Thursday, May 21, 2015
Research help ...
We need someone to extract from the Russell v. Russell material all comments about their writing partnership.
Wednesday, May 20, 2015
Tell your friends
Sales of Separate Identity are declining. We fund our (very expensive) research from sales of our books. Please recommend them to your friends.
Monday, May 18, 2015
Day Dawn
We are forced to sell our first edition Day Dawn. Probably not many who read this blog can afford it. We want $4200.00 US dollars. Contact me if you're interested.
Tuesday, May 5, 2015
Research Needs
Our outline calls for a chapter on the writing of Plan of the Ages. Mrs. Russell claimed to have written part of it. We believe her claim is somewhat exaggerated. We are open to observations and new research. Anyone?
Monday, May 4, 2015
Reviews
Some of you reviewed Separate Identity on google books. Google in their puzzling wisdom took that copy of our book down and put up a new version. The nice reviews are gone. Would you please go back to google books and leave a review?
Tuesday, April 28, 2015
Update
You won't hear much from us through the summer. Between us we've agreed to write three specialty textbooks that must be ready by end of August. They don't require original research, but they are still labor intensive.
We are open to articles by others. If you want to submit an article relevant to Watch Tower history, email it to me at rm de vienne @ yahoo.com. It must be footnoted. It must be verifiable, solid history. If it isn't, it won't see publication here. Bad writing wont see publication either. But ... if you want to try your hand at it, feel free. I prefer original research and an article with some depth.
We are open to articles by others. If you want to submit an article relevant to Watch Tower history, email it to me at rm de vienne @ yahoo.com. It must be footnoted. It must be verifiable, solid history. If it isn't, it won't see publication here. Bad writing wont see publication either. But ... if you want to try your hand at it, feel free. I prefer original research and an article with some depth.
Friday, April 17, 2015
A D Jones' theology in his own words
From Zion’s Day Star for January 1884
In fact, we were
never so thoroughly convinced as now, that the Four Gospels of the New Testament
have comparatively no inspiration about them! Very many of the New Testament
teachings do not correspond with those of the Old, but do, on the other hand,
flatly contradict them! Peter draws a clear-cut line between Jesus as the man
and his after exalted state as Lord and Christ. Note this well, for it is a
death blow to the Miraculous Conception theory!
We question the
inspiration of the Four Gospels, and we challenge those who teach such a theory
to harmonize it with Daniel’s prophecy! To claim that Peter, James and John
were inspired, is simply child’s talk! Let us look well to what we pin our
faith; or upon what we build an argument; and especially when using statements
found in either of the four Gospels or Acts of the Apostles!
You ask, then,
what is our opinion of him? (Jesus). We answer, it is that he was a man.
By January 1884 there was a doctrinal gulf between CTR
and Barbour and CTR and Paton. But in comparison the theological chasm between
CTR and Jones had now reached Grand Canyon proportions.
Addenda
I have been asked if I have a copy of the January 1884 Zion’s Day Star which is quoted above. Alas, no. The only two copies of this paper that I know to be in circulation are December 25, 1884 (by which time it was simply the Day Star) and August 19, 1886. There is a bound volume covering most if not all of 1886 in the Library of Congress, Washington, DC. But it is fragile and oversize, and the library has resolutely decided it can only be copied through one process – and that in about 3-4 years time. Perhaps.
So where does the January 1884 quote come from? It comes from an
article in the Church of God/Age to Come weekly paper called The Restititution
for July 27, 1887, page 3.
A lengthy sermon by Dr L C Thomas is reprinted as given at
Wyoming, Delaware, and Thomas quotes as above from the January 1884 Day Star. The
quote is probably a series of extracts that Thomas had put together as one to
give the flavour of Jones’ theology. Thomas was NOT impressed, and specifically
attacked the editor of the Day Star for being a Josephite. A Josephite is someone
who denies the concept of miraculous conception for Jesus, and who therefore
believes Joseph to be his natural father. Many Age to Come readers of The
Restitution were Socinian in outlook (i.e. they disbelieved in a literal
pre-existance for Jesus). Josephites would argue that they were simply taking
the concept one step further.
CTR of course had a great deal to say about how he viewed Jones’
changing theology in both early ZWTs, as well as a summary in Harvest Siftings.
Wednesday, April 15, 2015
Saturday, April 11, 2015
Short Update
We're still researching W. H. Conley and up-dating our chapter in progress. Be patient. Lots of new stuff. It will take time to present it accurately.
Friday, April 10, 2015
Selling Shirts
It is known that A D Jones once worked in one of CTR’s stores. He
also branched out into the shirt store business on his own account.
Below is an advertisement from the Pittsburgh Commercial Gazette
for November 6, 1883. The firm of Jones and Littell is operating from
Pittsburgh, but they have several branches. One of these branches is at 335, Fourth
Avenue, New York.
As shown below, this was the address of Jones’ (Zions) Day Star.
In the December 25th 1884 issue of Day Star there are
several advertisements under Furnishing Goods. Below are three. The one in the
middle is J M Littell (billed in the ad as the successor to Jones and Littell
of Pittsburgh) with its surviving Pittsburgh address. Albert D Jones and James
Littell appear to have parted business company by this time, although Jones’
paper still carried advertising for Littell’s solo venture. But topping and
tailing the Littell advertisement are advertisements for another company. Do
you want a Wamsutta Muslin Night Shirt? Or how about White Dress Shirts? The
American Shirt Store can assist you. And the address of the American Shirt
Store? Yes - 335, Fourth Avenue, New York.
There were several businesses at this address around this time
including a photographic studio and The Tiffany Glass Company. But it is surely
no coincidence that a shirt store in Pittsburgh bearing the name Jones, and its
successor, are both linked to the same address as the ill-fated Day Star.
Perhaps in retrospect, Jones would have done better just sticking
to selling shirts.
Tuesday, March 31, 2015
First few paragraphs. Rough Draft only ...
Conley, Faith Cure and Money
While the prophetic
failures of 1881 precipitated division, they were not the prime cause. Paton’s deflection centered on declining influence and a return to his
universalist belief. From the beginning, he and Russell were separated by their
beliefs, and separation was inevitable. Jones sought in rejection of key
portions of the Bible an excuse for behaviors few Christians would accept. William
Conley’s slow, painful withdrawl from Watch Tower association dates to the same
year, but there is no evidence to suggest it was related to failed prophetic
expectations. Russell connected it to status and finance:
The nearest we ever came
to asking money from any convinced us that such a course is wholly contrary to
the Lord's will. That instance was in 1881, when over a million copies of “Food
for Thinking Christians” were published and circulated. We then remembered a
Brother, who was well-to-do, and who had repeatedly shown a deep interest in
the cause, and who had said to us, “Brother R____, whenever you see something
good, something specially calculated to spread the light and needing money,
something in which you intend to invest, let me know of it – count me in on all
such enterprises;” and we merely laid the matter before him, explaining the
plan and the amount of money that could be used, without making any direct
request. The Brother gave liberally, yet apparently the offering brought him
only a partial blessing. And, perhaps from fear that we would call further
opportunities to his notice, and from a lack of full appreciation of our
motives in the matter or of the light in which we regarded it (as a favor
toward him to let him know of the opportunity), that Brother has gone backward
and lost much of his former interest. How much the above circumstance had to do
with his decline of interest we know not, but it doubly strengthened and
guarded us on a point on which we were already well settled, namely, that no
direct and personal appeals should be made to any in our Lord's name. All the
gold and silver is his. He neither begged nor commissioned any to beg for him.[1]
This is an obvious reference to Conley. We should note
that Russell continues to call him ‘brother’ in 1890, revealing a continuing
relastionship he did not have with Barbour, Paton or Jones. But as a brother,
Conley had taken a step backwards. Russell saw Conley’s four thousand dollar
donation to the tract work as liberal and speculated that fear of further calls
on his wealth caused Conley to withdraw.
Evidence
suggests that Russell mistook the nature of Conley’s “deep interest.” Conley supported
many religious causes, including those whose beliefs differed from his own. He
gave room in his home for Paton to lecture, but in 1894 he wrote to Russell saying:
“As to myself, you an rely on one thing; viz.; All report stating that I deny
the ransom are aboslutely false. The no-ransom people may talk, but they ‘have
nothing in me.’”[2]
Conley advertised in Jones Day Star, but we think it was recoup money owed to
Conley & Ritter, rather than as support for Jones’ later views. The Conleys
supported alternative religious movements in various ways out of a sense of ‘doing
good.’
Russell
is correct when he suggests that Conley did not appreciate his motives. Conley
was a religious gad fly. He did not share many of Russell’s beliefs. He was not
committed to an urgent last days’ message. While Russell was divesting himself
of commercial interests, Conley was cultivating his. The Allegheny belivers
were diverse, and Conley’s last religious belief suggests he retained his
millennialist Lutheran beliefs throughout the years he associated with Russell.[3]
What united them was a belief in the nearness of final judgment. They were not
united in most basic doctrine, and when they were their emphasis was different.
Much of Conley’s drift away from Zion’s Watch Tower is due to this shift
in emphasis.
Faith Cure
The faith cure movement as expressed in this era come to
America from Germany and Switzerland, but it took on a distinctivly American
flavor. Russell encountered it at least by 1878 when me met Jenny Smith at the New
York City Prophetic Conference. As you will recall from volume one of this
work, Smith believed herself cured by faith. Russell was interested, if not in
her personally, at least in her claims. Other Watch Tower associates were
interested too, and the topic was discussed in The Watch Tower.
Saturday, March 28, 2015
Who Was That Masked Man?
by Jerome
Diary
of A J Eychaner, reproduced by kind permission of Jan Stilson
First my apologies for the reference to The
Lone Ranger. It gives away my age somewhat. But it’s a way of raising an
important question on identity in a given situation.
At the head of this article is a most
interesting historical document. It is two pages from the diary of A J Eychaner
from 1895. As a later hand has indicated with comments and highlighter,
Eychaner talks of C T Russell speaking at a conference at Marshalltown, held
over August 15-25, 1895. This was the Church of God’s Iowa State Conference for
that year. Andrew James Eychaner (1842-1936) was a long time preacher for the
Church of God – a combination of congregations that used such names as Abrahamic
Faith/One Faith/Age to Come. They were eventually united as the Church of God
General Conference in 1921.
Charles Taze Russell (hereafter referred to
as CTR) had connections with this group in the early days. Because they would
often fellowship with Advent Christians on a local level (before the latter
body became an official denomination) this has muddied the waters somewhat
about the little fellowship CTR first met with at Quincy Hall in Allegheny. The
Church of God’s main paper, The Restitution, advertised Barbour’s Three Worlds
book, and CTR’s first independent work, Object and Manner of Our Lord’s Return,
was given away with this paper in 1877. These connections are discussed at
length in Separate Identity Volume 1, and also past articles on this blog such
as Charles Taze Russell and the Restitution, and 1874-75
Allegheny-Pittsburgh – Adventist or Age to Come?
It would appear from the diary above that,
although ZWT was well-established by 1895 and the Watch Tower movement was
achieving its “separate identity”, CTR still appeared on a Church of God platform.
This matter was discussed on the closed blog about four years ago, when the accuracy
of the diary entries was questioned. (For any who are gluttons for punishment
and want all the references and do not have access to the closed blog, by all
means feel free to contact me back-channel).
But reviewing the basics of the argument,
there appeared to be conflicting evidence for whether it really was our Charles
Russell who appeared on the same platform as A J Eychaner.
There were two main reasons for raising questions.
First, when The Restitution advertised the
conference, it billed a C W Russell as the supporting speaker, and he too was a
Charles. Charles W Russell was a regular assistant to Eychaner at this time. He
moved to Iowa from Chicago and received his teaching certificate in July 1894. Over
the next year, his name was regularly linked with Eychaner’s in tent work.
Years later, in 1912 he was still preaching for the Church of God.
So it would be logical for C W Russell to
appear at the Marshalltown conference. People would be expecting him, not CTR.
Hence he is clearly billed in The Restitution for August 7, 1895, which gives
the complete conference program with speakers.
Second, relations between our
CTR and the Church of God had soured considerably by this time. CTR’s writings
had attracted severe criticism as Restitution readers were warned about him. Some of
the choice epithets he’d already garnered by this time included “blinded by his own invention,” “abominable
trickery,” “want of faith,” “lead away from God,” “deceive,” “false prophet,”
“fraud,” “folly” and “poison.” The fact that ZWT adherents had targeted Church
of God believers with tract work (see The Restitution for December 5, 1894 for
example) left the latter singularly unimpressed. Which at least raises the
question - would CTR really have been invited to share a Church of God platform
for over a week? And had he done so, would he really (as the diary relates) have
accepted a dollar for expenses?
Having raised these questions, I believe
that had CTR been invited, he would have accepted. He was keen to share his
beliefs wherever he could. He would get involved in well-publicized debates
with clergy of the day – although a debate with two clearly defined opposing
viewpoints was a little different to being invited as a guest speaker. But with
strong attacks on his theology in The Restitution, would such an invitation still
be given at this late date? And assuming it had been, how would that be
received when news got out? Restitution readers were more than capable of
complaining when anything less than the truth as they saw it was preached to
them. But in extant copies of the paper, there is silence.
And yet one cannot escape the fact that the
diary clearly states it was C T Russell who attended and spoke. And a diary has
to be a primary source – of more probative value than a newspaper.
When I wrote on this subject four years ago
I was – I admit – a tad dogmatic. When deciding to re-use this material for a
new article, I decided it was more reasonable to now leave the question open. So
really, this article was to be a cautionary tale on how historians are often faced
with conflicting information. It still is. We don’t have literal observers to
talk to. And even if we had, you would probably still have to deal with
conflicting accounts given in all honesty by eyewitnesses. So a researcher has
to make a judgment. And however much one might argue as above, you cannot get
away from it – Andrew Eychaner sat down in the closing decade of the 19th
century, dipped his pen in the ink, and wrote down C T Russell. Three times. The
diary is a primary source.
And that would have been how the article
ended.
BUT THEN...
But then quite remarkably, after nearly 120
years, in a moment of serendipity, further evidence has come to light. Eychaner
wrote a report on what he had accomplished in the year 1895-96. It may even
have been intended for publication in The Restitution – but sadly that file is
incomplete. But his original handwritten report has survived. No doubt he used
his personal diary notes as source material at some points. And below is
reproduced the relevant page from this report in Andrew Eychaner’s own hand.
Report
of A J Eychaner, used courtesy of Jan Stilson from material donated by Lois
Cline, great niece of A J Eychaner
A
transcript reads:
As your evangelist for the past
year I submit to you the following report of work done, money received and
amounts paid out in necessary expenses.
From Aug 15 to 25 I was with you
in the conference at Marshalltown. I came on the 14th and brother
Prinner arrived on the 15th. We found much to do in order that the
conference might have a pleasant meeting. There was a lot to secure, water to
arrange for with the city and ground to clean, tents to set up, and other
necessary things to do. On Friday Aug 16 Brethren began to arrive and the
meeting began at 8 o’cl. by brother C W Russell preaching the introductory
sermon. During the meeting I helped along as I could in preaching 5 sermons and
taking part in social meetings, Bible readings and business meetings. I think
it was the best time we... (last line indistinct)
So no
matter what he wrote in his diary, when it came to an official report, we are
back with C W Russell.
A J Eychaner’s
account paints an entertaining and rather touching picture of
those days. He didn’t just preach, he organised water, he put up tents, he
dealt with the wind and the rain, he coped with local thieves who stole from
his tent, and straight after the conference in question he mentions C W Russell
again:
On Thurs Sep 5 I went to Lanark to assist in the conference of the
State of Illinois, and again left C.W. Russell in charge of the tent. That eve
there came up a severe storm and altho Bro Russell did all he could yet the
wind damaged the tent considerable. I spoke six times at Lanark and preached
one funeral discourse at Union church, returning to Laurens (?) and the tent
Mond Sep 7, after an absence of only 4 days. Spoke on the life eternal through
Jesus. That night thieves entered my tent and stole two chairs.
Later the conference made provision to fund this same Brother
Russell for evangelistic services for the next six months.
So what
do we have here? Three different sources and a conflict of information.
To
review:
First, from The Restitution for August 7, 1895, page 2. This was the advertisement to get readers to attend. It
was obviously the same conference that Eychaner described in his diary, even though
there were some changes between the planning and the reality. (It appears that
some billed speakers didn’t show, and those who were there had to fill in for
them). Note that the first day of sermons was to be Friday August 16th,
and C W Russell was billed to give a sermon.
However, when Eychaner wrote his diary, it
now became C T Russell giving the sermon on Friday, August 16th.
But later when he wrote up his full official
report, it reverted to C W Russell giving the opening sermon on Friday, August
16th.
CWR to
CTR and then back to CWR again. What explanation can there be for this
discrepancy?
I can
only think of two possibilities. The first is deliberate misdirection. CWR was
advertised, but CTR switched places with him. Then A J Eychaner put in his
official report that it was CWR. And hoped that no-one would blow the whistle
on the substitution.
Personally,
I would find that hard to believe, if for no other reason that Eychaner was an
honorable man. He might have been a bit of maverick at times, but that very
point means that if he’d wanted to do something controversial, he would have
stuck to his guns. He wouldn’t have falsified records to cover it up.
The
other possibility is what we might call, for want of a better expression, a Freudian
slip. The name of CTR wasn’t foreign to Eychaner – he had previously written
about him in The Restitution.
We have
all made such slips. Where I live there is someone who we shall call Debbie
Richards. A relative of mine must have been influenced by Singing in the Rain,
because the first time he met her he called her Debbie Reynolds. And for the
last dozen years of his life, he couldn’t shake this – his synapses insisted
that she was Debbie Reynolds – I mean Richards – and that was it. Had he
written a diary, I am sure the error would have been there.
An
historian who has examined the original diary in the archives of Atlanta Bible
College has commented that the ink seems to indicate that it probably wasn’t a
diary written day by day, but rather this whole page was likely written out in
one go – maybe from other notes. So one slip writing CTR could easily be
repeated on the same page.
If
readers can suggest further possibilities, then please do so in the comment
trail.
So in
conclusion - does it really matter? We know there were links between CTR and
the Age to Come movement in the early days. We know they became strained as CTR’s
theology developed and ultimately were broken. The Restitution even promoted a
book by W H Wilson (nephew of Benjamin) entitled Cunningly Devised Fables of
Russellism.
It is
just a matter of timing.
Perhaps
the main point is the original intent of this article – which is that you
cannot even automatically rely on a diary. Normally it would have trumped a
current newspaper account hands down. But some readers may feel that a carefully
thought-out report in the same hand can then trump a diary. We are all human,
we all make mistakes. We don’t expect people to pore over our words and rough
notes as if they were Holy Writ over a century later.
Caveat
lector – let the reader beware.
Personal comments by Jan Stilson, Church of God historian and
author
The question of whether or not C.T.
Russell was a guest preacher at the Iowa Church of God Conference in August,
1895, seems to have been settled once and for all when papers furnished to me,
a Church of God historian and author (J. Turner Stilson. Biographical
Encyclopedia: Chronicling the History of the Church of God Abrahamic Faith ISBN
0-615-46561-6), finally came to light.
An elderly local member, a great niece
of A.J. Eychaner, had donated a box of historic papers prior to her death in
2014. With my husband’s illness and other pressing matters, I had set them
aside for later review. As the question of Elder Eychaner’s mysterious diary
entries re-emerged, I sat down one day to review the issue. Something had
fallen out of a file folder next to the chair. In reaching for it I realized it
was a hand written report of Eychaner to the Iowa Church of God Conference
amazingly dated 1895-96. In these pages Eychaner several times had clearly
written the name of Bro. C.W. Russell (of Chicago) who had been hired as
evangelist for 6 mos.
How Eychaner managed to write “C.T.
Russell” in his diary and “C.W. Russell” in his report, remains a mystery.
Perhaps we can chalk it up to a lapse of memory, a “senior moment”, or some
other lapse on Eychaner’s part. Jerome has said that discovery of the
conclusive evidence at this particular time was “serendipity”, but perhaps it
was more than that. Perhaps the Lord himself wanted this question settled, and
made it so. The matter of unusual or conflicting facts is a major problem for
historians working from scant or scattered documents. Even editors in The
Restitution and The Restitution Herald, the Church of God’s succeeding title,
could not agree on spelling of pastor’s and reader’s names from issue to issue.
One might see “Uncle John Foor” in one issue and “Foore” in the next. And if
John Foore named his son John Foore, well, the problems of determining which
generation was being discussed were often serious. So, such an error on
Eychaner’s part can perhaps be forgiven by historians. It certainly has made
for an interesting dialogue. Thank you to all scholars for pursuing the matter.
– Jan Stilson, Oregon, IL.
Saturday, March 14, 2015
Thursday, March 12, 2015
Conley again ...
We're trying to follow W. H. Conley's path into faith cure. We can document his attendance at two faith cure meetings in the early 1880s and one in the 1890s. We don't need more documentation on That issue for the 1890s, but we need much for documentation for his adventures in faith healing in the 1880s. I've looked everywhere I know to look. Anyone else?
Wednesday, March 11, 2015
A disappointment
As one or two
associates may know, I have been trying to obtain the 1886 year of AD Jones’
Day Star from the Library of Congress. Visitors to the library have previously
been daunted by the surviving volume being off site, and by the time it could
be retrieved they were on a plane to somewhere else.
The result of
correspondence to and fro since last December resulted in the volume being
looked at closely, and the following was the gist of the final message:
There is no possibility of microfilming
pages so large. However, they could be digitized at 300 dpi, with a
page-turner, and loaded up onto the Library of Congress site, but at the moment, there is a huge queue of material
waiting for this treatment, plus a big gap in the budget, so digitizing fragile
materials is proceeding very slowly apace. In the meantime these volumes are boxed
in an acid-free box, and, apart from being looked at for the query they are stored
flat in a map cabinet and are in cold storage.
The message ended:
You could try writing again in about
three or four years. Monday, March 9, 2015
Chart of the Ages
This is a canvas chart of the ages, printed for 'chart talks.' We have to sell it to help pay medical bills. So I'm posting this photo so you can see it before it goes away.
28 x 19 inches
Sunday, March 8, 2015
We need to know ...
If the W. H. Conley who shared business interests with Rockefeller was 'our' W. H. Conley. Anyone?
Tuesday, March 3, 2015
Details
It is probably not fruitful to ask, but we need the details of the ...
Faith Cure Convention, held in Pittsburgh's Third Presbyterian Church, November 24-25, 1885. A. B. Simpson attended and (we think) so did W. H. Conley.
Anyone:
Faith Cure Convention, held in Pittsburgh's Third Presbyterian Church, November 24-25, 1885. A. B. Simpson attended and (we think) so did W. H. Conley.
Anyone:
Monday, March 2, 2015
Conley
We need help establishing a connectin between Dr. G. D. Bruce of Pittsburgh and W. H. Conley. Our sole connection so far is a stay in a Philadelphia hotel on the same date. We think there is a larger connection. Can you help?
We need to establish when Conley met A. B. Simpson.
We need to establish when Conley met A. B. Simpson.
Blog content
This is in response to a comment on Jerome’s article.
The research mantle has not fallen on Jerome. If Bruce and
I were for some reason to end our
project, we would take this blog down. Bruce remains in active control of our
project. We continue to write and research, though none of the recent results
are solid enough to appear here.
Jerome follows his own interests. He is free to post what ever he wants as long as it’s relevant to early Watch Tower history.
Presumptions are ‘iffy” and most often wrong.
Three sisters
by Jerome
Important note: Grateful thanks are due to correspondent Bernhard who supplied some of the information below.
Regrettably I am not able to give references in support of some dates, but I
have no reason whatsoever to doubt the accuracy of the information.
The title “Three Sisters” may
bring to mind a famous play by Anton Chekhov, likely inspired by the three
Brontë sisters, Charlotte, Emily and Anne.
However, this article is
going to briefly consider three who were classed as sisters within the
framework of the ZWT fellowship. They all had something remarkable in common –
they all served as directors of Zion’s Watch Tower Tract Society (from 1894 the
Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society) during the time of CTR’s presidency.
If this concept is a surprise
to modern readers, there are two facts about those early days that must be
recognized. First, women had a much more public role in the Society’s affairs
in those days. CTR’s wife, Maria, for example was an associate editor of the
Watch Tower for a number of years. (See Proclaimers book footnote, page 645).
And second, it must be
realized that the role of directors in those early days was mainly figurative.
In A Conspiracy Exposed (pages 55-60) CTR explained that for legal reasons they
needed directors, but it was always understood that matters were so arranged to
allow him (along with Maria at that time) to retain control. There was no
annual meeting, and elections, such as they were, took place on the first
Saturday of each New Year. Hence J B Adamson in that same document complained
that as a director he never made a decision. Later, Maria in the separation
hearing testimony, made a similar comment about her role as
secretary-treasurer. Directors would include some of CTR’s contacts in
Pittsburgh and Allegheny, and in many cases, those who were on hand by living
in or at least working in the Bible House. But they didn’t “direct” – they were
just names on paper. As time went on, a number of members of the Pittsburgh
Bible House family (and later Brooklyn Bethel family) simply stepped in and
filled gaps as directors – often for quite brief times – under the
administration of CTR.
So, our three “sisters” who
were directors?
The first female director,
was of course, Maria Russell herself. Maria Frances Ackley was born in 1850.
She married CTR in 1879 and
later that year worked with him as the fledgling ZWT magazine was launched. Her
sister Emma married CTR’s father, Joseph, the following year, 1880.
In 1881 Zion’s Watch Tower
Tract Society was formed with William Conley as president, Joseph L Russell as
vice president and CTR as secretary-treasurer. On Monday, December 15, 1884
this society was legally incorporated in Pittsburgh. Maria became a director
and an officer of the new incorporated Society – as secretary-treasurer. On
paper this meant that she replaced CTR who had previously held that position,
but who now became president of the new official arrangement.
Maria remained as secretary-treasurer
in name until the annual meeting on January 5, 1895. Although no longer an
officer, she remained on the books as a director until February 12, 1900 when
she resigned. She was replaced by either Albert E Williamson or Clara Taylor
(two new directors were required at this election).
Her subsequent history is
quite easy to trace. The contemporary newspaper St Paul Enterprise in its
Memorial number when CTR died gives an account of her in the funeral cortege.
She later moved to Florida with her sister, Emma, and died in St Petersburg,
Florida, in 1938. There is some biographical material for her on the Find a
Grave site, under Maria F Ackley Russell.
The second female director
was also a Vice-President of the Society for a very short time. This was Rose Ball Henninges. Early
census returns list her as Rosa (rather than Rose) J Ball - but no-one seems to
know what the J stood for. She and her brother, Charles, came to Pittsburgh.
Charles died in March 1889 and Rose became part of the Russell household and
then Bible House family. She is included in many group photographs of the day,
along with a young man named Ernest Charles Henninges, whom she would marry in
1897. (He too would be a director at one point).
A young Rose Ball
sitting in a group photo with her future husband Ernest Henninges in 1893.
Rose became a director on
April 11, 1892. Two directors were replaced on that date, William I Mann and
Joseph F Smith, so she replaced one of them. On January 7, 1893, Rose became
Vice-President for a year, until the next year’s elections on January 6, 1894.
After that she remained as a director until she resigned on February 12, 1900
(the same official date as for Maria Russell). As noted above, she was then
replaced by either Albert E Williamson or Clara Taylor.
A few years after her
marriage to Ernest Henninges, Rose and Ernest travelled abroad to further the
cause. They spent some time in Britain (you can find them in the 1901 UK
census) and then Germany, before eventually travelling to Australia. They spent
the rest of their lives there. A split occurred between them and CTR over the
understanding of “the New Covenant” and they founded their own journal in 1909,
which ran until 1953. Charles died in 1939, and Rose in 1950. She was survived
by two sisters still living in America, Miss Lilian Ball of Buffalo, NY, and
Mrs Daisy Mabee of Paterson, NJ.
As already mentioned in
passing, the third female director was Clara Taylor. Clara became a director on
February 12, 1900. On this date both Maria F Russell and Rose J Ball (now
Henninges) resigned, so Clara replaced one of them. As already noted, the other
replacement director appointed that day was Albert E Williamson.
Clara served as a director for less than a year. At the next election on the first Saturday of the New Year, January 5, 1901, she resigned and was replaced by William E Van Amburgh. He would become one of the longest serving directors in the Society's history. (Only Milton Henschel, Lyman Swingle and Frederick Franz would serve for longer).
Clara served as a director for less than a year. At the next election on the first Saturday of the New Year, January 5, 1901, she resigned and was replaced by William E Van Amburgh. He would become one of the longest serving directors in the Society's history. (Only Milton Henschel, Lyman Swingle and Frederick Franz would serve for longer).
Clara is featured in some
group photographs of the Bible House family in the first decade of the 20th
century. Below is a selection from a photograph showing the mailing room c. 1907.
Clara in the
Bible House mailing room c. 1907
All we know at present about
Clara Taylor comes from the separation hearing Russell v. Russell from
1906. She was called as a witness to
support the testimony of J A Bohnet, and was both examined and cross examined
in the case.
Her testimony shows that she
was working at Bible House in 1897 before Maria Russell left for Chicago to
stay with her brother, Lemuel. CTR had been called away from home and
telephoned Ernest Henninges (misspelled Hennings in the transcript) to ask if
could arrange for someone to stay over at Bible House so that Maria would not
be left on her own. (Most workers lodged outside the building). Clara was asked
and agreed, but was then told by Henninges that she no longer needed to do this
because Maria had told him via the internal speaking tube that she’d made her
own arrangements. That was the sum of
her testimony. But it showed that Clara worked at Bible House in 1897 before
Maria left. A passing comment indicated that she had not been there the
previous year, 1896. She was also still working there in 1906. And crucially
for subsequent attempts to trace her, she was addressed several times as Miss
Clara Taylor. So she was single at the time.
When the headquarters moved
to Brooklyn in 1909, Clara apparently didn’t go. Or at least, she is not in the
census returns from 1910 onwards. Whether that was due to the New Covenant
controversy, or just a matter of geography and family, is not known. She may
well have married, in which case the surname Taylor would disappear, making
tracing her subsequent movements somewhat problematic.
So Clara remains a bit of
mystery, even though she spent around ten years working at the headquarters,
and was one of the three sisters who became directors of the Society in the CTR
era.
More details on the
unsuccessful search can be found in the comment trail.
Friday, February 27, 2015
Names from the past
From the back page of the January 1905 Solon Society Journal. Henry Weber from Oakland, Maryland (recently deceased at this time) and Andrew Pierson from Cromwell, Connecticut were both directors of the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society, and both served as Vice Presidents in its history. They both ran horticulture businesses.
Monday, February 16, 2015
Please remember ...
Please remember to recomend our books to your friends. We pay most of our research costs from the sale of our books. Original research is expensive. The more copies we sell, the more we can expend on costs.
Making connections
Research turns up unexpected things. We now know that W. I. Mann and W. H. Conley had a direct business connection. It's not an earth-shaking find, but every detail adds to the story.
Update!
W. H. Conley was in Philadelphia in January 1883 to hear a Faith Cure lecture. This is an important find. We found this in January 24, 1883, Enquirer.
Update!
W. H. Conley was in Philadelphia in January 1883 to hear a Faith Cure lecture. This is an important find. We found this in January 24, 1883, Enquirer.
Tuesday, February 10, 2015
Find a Grave
by Jerome
This article is expanded from material that first
appeared on Blog 2. Its main purpose is to show photographs of headstones for
people connected with the history covered in this blog. I have received
permission from all the necessary contributors on the Find a Grave site to
reproduce their work here. So my grateful thanks go to Sherry, Doug, Shiver,
MrsJB, JennO, Duane, blt, Neil, Chris, Mojo, Joann, Kathie and Beverley. In some
cases the pictures used here are alternatives to those currently found on the
site, simply because I didn’t need permission to use my own photographs.
This means that you can probably assume it is OK to copy
these pictures for non-commercial use if you so choose. However, I would always
recommend going back to the original source on Find a Grave as some pages contain
further information on the individuals. And this is not static – new material
is being added all the time to this resource. What wasn’t there for me to
discover today could just be there for you to discover tomorrow.
In addition, it is worth noting that there are a number
of individuals connected with Watch Tower history who do not have headstones,
but nonetheless have pages devoted to them on the Find a Grave site. For
example, John Corbin Sunderlin has an entry, but there is no photograph of a
headstone on the page (as yet). Nonetheless, you CAN find headstones along with
biographical information for both his father and his son. However, in this
article, apart from a couple of paragraphs on the Staten Island Cemetery where no
grave markers exist as a matter of policy (see below), these have not been
covered. This article is, after all, about pictures. But I recommend that you still
type in your name of choice and check.
Before we actually get to the pictures, perhaps I can
illustrate the value of this resource with one current example. In researching
Henry Weber for a recent article, a letter was found in ZWT from 1901 written
by Edna Mary Hammond which stated that her introduction to Bible Student
publications was through her brother’s Sunday school teacher. This was Henry
Weber. Edna is very specific; she was 10 years old at the time. Find a Grave
finds – not just Henry Weber, but also Edna Mary. We know from her entry that
she was born in 1873 and also where she was born. Do the math and we know that
Henry was already circulating CTR’s publications in 1883. We also know from
Edna’s entry and the surrounding family entries that her sister died as a
Jehovah’s Witness. So we have the right name, the right family, the right place
and right religious connections. All of this to give us an earlier date than
previously known for Henry Weber’s Watch Tower connections.
The Russell family
Charles Taze Russell
Front row - markers for CTR's father, mother, and three siblings
Back row - markers for Uncle Charles, Uncle James, and Aunt Sarah
Father - Joseph L Russell
The in-laws - Mahlon and Selena Ackley
The wife - Maria F Russell
The sister-in-law and step-mother - Emma H Russell
Before the Watch Tower
Henry Grew
(No grave marker known, but this is his death certificate)
Benjamin Wilson
Jonas Wendell
George Stetson
George Storrs
Barbour family memorial
Nelson H Barbour
Conley family memorial
William H Conley
"Our Pet" - Conley's adopted daughter who died aged 10 in 1881
John H Paton
Hugh B Rice
Arthur P Adams
Otto von Zech
Nathan H Knorr and Frederick W Franz
Jonas Wendell
George Stetson
George Storrs
Barbour family memorial
Nelson H Barbour
Some of those who went their own way
William H Conley
"Our Pet" - Conley's adopted daughter who died aged 10 in 1881
John H Paton
Hugh B Rice
Arthur P Adams
Otto von Zech
Ernest C Henninges
(wife Rose Ball is buried here too but the headstone was never updated)
Post CTR
Later years
As previous articles on this blog have detailed, the
Society had its own burial ground at the Rosemont United Cemeteries in Ross
Township, Pittsburgh. Here CTR and a few Bethel family members and Pilgrims
were buried, and their names inscribed on a pyramid monument. For biographical
details of all these individuals please see articles on this blog Who Are Those
Guys? Parts 1 and 2 from September 2014.
However, shortly after the headquarters moved from
Pittsburgh to Brooklyn for the second time in 1919, this cemetery was to all
intents and purposes abandoned. It was only several decades later that the
remaining graves were sold off. See article A Short History of United
Cemeteries, also from September 2014.
It made more sense to have a cemetery for Bethel family
workers in New York where they were now headquartered. To replace the
Pittsburgh plot, a new cemetery was created on Staten Island, New York. In 1922
the Society bought 24 acres of land in Woodrow Road, Staten Island. The area is
sometimes known as Rossville and also Huguenot Park. The purpose was to build
their own radio station WBBR which started broadcasting in early 1924. There
was also some farming done on the land, in what was then very much a rural
area.
A new graveyard was established nearby in the same
street, alongside an historic landmark, the Woodrow United Methodist Church. The website NYC AM Radio
History when discussing station WBBR made the statement:
Judge Rutherford died in 1942 and was buried at
Rossville in a Methodist cemetery within sight of the WBBR towers.
This small burial plot was used until at least the late
1960s. There are various references to this cemetery in the Society’s
literature when the death of someone well-known from their headquarters staff
was announced. For example, the Awake for February 22, 1952 page 26 recounts
the funeral of Clayton J Woodworth, along with two other Bethel workers in a
triple interment. The article reads (in part):
On Staten
Island in New York City the Watchtower Society maintains a place of burial for
members of the headquarters staff known as the Bethel family. How appropriate
it is that the remains of these men who labored together during their lifetime,
Rutherford, Van Amburgh, Martin and Woodworth, should be buried there together!
These four had all been imprisoned together way back in
1918.
The Woodrow Road graveyard was accessible to the
general public. It was obviously the policy to have no grave markers. It is
reported that today you can recognise the area belonging to the Society simply
because it is the only section in the cemetery without headstones.
In the 1960s the Society purchased two properties at
Wallkill, Ulster County, about 100 miles north of Brooklyn, NY, totalling a
reported 1200 hectares (around 3000 acres). These became known as Watchtower
Farms, and extensive printing operations were transferred to this area from the
early 1970s onwards. A new graveyard was created on this property that is known
as the Watchtower Farms Cemetery. It is a private cemetery on private land and is
therefore not accessible to the general public. The custom is now to have small
grave markers put down as depicted above for Nathan Knorr and Frederick Franz.
Watchtower Farms cemetery
Very few of those buried at Wallkill have photographs
on Find a Grave. However, you can still check names. Currently the site lists 164
graves. Be warned that this list is not complete,
and is not error free. For example, it lists the grave of A H MacMillan as
being at Wallkill, whereas the Watchtower for 1966, page 608, clearly shows
that he was buried at Staten Island. The same would be true of Giovanni DeCecca
who died in 1965. These two, also imprisoned together
back in 1918, were probably among the last to be interred at Woodrow Road.
In conclusion, it is acknowledged that this article
does not directly add much to our knowledge of Watch Tower history as such, but
is designed to highlight a resource that the author has found extremely useful
in recent years. The more who use it, the more it will grow, and the more
useful it can be for future researchers.