Theosophist . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 354
Why I Do Not Return to India . . . . . . 348-349, 352, 373,
.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 380, 385, 406, 420
Will:
first Will . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 350, 352
Last Will and Testament .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 350-353, 357
second Will .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 350-352, 357
third Will . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 351, 353-354, 357, 361
Williams, Gertrude Marvin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 331
Wimbridge, Edward . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 318
Wright, Claude Falls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 341, 418
Wright, George W. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 368
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A Letter to Mrs. Annie Besant on the Recent Crisis in the Theosophical Movement by Amy Constance
Morant. London. August 17, 1895, 4 pp. Also contains a brief reply by Annie Besant, Aug. 22, 1895.
A Letter to The European Section. Circular by G.R.S. Mead, Feb, 1st 1895, 6 pp.
Letter from Sydney H. Old to Mrs. Fielding. Handwritten and signed, dated January 31, 1939 from Kelowna,
British Columbia (Canada). 5 pp.
462
Works Cited
MEMORANDUM OF INTERVIEW WITH DR. ANNIE BESANT. A 6 page interview with Dr. Annie Besant by
William Mulliss a Canadian newspaper man from Hamilton, Ontario. The unsigned Memorandum is dated
October 6, 1926. Mulliss also added an Addmemo which is dated October 25, 1926.
Minutes of Council E.S.T. Held at London, May 27th, 1891, after the departure of H.P.B. Issued at New York,
November 1894. STRICTLY PRIVATE AND CONFIDENTIAL. 8 pp.
Mr. Crumps notes on Mr. Neresheimers Paper on Some Reminiscences of William Q. Judge. Estimated
date, after Feb. 25, 1932, 5 pp.
A Narrative by Alexander Fullerton. New York, May 14, 1895, 4 pp.
New England Theosophical Corporation, 24 Mount Vernon Street, Boston, Mass., U.S.A. March 19, 1894, 2 pp.
To President H.S. Olcott, signed by the Pres. and Sec. of the Boston, Malden, Cambridge T.S., Robert Crosbie,
L.F. Wade, Geo. D Ayers, F.J. Goodwin, M.L.Guild, Anna Carret.
Newspapers:
Boston Herald
The Daily Chronicle (London)
The Journal (New York)
The Mail and Express (New York)
The Morning Advertiser (New York)
New York Press
New York Daily Tribune
New York Sun
The San Diego Union
San Francisco Chronicle
New York, April 6th, 1895. Includes an opening statement signed by ten members of the American Section. 34 pp.
Notes By Basil Crump. Basil Crumps comments on E.S.T. circular of April 3rd, 1896. A transcribed copy, 5 pp.
A PAGEANT OF THE FIFTH ACT: A Study of Mrs. Annie Besant by Herbert Coryn. London, May 1895, 4 pp.
THE JUDGITES. A THEOSOPHICAL POPE. Independent Theosophists Protest. A 1 page circular issued
by The Independent Theosophists of Boston. (From Boston Herald, April 30, 1895.)
Presidents Office. To All Members of the T.S.A. E. Aug. Neresheimer, President T.S.A. 144 Madison Avenue,
New York, Jan. 18, 1898, 1 page.
The Presidents Resignation. Issued by the Theosophical Society, European Section. General Secretarys office,
March 9th, 1892, 7 pp. Contains Olcotts Jan. 21, 1892 letter of Resignation, W.Q. Judges Feb. 22, 1892 letter
to Col Henry S. Olcott and Judges letter to G.R.S. Mead, General Secretary of the European Section, T.S.
Rerganization of the T.S. Includes a Draft of Proposed Constitution for The Theosophical Society in Great
Britain and Ireland. Date estimated, Summer 1895, 4 pp.
Reply of Mr. N.P. Subramania Iyer, President, Bangalore Cantonment Lodge, T.S., to B.P. Wadia, with
reference to the latters statement that accompanied his resignation. September 18, 1922, 10 pp.
Should Mr. Judge Resign? Speeches by Annie Besant and Bertram Keightley at the Dec. 25th, 1894 T.S.
Convention at Adyar, 15 pp.
Works Cited
463
To The General Secretary, Indian Section T.S. Letter by B.P. Wadia. Los Angeles, CA, July 18, 1922, 1 page.
Theosophical Society, European Section. General Secretarys Office. For the information of the Members of the
European and Indian Sections of the Theosophical Society. G.R.S. Mead, Gen. Sec. European Sec. T.S. and
Bertram Keightley, Gen. Sec. Indian Sec. T.S. London: The H.P.B. Press, March 27, 1894, 4 pp.
Theosophical Society, European Section. No. 2. General Secretarys Office. For the information of the
Members of the European and Indian Sections of the Theosophical Society. London: The H.P.B. Press, June 15,
1894, 2 pp.
The Theosophical Society and The Secession Therefrom by Constance Wachtmeister and Alexander Fullerton.
New York, January 1897, 4 pp.
The Theosophical Society and the Westminster Gazette by Annie Besant and Bertram Keightley. Madras, India,
Dec. 23, 1894, 16 pp.
Three Letters from The Anagarika Dharmapala to Alice Leighton Cleather. Aug. 27, 1921, 2 pp.; Feb. 6, 1922,
1 page; March 3, 1922, 1 page; (Typed transcripts).
To All Fellow Theosophists and Members of the Theosophical Society: A Statement by B.P. Wadia, July 18,
1922, 18 pp. ETS
To All Members of The E.S.T. by Annie Besant and William Q. Judge. London: Eastern School of Theosophy,
May 27, 1891, 8 pp.
To All Members of E.S.T. by Annie Besant and William Q. Judge. London: The H.P.B. Press, August 1893, 4 pp.
To All Members of The Universal Brotherhood. 144 Madison Avenue, New York, March 1st, 1898, 1 page.
To . . . ., Dear Friend. Theosophical Society in America. Headquarters, 144 Madison Avenue, New York City. A
letter from the President of T.S. in America, William Q. Judge, with enclosed Resolutions passed at the Annual
Convention of the American Theosophical Society. May 8th, 1895, 3 pp.
To Each Branch of the Theosophical Society Throughout The World. John M. Pryse, Clerk of Meeting. Jan.
15th 1895, Circular, 1 page.
To E.S.T. Members in Europe. E.S.T. London Office of William Q. Judge. December 30, 1894, 1 page.
STRICTLY PRIVATE AND CONFIDENTIAL.
To Members of the Theosophical Society by Alexander Fullerton. New York, June 18, 1896, 3 pp.
TO MY FELLOW-MEMBERS OF THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY. Circular by Alexander Fullerton. 144 Madison
Ave., New York City, January 16, 1895, 1 page.
To the Fellows of the Theosophical Society by Geo. W. Russell., F.T.S., March 26, 1894, 8 pp.
To the Members, Branches and Sections of the Theosophical Society by J.D. Buck.
[date estimated March 1895 from Albert Smythes notes]
TO THE MEMBERS OF THE BLAVATSKY LODGE. E.S. Circular issued by Annie Besant as President of
Blavatsky Lodge, 1 page.
To the Members of the E.S.T. E.S.T. circular. 144 Madison Avenue, New York City, March 29, 1896, 1 page.
464
Works Cited
To the Members of the E.S.T. E.S.T. circular. 144 Madison Avenue, New York City, April 3, 1896, 19 pp.
To the Members of the E.S.T. E.S.T. circular. Katherine A. Tingley. 144 Madison Avenue, New York City,
September 3, 1897, 2 pp.
TO THE MEMBERS OF THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY by Henry T. Patterson and signed by 121 American members,
8 pp.
T.S American Section. Theosophical Society, American Section, General Secretarys Office, New York. Alexander
Fullerton Gen. Sec. American Section T.S. 3 pp.
Two page letter. Letter (March 12, 1930) written from Point Loma, CA by Joseph H. Fussell to Mr. J.W. Willey.
Copy of letter in the H.P.B. Library. From the files of Basil Crumps miscellaneous letters.
Two page letter from Peking, China. Letter to Neresheimer from Basil Crump (Nov. 25, 1931). Copy of letter in the
H.P.B. Library.
The T.S. The Theosophical Society. 4 pages of Minutes and a Draft Code of Rules. Copy of the official minutes
of October 19, 1888, for the formation of the British Section of the Theosophical Society.
T.S. Application for Membership Original Application forms of the Theosophical Society, in the Archives of
Edmonton Theosophical Society.
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Oriental Department. New York: Theosophical Society, American Section, Oriental Department, Irregular, bimonthly, January 1891 to April 1897. Consisting of Sanskrit and other Oriental Scriptures specially translated for
this Department by Professor Manilal Dvivedi and Charles Johnston. [Republished by Edmonton Theosophical
Society 1988.]
The Path. Edited by W.Q. Judge. New York, Vols. 1-10, April 1886 to March 1896, Monthly. [Republished by
Edmonton Theosophical Society 1986.]
Reply by Mr. Judge to Charges of Misuse of Mahatmas Names and Handwritings. Read at Boston, Mass., April
29, 1895 by Dr. Archibald Keightley on behalf of W.Q. Judge, 29 pp.
The So-Called Expos of Madame Blavatsky. Letter to the Editor, The Index (Boston), March 11, 1886. pp.441-442.
Reprinted in The Esoteric She, compiled and edited by Daniel Caldwell. San Diego: Point Loma Publications,
1991, pp.22-24, and in Echoes of the Orient, Vol. 3, compiled by Dara Eklund. San Diego, CA: Point Loma
Publications, 1987, pp.122-124.
The Theosophical Forum (Original Series). Started as an 8-page Question and Answer pamphlet for members-atlarge as a result of a proposal by W.Q. Judge. Edited by Alexander Fullerton. Issued from April 1889 to April
1895. Contains many of Judges answers to questions. [Republished, with an Index, by Edmonton Theosophical
Society 1992.]
Theosophical Forum (New Series). Started by W.Q. Judge then edited by E.T. Hargrove from April 1896. New York:
Theosophical Society in America, monthly magazine. Vols. 1-10, May 1895 to April 1905. [Republished, with
an Index, by Edmonton Theosophical Society 1991.]
Theosophy Generally Stated. Bombay, 1893/94, 8 pp.
Universal Brotherhood, A Fact in Nature. Bombay, 1893/94, 8 pp.
The Yoga Aphorisms of Patanjali. An interpretation by W.Q. Judge, assisted by James H. Connelly. New York: The
Path Office, 1889.
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Eklund, Dara [Compiler]. Echoes of the Orient. Vol. 4 S Cumulative Index. San Diego, CA: Point Loma Publications,
1993, 135 pp.
Forum Answers by William Q. Judge. Reprinted from The Theosophical Forum (1889-1896). Los Angeles, CA:
The Theosophy Company, 1982, 141 pp.
GLEANINGS: FROM UNPUBLISHED LETTERS OF W. Q. J. The English Theosophist. Vol. 2, Oct. 1898, pp.140-143;
Vol. 3, Jan. 1900, pp.206-209; Feb. 1900, pp.238-243; Mar. 1900, pp.267-268. [Republished by The Theosophy
Company in Letters That Have Helped Me, 1946 edition, pp.167-178. Republished by Edmonton Theosophical
Society: See Part 2, Appendix I, THE JUDGE CASE: A Conspiracy Which Ruined the Theosophical CAUSE.]
The Heart Doctrine. A collection of articles by W.Q. Judge. Los Angeles, London & Bombay: The Theosophy
Company, 1951, 211 pp.
Langford, Laura Holloway. Extracts from Letters Written by William Q. Judge from London and Paris in the Spring
of 1884 to a Longtime Friend. The Word (New York), Vol. 15, March 1912, pp.324-32, April 1912, pp.17-24.
Letters From the Archives. The Theosophical Forum (Point Loma, California), Vol. 22, Feb. 1944, pp.82-83, Mar.
1944, pp. 131-132, May 1944, pp.215-216, June 1944, p.261, Nov. 1944, p.514, Dec. 1944, pp.546-551; Vol. 23,
Jan. 1945, pp.23-25, Feb. 1945, pp.78-79, Apr. 1945, pp.160-161, Sep. 1945, pp.419-420; Vol. 24, Feb. 1946,
pp.76-77, Apr. 1946, p.171, May 1946, p.226.
Letters From William Q. Judge. Written to E.T. Hargrove. Theosophical Quarterly (New York), Vol. 28, Apr.
1931, pp.314-326; Vol. 29, July 1931, pp.25-45, Oct. 1931, pp.107-122, Jan. 1932, pp.238-247; Vol. 30, July 1932,
pp.27-38, Oct. 1932, pp.122-129, Jan. 1933, pp.206-212; Vol. 31, July 1933, pp.31-35; Vol. 32, Jan. 1935, pp.198205. [Republished by Edmonton Theosophical Society: See Part 2, Appendix D, THE JUDGE CASE: A
Conspiracy Which Ruined the Theosophical CAUSE.]
Niemand, Jasper (Julia Keightley) [Compiler]. Letters That Have Helped Me. New York: The Path, 1891.
[Republished by The Theosophical Publishing Co. New York, 1911, 90 pp.]
Niemand, Jasper (Julia Keightley) and Thomas Green [Compilers]. Letters That Have Helped Me, Vol. 2. England,
1905. [Published by The Quarterly Book Department, New York: 1918, 126 pp.]
Theosophical Articles. 2 vols. Los Angeles, CA: The Theosophy Company, 1980, 621 pp., 655 pp.
Two Replies by William Q. Judge. Los Angeles, CA: The Theosophy Company, n.d., 53 pp.
Vernal Blooms. A collection of articles by W.Q. Judge. Los Angeles, London & Bombay: The Theosophy Company,
1946, 257 pp.
Historical / Biographical
Bates, Ernest Sutherland. Judge, William Quan. Dictionary of American Biography, ed. by Dumas Malone. Vol.
5, New York: Charles Scribners Sons, 1933, pp.233-234.
Bragdon, Claude. Episodes from an Unwritten History. Rochester, NY: The Manas Press, 1910, 2nd (Enlarged) ed.
pp.23-25.
Deveney, John Patrick. An 1876 Lecture by W.Q. Judge on His Magical Progress in The Theosophical Society.
Theosophical History, Vol. 9, July 2003, pp.12-20.
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de Zirkoff, Boris. William Quan Judge A Founder. Found in The Dream That Never Dies. San Diego: Point
Loma Publications, 1983, pp.85-90. Originally published in Theosophia, Vol. 17, Spring 1961.
de Zirkoff, Boris. William Quan Judge: His Occult Status. Theosophia, Vol. 31, Spring 1975.
Eek, Sven. William Quan Judge. A Theosophical Pioneer. The American Theosophist, Vol. 50, April 1962, pp.6572.
Eek, Sven and Boris de Zirkoff [Compilers]. William Quan Judge: The Life of a Theosophical Pioneer and some of
his Outstanding Articles. Wheaton, Ill., Madras, India and London: Theosophical Publishing House, 1969, 96 pp.
Fohat. Issue dedicated to W.Q. Judge. Edmonton, AB: Edmonton Theosophical Society, Vol. 7, Fall 2003, pp.49-72.
Fullerton, Alexander [Editor]. Department of Branch Work Papers. New York. Nos. 1/2 - 9/10, June-Dec. 1890;
11-22, Jan.-Dec. 1891; 23-29, Jan.-Dec. 1892; 30-38, Jan.-Dec. 1893; 39-36, Feb.-Nov. 1894.
Gomes, Michael. The Dawning of the Theosophical Movement. Wheaton, Ill: Theosophical Publishing House,
1987, 248 pp.
Greenwalt, Emmett. California Utopia: Point Loma: 18971942. San Diego, CA: Point Loma Publications, 1978,
pp.1-46. Originally published in The Point Loma Community in California: 18971942. Chapters 1-4. Berkeley,
CA: University of California Press, 1955.
In Honor of William Q. Judge. Point Loma, CA: Theosophical Publishing Company, 1901, 51 pp.
Knoche, Grace F. A Salute to William Quan Judge. Sunrise, Vol. 35, April/May 1986, pp.157-160.
Langford, Laura Holloway. William Quan Judge, A Reminiscence. The Word, Vol. 22, Nov. 1915, pp.75-89.
Leaves of Theosophical History. The Theosophical Forum (Point Loma, California), June 15, 1932 to Nov. 1937,
Oct. 1939 to Nov. 1941.
Leslie-Smith, Leslie H. 100 Years of Modern Occultism: A Review of the Parent Theosophical Society, 1987, 69
pp. Contains a segment on The Controversy Concerning W.Q. Judge, pp.26-32. Found in Theosophical History
Centre, Miscellaneous Papers.
The Letters of H.P. Blavatsky to W.Q. Judge. With notes by Michael Gomes. Theosophical History (California
State University), Vol. 4, Oct. 1992Jan. 1993; Vol. 5, Apr., July, Oct. 1994, Jan., Apr., July, Oct. 1995. 9 letters
printed out of 16.
Pelletier, Ernest E. What Killed William Q. Judge? Fohat, Vol. 7, Summer 2003, Part I, pp.29-34; Fall 2003, Part
II, pp.60-64, 69-70.
Report of Proceedings and Documents. The Theosophical Congress Held by The Theosophical Society at the
Parliament of Religions, Worlds Fair of 1893, at Chicago, Ill., September 15, 16, 17. New York: American
Section T.S., 1893, 195 pp. [Republished by Edmonton Theosophical Society 1988.]
Ryan, Charles. H.P. Blavatsky and the Theosophical Movement. Point Loma, CA: Theosophical University Press,
1937, 370 pp.
Sunrise: Special Issue. Contains 21 articles on W.Q. Judge commemorating the centenary of his death. Vol. 45,
April/May 1996, pp.97-192.
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The Theosophical Movement, 18751925: A History and a Survey. New York: E.P. Dutton, 1925, 705 pp.
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The Theosophical Movement, 18751950. Los Angeles, CA: Cunningham Press, 1951, 351 pp.
Theosophical Society, American Section, Report of Proceedings. Held at Chicago, 1888, 55 pp.; Chicago, 1889,
69 pp.; Chicago, 1890, 88 pp.; Boston, 1891, 51pp.; Chicago, 1892, 45 pp.; New York City, 1893, 32 pp.; San
Francisco, 1894, 52 pp.
Theosophical Society in America, Report of Proceedings. First Convention, held in Boston, Mass., April 28-29,
1896, 62 pp.; Second Annual Convention, New York City, April 26-27, 1897, 48 pp.; Third Annual Convention,
New York City, April 25-26, 1897, 60 pp.
Tingley, Katherine [Editor]. Helena Petrovna Blavatsky. Point Loma, CA: The Womens International Theosophical
League, 1921, 81 pp. Includes articles by W.Q. Judge about H.P. Blavatsky.
W.Q. Judge: Biographical Notes. Los Angeles, CA: United Lodge of Theosophists, 1996, 63 pp. Bio-Chronology
on William Quan Judge from 1851 to 1896.
Wadia, Sophia. William Quan Judge A Lover of India. The Kaiser-I-Hind, March 21, 1937, pp.3,7.
Illustrations: Sources
Part 1 & Part 2
Cover: William Quan Judge Universal Brotherhood Path, Vol. 15, June 1900
Inside cover: William Quan Judge aiming bow and arrow Courtesy of United Lodge of Theosophists (ULT) Los Angeles, CA.
Part 1:
Frontispiece: William Quan Judge (July 1895) Sunrise, April/May 1991
1. Helena Petrovna Blavatsky, circa 1877-1878 Archives of Edmonton Theosophical Society
2. William Quan Judge Blavatsky Collected Writings, Vol. 11
3. Henry Steel Olcott in 1875 The Theosophist, August 1932
4. Dr. Jirah Dewey Buck Universal Brotherhood, February 1898
5. (Mrs.) Melissa M. Buck The Theosophical News, August 30, 1897
6. Major General Abner Doubleday Internet photo, Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, LC-B8172-1497
DLC)
7. Edward Burroughs Rambo Universal Brotherhood, October 1897
8. Dr. Jerome A. Anderson The Path, April 1893
9. Bertram Keightley The Theosophist, September 1909
10. Dr. Henry Travers Edge Theosophia, Spring 1960
11. Dr. Archibald Keightley and Dr. Herbert A.W. Coryn Universal Brotherhood, December 1897
12. George Robert Stowe Mead Archives of Edmonton Theosophical Society; also found in The Theosophist, January 1910
13. Alfred Percy Sinnett The Theosophist, September 1909
14. Emil August Neresheimer Theosophy, August 1897
15. Alexander Fullerton The Theosophist, March 1910
16. Walter Richard Old The Astral Tramp, courtesy of Kim Farnell
17. Claude Falls Wright The Path, February 1894
18. Annie Besant Isis Very Much Unveiled by Edmund Garrett, 2nd edition
19. Julia Keightley (Jasper Niemand) The Path, April 1894
20. Countess Constance Wachtmeister The Path, November 1893
21. Isabel Cooper-Oakley The Path, July 1894
22. Daniel Nicol Dunlop The Theosophical News, June 7, 1897
23. Ernest Temple Hargrove The Path, September 1894
24. Dr. Franz Hartmann The Occult Review, January 1908
25. Alice Leighton Cleather Archives of Edmonton Theosophical Society, courtesy of The H.P.B. Library
26. Basil Crump Archives of Edmonton Theosophical Society, courtesy of The H.P.B. Library
27. Tookeram Tatya The Path, May 1894
28. Gyanendra Nath Chakravarti The Path, October 1893
29. Subramania (Subrahmanya) Iyer The Theosophist, August 1909
30. Nowroji (Navroji) Dorabji Khandalavala The Golden Book of the Theosophical Society
31. Bertram Keightley, William Q. Judge, Colonel Olcott and George R.S. Mead The Golden Book of the Theosophical Society
32. William Q. Judge (wearing his pill-box hat) Echoes of The Orient, Vol. 3; H.P.B.: The Extraordinary Life & Influence
of Helena Petrovna Blavatsky, Illustration No.8
33. Workers at London Headquarters after Blavatskys death in 1891 The Golden Book of the Theosophical Society
34. Annie Besant, Colonel H.S. Olcott and William Q. Judge in 1891 The Golden Book of the Theosophical Society
35. The Neresheimer residence at Bayside, Long Island, New York The Theosophical News, July 26, 1897
472
Illustrations: Sources
36. Delegates to the Worlds Parliament of Religions, Chicago 1893 Sunrise, April/May 1996
37. Group of prominent Theosophists prior to attending the Worlds Parliament of Religions at Chicago Archives of Edmonton
Theosophical Society, courtesy of Dara Eklund
38. William Q. Judge and Colonel Olcott, San Francisco, CA, October 1891 The American Theosophist, May 1914; Blavatsky
Collected Writings, Vol. 15; Sunrise, May/April 1996
39. Mahatma Koot Hoomi Archives of Edmonton Theosophical Society
40. Mahatma Morya Archives of Edmonton Theosophical Society
41. Notre-Dame-des-Champs in Paris (side view) Archives of Edmonton Theosophical Society
42. Notre-Dame-des-Champs in Paris (front view) Archives of Edmonton Theosophical Society
43. Le Chteau cossais at Enghien, near Paris, France Archives of Edmonton Theosophical Society
44. Le Chteau cossais at Enghien, near Paris, France Archives of Edmonton Theosophical Society
45. Photo of the original Minute Book of The Theosophical Society Archives of Edmonton Theosophical Society
46. First page of the original Minute Book of The Theosophical Society Archives of Edmonton Theosophical Society
Part 2:
Frontispiece: William Quan Judge (1892) The Word, Vol. 15, April 1912
47. Annie Besant (1891) The Theosophist, October 1931
48. William Q. Judge (1891) Blavatsky Collected Writings, Vol. 13
49. Colonel H.S. Olcott (1906) The Theosophist, October 1906
50. Cover of the June 1895 issue of The Path Archives of Edmonton Theosophical Society
51. Clement Acton Griscom Archives of Edmonton Theosophical Society, courtesy of Raymond P. Tripp, Jr.
52. Ernest Temple Hargrove The Lamp, August 1895
53. Henry Turner Patterson The Theosophical News, August 2, 1897
54. George William Russell The Canadian Theosophist, August 1935
55. Charles Johnston Archives of Edmonton Theosophical Society, courtesy of Raymond P. Tripp, Jr.
56. Group photo: H.P. Blavatsky with her sister Vera Jelihovsky, niece Vera Vladimirovna Johnston (nee Jelihovsky) and her
husband, Charles Johnston, and Col. H.S. Olcott Archives of Edmonton Theosophical Society
57. Diploma, The Theosophical Society of The Arya-Samaj of Arya-Wart The American Theosophist, May 1913
58. Albert E.S. Smythe Archives of Edmonton Theosophical Society, courtesy of Ted G. Davy
59. William Mulliss Williams (W.M.W.) [He never used the name Williams.] The Canadian Theosophist, February 1932
60. Dr. Henry Newlin Stokes The Canadian Theosophist, January 1943
61. James Morgan Pryse The Path, June 1894
62. Robert Crosbie Universal Brotherhood, February 1898
63. Alice L. Cleather at the birthday party of the blind Abbot of Kwan Yin Temple Archives of Edmonton Theosophical Society,
courtesy of The H.P.B. Library
64. Annie Besant with her new colleagues in Theosophy (1894) The Passionate Pilgrim by Gertrude Marvin Williams
65. Kavasji Mervanji Shroff The Golden Book of the Theosophical Society
66. Damodar K. Mavalankar The American Theosophist, December 1913
67. Mohini Chatterji Archives of Edmonton Theosophical Society, courtesy of The H.P.B. Library
68. Anagarika Hevavitarane Dharmapala The Path, December 1893
69. Headquarters of The Theosophical Society in America, 144 Madison Avenue, New York Universal Brotherhood, February
1899
70. Katherine Tingley Sunrise, April/May 1998
71. Katherine Tingley and Claude Falls Wright on board the steamship Paris (1896) The Theosophical News, August 1896