Hutton Gate (from Dr. King’s childhood)
<< Back to Chapter 1: Growing into a Master
Just outside Guisborough is a small village called Hutton Gate, which had great significance in Dr. King’s life. Leaving Guisborough, Dr. King and Ray Nielsen continued the mystical pilgrimage by visiting the small school at Hutton Gate where Dr. King’s father used to teach, (which they found had been divided into three houses) and where his family had a house. While walking around the grounds with one of the local men, Dr. King pointed out to Ray the exact spot in the woods where he had the deep mystical healing experience at the age of 11, as described in You Too Can Heal.
Dr. King: “The trees are still there, not nearly as good as they were in the 1930s. The old swing on the copper beech tree, used more by my sister, is still there, at least a part of it is still there. These woods to me always had a certain kind of mystical charm and a certain kind of romantic air which no other woods have ever had.”
Hutton Gate (from Dr. King’s childhood)
<< Back to Chapter 1: Growing into a Master
Just outside Guisborough is a small village called Hutton Gate, which had great significance in Dr. King’s life. Leaving Guisborough, Dr. King and Ray Nielsen continued the mystical pilgrimage by visiting the small school at Hutton Gate where Dr. King’s father used to teach, (which they found had been divided into three houses) and where his family had a house. While walking around the grounds with one of the local men, Dr. King pointed out to Ray the exact spot in the woods where he had the deep mystical healing experience at the age of 11, as described in You Too Can Heal.
Dr. King: “The trees are still there, not nearly as good as they were in the 1930s. The old swing on the copper beech tree, used more by my sister, is still there, at least a part of it is still there. These woods to me always had a certain kind of mystical charm and a certain kind of romantic air which no other woods have ever had.”