- Myrtle Fillmore
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New ThoughtMovementHistory • Discrimination • Criticism
Glossary • Literature - Vahle, Neal (2002). The Unity Movement. Philadelphia: Templeton Foundation Press. ISBN 1890151963.
- Vahle, Neal (1996). Torch-Bearer to Light the Way: The Life of Myrtle Fillmore. Open View Press. ISBN 0965590607.
Mary Caroline "Myrtle" Page Fillmore (August 6, 1845, Pagetown, Ohio - October 6, 1931) was co-founder of Unity, a church within the New Thought movement, along with her husband Charles Fillmore.[1] Prior to that time, she worked as a schoolteacher.
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Early life
Myrtle was the seventh child (of eight) of an Ohio businessman-farmer. Her parents were strict Methodists, but Myrtle rejected their puritanical teachings. She contracted tuberculosis at a young age. Also at a young age she developed a strong enjoyment of reading. At the age of twenty one she enrolled in the (one year) 'Literary Course for Ladies' at Oberlin College. After graduating in 1867, she taught in public schools in Clinton, Missouri, spending the next thirteen years there, except for a year in 1877-78 spent recovering from tuberculosis in Denison, Texas. In Denison, she met her future husband, Charles Fillmore, who was nine years younger than her, and they married in 1881. They lived initially in Gunnison, Colorado, Then moved to Pueblo, Colorado, where their first two sons were born, Lowell in 1882 and Rickert in 1884. The family then moved to Omaha, Nebraska and then Kansas City, Missouri, where their third son, Royal, was born in 1885.[2]
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