The Krotona Colony's Kaua'i Connection, Part IV: Augustus Knudsen's Passage to India
In 1896, Augustus Knudsen left Kaua'i for San Francisco. From there, he intended to travel to India and study Hinduism. But in San Francisco, fate intervened when he met the president and co-founder of the Theosophical Society, Henry Steel Olcott.
Henry Steel Olcott, seated at center, and Helena Blavatsky, standing behind him, with spiritual leaders in India/www.ookaboo.com
Olcott (1832-1907) was famous not only as Madame Blavatsky's partner in the Theosophical Society (which he served as lawyer as well as spiritual leader) but as the best-known, and probably first, person of European descent to convert to Buddhism. Before he embarked upon this unorthodox path, Olcott was a Civil War veteran who fought graft and investigated Abraham Lincoln's assassination. In 1874, he was hired by the New York Sun and New York Graphic to investigate "spiritual manifestations" at Eddy Farm. There he encountered Madame Blavatsky, a meeting of minds which led to the founding of the Theosophical Society the following year, and to the establishment of its worldwide headquarters in Adyar, Madras (now Chennai) in 1883.
The late 19th century was a boom time for new religions, many of which were concerned with signs of life after death. Olcott's social stature was shared by many fellow seekers: among his contemporaries who studied Theosophy were William James and Thomas Edison. Olcott's background as a soldier, lawyer and patriot no doubt boosted the image of Theosophy for those who otherwise would have been skeptical of some of its tenets.
What attracted Augustus Knudsen to Theosophy was the same thing that drew Olcott's attentions away from Buddhism: psychic phenomena and occult rituals like seances. In 1896, the newly converted Knudsen traveled to Adyar, where he studied with Madame Blavatsky. By 1898 he was back in San Francisco, where he married Margaret Russell, a Californian with Southern roots.
After their daughter Ruth was born in 1901, Augustus and Margaret returned to Kaua'i. Valdemar had died in 1898, and with only his brother Eric left to run the family businesses, Augustus had a role there. (The youngest Knudsen brother, Arthur, suffered a mental breakdown in his 20's and remained institutionalized in Boston.) But the marriage foundered when Margaret, a late-in-life mother, became physically and emotionally incapacitated by menopause. According to Ruth,
[Augustus] kicked her out of the house. And told me later that her illness had interfered with his spiritual development.
The calamity of divorce allowed Augustus Knudsen to make a final break with his life on Kaua'i. Placing Ruth in the care of her grandmother, Anne Sinclair Knudsen, he left Hawai'i, remarried and settled in Hollywood. The house he commissioned on Vista del Mar Avenue would be the gateway to the Krotona Colony, a utopia made real by his devotion to Theosophy--and the family fortune made on Kaua'i.
Additional Sources:
Oral History of Ruth Knudsen Hanner, Courtesy Kauai Museum.
Theosophical Society Headquarters, Adyar. http://www.ts-adyar.org/ _________________ For more about the Krotona Colony, purchase the documentary "Under the Hollywood Sign" at http://hopeandersonproductions.com/?page_id=3361 The film is also available for rent at https://vimeo.com/ondemand/uths