General Frederick Lawrence
Rawson
Male
England
1857-07-27
Cape of Good Hope, Western Cape Province, South Africa
1923-11-10
New York, United States of America


About

From https://www.newthoughtwisdom.com/frederick-l-rawson.html

Frederick L. Rawson was an influential English New Thought Leader. He was a brother to a great engineer in England. F.L. Rawson took 100 men into world war one. They all returned without a scratch on any of them. “There is nothing but God,” was his statement to that miracle. “There is nothing but God in God’s perfect world. Man is the image, the likeness, passing on God’s ideas to his fellow man with perfect regularity and ease.”

F.L. Rawson was born on the Cape of Good Hope in South Africa in 1857. Like many other leaders in the field of New Thought, he was not a clergyman. He was an engineer and businessman. He became a distinguished practicing engineer and achieved a marked success in his profession as consultant and as businessman, retiring before he founded the Society for Spreading the Knowledge of True Prayer.

Among other things, he was a pioneer in the field of the practical use of electricity and engineer of the first company in the field of electrical lighting, even laying the first electric railway in England. He had other interests; even drawing up plans for the first gas-driven automobile and was consulting engineer for the first airship built in Britain. Rawson had the respect of serious minded scientists of his day. He also excelled at various sports and was the first violinist in an orchestra for more than a dozen years.

He was widely knowledgeable in the fields of science and philosophy, and it was through his scientific interest in the remarkable claims made in the area of religion and the occult which led to him studying them extensively to discover the truth for himself.

In the late 1880’s, Christian Science had emerged in Britain with considerable success. Rawson was commissioned to make a study of this cult and write a series of articles about it. Rawson accepted the assignment and began a study of Christian Science, only to become fully convinced of its truth and eventually became an ardent Christian Scientist himself. Eventually he would part ways with the church to begin his own work; this ultimately grew into one of the most active and influential metaphysical healing groups in England, affiliating himself with the growing New Thought Movement.

In 1914, Frederick L. Rawson attended the first meeting of the International New Thought Alliance, held in London; it is here where he would become personally acquainted with the very influential English New Thought author, Thomas Troward. In 1916, he began a weekly publication called Active Service. The first words of the masthead of the weekly paper read: “A weekly paper devoted to the spreading of the knowledge of the truth. Ye Shall Know the Truth and the Truth shall make you free.”

In 1917, Rawson set up an organisation called The Society for Spreading the Knowledge of True Prayer (SSKTP); the method of prayer was to be that of the realization of and conscious communion with God. He lectured to larger audiences throughout the British Isles. In 1920, he made an extended tour of the United States and Canada, lecturing and giving class instruction and treatments. Later that year, Rawson was arrested in Saint Louis near the end of his healing and teaching tour. He was charged with practicing medicine without a licence and was released with charged dropped as long as he promised to refrain from the healing sessions.

Although Rawson’s basic outlook was distinctly Christian Science based, he co-operated enthusiastically with the various New Thought groups. He was a great scientist himself, and entertained a number of ideas – one of these being that the British and the Americans were the true Israel –that is, he held the expounded Anglo-Israel theory, which commended itself to a good many within the New Thought and the metaphysical field in general (one other being, Mary Baker Eddy).

Frederick L. Rawson passed away in 1923, but the SSKTP movement that he founded went on and his magazine Active Service continued publication up until the 1960’s.



Media


Archive statistics 1880 - 1890
2
28
16


Tournament wins 1881 - London Athletic Club (Amateur)
1881 - Downshire (Amateur)


Tournaments Wimbledon - 1890 Wimbledon - 1889 London Athletic Club - 1889 Wimbledon - 1888 South of England Championships - 1888 Middlesex Championships - 1888 Middlesex Championships - 1885 Wimbledon - 1884 Middlesex Championships - 1884 Prince's Club Tournament - 1883 Wimbledon - 1881 London Athletic Club - 1881 Downshire - 1881 Prince's Club Tournament - 1880

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