L. Ron Hubbard’s Phoenix Home
L. Ron Hubbard’s house on North 44th Street is true to the days he lived in Phoenix.
L. Ron Hubbard’s Phoenix Home
Every room of Mr. Hubbard’s home is carefully restored— including the living room, where he often met with some of the first Scientology students. In this
1952 photograph, he is seen conducting a demonstration of an early model of the Electropsychometer (E-Meter), the religious artifact used by Scientology
spiritual counselors.
L. Ron Hubbard’s Phoenix Home
Every room of Mr. Hubbard’s home is carefully restored— including the living room, where he often met with some of the first Scientology students. In this 1952 photograph, he is seen conducting a demonstration of an early model of the Electropsychometer (E-Meter), the religious artifact used by Scientology spiritual counselors.
L. Ron Hubbard’s Phoenix Home
Mr. Hubbard’s office stands exactly as it did when he worked here—replete with the SoundScriber transcription machine which he used in
authoring five seminal Scientology books.
L. Ron Hubbard’s Phoenix Home
Mr. Hubbard’s office stands exactly as it did when he worked here—replete with the SoundScriber transcription machine which he used in authoring five seminal Scientology books.
Scientology Founder L. Ron Hubbard's Phoenix home stands as a fully restored, national historic landmark in the shadow of the legendary Camelback Mountain.
It was here in 1952, culminating two decades of research into the life force, Mr. Hubbard made his breakthrough discovery: the isolation and identification of the human
spirit. Whereupon, he founded the Scientology religion and established the first Hubbard Association of Scientologists in downtown Phoenix.
Through the course of the following three years, Mr. Hubbard authored seminal scripture of Scientology and delivered more than 600 lectures to the earliest students of Scientology, who traveled to Phoenix from cities over the world.
It was also in Phoenix that Mr. Hubbard first announced Scientology to the world in his historic weekly public lecture series, The Golden Dawn.
Here, too, he established the fundamental axioms, codes and symbols of the religion.
After meticulous restoration, Mr. Hubbard’s home stands today exactly as it did when he lived in Phoenix. Original artifacts, informative displays and photographs tell the epic
story of the birth of the only major new religion to emerge in the twentieth century.
L. Ron Hubbard’s historic Camelback home was honored with the Arizona Governor’s Heritage Preservation Honor Award.