It sounds, at first, like the plot from a Woody Allen film. In 1916 members of
the Green Acre religious community in Eliot, Maine released their Baha’i founder from a psychiatric ward in downtown Portsmouth.
The patient, an elderly Sarah Jane Farmer, had been subjected to drug and early
electroshock therapy under Dr. Edward Cowles, a specialist in nervous and mental
disorders. Cowles had been "curing" Farmer for six years. She had lived, possibly
imprisoned, at times, in a small cell in the basement of a brick office on Middle
Street. According to legend, Dr. Cowles gave chase, pursuing the Baha’i liberators
automobile as they took Farmer back to her home in Eliot, Maine.
Nothing about the life of Sarah Farmer makes easy sense. Her father Moses Farmer
was a Transcendentalist and an inventor. He was reportedly the first man to wire
a house to use electric lights. Earlier, in 1847, Farmer had exhibited the first
electric passenger railway car in Dover, NH. He is credited with a series of key
electrical devices, including early work on the telephone with Alexander Graham
Bell and the first telephone-operated security alarm. Farmer did not patent many
of his early inventions because, due to his religious belief, he felt they were
ideas whispered to him by God for the use of all mankind.
Sarah's mother Hannah Shapleigh was a very early feminist, an abolitionist and
philanthropist who created a shelter for unwed mothers. When Sarah narrowly recovered
from a serious childhood illness, Hannah vowed that her daughter would dedicate
her life to God, which she dutifully did. The question, for this intelligent child
of free-thinking parents, was -- exactly which god to serve.
In 1890, Sarah Jane Farmer signed on with four others to open a restful summer
resort on a knoll high above the Piscataqua River in Eliot, Maine. The enormously
popular poet John Greenleaf Whittier was first to sign the guest book of the Eliot
Inn. It was Whittier who suggested the name Green Acre to Sarah, the name the
Baha’i school still bears today.
In 1892, the same year that her father died, Sarah had a vision. What if members
of all world religions could get together in one place and talk openly? Two summers
later, the Green Acre Conference was born. According to Eliot historian Rosanne
Adams, the hotel hosted representatives from at least 17 different faiths -- Jews,
Christians, Muslims, Buddhists, Hindi, Shinto, Zoroastrians, philosophers, religious
academics, artists and others arrived. Guests wearing long beards, turbans, robes
and fezzes roamed the Piscataqua estate and the little Yankee town of Eliot. In
1894 visitors to the summer multi-cultural conference raised the first known "peace
flag" dedicated to world harmony. Known as "The Monsalvat School for the Study
of Comparative Religions" Green Acre even published its own weekly newspaper.
At the turn of the century Sarah became interested in the relatively young Baha’i
faith that espoused world peace, the equality of women and the oneness of all
major religions. Despite chronic ill-health, advancing age and a lack of funds,
she traveled to Palestine in 1900 to meet 'Abdu'l-Baha, son of the great Baha’i
prophet Baha'u'llah. Sarah accepted the faith and the following summer Green Acre
began its evolution toward a Baha’i center -- a decision not popular with all
involved. By 1905 Japanese negotiators at the Treaty of Portsmouth visited the
renowned religious school and were photographed with founder Sarah Jane Farmer.
"It was always an open forum," says Rosanne Adams, a co-author of a history of
Green Acre. "But the Baha’i took more interest in her (Farmer). She had a Baha’i
lawyer, for example. The Baha’i belief in the oneness of God and the unity of
all people were very much her ideals too."
Here the story, already strange to Western ears, takes another turn. According
to Diane Iverson, a co-author of "Green Acre on the Piscataqua", Sarah had a serious
accident in 1907. She fell in a crowd of people entering a trolley in Boston.
She was pushed to the ground and her spine was crushed, leaving her temporarily
an invalid.
CONTINUE with SARAH FARMER STORY
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