Monday, November 10, 2014
Picture
We need a volunteer in the New York City area who is willing to visit the police archive and check for a criminal record (and photo) from 1896. Anyone?
Sunday, November 9, 2014
We need a volunteer
We need a volunteer who lives near Columbia, South Carolina, who is willing to visit USC and turn pages in an archive.
Anyone?
Anyone?
Friday, November 7, 2014
You can help
You can help us by recommending our
blog to others. You can help us by leaving a favorable review on the book site
from which you bought our books. There is one very positive review on Amazon.
We know we’ve sold more than one copy
on Amazon. If you like our book leave a review.
If you participate in other
Internet forums where Watch Tower history is a topic of interest, point people
to our books and to this blog.
We are researching some hard to
follow areas. We need material about congregations formed before 1910. We need
letters and photos relevant to the period. Even those you may see as
insignificant will help.
Thursday, November 6, 2014
End of Chapter on Food for Thinking Christians
Raw, unedited. But here it is:
  
 
  
 
 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
              
 
 
photo here    
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
Of
those prominent in the work up to 1881, Paton’s name is conspicuously absent
from the list of those circulating Food
for Thinking Christians. He is mentioned in passing as active in Michigan
and, Russell “presumed,” busy writing for the first issues of Zion’s Day Star. Paton was already
surrendering to Universalism, something that had appealed to him from his
youth, and he was uncomfortable with the lead Russell had taken. This is best
detailed in another chapter.
Samuel
T. Tackabury entered the work in March 1882. He had been “a member until now of
the M.E. Conference.”[1] Tackabury
was a new convert, one of the few ministers convinced by Food for Thinking Christians and other Watch Tower publications. He
forwarded his ministerial credentials along with his resignation from the
Methodist Episcopal ministry and from the M. E. denomination to church
authorities, and it is duly noted in The
Minutes and Official Journal of the New York Conference.[2] He
had been active in the Methodist ministry at least from the mid 1860’s,[3]
resigning his charge in 1877 because of chronic ill health. Early in his
Methodist Episcopal ministry, he supported himself as a “dairyman and farmer.”[4]
He
returned to the ministry later and was, at the time he was introduced to Watch  Tower Pierre , South
  Dakota Ohio August 5, 1888 , of “consumption,” that is tuberculosis.[7]
According to the 1870 Census he was born about 1832. By February 1883,
Tackabury was back in Ohio 
Entering
active Watch  Tower New York  State 
William
Boyer, an English immigrant, was born June 30, 1823, in Warrington, Lancashire,
to Samuel and Jane Boyer. A brief biographical note says:
He worked in a
chemical laboratory until he came to the United States Dane County , Wis. Wisconsin Iowa Floyd  County 
Nothing
is known of his conversion to Watch  Tower United Kingdom 
He
is not the same as the “gentleman” who in 1887 ran away with a fifteen year old
girl from Reading , Pennsylvania 
There
is circumstantial evidence that “Bro. Graves” was John Temple Graves. If so,
his association with Zion Watch  Tower June 11, 1910 , New York Times
quoted Graves  as saying: “I was a traveling lecturer for many years
between Pittsburg Graves  invited
Barbour to speak at a conference on the “mob spirit in America 
John Temple  Graves 
            While
Russell recounted the efforts of others, he did not chronicle his own. Only one
example of his personal evangelism using Food for Thinking Christians
and Tabernacle Teachings exists. Russell admired Joseph Cook, a well known
writer and lecturer.[15]
Cook, a Congregationalist clergyman from Boston 
            Russell
extracted from another publication a short paragraph suggesting that Cook
accepted some form of “second probation,” republishing the comment in The Watch 
 Tower 
            P.
S. L. Johnson elaborates an entire conversation between Russell and Cook that
we find difficult to credit. The basic story is that Russell presented Cook
with the booklets and Cook promised to read them. Johnson claimed that Cook had
previously read other material from Russell, and it is very probable that
Russell sent him tracts and sample copies of Zion Watch  Tower Watch 
 Tower 
photo here
Joseph Cook
By
January 1886, Maria Russell could report that “at present there are about three
hundred colporteurs at work in the vineyard earnestly laboring for the good of
their fellow beings and for the ‘well done’ of the Master, disseminating these
publications.” She wondered why more hadn’t taken up the work “We should each
ask himself,” she wrote, “What am I doing to herald the blessed gospel which
did so much for my own heart? How am I manifesting to God my appreciation of
his grace?”[20]
Interviews
Newspaper
reporters sought out Russell for interviews. Many of the articles were short
and of no lasting interest. Some few give us a fair picture of Russell and his
message. The New Philadelphia, Ohio,
Democrat ran an interview with Russell that’s of particular interest.
Russell pointed to growing labor unrest as a sign that the “time of trouble”
was upon them. He mentioned no specific event, but there was no need. 1882 saw
endless unrest in the mine fields of the west and Cumberland May 2, 1884 , issue The New York Times
reported on no less than seven strikes, one that included threats of violence;
so there was no need for Russell to pinpoint one specific event.[21]  The article, except the last paragraph, was
largely fair:
Rather a new
construction is put upon the signs of the times by Mr. C. T. Russell, of Pittsburgh 
“What evidences are
there that we are in these years of trouble that precede the millennium?” he
was asked
“Look at the condition
of affairs all over the world. Labor and capital are massing themselves,
nations are trembling and the whole outlook tends to strengthen our position.
God moves by natural means, and this uprising of labor against capital is the
result of the diffusion of knowledge among the masses causing them to rise
against oppression of all kinds, political and social.”
“This thirty-seven
years, then, will be filled with trouble such as the world has never known?”
said a reporter.
“Yes, sir. This
period is the day of the Lord, we think in which society shall be
disintegrated, and kingdoms and governments, as such, pass away.”
He thinks the
Nihilists and Communists are forerunners of the storm, and that Church and
State will go down in the “maelstrom.” His predictions of revolutions he bases
on Scripture reading, as follows:
“Do you consider the
present aspect of affairs between labor and capital indicative of great trouble
in the future?” was asked.
“There will be more
trouble, and there will be eventually a terrible struggle for supremacy with
all the dire results consequent upon such a struggle, and I think the
scriptures predict it. Among other passages read James V. 1-5”  
            The article quoted James 5:1-5 in
full, but ended with the observation: “And thus the cranks do multiply, and the
people imagine a vain thing, seek, in the supernatural, the explanation of
social disturbances, which arise from purely economic causes.”[22]
            To prompt more interest a tract
usually referenced as The Minister’s
Daughter was issued as a supplement to the June 1882 issue of Zion Watch  Tower 
Analysis
Because
of their much wider circulation the Bible
Students Tracts and Food for Thinking
Christians filled a place that Day
Dawn failed to fill. Paton’s book circulated in very small number, mostly
among those already interested or within the Second Adventist community. The
tracts and later booklet based on them, Food
for Thinking Christians, circulated widely among those not previously
exposed to Watch Tower teaching. It drew interest from outside the Second
Adventist community.
A
few decades later Harris
Franklin Rall, professor of Systematic Theology at Garrett
Biblical Institute, Evanston, Illinois, presented an analysis of Watch Tower teachings.
Without commenting directly on either Food
or the tracts, he suggested that it was rooted in First Century Christianity or
at least in an attempt to reclaim primitive Christianity. His review was
somewhat critical, because he felt Christianity had evolved beyond its
Chiliastic roots:
A different influence
was that working outside the great churches and appearing in the smaller
separatist groups. These were the modern successors of the more radical circles
of the Reformation period. In the first half of the nineteenth century there
appeared in England 
It is important, as
we turn to a detailed study of modern premillennialism, that we shall not only
recognize how it is connected with the past, but also the peculiar character
which it has to-day. The change that has taken place will appear if we contrast
this modern movement with the chiliastic hopes that were held in many parts of
the church in the first two centuries. The early Christians lived in a hostile
world, governed by forces that were always frankly pagan and sometimes
threatened their very existence. They saw no hope for deliverance except by the
destruction of the whole world-order. They believed that the age was near its
end. In the midst of this darkness they felt that the Lord would speedily
return and deliver them. They had no plans for the future because they did not
expect any future. … 
Modern
premillennialism faces a radically changed situation. It has to deal with the
fact that nineteen centuries have passed, that several score generations have
come and gone since that early day. It cannot ignore the fact that there is
such a thing as a long Christian history for which some sort of meaning must be
found. And unless it turns again to discredited calculations and fixing of
dates, it must realize that there may still be long centuries and even
millennia ahead of us here in this earth. The time is past when it can merely
quote a passage and voice a hope. And so modern chiliasm differs radically from
the simple and unreflective hope of that early day. It is no mere expectation
of the speedy second coming of Christ. It is no mere teaching as to the order
of certain events. It has of necessity become an elaborate system of doctrine,
a complete outline of theology. It is an interpretation of Christianity
claiming to give alone its true meaning. In Judaism and early Christianity
these hopes were expressed with a certain freedom, marked with feeling and
imagination, with no suggestion of logic and system. Modern premillennialism
has become scholastic system, with rigid forms of thought and endless
elaboration of doctrine.[23]
            Though Rall is critical, he saw
“Millennial Dawnism” as an attempt to return to Christian (and Jewish) roots.
He accurately describes the Watch  Tower 
The
claim to “truth” disturbed Rall and others for several reasons. Any claim to
advanced understanding of “truth” calls into question those who do not hold the
same views. No one likes to be questioned, though probing beliefs is an
essential to solid faith. Finding themselves defined as lacking led many to an
uncritical rejection of Watch  Tower Watch  Tower 
Also,
the claim to advanced light turned into a cudgel in the hands of the unkind and
stupid and led to severe and un-analytic rejection of Watch  Tower Watch  Tower Pittsburgh Watch  Tower 
One
Twentieth Century writer suggests that Food
for Thinking Christians is Russell’s most important book. In that it was
the first wide-spread dissemination of Watch  Tower 
What
did occur was an increase of resignations from former church affiliation on the
part of newly converted Watch  Tower Watch  Tower Watch  Tower 
Believing that we are in the harvest of the Gospel Age
as spoken of in Matt. 13:30, when the reapers are separating the wheat from the
tares, which the Lord has permitted to grow together during the age, and also
that the nominal church of all denominations is represented by the wheat and
tares in the field-- in which both have been growing, and that its mixed
condition of worldly-mindedness and lukewarm Christianity is displeasing in the
sight of our Lord, I have … concluded to sell all that I once found dear--my
reputation and my friends if need be--my time, my talents, my means, my all.
This mixed condition of truth and error, worldliness
and lukewarmness, etc., I believe to be the Babylon 
In obedience to this command, I ask to have my name
taken off the list of membership of the nominal church. It is written in the
Lamb’s book of life and that is enough.
In withdrawing my name I do not withdraw my affections
from you, but would if I could have you all “as ripened wheat,” gathered into
the barn – condition of safety, rather than bound with the bundles of tares for
the burning – with the “fire of God’s jealousy.”
Let me urge you each to a deeper consecration and a
more thorough searching of the Scriptures. 
Others
separated from their pervious church affiliation forming de facto congregations
in cities where more than one shared similar beliefs. The congregation in Albany ,
 New York Watch  Tower 
[1]               View from the Tower, Zion’s Watch Tower, March 1882, page 1.
[2]               The Minutes and Official Journal of the New York Conference: Fifteenth
Annual Session of the Central New York Conference of the Methodist Episcopal
Church held at Ithaca, New York, October 11-17, 1882, pages 24, 60.
Earliest mention of his ministry within the M. E. Church I could find is in The Syracuse , New York May 3, 1866 ,
page 5.
[3]               Elliot G. Storke. History of Cayuga County, New York,  lists him as active in the ministry in 1864.
[4]               Hamilton Onondaga  County 
[5]               His health issues are mentioned in
Central New York Conference reports in the late 1870’s Pastor in Pierre ,
 South Dakota Hughes  County County-  Superintendent Hughes County , South Dakota 
[6]               A Word from Brother Tackabury, Zion’s Watch Tower, March 1888, page 1.
[7]               Brother Tackabury’s Death, Zion’s Watch Tower, August 1888, page 1.
Tackabury was married twice. His first wife, Mary G. Watkins, died May 6, 1863 . The marriage and her
death are noted in The New York
Genealogical and Biographical Record, January 1913, page 84. He married
secondly Alice Force in Ohio 
[8]               Christopher B. Coleman: Some
Religious Developments in Indiana, Indiana
Magazine of History, June 1909, describes a “railroad preacher” this way: The
circuit rider and itinerant preacher, so necessary and useful in the early
times, survives under different conditions in a less glorious service and with
less effectiveness in the railroad preacher of the present, living in some
central location and going to scattered congregations for preaching service on
Sunday, and to funerals and weddings on week-days, stirring religious sentiment
by periodic protracted meetings, but seldom vitally affecting the life of the
community. – page 68.
[9]               View from the Tower, Zion’s Watch Tower, April 1882, page 1. 
[10]             History
of Floyd County, Iowa, Inter-State Publishing Co., Chicago 
[11]             Untitled Announcement, Zion’s Watch Tower, July 1882, page 1.
[12]             William
Worth Belknap: History of the Fifteenth
Regiment, Iowa 
[13]             Commercial Men Get Divided
Instruction, New York Times, June 11, 1910 .
[14]             Mob Spirit in America,
Chautauqua Press, 1903, page 23ff.
[15]             Cook was born January 26, 1838  in Ticonderoga ,
 New York Boston United
  States Europe .
He died in 1901. His obituary is found in the January 26, 1901 , New York Times.
[16]             C. T. Russell: Spiritualism, Zion’s
Watch Tower, March 1881, page 2.
[17]             Joseph Cook: God the Director of
Forces, Zion’s Watch Tower, September 1880, page 5. The extract is from Monday
Lectures: Fifth Series, London Edition, 1880, page 21.
[18]             Untitled short article: Zion Watch  Tower 
[19]             P. S. L. Johnson: The Parousia
Messenger, Philadelphia Philadelphia Boston 
[20]             M. F. Russell: Tract Fund Report, Zion’s Watch Tower, January 1886, page
2.
[21]             Labor Troubles, The New York Times, May 2,
 1884 .
[22]             Religious, The New
  Philadelphia , Ohio May 18, 1882 .
[23]
         H. F. Rall: Modern Premillennialism and the Christian
Hope, Abingdon Press, 1920, pages 101-103.
[24]             There are two versions of Elmer
Bryan’s arrest outside a church in Pittsburgh New York Bryan April 6, 1889 , paint the opposite
picture. The Dispatch may have been
swayed against Bryan Bryan 
                S.
I. Hickey disrupted a meeting of The General Assembly of the Presbyterian
Church in New York City May 18, 1889 .
                Neither
Bryan Watch  Tower Bryan 
                Another
aggressive Watch Tower evangelist was J. N Kleusch. In 1894 he was arrested and
fined twenty-five dollars for threatening behavior. The Chicago Inter-Ocean
reported: “In his missionary zeal Mr. Kleusch endeavored to force Mrs. Charles
Manval to buy a tract entitled “Millennial Dawn.” When she refused to do so he
began to threaten her and tell her the doom of backsliders. At this juncture,
however Mr. Manval entered the house. He covered the missionary with a
revolver, ordered him out of the house, and then swore out a warrant for his
arrest. In the Police Court yesterday morning the missionary appeared as his
own advocate and conducted his case in a novel manner. Hanging up a chart
before Justice Quinn, he began to demonstrate to the court that the day of
judgment was at hand. It required only a few moments for the Judge to become
satisfied on this point, and he accordingly assessed the alleged missionary $25
and costs.” – See the January 16, 1894, issue.
[25]             His Second Coming: Believers in the
Restitution Say Christ Will Come again in 1914, The Albany , New York May 28,
 1900 . There is no record of this group in contemporary issues of Zion’s Watch  Tower Albany 288 First Street England 
Monday, November 3, 2014
Blog visits have dropped off to nearly 0
I don't see a reason to keep this blog active if no one visits it. Do you?
Saturday, November 1, 2014
Part of a chapter (Vol 2)
Food for Thinking Christians
            True to his word, Russell released the small
paperbound book, Food for Thinking
Christians, in August 1881. It reprinted Bible Students Tracts one through five and the Chart Supplement and contained some additional matter.[1] 
The
archive that owns relevant material has been reluctant to share it, and we have
been unable to consult key documentation. But some documentation has come to
us, and from it one can conclude that plans for a major tact distribution in
the United
  States United
  Kingdom Zion 
As
indicated in a pervious chapter, a handwritten document dated “February 1881”
was drawn up and signed by the principals. Those signing the document – C. T.
Russell, A. D. Jones, W. H. Conley and J. L. Russell – stated their belief that
much good would be accomplished by a “judicious and thorough distribution of
tracts” that would share their beliefs about God’s “plans.” They intended to
target all the large cities of North
 America  and the principal
cities of Great
  Britain 
Unless
the widely circulated donation amounts found on various websites are derived
from another document, they are in error. This document committed the four
principals to significant (for 1881) amounts: Charles Russell committed to
$7000.00; Albert Delmont Jones committed to $2000.00; William Henry Conley
promised $4000.00; and Joseph L. Russell promised $1000.00. These amounts were
to be paid in two payments. The first half was paid on signing and the
remainder on demand after six months. The money was entrusted to C. T. Russell
who in turn committed to keeping an open and accurate set of books.[2]
            Russell envisioned circulating at
least three hundred thousand copies of the tract. That large number required
contracts with more than one printing firm, and Russell contracted with firms in
Columbus, Lockport, Philadelphia and New York City.[3]
Contracts with delivery services, primarily American District Telegraphy
Company, were let.
Though
the Watch Tower Society is reluctant to release documentation, some details are
known. Russell shepherded the monies donated for the tract work. Instead of
using the paper provided by the printing firms with which he contracted, he
provided them paper, buying it from the wholesale firm of Hand & Ellsworth.
We don’t know the final figure, but there is a record of one payment of
$2299.86.[4] R.
H. Forestal Company of Philadelphia provided the paper for printing there. The
cost was $1727.29. Russell contracted with various freight and mass mailing
companies, electrotyping companies and printers. What little of the original
ledger we’ve seen indicates that he sought the best prices. If Russell
contracted in person, the publication and circulation of Food for Thinking
Christians was an immense personal commitment.[5]
Russell
personally contracted with the American District Telegraph Company instead of
using one of the brethren in New York City or Newark as his agent. A newspaper
report says: “Mr. C. T. Russell … dropped in upon the offices of the American
District Telegraph Company in this city on Wednesday afternoon. He was turned
over to Superintendent Jackson of the Circular Department. Mr. Russell said
that he desired to have distributed 100,000 copes of the pamphlet. Mr. Russell
said that he was going to different cities to engage people to distribute the
pamphlets.”[6]
Several
sources describe Russell as nearly six feet tall.[7]
The Sun described the person who contracted with American District
Telegraph messenger service as “medium-sized.” 
Perceptions differ, but the Sun’s reporter was obviously more
observant than other reporters were. Russell was five feet nine inches tall.[8] 
Russell
reported that A. D. Jones “gave valuable assistance in the tract distribution”
in New York City Newark 
In
some of the smaller towns individual Watch  Tower Watch  Tower Kansas 
A
letter from Austintown , Ohio January 16, 1882 , reported: “‘Food for Thinking Christians,’ was duly
received a few weeks ago, and I have carefully distributed the greater portion
of them among such as would appreciate such teachings.”[12]
In the June 1882 Watch Tower, Russell announced that “Bros. Leigh and
Spears have started on a trip down the Ohio river  in a small boat belonging to the latter. They purpose (D.V.) to visit
all the river towns between here and Cincinnati St. Louis 
Identifying
Leigh and Spears was difficult. The primary identifier is that they sailed from
“here” or Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Federal Street 
Samuel
Leigh connects to “Brother Spears” through a shared occupation.  The 1880/81 Directory lists a number of
people with the last name “Spear” but only one with the name “Spears,” and
thereby we might make the connection. James Spears was a glass cutter, living
on Carson Street 
The Ohio River  at Cincinnati 
Positive Response and Adverse
Reaction
            Reaction to the tract was immediate
and mixed. The Buffalo, New York, Daily
Courier of August 19, 1881, commented: “Within a day or two past large
numbers have been distributed in this city of a tract entitled ‘Food for
Thinking Christians; Why Evil was Permitted, and Kindred Topics.’ … Its
contents are of a character to command the attention of intelligent Bible
students.”
            Others were far less commendatory.
In Newark , New
  Jersey 
[photo here]
            At The House of Prayer, a “High  Church 
Someone took the matter to The New York Sun which duly reported:   
Shortly before the
close of the morning service in the House of Prayer, an Episcopal church in Newark 
The sexton then began
to have misgivings, and as soon as the rector, the Rev. H. Goodwin, had passed
from the church into the choir room the sexton showed him one of the books. Mr.
Goodwin at once stopped their distribution, but not before about thirty had
been carried away by the congregation. In the evening he referred to the matter
in church, and said he would have the pamphlets burned. He asked that those
that were carried away be also burned. They were filled, he added, with
fanaticism and rank heresy.
Last evening Mr.
Goodwin said the book was a conglomeration of strange views about evil, the
resurrection, and various Scripture topics. He has heard that copies were left
in a similar way at St.
  Paul 
When
the messenger service boys showed up a week later to reclaim the books and
circulate them as intended, he refused to give them up “until ownership was
proved.” It was the only way of halting, at least temporarily, the circulation
of material to which he objected. He made the affair part of his sermon that Sunday, August
 14, 1881 , saying that “he
admired the zeal of the owners of the books and thought their impudence was
grand.”
            The premature delivery caused
difficulty elsewhere too. The messenger boys were rebuffed. The New York Sun reported that “at
several churches they were told that there were no books there, and when they
undertook to give them out at other churches they were hustled away, or ‘booted
off,’ as some of them expressed it.”
Agustus
M. Bergner[18]
(spelled Burgner in the 1880 Census), one of the pillars of the infant Newark 
Being ushered into
the dining room, this reporter ascertained that a religious meeting was in
progress in the parlor. Mr. Bergner is about 40 years old, with a fair face and
light hair and beard. He is of medium height and has clearly cut and rather
handsome features.
“I belong,” he said,
“to a company of Christians who have no common name. We are not Second
Adventists, as has been inferred from the pamphlet, and we are not the
‘Holiness’ or ‘Higher Life’ sect. … We are opposed to the teaching of the
churches on several points. What they teach about hell and immortality is
nonsense. There is no hell. There will be eternal life for those who serve God;
the wicked will also be resurrected and have a second probation during the
millennium. But you can’t understand our doctrine unless you read the pamphlet;
about which so much fuss is made. … To-day I went to the Park Presbyterian
Church and the Belleville Avenue Congregational with 120 copies, and the people
eagerly took every one. I went to the Park Presbyterian because of the
minister’s audacity in putting them out on the stoop last Sunday without first
reading one. … I am told that in the Sunday school of the Fifth  Baptist  Church 
            The
Sun reported that six thousand copies had been sent out on August 7th,
with the misdirected delivery, and that twenty thousand more would be delivered
at church doors in New
  York City New York City Newark 
            The controversy in Newark Newark August 18, 1881 , issue. 
Puck, an American
humor magazine, quipped: “Some tramps who got hold of one of the four hundred
thousand copies of Food for Thinking Christians, were disgusted on opening the
book to find no cold meat in it.”[20] Puck’s squib was spread through the
press as well.[21] Another
attempt at humor appeared in The Cheyenne Transporter, a semi-monthly
published in Darlington , Oklahoma September 10, 1881 , issue reported: “A little girl accompanied her
father to church in Bangor 
            The
New York Daily Tribune of August 18th carried a brief
explanatory paragraph datelined Pittsburgh the day before saying: “‘Food for
Thinking Christians’ – a free pamphlet, of which 400,000 copies have been
distributed to all the principal churches of all the large cities, and which
has excited widespread comment, some ministers fearing it was an infidel work –
is a publication by a tract society of this city, and is designed to counteract
infidel teachings and tendencies and to promote interest in and study of the
Bible.”[23]
With a snipe at clergy who demanded fees for every service, The Kingston,
New York, Daily Freeman reported: 
The gospel is
remarkably free in Newark , New
  Jersey 
The Newark August 18, 1881 , Chicago 
The
New York Daily Graphic, in its usual
clipped fashion reported: “Fifty thousand copies of pamphlets distributed at
church doors, wherein doctrines of hell and eternal punishment are declared to
be nonsense. Man in Newark 
While
the Newark 
Not
all church-door tract distribution received a negative reaction. That Watch  Tower 
The zeal of the
movement not infrequently shows itself in the distribution of such literature
at meetings … either within the hall if liberty be granted or at the street
doors as the audience is dismissed. Page after page of it may be read revealing
no serious errors in the light of the Word of God until finally one comes upon
something startling in its almost pagan strangeness as compared therewith.[27]
With
the October/November 1881 issue of The
Watch Tower, Russell could report that the initial press run of three
hundred thousand copies, “though very large,” was not “sufficient and it was
increased to 500,000 copies” in the United States. Another three hundred
thousand were published in the United Kingdom New
  York City Chicago Boston Philadelphia 
A special edition of Food in “newspaper shape” was printed
for the purpose, “and as such it constituted the September number of The Watch Tower.” This accounted, he
explained, for the increased size and change of shape of the September  Watch  Tower 
Russell
was reluctant to name the papers that circulated Food for Thinking
Christians to his order. If there is any implication that the papers
circulated it out of the goodness of the managing editors’ hearts, it is false.
Russell provided the tracts, of course, and paid the mailing and delivery
expense. The New York City paper was the Tribune. A payment of $404.90
ensured the delivery of one hundred thousand copies. Other papers circulating
Food were The Chicago Inter-Ocean (90,000 copies), The Chicago
Tribune (10,000 copies). The Western Rural, a weekly published in
Chicago but with a wide circulation through out the American mid-west,
circulated twenty-three thousand copies. Another journal meant for rural
distribution, The Farm Journal of Philadelphia, circulated thirty-six
thousand copies at a cost of $171.65. Massachusetts Ploughman, another
rural weekly, and New England Farmer were also used.[29]
The
extent of the work surprised Russell and his associates. They hadn’t planned on
anything approaching the circulation that resulted:
The work has been so much greater than we had
anticipated, and seemingly was impelled by an unseen hand and at such a special
time, too, that we cannot doubt that it is all of the Lord, and it is probably
designed as a ripener to some grains of “wheat,” to prepare them as a part of
the “first fruits” of the wheat or spiritual harvest--members of the Bride of
Christ; and also, one of the many instruments to be used in the overthrow of
“Babylon” and the deliverance of God’s children within her. But while an unseen
hand seemed to impel the onward progress of the work, another unseen hand
seemed at work seeking to thwart our purposes, but “if God be for us, who can
be against us?” In his strength one could chase a thousand opposers, and two
put ten thousand to flight.[30]
            The reaction of clergy wasn’t
entirely negative. “A few clergymen said he was right, and, with gladness,
joined with him in the work. The greater majority of the clergymen, instead of
explaining these Scriptures to the people and helping them, began a cruel and
systematic persecution.”[31]
            William R. Coovert, [alternately
spelled Covert] [32] a
clergyman with the Church  of God New
  York City 
            He
eventually went insane. Heavily involved in a controversy among the Order of
Solons, a fraternal order, he demonstrated “pugilistic qualities” by slugging
“Ex-supreme Secretary [G. A.] Mundorf.” He called in a reporter from The Pittsburgh Press to make a
statement, and the reporter found him delusional and rambling:
When a Press representative entered the hotel,
he was informed by the clerk that Mr. Covert had a vision during the night and
was very much wrought up over something … Mr. Covert was found in an excited
state of mind. His hair was disheveled and great drops of sweat were standing
on his forehead. He was walking the floor in an excited manner, and papers and
manuscripts were scattered in confusion about the floor.[34] 
He
had a spotty reputation among his own denomination, being admired as a debater
but was also seen as a “vehement and disturbing.” A denominational history
charitably calls him “a man of indefatigable energy, but of a volatile and
flighty fancy.”[35] Why
Coovert remained in favor with the Church  of God 
            Coovert challenged Russell through
the pages of The Pittsburgh , Pennsylvania Church  of God Church  of God 
[1]               As with Russell’s Object and
Manner, a startling amount of nonsense has been written about Food for
Thinking Christians. For example John Butterworth (Cults and New Faiths,
1982) wrote: “Russell gathered a group of friends together to study the Bible
regularly and published their interpretations in a magazine, Food for Thinking
Christians, later replaced by the bi-monthly Watchtower.” Jim Willis (The
Religion Book, 2004) has Russell publishing it in 1879. Amost nothing
Willis says is accurate. Why people write such obvious nonsense and why others
buy it is one of life’s mysteries. 
[2]               Tower Tract Society Organizational
Document dated February 1881. Handwritten manuscript. 
[3]               Untitled Article: The Buffalo August 19, 1881 . Zion’s Watch Tower Tract Society’s
ledger book names Burr Printing of New York City as one of the printers. We
know of one payment of $699.70 made to them. Another payment of $249.60 was
made to S. W. Green’s Sons, another New York printer.
[4]               Hand & Ellsworth did business
at 51 Beekman Street in New York City. Their paper mill was located near
Peekskill, New York. They went bankrupt in 1884, caught up in the financial
hard times of the mid-1880s. – Paper Merchants Suspend, New York Times,
July 25, 1884.
[5]               Zion’s Watch Tower Tract Society
Ledger Book, a handwritten accounts book.
[6]               Churchgoers Astonished, The New York Sun, August 15, 1881 . 
[7]               “Mr. Russell is … probably 35
years of age, nearly six feet in height, and of a pale, thoughtful cast of
countenance.” – A New Sect, Chicago , Illinois 
[8]               Russell’s passport application
dated June 24, 1891.
[9]               In the Vineyard, Zion’s Watch Tower, October/November
1881, page 5.
[10]             C. T. Russell: They Kingdom Come, Watch Tower Society, Allegheny ,
 Pennsylvania 
[11]             View from the Tower, Zion’s Watch Tower, January/February
1882, page 1.
[12]             View from the Tower, Zion’s Watch Tower, January/February
1882, page 1.
[13]             1873 Directory of Pittsburgh and Allegheny City, G. H. Thurston, page
323; 1873/4 Directory, page 43.
[14]             1878 Directory, page 373.
[15]             Churchgoers Astonished, The New York Sun, August 15, 1881 .
[16]             Hannibal Goodwin (1822-1900) is best
known for his invention of celluloid film, making motion pictures possible. His
fight with Eastman Kodak ran on for decades and wasn’t settled until after his
death.
[17]             Left at Church Door, The New York Sun, August 10, 1881 .
[18]             Agustus M. Bergner was born in Stockholm New Jersey 
 State August 1, 1893 ,
page 238. Bergner served in the Navy, probably the Civil War. The name Agustus
M. Bergner appears in a list of “soldiers and sailors” whose address was
sought. The last known address for him in the list was Brooklyn ,
New York.( See The Washington, D. C.,
National Tribune, April 17, 1899.) He was a mate on the American Navy’s
screw frigate USS Wampanoag
during its first sea trails. – Naval Intelligence, New York Herald,
April 18, 1868.
[19]             The Gospel is Remarkably Free in Newark Kingston , New
  York August 15, 1881 .
[20]             See the August 31, 1881 , issue, page 432
[21]             An example of this appears in The Chester , Pennsylvania September 10, 1881 . This was also reprinted in Puck’s Library No. X: Tramp, Tramp, Tramp!
Being Puck’s Best Things about the Great American Traveler, Keppler 
 &  Schwarzmann , New
  York 
[22]             She Preferred Milk, The Cheyenne September 10, 1881 .
[23]             The Origin of a Tract, New-York Daily Tribune, August 18, 1881 .
[24]             Untitled Article: The Kingston ,
 New York August 15, 1881 .
[25]             New York August 15, 1881 .
[26]             Philadelphia Enquirer, May 3, 1883 . Percival (c. 1854 -. Sep. 22, 1903 ) was twenty-nine and
not yet famous for his writing. A short obituary published in The New York
Times of September 24, 1903 ,
says: “He was an extensive writer on theology, many of his books being used as
standard works in nearly all of the Episcopal Seminaries of this country.” 
[27]             J. M. Gray: Satan and the Saint, Bible Institute Colportage Association,
Chicago, 1909, pages 69-70. 
[28]             In the Vineyard, Zion’s Watch Tower, October/November
1881, pages 4-5.
[29]             Zion’s Watch Tower Tract Society
Ledger Book, a handwritten accounts book kept per the original agreement
between the principals.
[30]             ibid. 
[31]             Kingdom
News, as quoted in “Kingdom News Being Sent Out,” The Watertown , New York May 3, 1919 .
[32]             Coovert was born December 17, 1853 , in Fayetteville ,
 Pennsylvania Mercer
  County , Pennsylvania Edinboro  State 
 Normal School Wappello , Iowa Iowa Grove City 
 College Townsend  Street 
 Church Pittsburgh January 27, 1915 , makes this possible. We’re uncertain if
this is the same person.
[33]             Claiming New-York City Lands, The New York Times, August 22, 1885; Harlem
Commons, The New York Times, June 17,
1886; The Harlem Commons Heirs: One of them Declares that a Swindle is Being
Attempted, The New York Times, June
9, 1886; The Harlem Commons: Roscoe Conklin Said to be Retained, The New York Times, June 17, 1886; 
[34]             His Mind Impaired: Rev. Covert
Succumbs Under a Mental Strain, The Pittsburgh December 8, 1892 . See also Pittsburgh Dispatch, December
 31, 1892 , page 10; The Rev. W. R. Coovert Seriously Ill, The New York Times, December 9, 1892 .
[35]             C. H. Forney: History of the Church of God in the United States, Churches of God,
1914, pages 209, 715.
[36]             Quoted by Forney, History of the Church of God, page 206.
[37]             Forney, page 206.
[38]             For a rather stupid and silly
example see O. C. Lambert, Russellism
Unveiled, Firm Foundation Publishing House, 1940.  See also the letters from John A. Hudson to
J. F. Rutherford as published in the second edition of Russell-White Debate, Old Paths Book Club, no date, appendix.
 
 
 
