So We All Can Be Heard
by Marlene Cook, IWPA Historian
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Ursula Newell Gestefeld, a founder of the Illinois Woman's Press Association, also established the Science of Being, a New Thought religious system that gained her national prominence.

Born April 22, 1845 in Augusta, Maine, to an invalid mother, Gestefeld was a sickly child. By 1878, she and her husband, Theodore Gestefeld, moved to Chicago where he served as a reporter for The Chicago Tribune and as city editor of The Statts-Zeitung, a leading German newspaper. When Ursula was given a Christian Science tract proclaiming the power of spirit over matter, she decided to heal her own illness and within three months had attained the good health that had previously eluded her. Her success led her to become not only a believer, but also a leader in the movement. She took classes from Mary Baker Eddy, Christian Science founder, and established herself as a metaphysician. She practiced, wrote and taught mental healing in Chicago.

In 1888, Gestefeld published "Ursula N. Gestefeld's Statement of Christian Science," which was denounced by Eddy. Ursula fought back with a second article, "Jusiutism in Christian Science." She was expelled from the association and turned her experiences into an independent New Thought career. She trained women to become certified leaders, teachers, traveling proselytizers or pastors. In 1895, she contributed to The Woman's Bible, which summarized the Science of Being principals. She published two novels, several tracts and started the Exodus, a monthly magazine for the New Thought movement, serving as writer, editor and publisher. She even formed an Exodus Club, charging dues of $25 per year. By 1902, she had at least 300 members, while more than 800 attended her weekly sermons.

Gestefeld is probably best known for her novel, The Woman Who Dares, a protest against the hypocrisy of marriage. The work portrayed a male-dominated society that used all means-legal, political, economic and religious-to enforce women's sexual subservience to men.

By the turn of the century, Gestefeld had expanded her mental health theories to include material wealth. At the age of 69, she traveled to London for the inauguration of the International New Thought Alliance and continued to write and lecture throughout the 1910s. She died of toxemia in 1921 and is buried at Graceland Cemetery, Chicago. Some of her books can be found in the Chicago Historical Library.

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