1. Mary Baker Eddy, Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures (Boston: The Christian Science Board of Directors), xii.
  2. Eddy, “Special Notice from Rev. Mary B. G. Eddy,” The Christian Science Journal, June 1889, 156.
  3. Laura E. Sargent, n.d., Reminiscence, 3.
  4. Laura E. Sargent, undated manuscript, Reminiscence, 3-4.
  5. James Henry Wiggin to Eddy, 11 May 1890, 349a.47.024.
  6. Eddy to Wiggin, 28 May 1890, L02218.
  7. Wiggin to Eddy, 1 September 1890, 349a.47.047.
  8. This statement was first published in the New York American newspaper, and can be found in the piece “Mrs. Eddy’s Activity Shown,” Christian Science Sentinel, 1 December 1906, 228-229. The piece was later republished in Eddy’s The First Church of Christ, Scientist, and Miscellany, as “Mrs. Eddy’s Statement,” on pages 317-319.
  9. Eddy, “Mrs. Eddy’s Statement,” Miscellany, 317-318.
  10. William G. Nixon to Eddy, 2 October 1890, 220c.36.012.
  11. Eddy to Nixon, 17 November 1890, L13250.
  12. Eddy to Nixon, 5 December 1890, N00049. See “What are considered the major editions of Science and Health?” for information on the important revisions of the book: 1878, 1881, 1883, 1886, 1891, 1902, and 1907.
  13. Eddy to Caroline D. Noyes, 15 January 1891, L05447.
  14. Eddy to Ruth Ewing, 18 January 1891, L08500.
  15. Eddy would, in a few years, establish the Bible and Science and Health as the “dual and impersonal pastor” of her church. For more on this, see “Mary Baker Eddy’s designation of the Christian Science pastor.”
  16. The platform of Christian Science consists of 32 numbered paragraphs detailing the metaphysical doctrines of the religion.
  17. See Norcross’s comments in “Science and Health by Mary Baker G. Eddy,” Journal, April 1891, 1–7.
  18. See Norcross, “Science and Health by Mary Baker G. Eddy,” Journal, April 1891, 1–7.
  19. Emma E. Cooley, “Some Reminiscences of Mary Baker Eddy,” 1932, Reminiscence, 2.
  20. Eddy, Science and Health, 361.