THEOSOPHY
H S OLCOTT
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________________________

Colonel
Henry Steel Olcott
Colonel Henry Steel Olcott
1832 – 1907
A co-founder of the Theosophical
Society in
He was a son of a merchant, born August 1st 1832 in Orange, New
Jersey. His first writing attempt was the revision of the 1845 edition of The
Descendants of
Thomas Olcott. He even wrote a new preface. The family genealogy
fascinated him.
He attended the City College of New York and Columbia
University. Upon the
failure of his father's business his formal education ended. He
entered
share-farming for two years working on various farms Then he
returned to New
York where he devoted himself to the scientific study of
agricultural. At
twenty-three his work won him recognition. In 1858 he wrote his
first book.
Sorgho and Imphee, the Chinese and African Sugar Canes. Now
having expertise in agriculture he accepted the position of associate
agricultural editor of the New York Tribune.
In 1859 Olcott volunteered to covered the Virginia lynching of
John Brown for
the Tribune. Although the Virginians had vowed no northern paper
would cover the event, Olcott witnessed hanging and wrote a good story about
it. Two years later he entered the Civil War on the side of the North but was
afflicted with
dysentery which ended his battle career. While recovering his
superiors noticed
his special abilities and made him a special commissioner to the
War Department. His assignment was to investigate the charges of fraud and
corruption in New York Mustering and Disbursing Office. He proved so zealous
that the Navy Department borrowed him to clean up the abuses in the navy yards,
and it was during this time that he was promoted to colonel.
After the war Olcott resigned his commission, but did not return
to his former
pursuits. He decided to study law. There is no record of him
attending any
university, so he probably read law for someone and attained his
degree that
way. He entered the new field of insurance law and retained many
reputable
clients including the City of New York and the Life Mutual
Insurance Company of New York. The latter employed him to lobby for the
insurance profession in the New York Legislature.
At 40 Olcott was reasonably well off. As a lawyer he was doing
well, having
enough money to enjoy some luxuries and do some freelance
newspaper work. In 1868 he married Mary Epplee Morgan, a daughter of an
Episcopalian minister. They had four children; two died, their third son lived
only four months, and their daughter Betsy less than two years.
It seems that Betsy's death partly contributed to the souring of
Olcott's
marriage. There was a separation in 1874, and after that Olcott
begun living in
clubs and participating in worldly public and private
undertakings and
speculations. Even Helena Blavatsky later described him as
"a gay dog" who kept a mistress and drank in clubs.
Some might have described him as a rogue, but in character this
seemed not to be the case. People who knew him considered him to be a
stereotype of a prosperous, middle-aged Yankee, who was unsophisticated,
honest, energetic, and practical. But that was before he grew his Santa-Claus
beard and stopped wearing shoes. However, even some of his enemies had to say
he was a man of integrity and sincerity.
His first experience with psychical phenomena came in 1874 when
the New York
Daily Graphic sent him to investigate the phenomena of the Eddy
Brothers in
Vermont. After spending ten days at the Chittenden farm Olcott
came away
convinced of the authenticity of the phenomena. He summarized
what he had
experienced in fifteen articles which launched his career as a
psychical
investigator.
The Holmes scandal afforded Olcott his next big opportunity.
Nelson and Jennie
Holmes, husband and wife, were materialization mediums who had
been accused of fraud. Helena Blavatsky arranged for further seances and for
Olcott to witness them. She and Olcott had met at the Chittenden in Vermont. In
a previous seance it was rumored that the Holmes, particularly Jennie, had
impersonated Katie King, the daughter of the spirit John King. In the seance
which Olcott witnessed, John King spoke again, clearing his daughter of all
wrong doing and rapping out an account of what actually occurred before. His
statement cleared the Holmes, and Katie King appeared in white again. Olcott
knew it was not Jennie Holmes whom he had securely tied up. This strengthened
Olcott's belief in psychical phenomena as well as the power of the Holmes.
After the Eddy and Holmes investigations Olcott was acknowledged
as a creditable psychical researcher. When the professors of the Imperial
University of St. Petersburg, at the wish of the Grand Duke Constantine of
Russia, decided to make a scientific investigation of Spiritualism, they asked
Olcott and Helena
Blavatsky to select the most qualified American medium. Henry
Slade was their
choice.
It must be said that from their first meeting at the Vermont
farm Olcott seemed
fascinated by Helena Blavatsky's psychic power; although, it
must be remembered he was attracted to all psychical phenomena. Olcott seemed
to have a love for it, as though the phenomena was a magnet drawing him toward
it. This, taken in mind, one might question whether he was the creditable
psychic investigator as many proclaimed. Also, this must be bore in mind when
examining his future relationship with Helena Blavatsky.
In those early days Helena Blavatsky professed to have been
controlled by the
spirit of John King during which she specialized in precipitated
writing,
independent drawing and supernormal duplication of letters and
other items. In
the presence of Olcott and the Honorable John L. Sullivan she
produced a $1,000 banknote which dissolved into a drawer.
These feats occurred after the founding of the Theosophical Society in 1875.
Olcott, himself, witnessed more Theosophic feats performed by
Blavatsky than
anyone else. This was another reason why he eagerly assumed the
presidency of
the Society. Even though the Society was actually the brainchild
of Blavatsky,
it can be said Olcott actually believed in it. Critics claim
that Blavatsky
manipulated him, which may be true to some extent, but Olcott
actively
participated in the Society's functions.
He sincerely believed in her power to produce illusions through
hypnotic
suggestion. He testified that the Madame disappeared from his
presence in a
closed room and appeared again a shot time later from nowhere.
This admission
appears in Olcott's records. Such evidence makes it intelligible
to see why he
believed in the appearance of the Mahatmas and the souvenirs
they left behind.
When Olcott and Madame Blavatsky were sailing to Bombay in 1878
they stopped in London, and A. P. Sinnett's The Early Days of Theosophy in
Europe (1922) suggests that their manners were not becoming in polite society.
It was
speculated this caused the unfriendly feelings of the Psychical
Research Society
(PRS) which sparked the Hodgson investigation of the
Theosophical Society that ended in Hodgson releasing a scathing report alleging
fraud and trickery by
Helena Blavatsky and her associates. This put a black mark on
the Theosophical
Society for over 100 years. In 1986 the PRS published an article
in its Journal
calling the report prejudiced, saying that Hodgson had ignored
all evidence
favorable to Helena Blavatsky, and, that an apology was due.
Undoubtedly Olcott's greatest achievement was his public
espousal of Buddhism that served to popularize the religion in Western
countries. He converted to Buddhism in Ceylon in 1880. His Buddhist Catechism
(1881) had been widely studied by Western Buddhists, and versions of it are
still in print.
Olcott died February 17, 1907 at Adyar, India.
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