I need a basic biography for William A. Redding, a 19th Century spiritualist author. Anyone?
Update
THE STORY IS IN THE DETAILS - Notice: I've withdrawn my books from Amazon. They are now only available at Lulu.com
Amazon continues to be abusive. The Separate Identity series is coming off of Amazon and will shortly be available only from lulu.com
Most readers interested in Watch Tower history will already know about the changes made in the United Cemeteries in the last twelve months. Earlier posts on this blog detailed the damage done to the pyramid monument in the center of the site, and how after just over one hundred years the decision was taken to dismantle it.
I now have photographs
from a source I can freely copy with permission. So thanks to Jim H, and here
is what has recently happened on site.
The first picture shows
the pyramid as it was in 2014, when I personally visited the site and took the
photograph. On the right you can see the site after the monument had been taken
down, with just the concrete base left. CTR’s grave marker is at the top of the
picture.
Where the pyramid once
stood nine flat grave markers have been installed. Here you can see the scarred
land after the original concrete base for the pyramid was removed. Again, you
can see CTR’s grave marker at the top of the picture. No doubt the grass will
soon grow over the barren areas.
Below is a close up of
the nine markers. These modest stones are similar to those found at the
Society’s current burial site at the Watchtower Farms Cemetery in Walkill,
Ulster Co. They give the names exactly as they appeared on the original pyramid
sides, along with the ages of the Bible Students concerned.
The figures, A-1, etc. refer to the actual grave numbers in the original plots.
A few years ago I did a filler article on
this blog about George Darby Clowes, adding to information published in Volume
1 of Separate Identity. I was able to
use Ancestry to trace modern descendants of George and find a photograph of him
which I was given permission to publsh. As happens all the time on the
internet, that picture is now everywhere. Recently I returned to the subject of
George and did research on the 1862 Allegheny Arsenal disaster which greatly affected
him. I decided that George needed a whole article to pull various threads
together. This is it.
GEORGE
DARBY CLOWES
George Darby Clowes (1818-1889).
Photograph reproduced by kind permission of his great-great-grandson, William J. 3rd.
In the March 1889 issue of Zion’s Watch Tower, in response to a letter from his father, Joseph
Lytle, Charles Taze Russell wrote a brief obituary for George Darby Clowes
(1818-1889). It shows that George had a part to play in the very early history
and pre-history of the Watch Tower movement. CTR’s comment is below:
George had previously appeared in the pages of Zion’s Watch Tower in May 1886 (page 1)
when the annual Memorial celebration held in Pittsburgh was “adjourned with
praper by Brother Clowes.”
This then is his story.
George Clowes was born in the British Isles on April
26, 1818. He was baptised into the established church (Birmingham, St Martin)
on December 29, 1818. At the age of 19 he was married at the same church to
Sarah Fearney on December 6, 1837. His occupation is given as “brass founder.”
He would cast items in brass, which could be anything from shell cases to
intricate parts for clocks and watches.
George and Sarah were to have nine known children
over the next 24 years. The first two were born in Britain, Emma (b.1841) and
James (1843-1916). After James’ birth the family moved to the United States,
specifically Pennsylvania, because the remaining seven children were born
there. These were Hepzebah (1845-1864), Israel William (1848-1915), Fredrick
(b.1851), George Darby Jr. (1854-1932), Stephen (1858-1920), Sarah (b.1861) and
Sumpter (b.c.1865).
The name George Clowes was to be carried on through at
least three generations. As well as George Darby Jr. (1854-1932) who was the
original George’s sixth child, the original George’s fourth child Israel also
named a son George Darby Clowes (1877-1946). While it makes for complications
in research it does allow one to track down through the ages, and in this case to
make contact with a modern descendant a few years ago, who provided the
photograph of our subject at the head of this article.
George did not apply for American naturalization
until 1861, but the document with his signature has survived
George’s wife Sarah died in 1881. From the
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette 14 March 1881 page 4:
George became a minister in the M(ethodist)
E(piscopal) church. According to a letter he wrote to George Storrs, which we
will come to later, this was “about 25 years before” the year 1871. That would
take us to before the American Civil War. But he was to change direction and become part
of the small congregation that first attracted CTR when he dropped into a dusty
dingy hall (Quincy Hall on Leacock Street) to hear Adventist Jonas Wendell
preach.
The Adventists (specifically the Advent Christian
Church) were keen to claim George as a prize. In their paper, The World’s Crisis for December 27,
1871, Wendell had a letter published about his recent travels. The letter dated
December 6, 1871, showed that there had been problems of some sort in the
Pittsburgh group. He had worked there, along with George Stetson, for a few
weeks, but now there was a need for a local person to take over pastoral care.
Clowes’ expulsion from the Methodists, and his new
role in the Pittsburgh Advent Christian Church, is remembered elsewhere. In The Advent Christian Story by Clarence
Kearney (1968) he is mentioned in dispatches:
Although the Pittsburgh group was branded as
Adventist in the Advent Christian press, in reality it had an eclectic mix. Advent
Christians and Church of God (Age to Come) believers would often meet together at this time. They were united on a keen interest in the return of Christ and
conditional immortality, while generally divided over such subjects as the
destiny of natural Israel, how many would benefit from future probation through
the resurrection, which key events yet to happen were timed for the start or
the end of the millennium, and the advisability (or otherwise) of date setting.
As long as everyone
remained tolerant and unofficial and generally disorganised the situation could
continue. But while Age to Come believers were generally
averse to organization, Second Adventists into
the 1870s were increasingly anxious for
recognition as an established religion. This required an official statement of
belief covering not just vague generalities but specifics.
So people began to make choices, and Clowes embraced
the Age to Come belief system. Up to 1873 we find references to Advent
Christian meetings at Quincy Hall, Pittsburgh, but by 1874 Elder G. D. Clowes
was billed at the same venue but now in the main paper of the Age to Come
movement, The Restitution. From the
November 5, 1874, issue:
This shift meant that independent mavericks like
George Storrs, who edited Bible Examiner
(and who increasingly detested the Advent Christian Church) would be more than happy
to visit them. He did so in May 1874 and Clowes was subsequently mentioned
several times in his paper.
In the June 1874 issue of Bible Examiner Storrs reviewed his recent visit. In the editorial, under
the heading “Visit to Pittsburgh, PA” Storrs wrote: “The editor of this
magazine spent the first and second Sundays in May in the above named city. He
found there a small but noble band of friends who upheld with the full hearts
the truths advocated by himself. Among them is a preacher who was formally of
the Methodists.”
We must assume that the former Methodist preacher
was George Clowes. In the same issue, Storrs lists the parcels he had just sent
out to fill literature requests. These included several to Pittsburgh, the
recipients including G. D. Clowes Sr., Wm. H. Conley, and J. L. Russell and
son. (The latter was obviously a business address, but the “son” Charles Taze
Russell would have his own letter acknowledged the next month, July, and would subsequently
write articles for Storrs’ paper).
There are further requests for literature from
Clowes and the Russells, and then in the November 1875 Bible Examiner there is a full letter from Elder G. D. Clowes of
Pittsburgh dated September 8, 1875. In it, Clowes expresses appreciation for Bible Examiner, and regrets the spirit
manifest by “some of our brethren who do not see these precious truths.” It is
in this letter, referred to earlier, that he reflects on how he “had been cast
adrift a few years before by those he had labored with for a quarter century.”
That would take his Methodist connections back 25 years before 1871. He also
writes that a “Brother Owen is labouring with us.”
The next page of Storrs’ magazine has a letter of
appreciation from Joseph Lytle Russell, CTR’s father. Joseph also mentions
“Brother Owen” visiting, which shows that he and Clowes were involved with the
same meetings.
Very soon the independent Bible study group linked
to Charles Taze Russell would take center stage, and this would link up with
Nelson Barbour. This is another chapter and in extant records George Clowes
does not appear in it. But then, after Zion’s
Watch Tower began publication we find him attending that 1886 Memorial
celebration and then being remembered by both Joseph Lytle and Charles Taze
when he died in early 1889.
George never
made his living from a paid ministry. He did various jobs but the most
consistent was working at the Allegheny Arsenal in Lawrenceville for a number
of years. In the 1860 census he is a “nail plate heater.” In the 1866-67 Directory of Pittsburgh and Alleghen Cities
he is “assistant laboratory superintendent at the Arsenal.” In the 1870 census
he is “master laboratory A” – the A probably standing for Arsenal. As late as
1875, from the US Register of Civil,
Military and Naval Service, 1875 volume 1, dated September 30, 1875 we have
George working as a Foreman at the Allegheny Arsenal for three dollars a day.
As noted above, his original occupation of “brass
founder” could include making shell cases and that may have had some bearing on
where he worked, and even why he relocated from England to Pittsburgh.
His close association with the Arsenal is shown by
the aftermath of the September 17, 1862 disaster. There was an explosion in the
Laboratory building where they were filling shells with gunpowder for Union
forces in the Civil War. This caused a massive fire and 78 people – mainly
young women – died. Loose powder on a roadway and a spark from an iron horseshoe
was one possible cause. Another theory is that it was caused by static
electricity from the women workers’ hoop skirts. It ended up being Pittsburgh’s worst industrial
accident and the Civil War’s deadliest civilian disaster.
Clowes was present on
the day and initially was thought to be one of the casualties. From the
preliminary list of the dead in the Pittsburgh
Daily Post for September 18, 1862:
It gives his
occupation as Superintendent of Cylinder Department and says that his daughter
Emma died along with him. The Pittsburgh
Gazette for the same date, September
18, only listed Emma and gave her age as 21, and listed her as “missing.” Daughter
Emma was born in 1841, so this has to be the right family.
A day or two later it was clarified that George had survived, and had tried to calm down the girls in the chaos and panic to get out of the buildings. From the inquest report in the Pittsburgh Daily Post for September 23, 1862:
The reason for the confusion over casualties was
that the explosion and fire meant many bodies could not be identified. The
remains of over 40 unidentified people were buried in a mass grave in the
Allegheny cemetery. The final list of these included Emma. Years later the Pittsburgh Dispatch for May 25, 1899,
told the story and listed the names on the Allegheny Cemetery monument. You can
see Emma’s name four lines up from the bottom of the clipping.
The monument was later replaced and the one you can
now visit in the cemetery lists all 78 names of victims.
The memorial was the result of a special campaign,
and understandably George Clowes was heavily involved in this project. From the
Pittsburgh Daily Post for September
18, 1863:
George was linked to the Arsenal again in 1869 where
the Pittsburgh Weekly Gazatte for
January 29, 1869, carried a story about a new Library Association and Reading
Room to be assisted financially by the Arsenal Lodge of Good Templars. The Vice
President of the new association was G. D. Clowes.
He was also an officer of the Temple of Honor in
Lawrenceville, PA, which was a fraternal order supporting the temperance movement.
He also appeared on a list of names for the “Reform Republican Vigilance
Committee” for his area.
Returning to his work history, while the above-noted
US Register of Civil, Military and Naval
Service 1875 still has him working at the Arsenal, the 1875-1876 Directory of Pittsburgh and Allegheny
lists him as the Rev. George D. Clowes. He also appears to be in newspapers of
the day as a clergyman. As an example, the report of the dedication services
for a new M.E. Church near the Arsenal in the Pittsburgh Weekly Gazette for June 14, 1869, listed those present.
There are no initials to confirm we have the right man, but the report included
“Rev. Clowes and local preachers.”
When George died there was just a small notice in
the paper. From the Pittsburgh Dispatch
26 January 1889, page 7,
He was George D. Clowes, Sr. His son, George D.
Clowes, Jr. also lived and worked in Pittsburgh for nearly all his life in the
iron and steel industry.
The records are incomplete, but George Sr. was probably buried in the Allegheny cemetery, where his wife and many other family members were laid to rest. This historic cemetery also contains the Arsenal memorial with Emma’s name, and the grave plots for nearly all of CTR’s immediate family.
If you own any copies of Zech's magazine, please contact me. Another researcher is urgently seeking them. I need your permission to pass on your email address.
Pastor Russell's Sermons .... reasonable price thus far.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/403732965302?hash=item5e005c27b6:g:gAUAAOSw7pdis3cn
For sale on ebay. Alas, for far more than I can afford. Some browsers will require you to click on the image to view the complete photo.
There are several “lost” films in the history of the
Watch Tower Society. The 1914 Photodrama
of Creation was a big success and since at least twenty complete sets were
produced, the majority of it survived – both in private hands as well as
official archives. But subequent Bible Student films have not fared so well.
There was a Photodrama “sequel"
produced by Bible Students in 1917 called Restitution.
It really needs its own article, but sad to say, only a few minutes have as yet
been discovered. It was renamed several times in a troubled history and was
finally rebranded as Redemption and
sold in pieces on 16 mm film in the late 1920s.
Some film was taken by secular sources. In
1913 when CTR arrived at the Hot Springs, Arkansas, convention, his arrival was
filmed (see 1913 convention report page 66). The Hot Springs New Era newspaper for June 7, 1913, also said that the
baptism ceremony was filmed by the same cameraman. But at the end of the year (Hot Springs New Era for 30 December
1913) in response to an IBSA enquiry, there were recriminations between cameraman,
studio and express company when the negatives disappeared in transit. So I
wouldn’t hold your breath for film of Pastor Russell alighting from a 1913
train any time soon.
When the Chicago 1921 Pageant of Progress exhibition
was filmed, the IBSA stand was reportedly featured (see write-up by Fred Franz’
brother Albert in New Era Enterprise
for September 6, 1921). However, most newsreel material was very short-lived.
Once shown, if shown at all, such films were usually melted down to reuse the
silver and nitrocellulose base.
But returning to the Bible Students’ own
endeavors, the bumper year for lost films seems to be 1922.
That year the Bible Students held a
convention at Philadelphia over four days, April 13-16. It started in the Moose
Hall and later transferred to the Metropolitan Opera House for the public
meeting, where Joseph F Rutherford gave the public lecture. The review of the
whole event as found in the New Era Enterprise
newspaper for May 30, 1922, page 4, mentioned a special film show.
So on the Friday evening, at Moose Hall,
to an audience of around 1500 people, 8 reels of moving pictures were shown.
For that size of audience it would have been on regular 35 mm film and would
have been the length of a modest feature film. The convention program showed
what this film contained.
Whether this was raw unedited footage or a
professional presentation we do not know, but what is obvious is that these
films were soon edited down quite severely to make two one-reelers, one on
Palestine, and one on Imperial Valley. This was as part of the Kinemo project,
described in the New Era Enterprise
for July 11, 1922, and also in The Watch
Tower for May 1, 1922.
There were three films in total in the
original Kinemo project, the two aforementioned and a third on the Great
Pyramid. They were produced on safety film (rather than dangerous nitrate
stock) on a substandard film gauge, 17.5 mm. They could only be seen with a
special Kinemo projector, designed for home or parlor use. All three films
featured Joseph F Rutherford in cameo appearances.
As earlier articles on this blog have covered,
the three Kinemo films survived in private hands and have been painstakingly
copied frame by frame, which is why you can see them on YouTube.
But the question we are left with is –
what about the remaining six reels as shown in Philadelphia in April 1922?
The 1922 convention that everyone
remembers today is the much larger event held later that year in September at
Cedar Point, Ohio. This too provides a tantalising glimse of lost films.
First, most will have seen the Watchtower
Society’s recent call for the footage actually taken at this Cedar Point convention.
This is based on an advertisement in the New
Era Enterprise over several issues in October and November, 1922.
This venture (or something similar) was suggested
in the Convention Notes as found in the Enterprise
for October 31, 1922.
It is hoped that someone somewhere still
has this footage. In this 100th anniversary year of this convention,
it would be special indeed if it survived and could be restored. Extant
photographs of the event show a full sized camera filming J F Rutherford as he
spoke out of doors in “The Grove.” Time will tell. It should be noted that as
well as the 17.5 mm Kinemo version, it was also possible to buy a standard 35
mm print from the same source.
However, motion pictures were also shown
at this convention, which provides even more “lost” films to consider. Again from the Enterprise for October 31, 1922:
The views of Egypt, Palestine and Imperial
Valley were obviously the current Kinemo trilogy in some shape or form, but what
about the other films?
The description talked about “Views of the
Bible House (back in Pittsburgh?) and other organization buildings and offices
in Brooklyn, the Bethel Home, etc., the printing and binding of books and
pamphlets, etc.” These films were shown on three evenings, Friday to Sunday.
But what happened to them thereafter?
Since the Society did not retain 1922 footage
that was actually sold to the public at the time, this does not bode well for
these other films ever surfacing.
But stranger things have happened.
We might end by asking why such films
became “lost?” The Society’s experience during the Great War, and its view of
the future, meant that archiving was not always a high priority, certainly not
for material viewed as ephemeral at the time. Even when the Society produced a
reprint of the first 40 years of (Zion’s)
Watch Tower they had to appeal to private collectors to help them complete
their file for the project. And who would know that a hundred years after these
events there would be interest in these old moving pictures? We might easily
make the same mistakes today in choosing what or what not to keep in our
personal video DVD collection.
Material in private hands may survive for
a while, but when people die their relatives may well throw out things because
they don’t realize their significence. Like many collectors I have followed up
leads only for them to repeatedly end this way. It is good that now there is
now far more interest in preserving the past and that technology allows for greater
sharing.
Some photographs have come to hand from around 100 years ago that feature well-known Bible Students. The photographs are courtesy of the Robert Riley collection. The photo book is entitled Cedar Point on Lake Erie.
The earliest
photographs are from the 1919 convention at Cedar Point, Ohio. Many are of
unknown groups of people and general views of the venue. But the following are
those of named people many readers will know.
The ebook version of Separate Identity is defective, pages not matching the print copy. I haven't found the cause. but in the meantime I've taken it down.
Rufus was for a period one of Storrs' coworkers. He was Jonas Wendell's nephew, scholarly, sometimes mentally unstable. However, he produced this version of the New Testament presenting the 1881 revision and the AV side by side. A copy is on ebay at a fairly reasonable price. I have no financial interest in this and do not know the seller.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/144365385342?hash=item219cd8f67e:g:DFEAAOSwLiFh3Ga5
I need clear copies of these for another project. Anyone?
Also, for the same project, I need a volunteer to transcribe the 1945 Informant articles about the public meeting arrangement into a word document.
Some of my emails to you return this error message:
Footnote 20 on page 20 reads:
20 C. T. Russell: The New Creation, Watch Tower Society, Volume 6 of Millennial Dawn, 1904,
[First Edition] page 510. Russell defended the decision to lead a temporary or fully celibate marriage in
“Things Thereof you Wrote to Me,” a four page pamphlet issued as Zion’s Watch Tower Extra, October 15,
1905.
It should read: "C. T. Russell: The New Creation, Watch Tower Society, Volume 6 of Millennial Dawn, 1904, [First Edition], page 510. Russell defended the decision to lead a temporary of fully celibate marriage in "Things Thereof you Wrote Me," a four page pamphlet issues as Zion's Watch Tower Extra, October 15, 1895.
Guest post by Leroy
From 1887 to 1891 the Society produced
millions of copies of a tract known as the Arp Slip, Arp’s Joy or the Arp
tract. This little tract was very effective to convince people to read CTR´s
books, in particular the first volume of the Studies in the Scriptures series, known at the time as Millennial Dawn or The Plan of the Ages1. The tract was designed to be
handed out to people outside of churches on Sundays, and also to be included in
letters and in any other post sent by readers of Zion´s Watch Tower to friends, family, etc.2
By December 1887, two months after their
first appearance, more than 100 thousand copies had been printed, and the goal
was to print a million of them.3 Two months later, in February 1888,
the TOWER mentioned the following:
“Seeing the
good results from the slips already distributed, it is proposed to deluge the
country with them. Order all you can use. Labor while it is called day, for the
night cometh werein no man can work.”4
There are many experiences that
demonstrate the effect that these tracts had, such as that of S. O. Blunden,
who went out one Sunday to distribute the tracts outside a church in
Harrisburgh, Pennsylvania. Church leaders were furious, with two of them
threatening Blunden with arrest. Blunden ignored their threats and continued
with his activity. One of the leaders grabbed him by the throat to try to drag
him out, but Brother Blunden continued to distribute the tracts and warned the
man that if he did not let him go, he might be the one to have him arrested.
The man then stood between Blunden and the people and asked the people not to
receive the tracts, to no avail. Failing to stop Blunden, he sent someone to
the police office to bring in an officer and arrest the brother, arguing that
there was a man "stopping people from going to church." The policeman
came and arrested Brother Blunden, and then took him to the police station.
There, without a trial or hearing, they set a $100 bond to let him go free.
Brother Blunden expressed his happiness at having experienced something similar
to what happened to Peter and John in Acts 4:1-21.5
Another brother reported: “The Arp slips have been scattered broadcast throughout
this locality, and […] have caused a grand confusion. The nominal churches are
denouncing us, and specially warning their congregations to not even allow a
scrap of paper of any kind we may send out to come into their homes, and
warning their children not to read anything of the kind.But […] it is only
stimulating us to greater efforts, and we can already see some fruits of our
labor.”6
A young Methodist, after reading the tract
began to cry with emotion, bought the book The
Plan of the Ages, and said that he could not believe the doctrines taught
by the nominal church, such as universal damnation and eternal torment. Many
others had similar experiences.7
Some had their own methods for
distributing them: “I find it is a good plan to
leave them in the seats in the R. R. depots. I notice the passengers read them
carefully, and fold them up and put them in their pockets, which shows, I
think, that they are interested.”8
Some even distributed them door to door,
and came back a few days later to offer the Plan
of the Ages.9
But, what, exactly were Arp Slips? What
was their content?
Arp Slips were small single-sheet tracts
measuring 7 cm wide by 34 cm long (2 ¾ × 13 ½ inches). On the front they
contained Bill Arp's comments on the book The
Divine Plan of the Ages, (hence the name) and on the back the poem
"The Minister's Daughter" by John Greenleaf Whittier. There were
several versions with slight modifications to the text accompanying Arp's
comments. Below, you can see a photo of one of these tracts:
It reads:
“Let
every man read, ponder and take comfort, for we are all
prisoners of hope.”
UPON READING
MILLENNIAL
DAWN,
THE
“PLAN OF THE AGES.”
FOOD AND
COMFORT FOR ALL THINKERS.
READ HIS
COMMENTS.
[From
Atlanta Constitution.]
A kind lady
has sent me a book of 350 pages called “Millennial Dawn,” published by the
Tower Publishing Co., in Pittsburg, Pa., which will, I believe, awaken the
thinking world. I see that its sale is already over twenty-five thousand. It is
impossible to read this book without loving the writer and pondering his
wonderful solution of the great mysteries that have troubled us all our lives.
There is hardly a family to be found that has not lost some loved one who died
outside the church—outside the plan of salvation and if Calvinism be true
outside of all hope and inside of eternal torment and despair. We smother our
feelings and turn away from the horrible picture. We dare not deny the faith of
our fathers, and yet can it be possible that the good mother and her wandering
child are forever separated—forever and forever?
I believe it is the rigidity of
these teachings that makes atheists and infidels and skeptics— makes Christians
unhappy and brings their gray hairs down in sorrow to the grave—a lost child, a
lost soul!
Let us see
how many lost souls. The geographers give the world a present population of
fourteen hundred million, of whom only one hundred and sixteen million are
Christians,— that is, who live in Christian countries. Of these, only sixteen
million are adult members of the church; and of these, about one million walk
not after the flesh but after the spirit. That is a beautiful picture.—Only one
million of truly good, pious Christian people in all the world, and thirteen
hundred and ninety-nine millions who are elected to be eternally damned. Add to
these figures one hundred and forty-two billions, who have already lived and
died in the ages past, and if all these are damned, it does look like God’s
plan of salvation was a miserable failure. He gets one soul for glory while
Satan captures thousands.
This wonderful book teaches that
trial is yet to come—that all are to rise from the dead when Christ comes, that
He will offer His salvation to all people ; not only to the living, but to
those who rise from the dead. His kingdom will be supported by the saints and
by good people everywhere, and the mother will have another chance to reclaim
her wandering child and bring him unto the kingdom. This wonderful book makes
no assertions that are not well sustained by the Scriptures. It is built up
stone by stone, and upon every stone is the text, and it becomes a pyramid of
God’s love, and mercy, and wisdom. There is nothing in the Bible that the
author denies or doubts, but there are many texts that he throws a flood of
light upon that seems to uncover its dark and gloomy meaning. I see that
editors of leading journals, and many orthodox ministers of different
denominations, have indorsed it and have confessed to this new and comforting
light that has dawned upon the interpretation of God’s book. Then let every man
read and ponder and take comfort, for we are all prisoners of hope. This is an
age of advanced thought and more thinking is done than ever before,—men dare to
think now. Light—more light, is the watchword. BILL
ARP.
Another version of the tract has Arp´s
comments abbreviated, and then comment by other people praising the book. They
all have advertising information at the end on how to get the volume. Here you
can see two other versions, front and back:
So, as we see, the tract basically
contained Bill Arp's comments recommending the Plan of the Ages. The goal was
to whet the appetite to read the publication. This was the type of tract that
Russell preferred to use, and not a tract that explained a biblical subject in
very few lines. The reason is that he thought that a biblical topic explained
in a few words did not have the power to convince someone to change their
belief, instead, a little treatise like the Arp Slip, could encourage that
person to read a more profound publication like The Plan of the Ages, and then this could really help them accept
the truth.10
Who was Bill Arp?
Major Charles Henry Smith, better known by
his nickname "Bill Arp," was born in Gwinnett County, Georgia in 1826
and was a highly influential figure in the American South. He held various
government posts but his best-known facet was as a writer, humorist and
lecturer. He was a highly respected opinion leader and deputy editor of The Atlanta Constitution newspaper.
“A woman” (you'll see why I put this in
quotes later) from Allegheny sent him a copy of Volume 1 of Studies in the Scriptures, and he was so
fascinated by what he read that he decided to publish a column about it in The Atlanta Constitution. This was
printed in the issue of July 24, 1887, which I show you below:
The column reads:
“THE
MILLENIUM.
Arp
Pleased with a Book He Has Been Reading,
THAT TELLS
ON THE COMING OF CHRIST.
When Peace
Will Reign on the Earth for a Thousand Years - Some Strange and Startling
Figures.
So many
have written to me to know where Baxter’s pamphlet on the millenium can be had
that I must answer publicly and say, I do not know—nor do I know who sent it to
me, nor where it was mailed. An old friend wrote me to send it to him and I
sent it. I do know that it is no ordinary interpretation of the prophecies and
that it contains many wonderful and startling facts. But a kind lady from
Allegheny has sent me a book of 360 pages called the Millennial Dawn, Charles
T. Russell, and published by the Tower Publishing compay (SIC) in Pittsburg,
Pa., which is far more comprehensive, and will, I believe, awaken the thinking
world. I is in paper cover, and worth I suppose, not more than fifty cents. I
see that its sale is already over twenty-five thousand. It is impossible to
read this book without loving the writer and pondering his wonderful solution
of the great mysteries that have troubled us all our lives. There is hardly a
family to be found that has not lost some loved one who died outside the
church—outside the plan of salvation and if Calvinism be true outside of all
hope and inside of eternal torment and despair. We smother our feelings and
turn away from the horrible picture. We dare not deny the faith of our fathers,
and yet can it be possible that the good mother and her wandering child are
forever separated—forever and forever.
I believe it is the rigidity of these
teachings that makes atheists and infidels and skeptics—makes Christains (SIC)
unhappy and brings their gray hairs down in sorrow to the grave—a lost child, a
lost soul.
Let us see
how many lost souls. The geographers give the world a present population of
fourteen hundred million, of whom only one hundred and sixteen million are
Christians, that is, who live in Christian countries. Of these, only sixteen
million are adult members of the church; and of these, about one million walk
not after the flesh, but after the spirit. That it is a beautiful picture. Only
one million of truly good, pious Christian people in all the world, and
thirteen hundred and ninety-nine millions who are elected to be eternally
damned. Add to these figures one hundred and forty-two billions who have
already lived and died in the ages past, and if all these are damned, it does
look like God's plan of salvation was a miserable failure. He gets one soul for
glory while Satan captures thousands.
This
wonderful book teaches that man’s trial is yet to come—that all are to rise
from the dead when Christ comes, and that He is coming soon—very soon—within a
few years and will reign on earth a thousand years, and will offer His
salvation to all people; not only to the living but to those who rise from the
dead. His kingdom will be supported by the saints and by good people
everywhere, and the mother will have another chance to reclaim her wandering
child and bring him unto the kingdom. This wonderful book makes no assertions
that are not well sustained by the Scriptures. It is built up stone by stone,
and upon every stone is the text, and it becomes a pyramid of God's love, and
mercy, and wisdom. There is nothing in the Bible that the author denies or
doubts, but there are many texts that he throws a flood of light upon that
seems to uncover its dark and gloomy meaning. I see that editors of leading
journals, and many orthodox ministers of different denominations, have indorsed
it and have confessed to this new and comforting light that has dawned upon the interpretation of
God's book. Then let every than read and
ponder and take comfort for we are all prisoners of hope, This is an age
of advanced thought and more thinking is
done than ever before, men dare to think
now. Light – more light is the watchword.
Still we
have plenty to do besides thinking about the millennium. That may be a century
off or it may be only a few years. Baxter says that a mistake of a hundred
years was made in the number of years that the judges of Israel ruled and that
all modern chronologists admit it, and that this is really 1987 instead of
1887, and that the 6,000 years since the creation of Adam have nearly passed. Mr. Russell says
that 6,000 years must pass before Christ comes, and that they have nearly
passed. But we have a good deal to do and need not be selling out or making
white garments for we are not going to ascend up to heaven even if the
millenium does come, Jesus Christ is going to descend down here and set up his
kingdom, and we will have to live on and work on under a government where not a
stain will mar the harmony of society, not a bitter thought nor an unkind word,
not an ache nor a pain nor any decay,
nor the fear of it. The human form and feature will be perfect in its beauty,
and-although human as it is—now will be of surpassing loveliness. Won't it be
glorious to live at such a time and never die-no toothache nor backache nor
lingering rheumatism, no empty sleeves nor crutches nor glass eyes nor bald
heads; no quarreling about the State road and the convicts and prohibition and
the pay of the jurymen. Why, if Mr. Baxter’s count is right, the general
assembly needent lease the State road for more than ten years, for it will be
run under a new regime, and one man will have no more privileges than another.
Every man will have to do his share of work It will go mighty hard with some, I
know, but maybe they will get used to
it. Money won’t relieve a man, neither will his pedigree, but all will have to
work for the common good. Mr. Russell says that the earth will have abundant
room for the 260 billions who have died, and the one and a half billions who
now live, and that they all can stand erect within the limits of Ireland,
allowing two square feet of space for each. The earth will then yield her
increase, and the desert will blossom as the rose, and waters shall break forth in the wilderness and streams in
the desert. With the help and power of such a king I reckon we can all get
along if we deserve to. But if the time is near at hand our people had better
begin to get used to some things. The rich and greedy had better begin to
divide out a little along by degrees, The malicious and quarrelsome had better
begin to cultivate the virtues of love and charity. The lazy had better rouse
up and work a little. White folks had better quit cheating and darkies quit
stealing, for it will be awful hard to stop all of a sudden. It will be safest
anyhow for us all to live just like we knew the millenium was coming very soon,
whether it comes or not. Let us have our lamps trimmed and burning.
BILL ARP.”
From this column were taken the comments
that came to form the Arp Slip, which helped many people to get closer to the
truth, and in many cases, become Bible Students.
Apparently, Bill Arp did not adopt the
faith that he admired so much, since his funeral was held in the Presbyterian
Church, and was officiated by the Reverend T. J. Christian, of the Methodist
Church.11
Their use and promotion
(Photo caption:)
(bottom part of the first edition)
The Arp Slip was first mailed to
subscribers of Zion's Watch Tower
free of charge as a supplement to the October 1887 issue. Explanation and
recommendations on how to use the tract were given in the following issue:
“THE “ARP SLIPS,” of which samples were
sent you with last TOWER, seem to meet with general approval. A sister greatly
interested expresses the desire that these slips might be circulated generally
among Christian people, believing that they would awaken new thoughts in many
minds, and lead them to study God’s plan anew, and thus prove an entering wedge
to let in the true light. She thinks an excellent plan would be, to distribute
these slips Sundays, to church-goers, either as they go in or are dismissed
after service. She donates fifty dollars to pay for printing and mailing these,
to be used thus, the sum to be applied to some one state, leaving it for the
publishers to decide which.
We think this an excellent plan. Should
it become very general it will make quite a stir, by throwing cold water
[truth] upon the “hell-fire teachings.” The ministers and officious members of
churches, will doubtless try both arts and threats to stop those who engage in
this crusade, but as the slips are free, and the sidewalks public, and the
tract a religious one—calling attention to the genuine gospel, good tidings,
there is no cause for either shame or fear. Since it is left to us to decide,
and since “charity begins at home,”—the sister is a Pennsylvanian—we apply the
above donation to the state of Pennsylvania, and accordingly invite all the
friends of the cause in Penn’a., to send in their orders for as many as they
will use according to the plan mentioned. Many can serve the cause we love, in
this way, who cannot preach in any other manner. Take a boy or girl to help,
where the congregations are large. The fifty dollars will print and stamp a
great many as we now have electroplates to print from.
The above offer must not hinder all
other readers from using these slips in a less extravagant manner among their
friends, enclosing them with their letters, etc., etc. Order freely; we have
them in packs of pounds, half-pounds, quarter pounds and two ounces. Order all
you can judiciously use FREE.”12
This of course generated a lot of interest
and orders started pouring in from all over the state of Pennsylvania. But of
course, readers from other states didn't want to be left behind. The following
month the TOWER announced that a
brother named Weber had donated 40 dollars to distribute these tracts in
Maryland and West Virginia,13 and the following month another
donation would arrive for the state of Ohio.14 The success was so
great that just a month later, in February 1888, Russell decided to use the
money from the TOWER TRACT FUND to print enough tracts to flood the entire
country, and it did.15
In addition to producing the tract as a
loose leaf, it was printed in newspapers across the country, including, in
addition to Arp's comments, the “response” of “Mrs. Lemuels”, as can be seen in
this newspaper clipping from the Miami
Republican:16
Comments from Mrs. C. B. Lemuels say:
“The truths
set forth in the above described work so benefited me, so opened my eyes to
God’s great, just, loving, wise plan, and so opened the Bible before me, that
with others who have read and been caused to see, I have concluded to spend
such means and strength as I possess in passing this cup of refreshing truth to
other thirsty souls. To this end I am loaning
this book, postage prepaid, to all who will promise a careful reading of it
and to pay return postage. The above came voluntarily and unexpectedly from Mr.
“Arp’s” pen after reading the book, sent him by me, and is well matched by
hundreds of letters from people in every station of life. I want every intelligent, thinking man and woman to
read the book, for as “Arp” truly says, “It is impossible to read this book
without loving the author [Doubtless God through the writer was the real Author of the plan unfolded,] and
pondering his wonderful solution of the great mysteries that have troubled us
all our lives.”
Address Mrs. C. B. Lemuels, Allegheny, Pa.”
During 1888, these advertisements signed
by C. B. Lemuels appeared in many newspapers in the United States offering to
lend the books to anyone who was interested, and many people approached the
Bible Students because of this, but…
Who was C.B. Lemuels?
In those years there were many very devout
women who were willing to give everything in order to make known the message of
the Bible Students, and many of them in later times did so, as in the notable
case of Gertrude Seibert or of the sisters persecuted in 1918, but the reality
is that Mrs. C. B. Lemuels was not one of them, in fact, C. B. Lemuels never
existed. She was a character created by C. T. Russell, who would represent his
wife Maria, to attract more people to his message. Russell himself explained it
in 1894:
“No wrong was done to any one by the use
of the name; but, on the contrary, much good was accomplished. Many readers
will remember seeing Mrs. C. B. Lemuels’ advertisements in different
newspapers, all over the United States, offering to loan free of charge a book
that would be very helpful to honest skeptics and infidels. Many of you first
learned of the truth by this means. The book was The Plan of the Ages—DAWN,
VOL. I, and the name Mrs. Lemuels represented Mrs. Russell. I
esteemed that the matter would be better received from a lady than from a
gentleman. I could have arranged for the use of Mrs. Russell’s name, or
the name of some other sister, but reflected that a confusion of letters might
result and prove inconvenient. Besides, I bring my own name as little into
prominence as possible. This will be noticed in connection with everything I
have published—the O. T. Tracts, the DAWNS, etc.
The name Lemuel is from the Hebrew and
signifies Son of God. The initial letter C, stands for Christ, and B. for
before; hence the whole name signifies, a son of God, after Christ. I consider
the using of the name for a good purpose entirely proper and not a deception,
in the proper meaning of that term; for it could make no
difference to the party blessed whether the instrument of his blessing had the
name of Smith, Brown, Lemuels or Russell. Indeed, our Lord was known by a
variety of names, other than the name of Jesus, given by the angel. He is
called also Immanuel, the Son of Man, the Redeemer, the Good Shepherd, Lord of
Glory, Prince of Peace, Prince of Life, the Word of God, Lamb of God, the Just
One, the King of Israel, Living Stone, the True Vine, Wonderful, Counsellor,
Savior, Mediator, the Amen, the Alpha and Omega, the Second Adam, the Messiah.
Our Lord and the Apostles and the Prophets, did not think it a deception to
apply these various names and titles, nor do I. Had I used the name for a wrong
purpose, the entire transaction would have been sinful; but as it is conceded
that it was used for a good purpose the entire transaction is faultless. Many
eminent writers for the press cover their identity under a nom de plume, and
justly without reproach.” 17
Bill Arp's comments were used as publicity
in various publications, for example in some issues of the Old Theology tracts
and in the back pages of the volumes of Studies
in the Scriptures, among others. The Arp tract in its entirety was
translated into German in its tract format, but it was also translated into
other languages in the form of advertising included in books.
What happened to the Arp Slip?
In November 1891, the TOWER announced that a new small tract was in the works to replace the Arp Slip18, and apparently it was, as that is the last mention in its pages of this small, but very powerful preaching tool.
Notes
1. Notes
1. Over time as the other volumes in
the series came out, the title changed to The Divine Plan of the Ages, and the
entire series became known as Millennial Dawn, and later the series name was
changed to Studies in the Scriptures.