Walter A. Carrithers, Jr.

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W. A. Carrithers at a young age

Walter Adley Carrithers (August 14, 1924 - ca. August 21, 1994) was a Theosophical historian in Fresno, California. Using the pen name of Adlai E. Waterman, he wrote the book, Obituary: the “Hodgson Report” on Madame Blavatsky 1885-1960, in which he reveals that the research of Richard Hodgson into the actitivities of Helena Petrovna Blavatsky was biased and defective.

He formed the Blavatsky Foundation to perpetuate public knowledge of the life and works of Helena Petrovna Blavatsky.

Biographical Sketch by John Cooper

Dr. John Cooper, Theosophical history expert who worked extensively on the Blavatsky correspondence, wrote of Carrithers:

The Theosophical historian Walter Adley Carrithers was born in Fresno, California on August 14th, 1924 and died in the same city on or about August 21st., 1994. He died of heart failure and was found by the police three days after his death.

Walter Carrithers will be best remembered under the pen name of Adlai E. Waterman as the author of the book, Obituary the “Hodgson Report” on Madame Blavatsky 1885-1960, which was published by the Theosophical Publishing House in 1963 with a preface by N. Sri Ram.

The then President of the Theosophical Society called the book а “remarkable piece of work ... undertaken ... with extreme thoroughness and care.” His first publication was The Truth about Madame Blavatsky published both as a pamphlet and as a Supplement to The Theosophical Forum, April 1947, by the Theosophical Society then at Covina and now at Pasadena, California.

This pamphlet was a rebuttal to the Blavatsky biography Priestess of the Occult (1946) by Gertrude Marvin Williams. His book Obituary led to intensive debate with Victor Endersby the editor of Theosophical Notes and, later, Walter Carrithers published several long articles on Tantra and Tibet in that journal.

He formed the Blavatsky Foundation to perpetuate public knowledge of the life and works of Helena Petrovna Blavatsky. He issued regular Newsletters mainly dealing with attacks on Madame Blavatsky for the Foundation.

He became obsessed with this defence and neglected his health by working night after night as one of the Defenders. In some ways he carried this to such an extreme that his friend Boris de Zirkoff wrote to advise that he should “take some rest, some sleep ... and place your mind somewhere eise than on those schemers and slanderers.” On Tuesday 14th, November, 1989 Dara Eklund, her husband Nicholas Weeks and I drove to Fresno to meet with Walter. It was a sad visit as he was quite ill.

Walter Carrither’s work continues and his writings deserve close study. His colleagues wish him well in his journey into the unknown.[1]

Additional resources

Websites

Articles and pamphlets

Books

Notes

  1. John Cooper, "Death of an American Theosophical Historian" The High Country Theosophist 10.1 (January 1995), 16.

[[Category:Independent|Carrithers, Walter A