Unsolved:Krotona
Krotona was one of three important Theosophical centers in the United States during the early part of the 20th century. Originally built in Hollywood during 1912, the colony was eventually relocated to Ojai, California , in 1926, where it operates today as the Krotona Institute of Theosophy.[2]
Located just off of State Route 33, the Krotona Institute holds regular classes and workshops on Theosophy, maintains an extensive library on the occult, and has a small bookstore.
The Hollywood Krotona building located at Primrose and Vista Del Mar was erected in 1919.[3] Tenants have included Annie Sullivan Knudsen (sugar cane heiress), New Yorker Grace Shaw Duff, Henry Hotchener, Marie Russak, silver screen stars Mary Astor and Charlie Chaplin, and record producer Joshua Rumer of Invengo Records. When the Krotonians, spurred by Madame Blavatsky, found Hollywood suffocating their peace-filled theosophies, they decided to move to Ojai California and that is where they have been ever since.
It was about a year before the Primrose building went up that Alice Bailey, subsequently a Theosophical and Spiritualist leader and author, moved to a "cottage on Beechwood Drive," to be near the Krotona colony, from Pacific Grove, CA, near Monterey. She had joined the Theosophical Lodge in Pacific Grove and was teaching and holding classes. Not long before, she tells, she had left her original traditional Christian beliefs behind and soon after "discovered" "that there was a great and divine Plan," and that there are those "who are responsible for the working out of that Plan" by leading mankind, "stage by stage," down the centuries. This "hierarchy of spiritual leaders" she calls the "Masters of the Wisdom," and they all report to and work with Christ, Jesus of Nazareth. Her own Master, Lord K. H. or Koot Hoomi, had made visits to her every few years, starting she said in 1895, this being one of his many duties in his role as a pupil or assistant to the Christ. K. H. was a master of love-wisdom. Bailey said about 500 people were then part of the Krotona community, some living on the premises, and she began work there by emptying the garbage. Soon she worked in the vegetarian kitchen and noted that some of the vegetarians felt smugly superior to carnivores, while others had no such notions. She remained with the Theosophical Society until 1920.[4]
References
- ↑ Siddall, John William (1917). "Men of Hawaii : being a biographical reference library, complete and authentic, of the men of note and substantial achievement in the Hawaiian Islands". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. p. 239. https://archive.org/stream/menofhawaiibiogr00sidd/menofhawaiibiogr00sidd#page/238/mode/1up/search/Krotona.
- ↑ Willis, Alfred. "A Survey of Surviving Buildings of the Krotona Colony in Hollywood". University of California, Los Angeles. http://corbu2.caed.kent.edu/architronic/v8n1/v8n106.pdf. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
- ↑ Meares, Hadley (2014-05-22). "The Creation of Beachwood Canyon's Theosophist "Dreamland"". https://la.curbed.com/2014/5/22/10099768/the-creation-of-beachwood-canyons-theosophist-dreamland-1.
- ↑ Bailey, Alice (1951). The unfinished autobiography of Alice A. Bailey. New York: Lucis Pub. Co.. pp. 34-37, 138-144, 152-155, 174. ISBN 9780853300243. OCLC 613248667.
Further reading
- Hine, Robert V. (1973). California's utopian colonies. Yale Western Americana series. New York: Norton. p. 57n. ISBN 9780520048850. OCLC 1028861073. https://archive.org/details/californiasutopi00hine/page/57. Retrieved 2018-06-12.
- Power, Ralph Lester (1921). Libraries of Los Angeles and vicinity. Los Angeles, CA, US: University of Southern California Press. pp. 48–49. ISBN 9785519143752. OCLC 613163355. https://archive.org/stream/librariesoflosan00powe#page/48/mode/2up/search/Krotona. Retrieved 2018-06-12.
External links
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Krotona.
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