Sidney Abram Weltmer
Sidney Abram Weltmer | |
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"Prof. S. A. Weltmer" taken from the online book "Seven Steps in the Life of Prof. S. A. Weltmer" (1906) from Grace Mann Brown (1859-1925)" | |
Born |
Sidney Abram Weltmer Jul. 7, 1858 Wooster, Ohio |
Died |
Dec. 6, 1930 Nevada, Missouri |
Resting place | Newton Burial Park, Nevada, Vernon County, Missouri, United States |
Residence | Nevada, Missouri |
Known for | Weltmerism, Weltmer Institute of Suggestive Therapeutics |
Home town | Nevada, Vernon County, Missouri, United States |
Religion | Baptist |
Spouse(s) | Mary Genoa (Adair) Stone, m. October 8, 1879 |
Children | 5 : Cyrus Ernest (1880-1963), Silas Woodson (1882-1956), Stella Truman, Tracy Carleton and Beulah Ethel |
Parent(s) | Abram Weltmer and Mrs. Catherine (Hull) Weltmer, |
Signature | |
Sidney Abram Weltmer (July 7, 1858 – December 6, 1930) was an author best known for the "Weltmer Method" (also known as "Weltmerism") and as founder of the Weltmer Institute of Suggestive Therapeutics. Weltmer claimed his method could cure disease through suggestions and hypnosis, a practice he referred to as "magnetic healing".
Early life
Weltmer was a native of Wooster, Ohio. At the age of seven, his parents moved to Morgan County, Missouri, where he attended the public schools. He studied borrowed medical books in hopes of becoming a physician, and later devoted himself to the study of the Bible.[1]
Career
Weltmer was ordained and licensed to preach as a Baptist minister at 19 years old. He founded in 1885 a private educational institution at Akinsville, in Morgan County, Akiusville Normal School which he presided and conducted from 1885 to 1889. The school disbanded in 1889. In Sedalia, Missouri, he established and organized a public library and was librarian from 1893 until 1895, and also for two years was a professor in Robbins Business College in that city.[1]
Personal life
On October 8, 1879, Weltmer married Mary Genoa (Adair) Stone. They had five children. Weltmer was a Knights Templar (Freemasonry) and Thirty-second Degree Mason, an Elk, an Odd Fellow, a Knight of Pythias and an unoath-bound initiate in the fourth degree of Atlantian Mystics.[1] Weltmer died in Nevada, Vernon County, Missouri on December 6, 1930 and was buried there.
Weltmer Institute
Weltmer founded the Institute of Suggestive Therapeutics on February 19, 1897. The institute provided rooms for patients and offered instructional classes in thought transference and "magnetic healing" that Weltmer promoted as a combination of clairvoyance and hypnotic suggestion that could allegedly cure diseases such as asthma and tobacco addiction. A ten-day course cost $100.[2]
The institute was dissolved in 1933 shortly after his death and the building was sold to a funeral institute.[3] In 2005, the building was demolished to make place for new buildings. His son, Ernest continued the Weltmer Magazine up till his own death.
Controversy
Some preachers and doctors were not convinced of the validity of his methods, condemning and denouncing the institute of fraud. Dr. Preston W. Pope wrote in "The Expose of Weltmerism: Magnetic Healing De-magnetized" how he viewed the whole idea. Dr. E. L. Priest from the Missouri Medical Association denounced the Weltmer Institute. Pastor Dr. Charles M. Bishop from the Centenary Methodist Church, published his bad reviews in magazines on the charlatanism of Weltmer.[3]
In 1900, the US Postmaster General declared Weltmer's "healing by mail" scheme a fraud and stopped mail delivery to the institute. Mail was restored after the U.S. Supreme Court decided in Weltmer's favor.[3]
A libel case against the Rev. M. Bishop for calling Weltmer and his assistants "miserable charlatans" brought before the Supreme Court of Missouri found a verdict for Mr. Bishop, and refused a motion for rehearing the case.[4]
Writings
Books
- Self-Reliance, or the Key to Business Success, Kansas City, Hudson-Kimberly Pub. Co., 1900
- The Healing Hand, Weltmer institute of suggestive therapeutics Company, 1922 - 225 pages
- The Mystery Revealed, or, The Hand-book of Weltermerism, Kansas City, Hudson-Kimberley
- The New Voice of Christianity, Hudson-Kimberly Publishing Company, 1903 - 192 pages
Articles, pamphlets
From 1901 to 1909 Weltmer published a magazine, Weltmer's Magazine of Suggestive Therapeutics
- Complete Clinical Texts on Suggestive Therapeutics and Applied Psychology
- How to Make Magnetic Healing Pay, Nevada, Mo., 1901 - 216 pages
- Hypnotism: In Its Psychological Relation to Everyday Life Weltmer Institute of Suggestive Therapeutics - 90 pages
- Is prayer ever Answered?, American School of Magnetic Healing, 1899 - 35 pages
- Real Man, Weltmer Institute of Suggestive Therapeutics, 1908 - 63 pages
- Real Man, Or Slave Man, Weltmer Institute of Suggestive Therapeutics, 1914 - 40 pages
- Regeneration, Nevada, Mo. : The Weltmer Foundation, 1925
- Regeneration; a Discussion of the Sex Question from a New and Scientific Standpoint, Foley Railway, 1899 - 130 pages
- Regeneration: a Scientific Discussion of the Sex Principle, 1898-1908, Weltmer Inst. of Suggestive Therapeutics Company, 1908 - 185 pages
- Self Protection, 1898
- Some Points on Personal Magnetism
- Suggestion Simplified, American School of Magnetic Health, 1900 - 117 pages
- Telepathy, Pomeroy, WA : Health Research
- Telepathy and Thought Transference, Nevada, Mo., 1902
- The Eternal Now, American School of Magnetic Healing, 1899 - 58 pages
- The Undying Character of Thought
- Therapeutic Suggestion
- Weltmerisms; or Pointed Paragraphs Relating to Magnetic Healing, Foley Ptg. Company, 1899 - 68 pages
- Who is a Christian?
- Seventy Bible References Relating to the Subject of Healing'
See also
References
- 1 2 3 Conard, Howard Louis. "Encyclopedia of the history of Missouri : a compendium of history and biography for ready reference". original from Indiana University. New York ; The Southern History Company, 1901. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
- ↑ Gregg Andrews (1999). Insane Sisters: Or, the Price Paid for Challenging a Company Town. University of Missouri Press. pp. 42–. ISBN 978-0-8262-1240-5. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
- 1 2 3 Moyer, Steve (August 19, 2004). "Aging building rich in local history". Nevada Daily Mail. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
- ↑ "Kansas City Medical Herald". 1904- official organ of the Medical Society of the Missouri Valley, Buchanan County Medical Society and Sioux Valley Medical Society. Kansas City medical index. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
Further reading
- Encyclopedia of the history of Missouri : a compendium of history and biography for ready reference / edited by Howard L. Conard.
- Missouri the center state, 1821-1915, by Walter B. Stevens. v. 4. Stevens, Walter B. (Walter Barlow), 1848-1939.
- One thousand American men of mark of to-day. Twentieth century edition de luxe. A national perpetual record of progressive men of America who have attained some prominence in the various social, commercial and industrial affairs. Compiled from standard biographical publications and original sources. The founders, makers and builders of our great republic..
- American elite and sociologist bluebook 1922, Herringshaw, Thomas William, 1858
- Ohio authors and their books : biographical data and selective bibliographies for Ohio authors, native and resident, 1796-1950 / edited by William Coyle ; preliminary research by Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Wessen ; sponsored by the Martha Kinney Cooper Ohioana Library Association.
- Who's Who in America v.11 1920-1921
- Pearson's magazine v.3 no.6 (June 1900)
- The Coming Age v.2 1899
- The Healing Hand [Weltmer institute of suggestive therapeutics Company, 1922 - 225 pages]
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sidney Abram Weltmer. |
- Article on S. A. Wetlmer
- Weltmer Institute images
- The State Historical Society of Missouri
- Tri-Country Genealogy Society (PDF)
- Newspaper, Nevada Daily Mail November 26, 2004
- Nevada Daily Mail: S. A. Weltmer and Edgar Cayce
- Early American Manual Therapy
- Old article cut out and posted in Afflictor
- - Link