Arthur Gebhard

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Arthur Gebhard was a German-American manufacturer whose family was close to Helena Petrovna Blavatsky in the early days of the Theosophical Society.

Personal life

Arthur Heinrich Paisley Gebhard was born on December 29, 1855 at Elberfeld, Wuppertal, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany. His father was Gustav Gebhard (1828-1900), a consul with manufacturing interests, and his mother was Frances Catherine Mary l'Estrange (1832-1892), known to her Theosophist friends as Mary.

In 1878, Gebhard moved to the United States, representing his family's manufacturing interests in New York and Boston. He was granted citizenship on May 17, 1889.[1]

On December 3, 1894, he married Harriet Luise Wilhelmine Frida Adolphe Bürger in Berlin.[2] Later he married a widow, Marie-Josephe von Hoesch, née von Carlowitz (b. Jan. 7, 1888), with whom he had two sons: Rollo (b. July 7, 1921; married to Hildegard Freyer; d. 2013) and Vidar Arthur Eward (b. Oct. 2, 1928, when his father was 73 years of age; d. 1910, London). In 1913, Arthur Gebhard officially added his mother's family name to his own, becoming known as Arthur Gebhard-L’Estrange. His sons used the surname Gebhard.

In 1913 he spent some time in Dresden on "literary work,"[3] and in the 1930s he spent time in Switzerland. He was one of the first patrons of Wagner’s musical dramas, at Bayreuth, Bavaria, recognizing their occult significance.

World War II found Gebhard was living in England. He died at Newton-Abbot on October 11, 1944.

Theosophical Society involvement

While living in the United States, Arthur was on friendly terms with Mohini M. Chatterjee and William Quan Judge. For a time he joined them in publishing The Path magazine. He took active part in the Theosophical Movement, lecturing on Oriental philosophy at salons and other meetings. Julia van der Planck was greatly influenced by one of his 1886 salon talks.[4] He studied astrology in Boston with Henry Morris, according to Theosophical historian K. Paul Johnson.[5]

One day, while lunching with her close friend, Mrs. Anna Lynch Botta, the name of Madame Blavatsky was mentioned, though she was spoken of as an exposed fraud. Mrs. Botta invited her to hear Arthur Gebhard speak on Theosophy at the home of a friend of hers. The impression produced upon Julia Ver Planck was so deep that she joined the Theosophical Society within two weeks, and started upon her Theosophical career.[6]

He frequently visited his relatives at Elberfeld, where H.P.B. and other Theosophists were also staying.

In collaboration with Mohini M. Chatterjee, who had by then become a critic of the Theosophical Society, he drew up a document that Madame Blavatsky (H.P.B.) regarded as a "manifesto." Entitled "A Few Words on The Theosophical Organization," it was filled with criticism of TS President-Founder Henry Steel Olcott, alleging despotism. H.P.B. wrote a powerful reply that has come to be called "The Original Programme of The Theosophical Society." That response was a statement on the basic platform of the T.S. and its policies, and a defense of Colonel Olcott. Both the "manifesto" and the "programme" were published in 1931 in the Adyar Pamphlets series, with an introduction by C. Jinarājadāsa.

Toward the end of his life, in 1940, Arthur Gebhard published a little book entitled The Tradition of Silence, in which he paid tribute to H.P.B. and her work.

Additional resources

Notes

  1. Passport application. January 7, 1914. U.S., Passport Applications, 1795-1925 at Ancestry.com.
  2. Berlin, Germany, Marriages, 1874-1936 in Ancestry.com.
  3. Passport application. January 7, 1914. U.S., Passport Applications, 1795-1925 at Ancestry.com.
  4. J. Campbell ver Planck, "Madame Blavatsky at a Distance" The American Theosophist 60 No. 4 (April, 1972), 77.
  5. K. Paul Johnson email to Janet Kerschner. February 4, 2014. Theosophical Society in America Archives.
  6. Boris de Zirkoff, 436.