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E-grāmata: Vanishing Messiah: The Life and Resurrections of Francis Schlatter

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  • Formāts: 262 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Jun-2016
  • Izdevniecība: University of Iowa Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781609384241
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  • Formāts: 262 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Jun-2016
  • Izdevniecība: University of Iowa Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781609384241

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In The Vanishing Messiah, a modern researcher painstakingly pieces together evidence from letters, newspaper reports, hospital records, mug shots, and published reminiscences of the healer, Francis Schlatter, to find out what really happened to him after he left Denver in the middle of the night in November 1895. In doing so, David N. Wetzel uncovers a historical puzzle of lies, deception, and betrayal, and offers a tantalizing look into a nineteenth-century messiah and his twentieth-century reincarnations—one of whom may have been the healer himself. 


In 1895, an extraordinarily enigmatic faith healer emerged in the American West. An Alsatian immigrant and former cobbler, Francis Schlatter looked like popular depictions of Jesus, and it was said that his very touch could heal everything from migraines and arthritis to blindness and cancer. First in Albuquerque, and then in Denver, thousands flocked to him, hoping to receive his healing touch. Schlatter accepted no money for his work, behaved modestly, fasted heavily, and treated everyone, from wealthy socialites to impoverished immigrants, equally. He quickly captured national attention, and both the sick hoping to be cured and reporters hoping to expose a fraud hurried to Denver to see the celebrated healer. By November of 1895, it is estimated that Schlatter was treating thousands of people every day, and the neighborhood in which he was staying was overrun with the sick and lame, their families, reporters from across the country, and hucksters hoping to make a quick buck off the local attention. Then, one night, Schlatter simply vanished. Eighteen months later, his skeleton was reportedly found on a mountainside in Mexico’s Sierra Madre range, finally bringing Schlatter’s great healing ministry to an end.

Or did it?

Within hours of the announcement of Schlatter’s found remains, a long-haired man emerged in Cleveland to say that he was Francis Schlatter, and the next twenty-five years, several others claimed to be Denver’s great healer. InThe Vanishing Messiah, a modern researcher painstakingly pieces together evidence from letters, newspaper reports, hospital records, mug shots, and published reminiscences of the healer to find out what really happened to Francis Schlatter after he left Denver in the middle of the night in November 1895. In doing so, David N. Wetzel uncovers a historical puzzle of lies, deception, and betrayal, and offers a tantalizing look into a nineteenth-century messiah and his twentieth-century reincarnations—one of whom may have been the healer himself. 
Preface and Acknowledgments ix
Prologue Where the Mirages Are Born 1(18)
PART ONE The Life of the Harp: A Biography
One The Denver Cobbler
19(16)
Two Pilgrimage
35(16)
Three The Desert Messiah
51(16)
Four Healer of the Multitudes
67(24)
Five "Father takes me away,"
91(14)
Six Winter Retreat
105(28)
Interregnum Into Mexico
119(14)
PART TWO The Hand of the Harper: A Biographical Quest
Seven "These men were imposters,"
133(16)
Eight "Look at my face,"
149(14)
Nine The Sparrow's Fall
163(14)
Ten The Days of Daniel
177(14)
Eleven "A True Account...,"
191(14)
Twelve God's Leading
205(14)
Epilogue Francis Schlatter Cyclus 219(4)
Appendix The Evidence Trail 223(8)
Timeline 231(2)
Notes 233(32)
Survey of Prior Works 265(6)
Index 271
David N. Wetzel spent twenty-six years with the Colorado Historical Society as a writer, historical interpreter, editor, and director of the publications program. He is the author of I Looked in the Brook and Saw a Face: Images of Childhood in Early Colorado and coauthor of Robert S. Roeschlaub: Architect of the Emerging West, 18431923. He lives in Kansas City, Missouri, USA.