Attracting Abundance - The Early Teachers

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By sabrebIade

The pioneers in using mental wealth building techniques

The Secret exploded onto the scene in 2006 and took the world by storm.
A lot of the furor has died down now but the ideas put forth in the book (and the DVD and tons of other related items) are still followed, analyzed and tried.
Of course if you read any of The Secret material, you know that Rhonda Byrne herself said these techniques weren't new, but had been hidden for centuries.
Well in the 19th century, here in the United States, the ideas weren't hidden at all.
The New Thought Movement started late in the 19th century here and the organizers of the movement weren't trying to hide anything at all. They published books and pamphlets that became fairly popular.
Here are a few of the big names in those early years....

Thomas Troward (1847-1916)

"We cannot really think in one way and act in another..."

One of the first New Thought Movement teachers was Thomas Troward.
Troward was Her Majesty's Assistant Commissioner and Divisional Judge from 1869 until his retirement in 1896 in British-administered India.
His hobby was metaphysical and esoteric studies and comparing religions.
The teachings of Christ, Islam, Hinduism, and Buddhism influenced his thinking and later writing.
Troward was born in Punjab, India to British parents, and he spent most of his life there.
When he retired in 1896, Troward threw himself into his hobbies, his research and painting.
He wrote several books and papers that inspired other teachers in the New Thought Movement, two of his most popular being Bible Mystery and Bible Meaning and The Creative Process in the Individual.

Frank Haddock (1853-1915)

"There has been altogether too much talk about the secret of success. Success has no secret. Her voice is forever ringing through the marketplace and crying in the wilderness, and the burden of her cry is one word, will."

Frank Channing Haddock's father was a Methodist minister and like Thomas Troward, he studied law.
Actually Haddock started out training for the ministry, moved onto law and became an attorney, then went back to the ministry when his father was killed.
Haddock's contributions to the New Thought Movement included books like Business Power, Practical Psychology and Creative Personality.
The books were part of his Power-Book Library series.

Wallace Wattles (1860 – 1911)

Wallace Delois Wattles may have had a funny sounding name, but this man's work was a lot of the main thrust behind The Secret.
His 1910 book, The Science of Getting Rich, is still being read today.
Rhonda Byrne said the reading that book is what inspired her to write The Secret.
Wattles was said to use the technique of creative visualization (the practice of trying to affect the outside world by changing your inner thoughts).
One thing I like about Wattles is that he tells his readers to try his theories themselves then decide if they work, not just take his word for it.
And Wattles always said that his books were easy to understand and practical, in the forward to The Science of Getting Rich he said that his book was:

"Intended for the men and women whose most pressing need is for money; who wish to get rich first, and philosophize afterward. It is pragmatical, not philosophical; a practical manual, not a lot of theory. It is for those who have, so far, found neither the time, the means, nor the opportunity to go deeply into the study of metaphysics, but who want prosperous results and who are willing to take the conclusions of science as a basis for action."

The only thing that bothers me is that he ran for office in Indiana twice and lost both times, and that he died at age 51, just one year after publishing The Science of Getting Rich and ironically, The Science of Being Well.
(Although I have read the average life expectancy back then was thirty to forty years old. So if that's true, I guess he beat the odds)

Elizabeth Towne (1865 - 1960)

"Success is liberty to command, coupled with a clear conscience and loving heart."

Elizabeth Towne was all over the New Thought Movement early on.
She founded and published Nautilus Magazine from 1898 to 1953.
Nautilus was a literal "who's who" of the New Thought Movement, publishing works by authors like Paul Ellsworth, Orison Swett Marden, William Walker Atkinson, Edwin Markham and Wallace Wattles.
Besides running a clearing house for the New Thought Movement, Towne also wrote books herself, including How to Grow Success, Your Character (How to Read Character), Just How to Concentrate and Practical Methods for Self-Development: Spiritual, Mental, Physical.
By the way, Towne was 95 when she died.

Charles Haanel (1866 - 1949)

"The things of the world are fluid to a power within man by which he rules them."

Charles Francis Haanel was the author of The Master Key System.
This work is still popular today, even though it was published in 1912, and is available from many online sources for free.
When it first came out, Elizabeth Towne promoted it heavily in Nautilus Magazine.
Now if you want to talk about not just talking the talk, but walking the walk, according to author Walter B. Stevens...

"He (Haanel) was president of the Continental Commercial Company, president of the Sacramento Valley Improvement Company, and president of the Mexico Gold & Silver Mining Company."

AND Haanel died at the age of 83....I'm just saying.

I'm sure most of you have heard the rumor that while he was attending Harvard University, Bill Gates read The Master Key System, and that the book that inspired him to drop out of the University and pursue his dream of "a computer on every desktop.".
Well Gates took a leave of absence from Harvard in November 1975 and never returned, but as far as The Master Key System being the reason, I have seen no real proof either way.
Maybe in an interview one day some intrepid reporter will ask Bill about this and clear it up once and for all.

Napoleon Hill (1883 – 1970)

"What the mind of man can conceive and believe, it can achieve" was one of Napoleon Hill's favorite sayings.
We know he read The Master Key System, and even sent Haanel a letter thanking him for the book.
But Hill was influenced by many, many others.
After meeting billionaire industrialist Andrew Carnegie, Hill sought out and interviewed (with Carnegie's help and blessing) the major players of that time.
Men like Henry Ford, Thomas Edison, Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson and George Eastman.
Hill, (who grew up in a one-room cabin in an Appalachian town) wanted to find out what made these movers and shakers tick.
I think that's called Neuro-linguistic programming now.
Anyway, Hill and Carnegie, published the work in 1928 as a study course called, The Law of Success and that later became the basis for the blockbuster Think and Grow Rich.
Hill never laid out his findings exactly as say Wallace Wattles and Charles F. Haanel did, he felt the readers needed to discover it themselves to give them more benefit.
He also wrote several other lesser known books including How to Sell Your Way through Life, Success Through a Positive Mental Attitude and the interestingly titled The Master-Key to Riches.

William Walker Atkinson (1862-1932)

"The best way to overcome undesirable or negative thoughts and feelings is to cultivate the positive ones."

Another man that fits into this catagory is William Walker Atkinson.
William was born on December 5th, 1862 in Baltimore, Maryland.
Like a few other original teachers William started out as a business man, did well, then went through a both a physical and mental breakdown, then financial ruin which changed his life.
William credited the teachings of the New Thought movement for healing him.
After his healing, he began to write books about what he called "Mental Science" (actually several of the teachers used this term).
William is different from a lot of the other authors because of his extensive use of pseudonyms.
He wrote not only under his own name, but also Yogi Ramacharaka, Theron Q. Dumont, Swami Bhakta Vishita, Swami Panchadasi and Theodore Sheldon among others.
William not only created new names, but in some cases a whole faked background to accompany each pseudonym.
His book, "The Art and Science of Personal Magnetism: The Secrets of Mental Fascination" published in 1913 is probably his most famous work.
It was published under his Theron Q. Dumont pseudonym, Theron being an "Instructor on the Art and Science of Personal Magnetism, Paris, France".
Which of course William wasnt.
He died on November 22, 1932.

Neville Goddard (1905-1972)

Moving forward a little, we have one of the first people that made an impact on me when I started reading about New Thought, Neville Goddard.
Neville was born on February 19th, 1905 in St. Michael, Barbados in the British West Indies.
His ideas of thinking from the end and visualizing have lead to a catch phrase in some creating wealth circles called "Nevillizing".
And his constant references to assuming you already are something or have something were echoed by other teachers like Wayne Dyer years later.
Interestingly, Neville and Joseph Murphy were both taught by the same man, Abdullah.

The Early Teachers at Amazon

Think and Grow Rich
Napoleon Hill
Amazon Price: $5.99
List Price: $9.99
The Complete Master Key System (Now including 28 Chapters)
Charles Haanel
Amazon Price: $7.58
List Price: $11.99
The Wisdom of Wallace D. Wattles - Including: The Science of Getting Rich, The Science of Being Great & The Science of Being Well
Wallace Wattles
Amazon Price: $5.95
List Price: $9.99

Comments

Attracting Abundance Fan Rishan 17 months ago

Thanks for this cool summary. Wallace Wattles is still one of my favorite teachers of all time. His stuff is just so simple yet effective. I recall the first time I used the info he teaches in "The Science of Getting Rich" - I had astounding results and been hooked ever since. Charles Haandel is another of my favorites.

Leo Collins profile image

Leo Collins 19 months ago

Great information. I enjoy reading the early teachers. I had not heard of the first two you mentioned.

Richard O'Neill profile image

Richard O'Neill 21 months ago

Fantastic hub. I'm a believer of the law of attraction and the many other laws that govern our universe. It's a difficult process to implement but a hugely rewarding and natural one nontheless.

Richinfaith 21 months ago

Some really good information there. Thanks for sharing all that. I'm extremely interested in The Law of Atraction and i've read Napoleon hill's Think and grow rich and Wallace Delois Wattle's The science of Getting rich. However, it appears there is still a lot i need to learn!! Good research indeed!You say the best is 50/50 huh, well how long have you been committed to using This Law of thinking?

I've studied it a lot over the past year and the conclusion i've come to is that in order to use it effectively, we first have to do a spring clean of the rooms of our mind. We are so used to thinking with boundaries and limits that unless we first remove them, the Law Of Attraction will fluctuate in it's effectiveness.

Do you agree? What's your take on it? Please drop by my hub sometime. I've only just started a fresh one. Thanks Take care

sabrebIade profile image

sabrebIade Hub Author 22 months ago

Michael Shane: Thank you! And thanks for dropping by!

Michael Shane profile image

Michael Shane 22 months ago

Interesting hub! Thanks!

sabrebIade profile image

sabrebIade Hub Author 23 months ago

DREAM ON: So far, the best I have been able to do with anything is maybe 50%.

And that might just be a coincidence.

You know...a fifty/fifty chance.

DREAM ON profile image

DREAM ON Level 7 Commenter 23 months ago

From your own experiences what has worked for you what hasn't?

DREAM ON profile image

DREAM ON Level 7 Commenter 23 months ago

I like following the history of attracting abundance.I think we can keep learning from each other.Nice hub.

scheng1 2 years ago

very interesting. Actually the ancient classics did mention the same concept, using different terms. Even I-Ching has many sentences implying the law of attraction.

Jane Forrest profile image

Jane Forrest 2 years ago

very interesting to have a look back in time. After all people have been doing and looking at this stuff for a long long time, but they were burned as witches so perhaps a lot didn't get passed on after all.

Thank you for the information most helpful.

sukhera143 profile image

sukhera143 2 years ago

Nice sharing.

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