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astrologers, <strong>the</strong> Rosicrucians, under <strong>the</strong> leadership of Johannes Kelpius (1673–1708),<br />

established an astrological library and conservatory on Wissahickon Creek in what is<br />

now <strong>the</strong> Germantown section of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Among o<strong>the</strong>r activities,<br />

<strong>the</strong>y helped upgrade <strong>the</strong> almanac already being published by Daniel Leeds, and, in<br />

1698, one of <strong>the</strong>ir better astrologers, Johann Seelig, was commissioned to cast <strong>the</strong><br />

horoscope for <strong>the</strong> Swedish Lu<strong>the</strong>ran church in Wisaco, Pennsylvania, in order to<br />

determine <strong>the</strong> best date to commence <strong>the</strong> new building. After <strong>the</strong> demise of <strong>the</strong><br />

Chapter of Perfection, as Kelpius’s group was known, surviving members became <strong>the</strong><br />

first hexmeisters, <strong>the</strong> well-known folk magicians of eastern Pennsylvania.<br />

European Background<br />

Through <strong>the</strong> eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, Americans attracted to<br />

<strong>astrology</strong> derived <strong>the</strong>ir interest from a flow of material from Europe, even though several<br />

almanacs, which passed along astrological data for farming and doctoring, were<br />

published in America. After reaching a low point in <strong>the</strong> eighteenth century, a distinct<br />

new era for <strong>astrology</strong> began in England in <strong>the</strong> early nineteenth century. This new era<br />

can be marked by <strong>the</strong> 1816 publication of James Wilson’s A Complete Dictionary of<br />

Astrology, which for <strong>the</strong> first time gave its readers <strong>the</strong> basic kind of astrological information<br />

<strong>the</strong>y needed to construct astrological charts and interpret <strong>the</strong>m. A decade<br />

later, Robert C. Smith (1795–1832), writing under <strong>the</strong> pen name Raphael, launched<br />

<strong>the</strong> first successful astrological publishing house. His first <strong>book</strong>, Manual of Astrology,<br />

was an immediate success, but more importantly, he produced an ephemeris, a <strong>book</strong> of<br />

charts showing <strong>the</strong> position of <strong>the</strong> planets in <strong>the</strong> sky day by day. The annual Raphael’s<br />

Ephemeris remains a standard astrological text<strong>book</strong>. After Smith’s death, a succession<br />

of individuals carried on his work, providing <strong>the</strong> material necessary for those who<br />

wished to follow its practice. Wilson, <strong>the</strong> various Raphaels, and <strong>the</strong> two men who<br />

wrote under <strong>the</strong> pseudonym of Zadkiel (Richard James Morrison and Alfred J. Pearce)<br />

produced <strong>the</strong> initial library of <strong>book</strong>s that circulated in <strong>the</strong> United States and through<br />

which Americans rediscovered <strong>astrology</strong>.<br />

At <strong>the</strong> end of <strong>the</strong> century, <strong>astrology</strong> received additional support from <strong>the</strong> Theosophical<br />

Society. The first important Theosophical astrologer, Walter Gorn Old, also<br />

assumed a pen name, Sepharial. As popular as Sepharial became—and his <strong>book</strong>s are still<br />

in print—his work was eclipsed by that of a man he introduced into <strong>the</strong> society and to<br />

<strong>astrology</strong>, William Frederick Allen (1860–1917), better known by his pen name, Alan<br />

Leo. Allen launched <strong>the</strong> very successful The Astrologer’s Magazine (later renamed Modern<br />

Astrology), and, in 1896, he and Old organized <strong>the</strong> first modern astrological society.<br />

This Astrological Society, soon reconstituted as <strong>the</strong> Society for Astrological Research,<br />

survives today as <strong>the</strong> Astrological Lodge of <strong>the</strong> Theosophical Society. Among its outstanding<br />

members were Allen’s wife, known under her pen name, Bessie Leo, and one of<br />

<strong>the</strong> first British astrologers not to use a pen name, Charles E. O. Carter.<br />

New Beginnings in America<br />

Throughout <strong>the</strong> colonial era, America had never been without <strong>astrology</strong>. As<br />

with Europe, <strong>astrology</strong> had been pushed to <strong>the</strong> hinterland and for many years survived<br />

History of Astrology in America<br />

THE ASTROLOGY BOOK<br />

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