Horatio Willis Dresser (January 15, 1866 – March 30, 1954) was a New Thought religious leader and author in the United States. In 1919 he became a minister of General Convention of the Church of the New Jerusalem, and served briefly at a Swedenborgian church in Portland, Maine.
In addition to his writings on New Thought, Dresser is known for having edited two books of selected papers by Phineas Parkhurst Quimby. Both of Dresser's parents had studied with the mesmerist, who influenced the New Thought movement.
Horatio Willis Dresser (January 15, 1866 – March 30, 1954) was a New Thought religious leader and author in the United States. In 1919 he became a minister...
British/Argentinian figure skater Horatio Caro (1862–1920), English chess player Horatio Parker (1863–1919), American composer HoratioDresser (1866–1945), New Thought...
Julius Dresser, and later his son Horatio, are sometimes credited as founders of New Thought as a named movement, others share this title. Horatio wrote...
cured by Quimby were Julius Dresser and his wife Annetta Dresser, from what sickness it is unclear. Their son, HoratioDresser, wrote extensively on Quimby's...
Dresser met Annetta Seabury at Quimby's office. They married in 1863. Their first son, Horatio, was born in 1866. In 1866, at the age of 28, Dresser become...
as William Walker Atkinson, Clara Bewick Colby, Florence Crawford, Horatio W. Dresser, George Wharton James, Edgar L. Larkin, Orison Swett Marden, and Elizabeth...
James in 1872, was called "the first permanent New Thought Club" by HoratioDresser. This Metaphysical Club was absorbed into the International New Thought...
2006 film and book Theosophy Universalism List of New Thought writers Dresser, Horatio Willis (1919), A History of the New Thought Movement, TY Crowell Co...
Couldn't Be Easier, The Top 10 Things Dead People Want to Tell You HoratioDresser – The Quimby Manuscripts; The Power of Silence; Spiritual Health and...