Virginia Hanson: Difference between revisions

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== Awards ==
== Awards ==


The [[Olcott Foundation]] named Virginia Hanson to win its lecture award for 1951, in recognition of her lecture, "The Divine Autobiography - A Universal Best Seller." In 1990, Miss Hanson was awarded the prestigious [[Subba Row Medal]] for her Theosophical writings.
The [[Olcott Foundation]] named Virginia Hanson to win its lecture award for 1951, in recognition of her lecture, "The Divine Autobiography - A Universal Best Seller."<ref>Margery Parks, Virginia Deaderick, and Dr. George B. DeHoff, "The Olcott Foundation," ''The American Theosophist 39:9 (September, 1951), 180.</ref>
In 1990, Miss Hanson was awarded the prestigious [[Subba Row Medal]] for her Theosophical writings.


== Later years ==
== Later years ==

Revision as of 17:53, 1 February 2013

Virginia Hanson

Virginia Gordon Hanson was an editor and writer best known for her books Masters and Men and, with George Linton, the Readers Guide to The Mahatma Letters to A. P. Sinnett.

Theosophical work

Miss Hanson joined the Theosophical Society in America in 1949, in Washington, D. C. She became a prominent lecturer for the Society, and wrote numerous articles. In 1962 joined the headquarters staff, where she wrote a series of educational letters that were sent to new members, a project that continues to this day. She was a Senior Editor of Quest Books of the Theosophical Publishing House (Wheaton).[1]

Readers Guide to the Mahatma Letters

Readers Guide to the Mahatma Letters cover.jpg

George Linton and his wife, of Portland, Oregon, frequently visited the TSA headquarters while Miss Hanson was on staff there. Readers Guide to The Mahatma Letters to A. P. Sinnett was the product of much study by each of the coauthors, and it continues to be a valuable tool for study of the letters.

Awards

The Olcott Foundation named Virginia Hanson to win its lecture award for 1951, in recognition of her lecture, "The Divine Autobiography - A Universal Best Seller."[2] In 1990, Miss Hanson was awarded the prestigious Subba Row Medal for her Theosophical writings.

Later years

Virginia Hanson
in 1984

From 1975 until her death in 1991, Miss Hanson was on the staff of the Krotona Institute of Theosophy.

Notes

  1. "Hanson, Virginia Gordon", Theosophical Encyclopedia (Quezon City, Philippines: Theosophical Publishing House, 2006), 268-269. Available online at Theosopedia.
  2. Margery Parks, Virginia Deaderick, and Dr. George B. DeHoff, "The Olcott Foundation," The American Theosophist 39:9 (September, 1951), 180.