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===Church Triumphant and radio station=== Stetson still retained some support, and continued to live in her mansion next to First Church, instructing students who had remained loyal to her.<ref name="swihart"/>{{rp|366.}} She claimed that Eddy was still on her side, and that Eddy's actions were actually a way to free her from the Mother Church,<ref name="gott"/>{{rp|377.}} or that Eddy was merely testing her.<ref name="swihart"/>{{rp|366.}} She came to believe her mission was to create a more "spiritual" version of Christian Science, which she called the "Church Triumphant."<ref name=mchenry/><ref name="swihart"/>{{rp|366.}} When Eddy died in 1910, Stetson declared that she believed Eddy would rise from the grave like Jesus and appear to her personally before appearing to the rest of the world, a claim Stetson would repeat for the rest of her life. It became a national news story and Christian Scientists, including the Christian Science Board of Directors itself, repeatedly denounced these proclamations as [[heresy|heretical]].<ref name="swihart"/>{{rp|366.}}<ref>{{cite news|url=https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030214/1910-12-30/ed-1/seq-1/|title=Mrs. Eddy will Rise|date=1910-12-30|publisher=[[New York Tribune]]|pages=1, 2|access-date=2009-09-04}} (responses from a former student and from Alfred Farlow of the Mother Church on page 2)</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Safronoff |first1=Cindy P. |title=Dedication: Building the Seattle Branches of Mary Baker Eddy's Church |date=2020 |publisher=this one thing |location=Seattle |page=83}}</ref> Stetson was, as one historian put it, an "incurable mythomaniac" and that "nothing she says, especially about herself, can be taken at face value", and she even went so far as to reassemble [[photostat]]s of handwritten letters from Eddy to make herself look good.<ref name=gill/>{{rp|693.}}{{efn|Stetson had a largely negative impact on biographies of Eddy. In particular, Stetson was a main source for a book attacking Eddy by Edwin Dakin.<ref name=gill/>{{rp|534, 693.}}}} Stetson published pamphlets advocating her "Church Triumphant" and attacking the Mother Church, and spent a significant amount of her followers' money promoting her views in newspapers. She also started a short lived magazine called ''American Standard'' in order to "guard and foster [[White supremacy|Nordic supremacy]] in America" which in 1925 merged with a radio station bought for her by her students.<ref name="swihart"/>{{rp|366.}} The station broadcast "an extraordinary mixture of [[Proto-fascism|protofascist]] propaganda and classical music."<ref name=gill/>{{rp|694.}} The station, known as WHAP for "We Hold America Protestant", and officially owned by a group of Stetson's students who called themselves the Defenders of Truth Society, was known for being overtly [[Anti-Catholicism|anti-Catholic]] and [[Antisemitism|anti-Semitic]], and was often the subject of controversy. William Taylor, a Stetson follower who was the official licensee for the station, was expelled from the Mother Church for his involvement, and the Mother Church issued a circular denouncing WHAP's anti-Catholic and anti-Jewish broadcasts.<ref name="jaker">Jaker, Bill; Sulek, Frank; Kanze, Peter (2015) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=ACckCQAAQBAJ The Airwaves of New York: Illustrated Histories of 156 AM Stations in the Metropolitan Area, 1921-1996]''. McFarland. pp. 79-80.</ref> Stetson's former church in New York condemned her for the station, saying that she was in "no way connected with the Christian Science movement" and that the church opposed all "attacks on other religions or religionists."<ref name="jta">{{cite news |title=N.Y. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE COMMITTEE DISAVOWS PART IN MRS. STETSON'S ATTACKS |url=https://www.jta.org/1927/03/16/archive/meer-grossman-received-by-polish-vice-premier |publisher=Jewish Telegraphic Agency |date=16 March 1927}}</ref> In 1927, Stetson predicted her own immortality,<ref name="mchenry"/><ref name="gray"/><ref name="jaker"/> and in 1928, shortly before her death, she announced she was withdrawing from her radio station.<ref name="jaker"/> Stetson died on October 12, 1928, in [[Rochester, New York]].<ref name="brit"/>
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