Edward L. Gardner: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Gardner The Wider View.jpg|right|thumb|Book cover, 1962.]]
[[File:Gardner The Wider View.jpg|right|thumb|Book cover, 1962.]]


By 1931, Mr. Gardner had retired.<ref>U.S., Border Crossings from Canada to U.S., 1895-1960. Passenger manifest of ship Duchess Richmond. October 16, 1931.</ref> He and Adelaide traveled, lectured, and wrote for Theosophical audiences, and spent time at Tekels Park and other Theosophical centers. He also served as the Chairman of the Council of the Theosophical World University that [[George S. Arundale]] aspired to establish.<ref>ANonymous, "A Name for the Theosophical World University?" ''Theosophical Worker 8 no.8 Aug 1943 p 124.</ref>
By 1931, Mr. Gardner had retired.<ref>U.S., Border Crossings from Canada to U.S., 1895-1960. Passenger manifest of ship Duchess Richmond. October 16, 1931.</ref> He and Adelaide traveled, lectured, and wrote for Theosophical audiences, and spent time at Tekels Park and other Theosophical centers. He also served as the Chairman of the Council of the Theosophical World University that [[George S. Arundale]] aspired to establish.<ref>Anonymous, "A Name for the Theosophical World University?" ''Theosophical Worker 8 no.8 Aug 1943 p 124.</ref> The Gardners were highly regarded and much in demand. A typical comment from 1931 was:
<blockquote>
Mr. E. L. Gardner, formerly General Secretary of the English Section, is an honored visitor and a very welcome speaker on the program of the New York Federation for the month of November. Mr. Gardner is a student and scholar along scientific and progressive lines of thought as well as a theosophical student, and the series of classes and members’ meetings which he will direct in New York City will be tremendously valuable. Mrs. Gardner has accompanied her husband to this country and she will go to Boston, Baltimore and Philadelphia to fill several lecture engagements.<ref>Anonymous, "Our Lecturers" ''Theosophical Messenger'' 19 no.11 Nov 1931 p543.</ref>
</blockquote>  


Gardner died in the summer of 1969 in Surrey.<ref>England & Wales, Civil Registration Death Index, 1916-2007.</ref> Adelaide had predeceased him in 1960.
Gardner died in the summer of 1969 in Surrey.<ref>England & Wales, Civil Registration Death Index, 1916-2007.</ref> Adelaide had predeceased him in 1960.

Revision as of 17:36, 12 October 2022

E. L. Gardner in 1927
E. L. Gardner as member of Exec Committee of TS in England
N. Sri Ram and E. L. Gardner at Tekels Park. © Theosophical Society in England Archives.

Edward Lewis Gardner (1869-1969) was a noted writer and lecturer from the English Section of the Theosophical Society based in Adyar, India.

Personal life

Gardner was born at Coggeshall, Essex, England on March 19, 1869 to father Matthias A. Gardner, a brick and tile manufacturer.[1] He attended school in Lewisham.[2] Edward married Clara Beard in 1892, and they had at least two sons, Ralph and Leslie. The family lived at Willesden in Middlesex, where Edward had a business as a builder and contractor.[3] Clara died in 1920. Two years later, he married Eliza Adelaide Draper, a respected Theosophical writer and lecturer who was born in the United States.

Theosophical Society involvement

Gardner joined the TS on April 17, 1907. He served as General Secretary of the English Section from 1924-28, and was a popular lecturer and write for several decades. Clara Codd referred to him as "the English sage."[4]

According to The Theosophical Encyclopedia,

Gardner traveled widely as an International Lecturer for the Theosophical Society. In 1926 he founded the theosophical community at Stamford House, Wimbledon, London, and presided over it until 1940. Gardner was one of a group that bought Tekels Park, now vested in the English section of the TS. [5]

Gardner had the honor of delivering three Blavatsky Lectures. In 1918 he presented the inaugural lecture on the subject of "Matter is the Shadow of Spirit," followed by "The Nature and Function of the Soul" in 1946, and "Whence Come the Gods? and Related Studies" in 1959.

Some controversy arose when Gardner published a pamphlet There Is No Religion Higher Than Truth in 1964. He made the allegation that the clairvoyant visions supposedly experienced by Charles Webster Leadbeater were simply examples of unconscious kriyashakti (thought power, or self-delusion). Geoffrey Hodson defended CWL vigorously, and his wife Sandra compiled a book on the subject called C. W. Leadbeater: A Great Occultist. Pedro Oliveira followed up with an article, "The Mystery of C. W. Leadbeater’s Clairvoyance," and a portion of his book, CWL Speaks.

Cottingley Fairies

A major episode in Gardner's life involved the Cottingley Fairies. In 1917 two young girl cousins claimed to have taken photographs of fairies in their garden. Prints of the photos were given to Edward Gardner, who shared them with Arthur Conan Doyle. Doyle wrote an article for Strand magazine, and later a book, The Coming of the Fairies. Clairvoyant Geoffrey Hodson spent days with the girls, and verified that fairies were indeed perceptible in the garden. Gardner lectured and wrote about fairies for some years.[6] Great public attention came to all involved, with many doubting the accuracy of the photographs and the truthfulness of the girls. Decades later, the girls admitted that while they had seen fairies, the photographs had been faked.[7]

Later years

Bookmark featuring Gardner, issued by TS in England
Book cover, 1962.

By 1931, Mr. Gardner had retired.[8] He and Adelaide traveled, lectured, and wrote for Theosophical audiences, and spent time at Tekels Park and other Theosophical centers. He also served as the Chairman of the Council of the Theosophical World University that George S. Arundale aspired to establish.[9] The Gardners were highly regarded and much in demand. A typical comment from 1931 was:

Mr. E. L. Gardner, formerly General Secretary of the English Section, is an honored visitor and a very welcome speaker on the program of the New York Federation for the month of November. Mr. Gardner is a student and scholar along scientific and progressive lines of thought as well as a theosophical student, and the series of classes and members’ meetings which he will direct in New York City will be tremendously valuable. Mrs. Gardner has accompanied her husband to this country and she will go to Boston, Baltimore and Philadelphia to fill several lecture engagements.[10]

Gardner died in the summer of 1969 in Surrey.[11] Adelaide had predeceased him in 1960.

Writings

Gardner was much known for his writings. The Union Index of Theosophical Periodicals lists 74 articles under the name EL Gardner, 3 under E L Gardner, and 14 under Edward L Gardner.

In 1940 he was awarded the Subba Row Medal for his contributions to Theosophical literature. These are books and pamphlets that he wrote:

  • The Fourth Creative Hierarchy, Matter is the Shadow of Spirits, and The Web of the Universe. Madras, India: F.E. Philp & Sons, 1913. Reprinted 1936, rev. Ed. 1938.
  • The Web of the Universe. 1936.
  • The Play of Consciousness. 1939.
  • Fairies; A book of Real Fairies. 1945.
  • Fairies: The Cottingley Photographs and Their Sequel. 1945.
  • The Mysteries. 1945.
  • The Nature and the Function of the Soul. 1946.
  • The Imperishable Body. 1949.
  • The Heavenly Man. 1952.
  • The Wider View & Studies in the Secret Doctrine. 1962. Håkan Blomqvist describes this as "a collection of articles published between 1944-1959. In several of these articles Gardner tries to understand the UFO enigma from a Theosophical viewpoint. His theory is that they represent either etheric Venusians or deva materializations."[12]
  • There Is No Religion Higher Than Truth. 1964. Booklet.
  • A Mind to Embrace the Universe. 1965.
  • Thyself Both Heaven and Hell. 1966.

Published lectures

Additional resources

Notes

  1. 1871 England Census.
  2. 1881 England Census.
  3. 1911 England Census.
  4. Clara Codd, Circular Letter No. 101. October-November, 1962.
  5. "Gardner, Edward Lewis" in Theosophy World.
  6. One example was described in the March 1921 issue of Light, available at IAPSOP.
  7. James A. LeFevour, "CLairvoyance and the Fairy Realm" Quest 101 no.4 (Fall, 2013), 141-144.
  8. U.S., Border Crossings from Canada to U.S., 1895-1960. Passenger manifest of ship Duchess Richmond. October 16, 1931.
  9. Anonymous, "A Name for the Theosophical World University?" Theosophical Worker 8 no.8 Aug 1943 p 124.
  10. Anonymous, "Our Lecturers" Theosophical Messenger 19 no.11 Nov 1931 p543.
  11. England & Wales, Civil Registration Death Index, 1916-2007.
  12. Håkan Blomqvist at at UFOArchives.blogspot.