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  1. Wallace Delois Wattles (/ ˈ w ɑː t əl z /; 1860 – 7 February 1911) was an American New Thought writer. He remains personally somewhat obscure, [ 1 ] but his writing has been widely quoted and remains in print in the New Thought and self-help movements.

    • Wallace D. Wattles Life and Career
    • Christian Socialism
    • New Thought
    • Influence
    • Bibliography
    • GeneratedCaptionsTabForHeroSec

    Wattles’ daughter, Florence A. Wattles, described her father’s life in a “Letter” that was published shortly after his death in the New Thought magazine Nautilus, edited by Elizabeth Towne. The Nautilus had previously carried articles by Wattles in almost every issue, and Towne was also his book publisher. Florence Wattles wrote that her father was...

    In 1896 in Chicago, Illinois, Wattles attended “a convention of reformers” and met George Davis Herron, a Congregational Church minister and professor of Applied Christianity at Grinnell College who was then attracting nationwide attention by preaching a form of Christian Socialism. After meeting Herron, Wattles became a social visionary and began ...

    As a Midwesterner, Wattles travelled to Chicago, where several leading New Thought leaders were located, among them Emma Curtis Hopkins and William Walker Atkinson, and he gave “Sunday night lectures” in Indiana; however, his primary publisher was Massachusetts-based Elizabeth Towne. He studied the writings of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel and Ralp...

    Rhonda Byrne told a Newsweek interviewer that her inspiration for creating the 2006 hit film The Secret and the subsequent book by the same name, was her exposure to Wattles’s The Science of Getting Rich. Byrne’s daughter, Hayley, had given her mother a copy of the Wattles book to help her recover from her breakdown. The film itself also references...

    The Constructive Use of Foods(pamphlet)
    Hellfire Harrison(his only novel)
    Jesus: The Man and His Work, a long speech made into a pamphlet, and the base of “A New Christ” (1902)
    A New Christ (1903)

    Wallace D. Wattles was an American author and a New Thought writer who published The Science of Getting Rich in 1910. He also wrote about Christian Socialism, health, and the law of attraction.

  2. Religion portal. v. t. e. The Science of Getting Rich is a book written by the New Thought Movement writer Wallace D. Wattles and published in 1910 by the Elizabeth Towne Company. The book is still in print. According to USA Today, the text is "divided into 17 short, straight-to-the-point chapters that explain how to overcome mental barriers ...

    • (46.9K)
    • August 15, 1911
    • September 20, 1860
    • The Science of Getting Rich.
    • The Science of Being Great: The Practical Guide to a Life of Power.
    • The Science of Being Well.
    • The Wisdom of Wallace D. Wattles - Including: The Science of Getting Rich, The Science of Being Great & The Science of Being Well.
  3. Wallace D. Wattles was an American author and New Thought writer who published The Science of Getting Rich in 1910. He also ran for public office as a Socialist and studied the works of Hegel, Emerson and Fletcher.

  4. Aug 15, 2015 · Transform your approach to money and create success. The formula for getting rich from a Christian perspective and the inspiration behind Rhonda Byrne’s bestselling book and movie, The Secret. Wallace Wattles concisely shows how to use the power of thought and willpower on the way to getting rich.

  5. As featured in the bestselling book The Secret, here is the landmark guide to wealth creation republished with the classic essay “How to Get What You Want.”. Wallace D. Wattles spent a lifetime considering the laws of success as he found them in the work of the world’s great philosophers.