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Kawayae Nagasawa
on a Bicycle.
Through the efforts of Spiritualist follower, Kanaye Nagasawa, Fountaingrove
developed a successful winery. Kanaye Nagasawa became sole owner in the
1920s, and operated the winery until his death in 1934.
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FOUNTAINGROVE
Fountaingrove was established
in 1875 by Thomas Lake Harris, founder of the Brotherhood of the New
Life and of three colonies in New York between 1861 and 1867. Fountaingrove,
described by its founder as a Theo-Socialist community, was situated
in Northern California on 700 acres two miles north of Santa Rosa, “the Eden of the West.” The charismatic
Harris called himself the "primate," or "pivotal man" chosen
by God, in whom the forces of good and evil fought on earth and from
whom the announcement of Christ’s Second Coming would emerge. He
identified himself with Christ and as a bi-sexual and divine man-woman.
His spiritualist doctrine included teachings such as Divine Respiration,
which enabled the brotherhood to commune with God through rhythmic breathing.
In 1891, Harris’s complex theories of Spiritual Counterparts—each
person had a counterpart in heaven—and celibacy resulted in a widely
publicized accusation of sexual license and immorality. Harris left Fountaingrove
but not without having presided over a successful enterprise.
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