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The life of Rev. W. W.
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THE LIFE
OF
REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D
BY
HIS SON.
PHILADELPHIA:
LOUIS H. KVKRTS.
18 91.
Copyright, 1891, by Key. ^Y. W. Everts, D.D.
PEEFAOE.
Herder, in speaking of a national biography, remarks that
" the names of those only should have a place in it who have
contributed something to the well-being of mankind. The
chief aim of biography is to show how the man became what
he was, what obstacles he had to encounter, how far he went,
what he left to be done by others, and how he himself regarded
the work of his life."
The life of Dr. Everts, aside from the pastorate, was devoted
to the establishment of educational institutions in Chicago, to
the dedication of church buildings, chiefly in the West, and
to the advocacy of pure translations of the Bible throughout
the world. The obstacles he met with, especially in this
public service, and the joy that came at last with the firm
establishment of the institutions and ideas with which he
had been identified, are fully stated in the following pages :
" It has seemed to me that my public life, in its enthusi-
astic co-operation with the denomination and with public
progress, might be a guide to some making the public service
their aim, and give them hints of methods and warnings of
trials incident to all honest and earnest workers. My indi-
viduality seemed to me lost in devotion to the public good,
in measures for social and Christian progress." These senti-
3
4 PREFACE.
meDts of the subject of this memoir have been the inspira-
tion in the preparation of this volume. No one need turn these
pages expecting to find profound speculations or poetical
fancies, for the life of which they treat was devoted to other
ends. But if any one is interested in the present rather than
in the past, in the practical rather than in the ideal ; if any
one is stirred by the contemplation of a leader " without fear
and without reproach," of an orator who sways the multitude
for noble ends, of a reformer of abuses, of an organizer with
far-reaching plans, of a creator of permanent material enter-
prises, such an one will be quickened by reading this brief
memoir of an active and effective life.
W. W. Everts.
Haverhill, Mass., March 20, 1891.
COI^TENTS.
CHAPTER I. PAGE
The Years of Preparation 7
CHAPTER II.
In the Flush of Manhood 14
CHAPTER III.
Life in Kentucky 2G
CHAPTER IV.
Growing up with Chicago 46
CHAPTER V.
Ix THE Service of the Denomination at Large . . 66
CHAPTER VI.
Fiery Trials 87
CHAPTER VII.
The old University of Chicago 94
CHAPTER VIII.
The Theological Seminary at Chicago 109
CHAPTER IX.
Labors in behalf of Pure Versions of the Bible . 117
CHAPTER X.
The Journey's End 129
5
THE LIFE
OF
REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
CHAPTER I.
THE YEARS OF PREPARATION.
John Evarts, the ancestor of the Enghsh line of families
in the United States bearing the name Evarts or Everts, was
one of the freemen who founded the town of Guilford, Con-
necticut. He settled there a little later than the rest, in
1652. There his descendants lived until the close of the
war of the Kevolution, when some of them removed to Sun-
derland, Vermont. Here Jeremiah, the father of the United
States Senator William M. Evarts, and his cousin Samuel,
the father of William Wallace Everts, were born. Samuel,
whose father had been a sea-captain at Guilford, married
Phebe Spicer, whose grandfather likewise had commanded
at sea. Their son William was born April 14, 1814, in-
herited his fearlessness, ready resource, and power to com-
mand, from both his paternal and maternal ancestors. His
father was a leader of the militia, raised a company for the
war of 1812, and was appointed brigadier-general. He
transmitted to his son an erect figure, a military bearing, and
ability to endure hardness as a good soldier.
After the war, the brigadier became sheriff of the county,
7
8 THE LIFE or REV. ^Y. W. EVERTS, D.D.
and his little son learned to admire feats of agility and
prowess exhibited in the chase and capture of daring law-
breakers. On training days of the militia, the father looked
on and inspired his son to excel in the exciting sports. He
would take him when quite young to a deep place in the
creek, and leap or dive into the water with the child upon his
back. Such were the hardihood and courage thus developed,
that this boy was put forward at wrestling matches as the
village champion.
But his father was no less ambitious for the intellectual
advancement of his family. As he had been a student at
Middlebury College, Vermont, and his wife had been a
school-teacher, the children received at home an intellectual
stimulus that led six of them to choose a professional life.
The spiritual, as well as the mental, needs of his children
were objects of the father's care. While occupied in military
duties, he would improve a pause in a parade to converse upon
religious themes. In his frequent journeys on court business,
such was his religious ardor, that he was known as " the
minister." When he removed his family to a new region, two
thoughts were in his mind, — viz., to establish a day-school
and a Sunday-school.
When William was but twelve years old, his father died,
and the further moulding of the boy's religious character de-
volved on his mother. Phebe Spicer was a spirit well mated
to her husband. There was a flavor of romance about the
marriage, for the maiden had had two suitors for her hand.
For some time she was at a loss how to decide between them.
But one night she dreamed that the two young men were
drowning, and that she, standing on the bank, could save but
one. Quickly her choice was made, and the choice of her
dream became that of her life. She had inherited from her
mother and grandmother a strong religious nature, and, when
THE YEARS OF PREPARATION. 9
a little child, had learned to walk with God. She was well
named Phebe, for, like her namesake, she was " a servant of
the church and a succorer of many." No person, during her
long life, ever came into her presence without receiving a
Christian message. After her husband's death she conducted
the family prayers, and if minister and deacon failed to ap-
pear at a funeral, her voice gave Christian burial to the dead
and comfort to the living. The death of her husband was
the severest trial of her faith. They had just emigrated, by
ox-teams and canal-boats, from the Green Mountain region to
the territory beyond Lake Erie. It was in the fatal year
1826, when the dreaded fever ravaged the new settlements
of Michigan. Her oldest daughter had just recovered from
the disease, when the stay of the household was stricken
down. Betaking herself to a retired spot to pray, she
wrestles in mute agony for the life of her dear one. As she
can find no words to utter, she becomes confident that his
death is decreed, and, arising from her knees, she returns to
her house and calmly awaits the flight of his spirit. Again,
after prayer, she determines, against the entreaties and
promises of kind neighbors, to return to the East; for a
voice has been heard, saying, " Go back, and I will take care
of thy children ; they shall be mine." Her composure does
not forsake her when, in a terrible storm on Lake Erie, all
the passengers expect that the steamboat on which she has
embarked will sink. Almost penniless, the widow arrives with
her large family among old neighbors at Clarkson, New York.
Well might she have used the words of Naomi, under similar
circumstances, " Call me not Naomi, call me Mara ; for the
Almighty hath dealt very bitterly with me."
It was some comfort to twelve-year-old Willie that they
did not have to beg, though he admitted that they had a good
many presents. He was taken into a doctor's family, where
10 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
he had everything he wanted ; but he would not be petted
and treated as a child, and ran away to his mother, saying to
her, " I'll never amount to anything there, so I left." He
was then sent to a farmer in the town of Sweden. Away
from home at a formative period in life, he came into evil
association with older boys. Information of this soon reached
his watchful mother, who flew to his rescue. Without a word
of reproach, she disclosed her tender love for him, and ex-
pressed her confidence in his future. " My dear son will
remember his father's honor and his mother's prayers, and
avoid evil companions." " That tender and confiding appeal
reached my conscience till I was converted. My mother,
more than any other human being, determined my character
and destiny," is the tribute of later years to her memory.
When he was thirteen years old, there was a revival in the
school he was attending in Clarkson, and he was one of the
converts. One day, at the close of school, after the Bible
was read, he was surprised at being called on to pray, and
thus singled out for a public service. As there was no Bap-
tist church in the place, he delayed making a public profession
of his faith, and thereby lost his interest in religion. His
brother Jeremiah, then a student for the ministry, visited
him and warned him of the peril of a life not publicly com-
mitted to God, and secured the promise of an immediate
settlement of the question. To fulfil the promise and to end
the controversy of life, a lonely spot was sought, and, like
Jacob at Peniel, he spent hours in wrestling, agonizing prayer.
Exhausted, faint, despairing of ever attaining positive as-
surance of salvation, he at last resolved, whether knowing or
not knowing, to follow Christ, to be with Christians, and to
live as a Christian should. Accordingly, in the spring of 1829,
he was baptized at Sweden by Elder Zenas Case. The next
year, with his employer's consent, he went with his mother
THE YEARS OF PREPARATION.
11
to a protracted meeting at Holly. The Spirit of God was
present to save, and inquirers in large numbers came forward
to the anxious seats. Prayer was to be offered for them, when ,
strange to say, three persons who were called on to pray,— a
Presbyterian minister, a Methodist minister, and a Baptist
deacon,— each in turn declined, whereupon the leader said,
<' William Everts, come up here and pray." The boy did as
he was bidden, and such was the fervor of his prayer that,
when he had finished, a woman turned to his mother and
said, " Do you know who that boy is?" She replied, " It is
a child the Lord gave me." Then came the impassioned out-
burst of feeling, "Blessed art thou among women, and
blessed is the fruit of thy womb." The language of this
woman expressed the general feeling. The moderator, Pvcv.
Henry Davis, took the youth to his own house at Bockport,
and next year, with the hearty endorsement of the church,
sent him to Hamilton, New York, to study for the ministry.
In the fall of 1831 he arrived at school, with just three
dollars in his pocket. There was no " Education Society"
to look to for aid, and the friends at home were unable to
render further assistance. But, if there was plain living,
there was high thinking in the company of Comstock, How-
ard, Vinton, Bead, Wheelock, Spear, Knapp, Freeman, and
Baymond. The chapel bell rang at five o'clock in the morn-
ing, but young Everts found time before chapel to earn his
dally bread. Poverty was no disadvantage. Porridge proved
good food for the brain. The youth rose to the head of his
class and kept there. Yet now and then ambition succumbed
to homesickness, as occurred one Saturday when he was walk-
ing down the Chenango valley to spend a vacation with a
hospitable family at North Norwich. He became weary and
footsore before he was met by the promised conveyance, and,
as he sat down by the wayside to rest, was suddenly over
12 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
whelmed by a sense of liis lonely condition and uncertain
future, and for once in his life gave way to melancholy. In
those early years of struggle, he often recalled his mother's
injunction, " In all thy ways acknowledge Him, and He will
direct thy steps." During the last years at Hamilton he was
less cramped. As early as 1 834 he obtained the supply of a
pulpit occasionally. Then his vacations were profitable, that
of 1835 being spent with the Second Baptist Church, Roches-
ter; that of 1836 at Bridgeport, Connecticut, resulting in an
invitation to settle ; and that of 1838 with the First Baptist
Church in Detroit, where lifelong friendships were formed.
His eight years at Hamilton, in companionship with such
students as E. E. L. Taylor, afterwards secretary of the
Home Mission Society; the evangelists Jacob Knapp and
Jabez Swan ; and the missionary Vinton, brought him into
sympathy with all kinds of men and all departments of
Christian enterprise. Home missions, foreign missions, and
evangelism were equally dear to him ever afterward. His
student note-books show a familiarity with Latin, Greek, and
Hebrew ; but the pressing claims of pastoral work prevented
the fulfilment of the bright promise of his earlier years in
the field of ancient languages. He did not abandon literary
studies, but they were chiefly concerned with modern reforms ;
and the productions of his pen were devoted to practical
rather than speculative theology. His ideal was found in
Andrew Fuller and Spencer H. Cone, rather than in John
Foster or William B. Williams. Contrasting these men, he
said, " Some men of marked individuality work in compara-
tive isolation from the pursuits of others. They are like a
rivulet that, avoiding the broad river, seeks in its own new
channel its way to the sea. But the lives of most men are
blended, and almost lose their identity in the social achieve-
ments, pursuits, and progress of an age. Foster's life was
THE YEARS OP PREPARATION. 13
more isolated and independent. Fuller's blended with the
church activities, methods, and missionary enterprises of the
denomination. His life thrilled and wrought in them all.
There is no motive for extolling one at the expense of the
other. They represent two different and complemental forms
of power. So Dr. W. E. Williams has co-operated far less
in the general activities of the Baptist denomination than
Dr. S. H. Cone. It were needlessly invidious to assert that
Dr. Williams has exerted more influence on the age than Dr.
Cone. Dr. Cone's life still palpitates most vigorously in the
heart of the denomination, through leading men, preachers,
and churches, and by the spread of Baptist principles. The
man who formulates theologies, and defends them with mas-
terly logic, has his sphere in the ministry of the church ; but
one apprehending the possibilities and needs of the churches
in various activities, may contribute no less spiritual force
to the progress of Christianity. His quicker sympathies, his
wiser intuitions, his more self-sacrificing benevolence, his en-
thusiastic enterprise, may contribute more to denominational
growth than the special studies of the isolated worker."
14 THE LIFE OF REV. AV. W. EVERTS, D.D.
CHAPTER 11.
IN THE FLUSH OF MANHOOD.
While Mr. Everts was finishing bis course of study at
the seminary, Baptist aiFairs in New York City were near-
ing a crisis. The Mulberry Street Church bad lost, in 1836,
its first and only pastor, Dr. Maclay, and was speedily reduced
to the necessity of letting its great edifice go under the ham-
mer. This was Deacon William Colgate's opportunity to
establish a church in favor of three days' meetings, anxious
seats, and other revival measures, — the new methods, — of
which he had heard such glowing reports at his annual visits
to Hamilton. The old Calvinism was so strongly entrenched
in the New York City pulpits at that time, that it was neces-
sary to establish a new church, if the new methods were to
be tried. Deacon Colgate was followed by a score or more
who sympathized with his views, from Oliver Street by a
struggling band known as the West Church, of which Dr.
Dowling had been pastor, and by the survivors of Dr. Maclay's
charge ; and all together formed what became known as the
Tabernacle Church.
The Mulberry Street property was bought. The seats
were all made free. Then the question arose, What strong
preacher, with no assured income from pew rentals, will accept
a call. On Commencement Sunday of the year 1839, Mr.
Colgate and Deacon Houghton made arrangements to hear
Mr. Everts preach at Hamilton, and so well were they pleased
with the matter and spirit of the discourse, that they urged
IN THE FLUSH OF MANHOOD. 15
him to visit New York City, and look over the new field, with
a view to settlement. With great fear and misgiving, and
with much pain at the thought at leaving his growing con-
gregation at Earlville, the invitation was accepted. The visit
led to an immediate call. " If I had any ambition, I think
my prudence repressed it, and I was averse to so responsible
a settlement." However, with tears in his eyes he yielded to
their entreaties. The acceptance of the call led to several
happy results. A debt of seven hundred dollars, which he
had incurred at school, was assumed by the church. His
marriage with Miss Maria Wyckofi", sister of W. H. WyckoflP,
D.D., was celebrated.
He became, according to the testimony of Dr. W. H.
Parmley, who was then just entering Columbia College,
" decidedly the most popular young Baptist preacher of the
time."
The union of pastor and people was sealed by the Holy
Spirit. Elder Knapp was expected in February, and fre-
quent baptisms indicated that the church was ready for his
coming. The great meeting-house was filled for months
before the Evangelist arrived, and the heterogeneous elements
of which the church was composed had been fused by the
baptism of fire into perfect harmony. The day he came nine
persons were baptized in the morning, and twenty received
the right hand of fellowship in the afternoon. Dr. Knapp's
first sermon, which was on " Lukewarmness," led to still
deeper heart-searching. Deacon Colgate left his great business
to other men's care, and attended the services night and day
for nine weeks. The church responded to the work as one
man. The New York Herald widely advertised the re-
vival by its sensational accounts of the services, and its
wood-cuts caricaturing the baptisms at the river. The Mul-
berry Street meetings became the talk of the day. It was
16 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
the news-boys' cry. People who never went to church
became curious ; drunkards, gamblers, and harlots heard of
it. The aisles, windows, and corridor of the church were
packed with people. Never was Elder Knapp mightier in
the pulpit. Night after night the church remained in ses-
sion, to examine candidates for baptism as they were sent
down from the inquiry room. The new-born souls gathered
at the river like a flock of doves. One day ninety-six, and
another one hundred and fifty, — altogether four hundred con-
verts,— were baptized by the pastor and the Evangelist. Two
hundred of them, standing down the aisles and around the
walls of the church, received the right hand of fellowship at
one time. It was estimated that two thousand persons were
converted. " This introduced," says Dr. Parmley, " an era
of prosperity unknown before."
As at the Exodus from Egypt, the redeemed people were a
mixed multitude. Some were snatched as brands from the
burning, recovered from depths of degradation ; others were
leading merchants and lawyers. A company of twelve were
sent to Hamilton to study, among them those bearing the
familiar names of Professor Harvey of Hamilton, Rev. J. S.
Dickerson, of Pittsburg, and Professor M. K. Forey, of Chi-
cago. These students maintained for some time what was
called a " Tabernacle" prayer-meeting among themselves. A
series of class-meetings was established in different parts of
New York City, to guard and instruct the new converts,
who were so carefully nurtured that the fears that many
would fall away proved groundless.
On the departure of the Evangelist, the church redoubled
its efforts, and its numbers continued to multiply, so that, at
the end of three years' service, the young pastor could re-
port the almost unparalleled net gain of six hundred mem-
bers. " It was no particular talent of mine, but the favor-
IN THE FLUSH OF MANHOOD. 17
able juncture and circumstances," he said, " that account for
this great ingathering," In after-years, whenever he preached
in a church in or near New York City he was sure to be
greeted by some one from the Tabernacle. J. M. Davis, of
Newark, who gave twenty-five thousand dollars to Rochester
University, and Mrs. Bertine, the founder of the church at
Babylon, L. I., and William Phelps, of New York, were fruits
of the great revival.
The spirit, aim, and motive of the first pastor of the
Tabernacle Church are reflected in a letter he wrote soon after
reaching the city to his younger brother Samuel : " I always
expect to be wholly occupied. It seems somehow inherent in
my nature to be in a hurry. You should never aim lower
than at the highest point of excellence in whatever you en-
gage. There is no eminence to be gained without high aim,
high resolve, and strong persevering effort. As you bear the
given name of dear father, you should honor his memory.
Consider nothing prosperity in which you cannot acknowl-
edge the Lord, and which you will not be willing to meet in
the judgment."
Though Mr. Everts was now twenty-five years old, he was
known, on account of his flaxen hair, rosy cheeks, and youth-
ful appearance, as " the boy-preacher." Free from the tram-
mels of form or manuscript, he appeared before his hearers
with a flaming desire to impart to them his convictions. In-
tense enthusiasm characterized his delivery. He honored the
humblest occasion by careful written preparation. Under the
instruction of a famous elocutionist, named White, he acquired
an impressive style of reading the Scriptures and hymns,
and in gesture a self-command that seldom forsook him. No
audience ever heard him without feeling that there was some-
thing which he thought they ought to hear. He was never
like Whately's preacher, who had to say something, but he
2
18 THE LIFE OP REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
always had something to say. Mr. J, M. Vanderlip, who
became acquainted with him in New York, writes : " I was
then impressed by his extraordinary mental force, combined
with sweetness and simplicity. Indeed, I never met a man
more rousing and compelling in his private preaching. He
was preaching constantly, and his conversational was better
than his pulpit oratory."
Such a preacher is always in demand, and the week-days
were full of sermons to churches, and addresses ; as, at the
anniversary of the City Tract Society, at the laying of the
corner-stone of the Pierpont Street Church, Brooklyn, and
that of the Home for the Friendless in New York. Every
Christian enterprise in the city awakened his interest, but his
special attention was given to church extension. He offered
what afterwards became known as " the Everts' Resolutions,"
at a meeting of the Hudson Kiver Association, advocating
the purchase of sites one mile apart, on the east and west
sides of Manhattan Island, to be used in the future for
church buildings. He observed the rapid movement of the
population up-town, and when a fine church building in that
direction on St. John's Park was for sale, he urged the
Tabernacle Church to buy it. It was the Laight Street Pres-
byterian Church, built for Dr. Samuel Hanson Cox, where the
abolition riot occurred. There seemed to be a readiness to pur-
chase, on condition that the Tabernacle Church would sur-
render its pastor for the new enterprise. At this the church
demurred, and offered considerable increase of salary to in-
duce the pastor to remain. But the opening seemed provi-
dential, and leaving a church with nine hundred members for
one with seventy-four, Mr. Everts became the first pastor of
the Laight Street Church, as he had been of the Tabernacle,
and preached in a building obtained by contributions which
he himself had solicited. This apparently hazardous change
IN THE PLUSH OF MANHOOD. 19
proved to be one of God's plans, for a continuous revival
added to the church as many as seventy members a year, for
the eight years of his pastorate. In 18-48 the church re-
ported four hundred members. " It was, perhaps, among the
most popular resorts for Baptist crowds of evening worship-
pers in New York City," writes Dr. Parmley. During this
pastorate Miss Margaret Keen Burtis was brought from
Philadelphia to assume the responsibilities of the minister's
wife.
Arduous as were his pastoral duties, his exuberant energies
responded to his inventive mind ; and lo ! in quick succession
appear " Tracts for Cities ," prepared with the co-operation of
G. B. Cheever, Wm. Hague, G. W. Anderson, and J. W.
Alexander ; the " Scripture School Reader," designed to meet
the objections of Romanists to the use of the Bible in the
public schools ; " Life and Thoughts of John Foster," fre-
quently republished extracts from writings which had more
influence upon him than any others ; and " The Pastor's Hand-
Book," new editions of which are still in demand. Another
scheme, interrupted by failing health, was the preparation of
a people's plain commentary on the whole Bible.
Incessant labors gradually undermined his constitution.
"As the silk-worm spins from its own being the tissue
that is interwoven in beautiful fabrics to shelter and adorn
the life of other beings, so the minister of God exhausts his
own being, and weaves the garments of salvation, for others,
from the failing energies of his own nature." With such
sentiments he toiled in the metropolis. When he first came
there, he used to complain of himself because he could not
imitate Dr. Wm. R. Williams, who frequently spent all night
in study ; nevertheless his prodigal expenditure of nervous
energy for ten years led to complete exhaustion. Buoyancy
of spirit, interest in passing events, power of concentration,
20 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
ability to sleep were gone. After a year's rest, mental exer-
tion was accompanied by the dreaded symptoms that had
threatened to end his public career. Accordingly, he resigned
his pastorate in the fall of 1850.
How warmly attached the Laight Street Church were to their
founder, appeared in their generosity in sending him to
Europe ; and, in after-years, they urged him to renew the old
relation. " Your return would be a solution of the entire
enigma, and a consummation which all desire. It is our first
choice as well as, it appears to the minds of some, the last
necessity of the Old Colony."
He accepted an urgent request to preach the " farewell "
sermon in the old house on October 23, 1870. As he
rode by the closed meeting-house he said to his old friend,
Allen Freeman : " This house ougrht never to be sold. It
ought to remain in the denomination. Do all you can as a
member of the Board of City Missions to save it." Three
years later, on October 9, 1873, Mr. Freeman writes : " I now
have the pleasure of telling you that the Union have pur-
chased the property for the use of the First Baptist Mission
Church."
Meantime, on September 26, 1870, the Laight Street Church
had bought the heavily mortgaged property of the Central
Baptist Church on Forty-second Street, which had been occu-
pied by the survivors of the old Bloomingdale Church after
the secession of the short-lived Plymouth Church. The old
Laight Street property has since been sold by the City Mission
Board, and the proceeds, fifty thousand dollars, have been re-
invested in an up-town enterprise. Thus the timely purchase
made in 1842 has not only led to an honorable history on the
spot, but has also furnished the means for the rescue or estab-
lishment of two other church enterprises. It is a saying of
Lord Bacon that the founders of institutions are the greatest
IN THE FLUSH OP MANHOOD. 21
of mankind. A founder of such an institution as Laiglit
Street Church, Mr. Everts wrought himself into the fabric of
Baptist history in New York City.
The conference of Baptist pastors admired his spirit
and expressed the hope, when he left the city, " that his far-
reaching plans for the welfare of the churches and the world
may receive the divine blessing, and that he may be spared to
see them accomplished." This refers not only to what he had
accomplished in the city, but also to plans he had laid before
the State Convention and the Board of the Home Mission
Society. The former body was urged to appoint an agent for
the city of New York, to have charge of " missionary explo-
ration and enlargement." On the records of the executive
committee of the Home Mission Society, of which Mr. Everts
had been a member since 1840, is found, under date of Octo-
ber 31, 1850, the following minute : " The subject of devising
a plan for aiding feeble churches in building meeting-houses,
either by the formation of a new society, or by some other
means, was introduced by brother W. W. Everts, and referred
to a committee of three, consisting of S. H. Cone, A. B. Cap-
well and D. C. Eddy." Thus originated what became known
as the church edifice department of that society.
Though urged to accept the pastorate of the First Baptist
Church in Baltimore, and the First in Rochester, he had to
content himself for the present with a smaller field of labor,
and he settled at Wheatland, not far from Sweden, where he
was converted. The church was well-to-do, a generous sup-
porter of Rochester University, and drew its members from
all the country around. Settling in December, 1850, he
found that his duties in the extensive parish required con-
stant sleigh-riding. In summer there was a garden to cul-
tivate. As he was under no pressure for new preparations for
the pulpit, and was free from calls to lecture, the naturally
22 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
strong constitution of Mr. Everts during this out-door life
steadily recovered its tone. Sleep, appetite, vigor returned.
Not satisfied with a growing congregation, so long as it con-
sisted only of those who could afford to ride, the thoughtful
pastor proposed to give one service a day to Clifton, Church-
ville, or Mumford, villages lying from three to six miles away.
As this proposition was not favorably received, a student from
Rochester was secured to man the out-stations. In a short
time Mr. Everts came to the conclusion that the future be-
longed to these villages rather than to Wheatland, where
there was no post-office, hotel, store, or street. Within two
years, in the face of considerable opposition at Wheatland,
three churches were organized and three neat meeting-houses
built. More than two thousand dollars was required for each,
and money was raised by the pastor himself, or in consequence
of the incentives he urged. At Mumford, a revival prepared
the way with forty converts, one of whom became a pastor in
Michigan. All three churches are self-supporting to-day,
with houses and parsonages free from debt. If the three vil-
lages had not been occupied, the grand old mother-church
might have disappeared without leaving a trace behind her.
As it was, each of the three offshoots became almost equal in
size to the parent stock.
July 1, 1852, when these three enterprises were just
fairly under way, the clerk of the First Baptist Church in
Chicago wrote to Mr. Everts, urging him to '' extend the
blessed influences of the gospel over this great though wicked
city. Eighty were added to the church under the labors of
Elder Knapp the past winter, and we now number two hun-
dred and fifty. We have been destitute of a pastor since the
resignation of Rev. Elisha Tucker. We would like to have
you visit us with a view to settlement. We will pay the
expenses of your removal, and a salary of one thousand
IN THE FLUSH OF MANHOOD. 23
dollars, which will undoubtedly be increased early in the
future. Our city numbers about forty-two thousand inhabitants,
and is destined to take the front rank in the cities of the
West. It is calculated we will number one hundred thousand
within ten years. It seems to me that no place in the United
States presents so important a field as this. From its geo-
graphical position, it must soon become the heart of the
West, the arterial passages being rapidly constructed east,
west, north, and south, in the shape of railroads. It is a
healthy place. We are about to light our house with gas,
and about putting in furnaces to warm it with hot air."
The reply to this letter contained the remark, that " exist-
ing engagements would prevent my leaving for several weeks."
But the church replied, " Although we are in great need of
a pastor, still we would wait your convenience, so that the
embarrassment on that point may be considered settled."
Another remark in the letter from Wheatland, " I feel a
delicacy in taking any public step contemplating a new settle-
ment in the pastorate, where there is not considerable ante-
rior probability of consummating," was understood to be
an objection to candidating, and, as such, was obviated by the
ofi'er to rescind the church rule to hear before electing a
pastor. But Mrs. Everts explained the remark to her
brother in Chicago, as follows : " In looking over his present
field, my husband feels that he could not leave for months to
come, and how many Providence only can determine, without
jeopardizing the cause in two villages where meeting-houses
are at present in process of erection. This would prevent
his changing for the present, however desirable the place
might be. He could not consent to visit the Chicago church,
unless his mind was pretty well made up to accept the call if
given. He does not consider it fair dealing to act otherwise."
Thus the Wheatland pulpit was retained for the sake of the
24 THE LIFE OP REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
two out-stations, though there was a growing jealousy of
their prosperity.
The pastor's plan was to have one church, with three places
of meeting, and three services each Sunday, — all candidates
for baptism to be received at Wheatland ; but, as this plan
was rejected, letters were asked, so that at Clifton and Mum-
ford independent Baptist churches of fifty and thirty consti-
tuent members were duly organized, and recognized by
Council. The approval of the Council had been anticipated
by the following vote of the Association, in February of the
same year : " Resolved, That, in the opinion of the committee,
the measures recently adopted by Brother W. W. Everts
upon the field of his own pastoral labor are highly important
in their bearing upon the general objects proposed in our
present organization ; that we pledge to Brother Everts our
cordial fellowship in the work, and assure him of our con-
fidence in the wisdom of the steps so far taken." Contribu-
tions for the two meeting-houses came in with surprising
liberality. The opposition at the centre made the grateful
appreciation of his labors on the new fields most welcome.
They had been redeemed by him from Sabbath-breaking, tip-
pling, and other vices. The new houses were filled with the
divine spirit, and at Clifton eighty converts were added within
a year. The parting with Mumford was most afi"ecting.
This was the " little flock," and called out his tender affec-
tion. Not satisfied with securing funds sufficient to pay for a
church, he felt the importance of adding a lecture-room, and,
when it was proposed to have a donation party, resolved to
contribute to the building of the room all the cash he should
receive. This awakened an interest in the project in the
minds of some Episcopalian gentlemen, who, in recognition
of the benefit he had conferred upon the neighborhood, made
up a purse for him of one hundred dollars, — just the amount
IN THE FLUSH OF MANHOOD. 25
of his contribution . Meanwhile he had accepted a call to
Louisville, Ky. The time of departure was postponed one
day, that the ladies might give a " social," with a charge for
admission. Thus sixty dollars more were added to the fund,
and the srift was announced of sofa and chairs from William
O
Phelps, of New York. Such was the attachment of the
churches at Clifton and Mumford to their benefactor, that it
almost broke his heart to leave them. On the morning when
he left them to visit Louisville, Deacon Hosmer came two
miles before daylight to beg him to give up going, and, but
for the definite promise he had made, he would have been
deterred.
26 THE LIFE OP REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
CHAPTER III.
LIFE IN KENTUCKY.
The following letter from Dr. S. W. Lind, of Covington,
Ky., was addressed to the church at Wheatland to induce
them to let their pastor go : " Our condition in the West is
peculiar. Our population is rapidly increasing every year,
and the destitution of pastoral labor is very great. We are
educating but few men for the ministry, compared with the
number educated in the East. It is essential to the welfiire of
our whole country, that the strongest moral influence should
be exerted in the West. We must for a time look to the East
for the requisite supply. The condition of the Baptists in
Louisville is peculiar. This city has a population of fifty
thousand souls, and not a single Baptist pastor. It is exceed-
ingly difficult to obtain one of the right stamp, and the church
has been praying and seeking a suitable pastor for about two
years. They have heard Brother Everts, and have given him
a unanimous call.
" The Baptist cause is greatly suffering there. The call,
in my estimation, is one that will scarcely leave Brother
Everts an opportunity to decline it ; and, should it be im-
pressed upon his mind that it is his duty to accept, provided
he can leave his present field satisfactorily, I hope you, my
brethren, will kindly remember our necessities in this region,
the peculiar circumstances of the church in' Louisville, and
the large field of usefulness that it will open to him whom
you love as your pastor. As I remarked before, this church
LIFE IN KENTUCKY. 27
has been without a pastor for about two years, and, should
they fail in their efforts to secure the services of Brother
Everts, may remain in this state for a long time to come. If
I appear to be urgent in the case, I think it is to be ascribed
to my deep interest in the cause of Christ in the great valley."
About the same time, J. L. Waller urged the pastor-elect
to accept the call. " In all candor, I give it as my emphatic
opinion, after a long and careful examination of the whole
field, that that is the most important point in the whole Mis-
sissippi Valley. Louisville is the emporium of the greatest
Baptist State in the world. Kentucky has a larger actual
membership in the Baptist churches, according to population,
than any other community on the globe. And then the wealth
of the State is in the hands of the Baptists. Louisville has
the Board of the Indian Mission Association, and of the Bible
Kevision Association, and the leading weekly paper of the
West, and the only monthly periodical. We need a point of
central influence in the great valley. The valley States will
soon control this country politically and religiously. We must
concentrate our plan of action. Where can this be done so
well as in Louisville ? Kentucky, religiously and politically,
has the confidence of the North and South ; she is esteemed
the most conservative State in the Union. Your position as
pastor of the Walnut Street Church will be an important,
laborious, and responsible one ; but, my dear brother, you will
have the prayers of thousands of your brethren for your suc-
cess. The ministers and churches throughout the State, I
am sure, will greet you with a warmth of cordiality worthy
of Kentucky. I assure you, no man could come among us
with a better impression in his favor than yourself. I have
written thus far simply as a friend of our common cause. I
need scarcely add that, personally, I am anxious that you
should accept the call. Your views and mine on all the lead-
28 THE LIFE OF REV- W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
ing denominational questions are alike. I like you as a man,
and love you as a minister. You are the sort of person I
feel sure I can work with and sympathize with. I pledge
you my heart and hand. Yours fraternally and affectionately,
" John L. Waller."
On January 2, 1853, a leading member of the Walnut
Street Church, Dr. William B. Caldwell, writes : " Yours
received, and we feel to breathe easy now, for we not only
have a pastor, but a day fixed when he will commence his
labors with us. Suspense and uncertainty to a people already
out of patience are insufferable ; hence the earnest appeal I
made to have a definite time. But there are many urgent
reasons why you should shorten the time as much as possible.
It is unnecessary to enumerate reasons ; the general down-
ward tendency of everything cries aloud for you to shorten
that time as much as possible. It is impossible to express in
a letter the many reasons why you should come here imme-
diately ; but, when you have been here a month, you will feel
perfectly astonished at yourself for not having seen it sooner.
Our little girl often speaks of you. As we were going to
supper to-night, she said, ' Ma, I haven't seen Mr. Everts for
two or three days.' Say to Mrs. Everts, we have a healthy
and pleasant city, and that many warm hearts are ready to re-
ceive her into the fellowship of their homes and the church.
We have no strangers here. Mrs. Caldwell joins me in most
cordial Christian love and prayers for yourself and family.
Write soon, and express freely any wish or feeling that may
suggest itself touching our or your interest. Affectionately
your brother in Christ." Louisville was so urgent in its call,
that a deaf ear was turned to Baltimore, which sought cor-
respondence almost simultaneously.
In February, 1853, Mr. Everts began his life at Louisville.
LIFE IN KENTUCKY. 29
In a book on Louisville, from the pen of Ben Cassedy, that
appeared in 1852, a good impression is given of the commu-
nity. A great business was being done, and yet a stranger
would not have observed the signs of its great prosperity, so
quietly was everything done. In twelve years the population
had increased from twenty-one thousand two hundred and
ten to fifty-one thousand seven hundred and twenty-six.
" There are certain traits in the Kentucky character which
are everywhere spoken of with approbation. A manly inde-
pendence, a generous frankness, and a careless but attractive
freedom of manner, united with unbounded hospitality and
that true politeness and deference which proceed rather from
a natural instinct than from a knowledge of the rules of eti-
quette, constitute the Kentuckian's chivalry. It is equally
far removed from the suspicious reserve of the Yankee and the
foppish pretence of the Southerner. North, South, and East
soon become integral parts ot one great circle in Kentucky."
In 1852 the Baptist denomination in Kentucky was still
profoundly agitated by the so-called " reformation" begun by
Alexander Campbell, which drew most of its strength from
Baptist ranks. Another question of the day concerned the
revision of the English New Testament, as undertaken by the
American Bible Union of New York. This question was in-
volved with the preceding one, because the Beformers, or
Campbellites as they were then called, were strong advocates of
revision, and were members of the Board of the Revision As-
sociation at Louisville. A third question was sectional. In
the recent influx of residents, many settlers had come from the
North, and the natives were somewhat suspicious of Northern
and Eastern ideas. The agitation of these questions had dis-
tracted the Baptist forces in the city. In 1831 those Baptists
who had joined the Reformers were given by the courts half-
ownership in the meeting-house. The half was of little
30 THE LIFE OF EEV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
value. There were no pews, but only wooden seats, some
with and some without backs. Elder John L. Wilson suc-
ceeded in purchasing the claim of the Reformers and re-
modelling the edifice, but the first service in the newly-fur-
nished structure was the funeral of the energetic pastor.
Under the next pastor, who was a Virginian, the Northern
element in the church became restive, and, aided by the
Home Mission Society in New York, went off in 1839 and
formed the Second Church. At length, in 1849, both church
pulpits were vacant, and both sought as pastor the same young
man. Rev. Thomas Smith, son of a wealthy Kentuckian, a
graduate of Princeton. Love for him induced both churches
to unite again and undertake the erection of a worthy build-
ing on the finest corner in the city. The lecture-room was
soon finished, but the first service held in the basement of the
new building was the funeral of the dearly-loved pastor.
" Like the rose plucked with the dew upon its petals, he
withered and passed away." Now came a period of reaction
and discouragement. For two years a vain search was made
for a pastor, until, through Drs. Elisha Tucker and Thomas
Armitage, their attention was directed to Wheatland. Not-
withstanding Mr. Everts's predilections were all Northern,
and his aversion to slavery was so strong, and though the ties
of Clifton and Mumford were so many, yet his conscience
was so pressed there was no happiness with any decision
except to go.
When he arrived at Louisville, he found nothing encour-
aging except the field. The building was standing half fin-
ished. The meetings in the basement were reduced to an at-
tendance of half a hundred. Passers by wagged their heads,
as if to say, " They have built a tower and are not able to
finish it." As Mr. Arthur Peter says, " The church was very
low indeed, and seemingly retrograding, if that were possible.
LIFE IN KENTUCKY. 31
Strength seemed to have been exhausted and the end not
accomplished. They were at the Red Sea, no retreat, and
apparently no possibility of advancing. At this crisis Dr.
Everts was sent by his Master, and threw himself into the
work with all his great energy and hopefulness, and the Wal-
nut Street Church became strong from that moment." Large
subscriptions, amounting to fourteen thousand dollars, were
secured. Those who had fainted were revived. The public
were interested, especially at the suggestion of increasing the
length of the structure eighteen feet, making the entire
length one hundred and thirty-eight feet, so as to se-
cure finer proportions, and also to make room for modern
conveniences. Those who had predicted failure were now, on
account of the leader's faith and energy, filled with confidence.
The local Baptist paper remarked : " Brother Everts has no
such words as ' stand still,' or ' it can't be done,' in his vocabu-
lary. It seems to be a maxim with him, that what ought to
be done can be done, and must be done." Within a year, on
the third Sabbath of January, 1854, the dedication occurred.
It was a trying hour. The architect had estimated the cost at
thirty-five thousand dollars, but he died with nothing but the
front elevation drawn. Other architects increased the figures
to sixty thousand dollars ; and, after heroic efibrt had been
made, one member giving a tenth of his property, a debt
of twenty thousand dollars still remained. The brethren
met for consultation. "What shall we do?" they asked,
with anxious looks. " The debt, the whole debt, must
be paid !" was the inspiring exhortation of the pastor. " Let
each one be prepared prayerfully to do his duty, and it can
be done." With no other preparation, the service of dedica-
tion was held. The occasion awakened profound interest and
enthusiasm. Great sacrifices were made ; twelve thousand
dollars was pledged on the spot, and within ten days the total
32 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
debt was cancelled. A bell was presented by Mr. James E.
Tyler, and soon a ten-tbousand-dollar organ completed the
furnisliing of the finest cathedral in the Southwest.
Advantage was taken of the general rejoicing to project at
once other enterprises. A Presbyterian meeting-house, on
Jefferson street near Seventh, was purchased by one of the
deacons, and occupied by a [colony of fifty persons from the
Walnut Street Church, the latter pledging part of the pastor's
salary. Their departure was celebrated by special services.
" Dearly as I have loved you," said the magnanimous pastor,
"I love you more since you have given such proof of
your devotion to your Master." Thus were laid in love and
self-denial the strong foundations of the present Chestnut
Street Church.
Dr. Oncken's visit to Louisville, in 1S54, in behalf of the
struggling Baptists in Germany, led to the erection and estab-
lishment free of debt of a building costing nearly five thousand
dollars, with accommodations for a church and pastor among
the Germans of Louisville. In addition to this extension
of the gospel to the east, a lot was secured at Portland, below
the falls, three and a half miles to the west, and a building
erected. As chairman of the Board of General Association,
Mr. Everts secured the appointment of Elder Shirley to this
field, and, as pastor of Walnut Street Church, he raised his
salary and launched the new church practically out of debt.
The Jefferson Street Church, under the care of Kev. J. V.
Schofield, soon had the largest Sunday-school in the city. At
the other points, the growth, though less marked, was steady.
The Walnut Street Church experienced the truth of the
proverb, ''There is that scattereth and yet increaseth."
Losses were more than made good by constant revivals. In
one year one hundred and fifteen were added to the church,
with a total of four hundred and eighty-five in six years' pas-
LIFE IN KENTUCKY. 33
torate. The congregation became the largest in the city. At
the end of the first year, insurance for ten thousand dollars was
taken out on the pastor's life. The Louisville triumph attracted
the notice of the trustees of Franklin College, Indiana, who,
by the hand of President Silas Bailey, conferred upon the
pastor the honorary title of Doctor of Divinity. It commanded
attention throughout the State, and several extensive preach-
ing tours were undertaken, during which the church buildings
at Lebanon, Taylorsville, and Campbellsburg were dedicated.
His parish were liberal supporters of the cause of Bible re-
vision, and the general societies contributed five thousand
dollars to Georgetown College, and raised in all ten thousand
dollars each year.
In the city of Louisville the popularity of the pastor of
Walnut Street knew no bounds. A course of Sunday even-
ing sermons was repeated during the week to the young people
of the city. When a Young Men's Christian Association was
formed, he was made president, and a constitution, which he
had prepared, was adopted.
The effect produced by his sermons is thus described in
a letter from Cincinnati, dated November 21, 1S5S : -' I never,
till last evening at the hall, woke up to the excellence of our
dear Brother Everts as a speaker. His theme was ' The
Mission of the Church.' He was full of zeal and of the Holy
Ghost. Judge Storer sat entranced with his effort, and all for
a time appeared absorbed in the subject. One gentleman be-
hind me wept freely, and said aloud, ' Amen.' "
The following appreciative criticism came from one of his
regular hearers : " Your discourses produce, when delivered,
an effect it is impossible to describe, — they often hold me
spell-bound, so that I cannot move a muscle without a sense
of actual suffering, from the first to the last of your longest
sermons. The cause of this I apprehend to be in the hold
3
34 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
you gain upon the mind, that enables you to engross the
thoughts of your hearers in the subject you present to them.
I will venture to say that you have never spoken to an inat-
tentive audience. Is this not true ? Now this is precisely
the point I wish to call your attention to : how do you gain
this undivided attention from a congregation composed of
every grade and variety of mind ? By the internal force of
your own mind, that turns with irresistible power to whatever
channel you will the thought of your auditors. This
power lies not in the thoughts themselves, neither in the
language employed to convey them, but dwells within your-
self. It is the assertion of conscious power in the tones of
the voice and the glance of the eye."
Among; the most remarkable incidents of Mr. Everts's life
at Louisville was the conversion, in 1856, of two actors, after-
wards known as Rev. Drs. G. C. Lorimer and E. F. Strick-
land. The story is told by the latter, as follows : " John
Bates was an old American theatrical manager, who was
catering histrionic attractions to the people of Cincinnati,
Louisville, and St. Louis. Not long before. Manager Bates
had secured an engagement with a young English eccentric
comedian, Edwin Strickland, with his wife. Later, a young
stripling of promise, George Lorimer, was engaged, and sailed
for America. He was half- ship wrecked, and was obliged to
return, to attempt again the passage. In the course of time
these two young actors found themselves in the same com-
pany, and billed for an engagement at Louisville, where, in-
stead of appearing for one month, they were to remain for
two, inasmuch as the field of their expected engagement for
the second month — Cincinnati — was occupied by Boucicault.
" Well, there they were in Louisville, where Dr. Everts,
with others, was conducting a revival. On a Sunday morning
George Lorimer and Edwin Strickland were passing the
LIFE IN KENTUCKY. dO
church into which the people of Louisville were pouring. One
proposed to the other that they go in, and in they went. The
Rev. Dr. Teasdale was speaking. Said Strickland to Lori-
mer, referring to the long white locks, face, and bust of the
venerable preacher, ' What a make-up for " Lear," that
would be.' Lorimer agreed that it would. One day Strick-
land was studying a Western cut-throat atrocity of a play
written by some local aspirant. Strickland had his task, and
in his own room, at his boarding-house, was studying his
lines. There came a timid rap at the door. The occupant
was in no mood to receive visitors ; his room was littered
with theatrical paraphernalia, and he imaginged that the in-
truder was a representative of the press. But he threw open
the door and revealed two ladies. Said one, with a face as beau-
tiful as her disposition and spirit were afterwards found to be
by the converted actor, ' I must have come to the wrong
place.' Strickland assured her that she had, but politely
invited the ladies in. Shortly afterwards their host informed
his visitors that he was an actor. Then said the sweet-faced,
noble lady who had previously spoken, ' The soul of an actor
is as dear to me as any others.' The lady was the wife of
Dr. Everts. She had come to Strickland's apartments in her
noble mission for the distribution of tracts. She and her
companion departed, but they surely left a foretaste of a sweet
balm in the heart of the actor, Edwin Strickland. Shortly
Lorimer and Mrs. Strickland returned from rehearsal, and
were told the story of the visitation. It seemed to go no
further ; for a long time it went no further with Mrs. Strick-
land, who afterwards became converted by the preaching of
her own husband. But Strickland had entertained angels
unawares, despite himself, and the fruitage came in good
time. Again and again went Lorimer and Strickland to the
church, and heard Dr. Everts preach. Once the latter came
36 THE LIFE OF REV. AV. W. EVERTS, D.D. .
to their rooms, where the two men were carousing a bit with
others of the troupe. Even to this day Dr. Strickland re-
members how he offered their visitor wine, and how he refused.
^ You have offended against the Lord your God, and your
sins will find you out,' said the pastor, solemnly. ' Your
sins will find you out' struck the elder actor with conviction,
for some time before the same words had pierced his soul, as
they came from the lips of the dying tragedian, who in the
death-struggle seized him by the wrists and shouted them in
his ears. Before their engagement was up, Lorimer and
Strickland were baptized at the same time, in the same bap-
tistry, by the hands of Dr. Everts. Then the ladies rallied
around them in grand style ; and Lorimer, having been for a
time under the tutelage of instructors at Georgetown College,
in Kentucky, who did not understand him, instituted a school
in elocution, and soon had some fifty scholars. Then each
pursued his particular way, in time was duly ordained, and
began a new career."
The phenomenal success of the Louisville pastorate was
attained in spite of many difficulties. It would be preferable
to make no reference to the envy that success always provokes,
but envy may, as in this case, appeal to motives in others that
are honorable. The first honorable opposition encountered
was aroused by an article published by the new pastor in May,
1853, in the Western Recorder^ the chief Baptist paper in
the Southwest, in justification of the union of Baptists and
Reformers in the revision of the Bible. AVhen, two years
later, duriug a revival in the Reformers' Church near his own,
the Baptist pastor offered prayer, and went so far as to
preach, envious men circulated the report that Elder Everts
was secretly a " Campbellite." When it is remembered how
the Reformers had divided, and distracted the Baptists in
Kentucky, it is not surprising that such reports occasioned
LIFE IN KENTUCKY. 37
wide-spread alarm. This feeling was intensified when, upon
the death of John L. Waller, the Long Run Association, on
the motion of the pastor of Walnut Street, passed resolu-
tions eulogizing his character, and vindicating his fame as a
Baptist leader against those who had sought to disparage him
because of his union with " Campbellites" in the Revision
As'sociation. This called out a bitter editorial attack from a.
Tennessee paper, which also began in 1855 to publish invidi-
ous letters from Louisville, with flings at fine houses, organs,
titled preachers, heresy and disloyalty to the denomination.
Fuel was added to the flames by the publication of the " Bible
Prayer-book," designed to assist and encourage private and
family devotion, but regarded by those who had begun to be
suspicious of the author's orthodoxy as a bold plan to intro-
duce ritualism into the denomination. Soon the charge of
" Universalism" was bandied about, because the preacher had
expressed a preference of an upright man of the world to an
immoral professor of religion.
Far from yielding the position he had taken, in the revi-
sion movement, Dr. Everts made use of the columns of the
Christian Repository^ a monthly that was under his control,
to conduct a lengthy controversy with Dr. J. M. Pendleton,
the author of "An Old Landmark Reset," and a leader in the
so-called " Landmark" movement. Dr. Pendleton held that
Pedobaptist bodies were not churches of Christ, and that
Pedobaptist ministers could not administer valid baptism, or
lawfully be allowed to preach in Baptist pulpits.
These three positions were stated and controverted at length
in the magazine. " Pedobaptists are in the condition of a
regiment or a company which has misapprehended an order
or line of command, and not of one intentionally rebelling
against military order. Many evil consequences may follow,
but they may not be disowned for the misapprehension of one
38 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
order, while observing ten. Baptism is not the whole busi-
ness of the minister, nor the whole duty of the believer.
Surely, moral deficiency should go farther to invalidate the
claim to be regarded as a regular church of Christ, than cere-
monial deficiency. There are the fragrance and beauty and
color of the rose, but the name ' dog's-tail,' or maybe ' night
shade,' is given to it. There are the structure and flower of
the nightshade or dog's-tail grass, but, upon some botanical
authority, it is called a rose. Have not some Pedobaptist
communions, at least, got a part way out of Babylon ? Have
all Baptists, in their spiritual-mindedness and practical appli-
cation of the truth, got clear out ?
" Our denominational controversies seem better maintained
than our Christian controversies. Our churches seem some-
times to wrestle more intensely against the principalities of
Pedobaptism than against the principalities of spiritual wicked-
ness rising over the world,' in the menacing forms of paganism,
papacy, infidelity, and vice. Such has been the tendency of
mankind in all ages, and in every part of the world, to exalt
forms and parties above religion. As the marriage ceremony
celebrates but does not constitute the marriage contract, so
baptism distinguishes but does not make the church. If bap-
tism constitutes the separation that distinguishes churches, it
is a saving ordinance ; if essential to separation, it is essen-
tial to salvation, and we should cease to denounce baptismal
regeneration." The following paragraph expresses his senti-
ments on the controversial spirit: " It may be fairly doubted
whether advocacy of the truth, however learned, logical, or
eloquent, proceeding from low, selfish, partisan motives, or con-
ducted with denunciation, censoriousness, or uncharitableness,
does any good, — whether it does not, on the whole, by awaken-
ing disgust, arousing prejudice and partisan feeling, and
organizing opposition, do more harm than good, and defer,
LIFE IN KENTUCKY. 39
instead of hasten, the millennial triumph of truth. The bad
passions inflamed and perpetuated seem to prevent or counter-
balance all the advantage of intellectual enlightenment. And
those insulted, while convinced, will continue in the same
course of action still. We can no more whip error out of
the community by the scorpion-lash of controversy, than we
can drive out of the community insults, violence, altercations,
and murders by carrying bowie-knives and pistols. There is
an order of religious controversy as effectually barring the
progress of truth, as pistols and bowie-knives the prevention
of frequent altercations and murders, and the triumph of
peace principles."
Another complaint was not doctrinal, but sectional. Unfor-
tunately for the pastor at that period of his life, he was not
born at the South. It was natural for him to introduce
James Edmands and Stephen Remington from the North, as
secretaries at the Revision Rooms, and to bring Elder Jacob
Knapp to conduct revival services, but it looked to some
as though his purpose was to " Easternize" and " Yankeeize"
Kentucky. The pastor had never made a hobby of anything,
of anti-masonry or of abolition, but it was difficult for him
to make Elder Knapp appreciate the delicacy of his position.
The Evangelist could not endure the restraint, and would
have made a public attack upon slavery if his services had
not been summarily closed. As early as November, 1854,
warning came of " a series of articles of a provoking and
denunciatory nature" that was to appear in the Recorder
to force on a controversy concerning North and South.
Some of his friends urged him to strengthen his position by
hiring, if not purchasing, a slave.
In the spring of that year, John L. Waller wrote a letter
full of foreboding of trouble for the Baptist cause in Louis-
ville.
40 THE LIFE OP REV* W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
"Salina, May 9, 1854.
" Dear Brother Everts, — Come and spend several days
with me this week. Do not fail, as I want to confer with
you on matters of importance, and about which I can confer
with no one else in Louisville. I believe, like myself, you
wear but one face, and use but one tongue. In plain Eng-
lish, I do not like certain things pertaining to our general
affairs in your city. There are too many cliques and too
much underground working to please me ; and I came home
almost resolved to resign all connection with Revision, etc.,
and to wash my hands from every public concern. I hope,
then, you will be sure to come, and do not come in a hurry,
but stay some two days.
" In haste, yours, etc.,
" John L. Waller."
January 2, 1855, Dr. J. L. Burrows writes from Rich-
mond, Va., that reports have reached there that Louisville
cannot be relied on for the Southern Boards. On Novem-
ber 29, 1857, S. S. Helma writes from Covington, Ky.,
" Local prejudices, North and South, are wrong, but they
exist. Several preachers and a host of Baptists sympathize
with me in my astonishment that an agent from the North
should be appointed agent of the Revision Association. You
will find out, if you have not already, that Kentuckians are
apt to do much as they please, right or wrong. They may
not contend much about what they shall do or shall not do,
but, after all, take their own course." Sectional animosity
was inflamed not so much by natives as by immigrants from
the North. After hearing a fiery speech from an ex-New
Englander at Nashville, John L. Waller turned to Stephen
Remington and said, " You see who are ultraists ; they are
LIFE IN KENTUCKY. 41
not Southerners, but your Eastern people who have come to
live among us."
The following letter illustrates the method resorted to, not
by a native, but by a foreigner, to arouse prejudice against
Dr. Everts :
" Wkst Chester, Pa., July 5, 1858.
" Dear Brother, — I take the liberty of giving you the
following information, which may possibly materially concern
you. Some weeks ago there appeared in the New York Tribune
and, perhaps, in other papers, an advertisement calling for a file
of the Tribune for 1850, and offering five dollars for it. A
friend of mine in West Chester responded to the advertise-
ment, received the five dollars, and sent the file. Some days
afterwards he received a letter from LouisviUe, whither
the papers were sent, stating that the article required could
not be* found in the file for 1850, and requesting him to
examine his file for the following year, and if he found a paper
containing a 'protest or petition against the Fugitive Slave
Law signed with the name of W. W. Everts and others, he
should receive five dollars for that single paper. He re-exam-
ined, and finding no such article, he wrote to that effect, and
supposed the matter ended. Since then he has received
another letter from Louisville^ suggesting if the article de-
sired is not in the Tribune it may be in the New York Inde-
pendent, or some paper of similar stamp, and offering ten
dollars for any paper that contains ih^ protest ov petition with
the name of W. W. Everts amons; the si^-ners. This last
letter he has not answered, and I believe does not intend to
answer. He believes that there is a conspiracy to injure you
on the part of certain pro-slavery men, and, being a strong
anti-slavery man himself, he does not feel like lending himself
to such work. One of the letters is signed Frank Tryon,
which, of course, is an assumed name, and directs the docu-
42 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
ment to be sent to that name in care of the Express Agent in
Louisville. The initials ' S. H.' appear at the bottom of the
letter, for what object I cannot conceive. These are the facts
as they have come to my ears. It seemed to me that some
personal enemies, for the accomplishment of hostile pur-
poses against you, were striving in this manner to impair
your reputation in your city, and detract from your popularity
by appealing to popular prejudice. On the supposition that
this might be so, I have hastened to drop you these few
lines, putting you on your guard, if it be necessary, against
the machinations of those of whom you may be ignorant.
With the few data above, you may, possibly, trace the con-
spirators, and break a covert attack. Trusting that such may
be the issue,
" I am yours, fraternally,
" Robert Lowry, Pastor Baptist Church, West Chester^
Mr. Arthur Peter writes : " Dr. Everts's ministry in Louis-
ville was an undoubted and uninterrupted success from be-
ginning to end. His rapid progress towards pre-eminence in
the ministry of the State excited the envy of some ground-
lings, and their jealousy soon found out the vulnerable place
in Dr. Everts's character. He was without policy or guile,
open and outspoken in everything, so much so that some of
his friends said ' he thought aloud.' " In justification of fol-
lowing one's impulses, Dr. Everts said : "In projecting great
plans, wariness should always be associated with just purposes.
Many disinterested and noble lives have been unsuccessful for
want of practical wisdom. But in the minor affairs of life,
minutiae of daily conduct pure motive and impulses may be
almost exclusively trusted. In guidance for man they approxi-
mate the infallibility of instinct. Pausing ever to consider
expediencies of words or acts, one becomes timid and irreso-
LIFE IN KENTUCKY. 43
lute, if not sinister or selfish. One regulating his life only by
expediencies is like one attemping to keep a clock regulated
by external pressure upon the hands, forcing them to follow
the figures on the dial-plate. One regulating his life by
cultivating just and generous impulses is adjusting a latent
force, an internal spirit that assures the steady movement of
the clock and the infallible direction of the hands." The
man who fomented the discord in Louisville took delight in
the thought that the Louisville trouble would become histori-
cal, and that his name in connection with it would descend to
posterity.
"In reviewing the Louisville experiences," said Dr. Everts,
" I see not how I could have been loyal to conscience and
honor of the Baptist denomination, and of Christianity, and
pursued a different course. I see no merit in getting along
in the ministry or church with men of bad reputation. The
public confidence is destroyed by the church which compro-
mises with bad character and life. An ancient church was
praised because it could not bear the deeds of the Nicolaitans.
Christianity is more honored by failure in a struggle to purify
the ministry or church than by the most successful compro-
mise to conceal them." The conflict was annoying, and ren-
dered his position somewhat uncomfortable, but it had no
efiect upon the size of the congregations or the general pros-
perity of the church. The extraordinary favor of God upon
the work in Louisville led the pastor to turn a deaf ear to an
invitation from High Street Church, Baltimore, dated March
1, 1855, and to another from Laight Street, New York City,
sent April 28, 1856. In May, 1858, he was visited by a
committee from Augusta, Georgia, with a request to succeed
Dr. Brantly ; in June he is urged to go to St. Louis as pastor
of a new church of two hundred members gathered by Elder
Knapp, and in July he receives a letter from the chairman of a
44 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
committee of the North Church, Chicago, saying : " We are all
exceedingly anxious to get you here, and, if you are willing to
leave Louisville at all, I am very certain this is the place for
you, and you are the man to occupy the field." The last
request greatly moved him, and on two Monday mornings he
was on the point of starting for Chicago, but each time he
was providentially hindered from going. Undoubtedly a very
few of the leading brethren were weary of the conflict forced
upon their pastor, and saw no hope of peace unless he with-
drew from the scene ; but the almost unanimous voice of the
church prevailed upon him to abandon thought of leaving at
that time lest a breach in the church should be the result.
As a tangible evidence of affection, the sisters Mrs. Lucy G.
Tucker, Jas. Edmunds, Charles Duffield, Jas. E. Tyler, V. C.
Peter, Kate Halbert, I. D. Allen, Wm. Pratt, and N. C.
Morse presented a blooded horse with carriage. At the same
time, in May, 1858, a complete set of Olshausen's Commen-
taries was received as an appreciation " both of your public
services and private worth." The church passed unanimously
the resolution, " That we cherish undiminished confidence
in the purity of his character and his fidelity to the great
principles to which we hold as a denomination."
In 1859 calls began to come again, — in March to visit Cin-
cinnati, and in June to succeed Dr. Samson in the pastorate of
the Calvary Church, Washington, while at the same time
negotiations were pending with the First Church, Chicago.
On June 8, a letter from Chicago says, " The sooner you
are here the better for the interest of the church." On June
10, the Louisville church requests, " In view of your fiuth-
ful labors and the success that has attended your ministry,
that you reconsider your determination, and if it accord with
your views of duty, to withdraw your resignation." Even
then, though the call to Chicago had been accepted, he would
LIFE IN KENTUCKY. 45
have withdrawn his resignation, could he have been assured
that this unanimous request pledged the co-operation of every
member. For, as his wife wrote : " We shall never proba-
bly find a church who will love Mr. Everts any better than
this, but there are some spirits who make a Northern pastor's
place very uncomfortable. Life is too short to waste in antag-
onisms." When the final decision was announced to the
church, " They mourned with a depth of sorrow seldom wit-
nessed except where the bereavement has been occasioned by
death."
With remarkable generosity, an extra quarter's salary was
voted to the retiring pastor, but not a dollar of the five hun-
dred was taken to Chicago. It was all distributed between
two needy City Missions, for which one thousand dollars more
was raised during the last week spent in Louisville. Thus the
last days in Louisville were spent as the last in Wheatland
had been, in firmly establishing new enterprises. Upon the
occasion of a visit South, the following year, Dr. and Mrs.
Everts were overwhelmed with attention. Many contended
for the privilege of entertaining them. A solid silver service,
inscribed " In memoria eterua," was presented. Mrs. Everts
wrote, " I never felt so overwhelmed by demonstrations of
affection in my life." On their way to the new pastorate, a
stopping-place was offered at West Urbana, 111., in the home of
Mr. A. E. Harmon, a former resident of W^heatland. " Chi-
cago is the place," he writes : " there will be a first-class
college there, and probably a theological seminary."
46 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
CHAPTER IV.
GROWING UP WITH CHICAGO.
The condition of the Baptist cause in Chicago in 1859
was not hopefuh Three of the churches were in debt for
their buildings, and the other two for their land. The First
Church was threatened with foreclosure. The mortgage upon
its edifice amounted to twelve thousand dollars, and there was
a floating debt of two thousand dollars to weigh down still
lower the spirits of the people. The community had not
recovered from the effects of the panic, and all religious enter-
prises were suffering. The fine building occupied by the
Universalists, rumor said, would be abandoned. It was evident
to the new pastor that the financial burden upon the church
must be lifted in order to free the spiritual energies of the
people, and after beginning his labors the third Sunday of
July, as early as the third week in September he impressed
upon the church the imperative duty of raising the entire
debt. A committee was appointed to consider the matter on
Wednesday, their favorable report was adopted on Friday, and
on Sunday morning, after a sermon from the text, " The love
of Christ constraineth us," the appeal was made to the con-
gregation. Viva voce responses were called for from the floor,
and were given by men and women, two or three arising at a
time, till the whole congregation was electrified. As it was
announced that no subscription was binding unless every dollar
was subscribed, the struggle became more and more exciting.
GROWING UP WITH CHICAGO. 47
The most hopeful had predicted that half of the amount
might possibly be secured ; but when in forty minutes the
whole mortgage had been cleared, many were eager now to
sink the floating; debt. But this was reserved as a little mat-
tcr for absent members and friends to care for, and in the
assurance that they would do their share, service of thanks-
giving and congratulation was announced for the next Tuesday
evening. " Good grit," the daily paper said. " That is effec-
tive preaching." The news spread throughout the city and
encouraged the Universalists to save their property. It spread
throughout the Northwest, where the whole denomination
rejoiced at the triumph of its metropolitan church. It pro-
duced more of a sensation, says Dr. Wm. Haigh, than the
recent gift of one million dollars by Mr. Rockefeller.
That subscription made possible the subsequent and imme-
diate growth of the Baptist cause in Chicago. It inaugurated
the era of mission schools, established by the First Church.
December 29, 1861, the North Star building was dedicated
and the largest school in the city was gathered in it. About
the same time a lot was given by a Philadelphia lady, a visitor
at the parsonage, and the Shields mission became as well known
on the South side as the other on the North. These two
enterprises were hardly launched when a third was undertaken
in the neighborhood of the University. Lots were given
by property-owi^rs, and a first subscription of two thousand
dollars was secured, enough to enclose the lecture-room. To
prevent delay, if not the abandonment of the unfinished
structure, the pastor became personally responsible to the con-
tractor, and as the work advanced, week by week, he labori-
ously raised the money to pay the bills. The deficiency of
six hundred dollars was secured on the day of dedication,
April 12, 1863, the church omitting its regular service to
attend. He " builded better than he knew," for within ten
48 THE LIVE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
years this property and the Baptists gathered there constituted
the balance of the power which determined the present
admirable location and the grand career of the mother-
church.
These enterprises having been firmly established, the atten-
tion of the far-seeing pastor was now concentrated upon the
needs of the home field. Business was moving towards, and
families were moving away from, Washington Street, where
the church building stood. Calmly, patiently, earnestly, he
pressed upon the attention of the church the necessity of
finding a better location. When, at length, the Board of
Trade made an ofi"er of sixty-five thousand dollars for the
land on which the church stood, by a two-thirds vote the
offer was accepted, and to satisfy the minority it was also
voted to give the meeting-house and furniture to the Second
Church, and to distribute fifteen thousand dollars among
the other churches in the city, according to their necessities.
With the gift of six thousand five hundred dollars the North
Church was able to purchase a lot and enlarge its building ;
with the four thousand dollars given to it, the Fourth Church
secured a desirable location ; and the Wabash Avenue (later
Michigan Avenue) Church was helped sufficiently to cancel
its debt. Reserving fifty thousand dollars from the sale of
the property for its own use, the First Church added thirty
thousand dollars to it by a subscription taken at the farewell
service in the old house, held April 3, 1864, and dwelt in
tabernacles until the first of January, when the lecture-room
of the new structure on Wabash Avenue was dedicated. On
this occasion thirty-three thousand dollars more were given,
with an additional one thousand dollars, when the children's
chapel, beautiful with organ, fountain, and flowers, was con-
secrated. Great was the burden of anxiety on the pastor
during these months, for it was a question with many
GROWING UP WITH CHICAGO. 49
whether the enterprise would be a magnificent success or
a dismal failure. His old New York physician warned
him against the recurrence of the prostration of the year
1849. " If you resume your habit of taking up responsi-
bilities on every subject, you will break down completely, but
if you abstain from responsibilities about the college and
other outside matter, your health may be permanently re-
stored."
Had it not been for the commensurate spiritual growth of
the church, this large undertaking would have failed. But
their prayers and their alms went up together for a me-
morial before God. Fully three hundred members had been
added to the church since the year 1859. Furthermore, the
magnificent pile of stone captivated the eye of the citizens,
and their help was secured so largely that on March 18, 1866,
dedication day, a day never to be forgotten, the sum of
fifty-three thousand dollars, the largest amount ever pledged
in this country at that time on such an occasion, was freely
given, and a property costing one hundred and seventy-two
thousand dollars, declared by James Parton to have the finest
appointments of any Protestant edifice in the United States,
was ofi"ered to God free of debt. The national Baptist anni-
versaries were invited to meet in the new building the fol-
lowing year. " Come one, come all," was the invitation, and
fully three thousand persons responded to the call.
The proud standing of church and pastor at that time is
set forth in the enthusiastic language used by " January
Searle" in his book on " Chicago Churches." " From 1859
the march of the church has been a regal progress through
triumphant arches and over roads strewn with flowers and
amid the glorification of redeemed souls and the acclamations
of angels." The recent handbook of Chicago, prepared by
Marquis, refers to the glorious administration of Dr. Everts,
4
50 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
when the church numbered " two thousand members." The
large figures would be true if they referred to the attendance
at that time upon the various Sunday-schools controlled by
the church.
At this moment of his greatest power in Chicago, invita-
tions came to him to assume the editorial charge of a news-
paper about to be started in New York City, and to become
pastor of the First Church in San Francisco. The latter call
was strongly pressed upon his attention. The retiring pastor,
Dr. D. B. Cheney, wrote: "There is no field to compare
with it in our country. The esteem in which you are held
alike among our ministers and laymen would cause them all
to rally around you as their leader in all enterprises. I
earnestly hope and pray that you may be led to regard this
Macedonian cry with favor. You have built a monument
which you can afford to leave in Chicago. Go and seek to
build a similar one on the Pacific before you die, and be assured
the prayers of many thousands will follow you." Dr. C. A.
Buckbee writes from California : " All eyes turn to you. All
friends of education are praying for Dr. Everts. The Bible
Union wants you. The pastors all want you. The First
Church needs you. Christ needs you. God has made you a
power for church extension. That is now needed here. Do
not, do not say no." From his old New York friend, Wil-
liam Phelps, he hears: " Since you left, my mind has been a
good deal exercised about your call. There are so few men
fitted for that important position, so few that have formative
and directing power much needed in that vast field. I do not
believe we have a man in our denomination that would fill
that place like yourself. There you would be perfect master
of the situation. I do not write to advise, but to suggest
that if God inclines your heart in that direction, do not pass
it lightly by. When God opens those wide doors of useful-
GROWING UP WITH CHICAGO. 51
ness to his servants, it is right for them to consider well
before they decide." In a like strain, Dr. J. B. Simmons
writes from the Home Mission rooms : " Now, dear brother,
while Chicago is of vast importance, and while the work you
have done there has been, under God, superior to what almost
any other man in our ranks could have achieved, and while
we here, and the people of the Northwest, would dread to
think of you as having left, yet — yet what of San Francisco,
California, and the Pacific Coast ? You would be equal to
one hundred common men to our cause on that coast. Please
consult the Lord about it. The work, the field, and the man
are his." But it was against the policy of his life to make
a change unless the call to go was unmistakable. In this case
the call to stay seemed the louder. Besides, he considered
Chicago second to no field in the world ; his whole soul was
engrossed in the establishment of Baptist institutions of
learning there, and last, but not least, he had his family and
kindred about him. His church had become the strongest
and wealthiest in the city, and paid, as the internal revenue
collector found, the handsome salary of five thousand dollars.
He concluded to let well enough alone.
The new house of worship became known as the strong-
hold of orthodoxy on account of a friendly controversy car-
ried on in pulpit and press with Bev. Laird Collier, a neigh-
borino- Unitarian minister. The sermons attracted crowded
houses, and were the religious topic of the day. Though the
owner of McYicker's theatre lived next door, his profession
was made the subject of frequent philippics. Yet Mary, the
manager's daughter, frequently found her way into the ser-
vices, and not only brightened the social gatherings by her
recitations, but also thrilled the prayer-meetings by her con-
fession of sin and her need of the Saviour. Her later career
as the wife of Edwin Booth is known to the public, but the
52 THE LIFE OF REV. W. AV. EVERTS, D.D.
true glory of her life was seen, not on the gaudy stage, but in
the quiet chapel.
In view of Dr. Everts's repeated assaults on the theatre,
the following letter of inquiry from Rev. De Loss Love, of
Milwaukee, acquires a tinge of humor :
" Milwaukee, October 26, 1867.
" Rev. Dr. Everts :
" Dear Sir, — While at an editor's office last evening, the
agent of the ' Black Crook Spectacle' inquired of me for some
benevolent society here for which he might give a benefit,
saying that in Chicago he gave in that way eleven hundred
dollars to the Home for the Friendless. He then said that
Dr. Everts, who lives on Wabash Avenue, at first objected to
the ' Black Crook,' but on his invitation went to see the per-
formance, and took his wife alono;, he sending a carriage for
them. And that when Dr. Hatfield preached against the
' Black Crook,' Dr. Everts came out and advocated it, affirming
that there was nothiog harmful in it."
In all moral reforms the pastor of the First Baptist Church
took such a leading position that it was seriously proposed by
the better elements of the population to nominate him for mayor
of Chicago, as the following editorial declares : " A sensation for
politicians. — The latest local political sensation is to the efi"ect
that the coming city campaign is to be made exciting by the
appearance of one of our well-known divines on the stage as
candidate for mayor, so that the contest will be ' Everts versus
Schintz,' or ' Bible versus Beer.' In other words, a strong
movement, it is said, is being made by religious people to
bring out Rev. Dr. Everts, the live pastor of the First Baptist
Church, as the champion of the anti-liquor, anti-Sabbath-
breaking sentiment ; that the extended machinery of the
churches, the Sunday- and mission-schools, and the Young
GROWING UP WITH CHICAGO. 53
Men's Christian Association is to be set at work to sweep the
city with a genuine reform ticket whicli shall make ' rings'
and ' barnacles' tremble. The idea is by no means a chimeri-
cal one, and politicians had better prepare for a storm. Dr.
Everts is said to be a natural politician and a stirring, shrewd
business man, as well a@ a successful divine, and if he got his
coat off in a battle for the saints, sinners would be very sure
to hear from him. We shall watch the development of this
movement with great interest."
The year 1868 was full of honors and of cares. One of
the trustees of the church made his pastor a life-member of
the Chicago Academy of Sciences ; the American Baptist
Historical Society advanced him to the oflBce of vice-presi-
dent, a position which he held for several years ; the Home
Mission Society asked him to represent the West, as Dr.
Broadus the South, at the anniversary in New York. Among
the minor cares are letters to be answered inquiring concern-
ing the Chicago plan of church extension and methods of
benevolence and church discipline. The following letters
illustrate the burdens he cheerfully lifted :
" Dr. Everts:
" Dear Sir, — I take the liberty of sending forty dollars to
your care for safety. Please pay it to my son, not to bearer,
and advise him in all things, and, above all, to come right on
to Baltimore, where liome 2ind friends are waiting him, and,
above all, to let no one tempt him to wander any more or to
stay in Chicago. He has had great distress, not even bread to
eat. He thought I had gone to Japan with his father. I am
a Baptist. Protect my poor boy, sir, and may a mother's
prayers be heard for you.
" Very respectfully,
" Mrs. Nichols."
54 THE LIFE OF REV. AV. W. EVERTS, D.D.
" Monday^ 16. — Yesterday a home of culture and refine-
ment was threatened with ruin ; your sermon on charity has
saved separation and domestic misery in that instance."
A series of sensational articles, entitled " Walks among the
Churches," retailing gossip and scandal, appeared at this time,
and called forth from him this remai^ : " The press, like a
parrot, repeats all that is said in the great family. The family
is more to blame for its loose tongue in speaking than the
parrot for repeating what it hears."
His sunny disposition sent forth bright rays in every direc-
tion. " I thank you," wrote Rev. I. E. Kenny, in the midst
of a new enterprise at Hyde Park. " I thank you for the
words of cheer and encouragement you gave me at the book-
store the other day. I was in need of just that at that time.
You very kindly asked me if I had found anything discourag-
ing. No, but we need encouraging by our brethren, and this
is to thank you especially for that word of brotherly kindness
the other day. It did me good."
On February 11, Rev. Robt. Atkinson writes in behalf of
Ottawa University : " The college can be saved to the denomi-
nation if aid will be given now, otherwise it will undoubtedly
go, as it has come to this with the Indians, either finish the
building or give it up. I am willing to take hold and do my
best if I am encouraged. Please write your feelings about the
matter. I must decide my destiny very soon. If I do not re-
turn to Kansas I must accept a call that has been pressing upon
me from a church." On August 21, asking for help in secur-
ing a railroad pass, he adds : " I am asking too much from you,
I know, but I have no one else to look to aid me in these mat-
ters. But they are for the Master's cause and for the good of
the Baptist denomination, both of which I know you love."
A year later he writes : " You have taken a deep interest in the
Ottawa cause. It is a denominational matter, as you, more
GROWING UP WITH CHICAGO. 55
than most men, will understand. I came here at the earnest so-
licitation of many, yours included. The Lord pity Chicago if
you were gone. Our denomination, I fear, would not sustain
the proud position it has at present."
While three of his children were in Europe, the hard-work-
ing pastor planned a vacation of six months for himself.
When this become known, farewell receptions were tendered,
one on the west side of the Second Church, the other on the
south, at the University. At the former. Dr. Reuben Jeffry
presented a gold-headed cane with the names of the Baptist
pastors and the enthusiastic motto " Faithful until Death " in-
scribed upon it. At the latter the President of the University,
after congratulating him upon his successful ministry, pre-
sented him in the name of prominent citizens with a gold
watch. The church prayed that he " might be safely kept by
the good providence of God in all his journey, and returned in
due time renewed in health and strength to this people, who
will anxiously await his coming."
The commanding influence of the church at this time is
well expressedin a sermon preached by Dr. Gr. W. Northrup,
who supplied the pulpit during the pastor's absence. " Who
can estimate the power exercised by this church? I believe
there is no church in the United States that is not influenced
somewhat by the example of this church. Look at the activity
in building good houses of worship in this vicinity, nearly all
of which is due to the spirit exhibited by this church. I am
not a member of this church, — though I have sometimes, and
especially of late, wished I was, — therefore I speak unpreju-
dicedly when I say that I believe there is no more powerful
church in the United States than this First Baptist Church of
Chicago. And how have you got the power ? By giving —
and that liberally."
While abroad, Dr. Everts, who had been left a widower in
56 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
1866, was married at Berlin to Miss Naomi Townsend, of
Brewsters, New York. A hearty welcome awaited them in
Chicago, and at the first public service an original hymn was
sung, with the words :
To our homes, our hearts, our altars,
To the good we hope to see,
To the faith that never falters,
Pastor, now we welcome thee.
His old friend, Dr. H. J. Eddy, sent from Belvidere, 111.,
these enthusiastic words : " You are welcome home again to
the Prairie State. That public welcome your church gave
you, and the addresses, are altogether the best of the kind
I have ever seen in print. I am proud of your church. It
cannot be equalled in this country. I must congratulate you
on being the pastor of such a church ; on your wonderful
success in b\iildiDg up the churches and institutions of
Chicago, and of the Baptists in the great West ; on your
safe return from the East; on the reception you met, and
on your restoration to the marriage relation. Give my best
respects to Mrs. Everts. Tell her that when she married
you she wedded the whole State of Illinois and came into
possession of all this Western country. Probably, when she
consented to marry you, she knew that you belonged not ex-
clusively to the First Church, or Chicago, or Illinois, but to
the West.^^ Mrs. Everts was presented with a solid silver
coffee urn, and her husband with several costly volumes, at a
reception given soon after. His welcome home was so cordial
that, though repeated invitations came from members of the
Calvary Church, Washington, urging him to return to the
East, no one in Chicago knew of the correspondence.
A singular episode occurred in the spring of 1870, when
GROWINa UP WITH CHICAGO. 57
the question of the Bible in the public schools was agitating
the West. Dr. Everts was an ardent supporter of the
affirmative of that question, so ardent that the Chicago
Times expressed its regrets that Dr. Everts had " turned
Roman Catholic" in maintaining that religion is the basis
of education. So the report spread that the pastor of
the First Baptist Church, Chicago, had " turned Roman
Catholic." Dr. A. S. Patton wrote to inquire, " What is
your purpose, to enter the priesthood, or devote yourself
to building great churches?" The best reply to this story
was the organization that year of another Baptist Church on
Coventry Street, now the Ashland Avenue, out of a mission-
school.
The following year the denomination met in Chicago again,
and when, on October 11, the great fire occurred, and it was
learned that the North, the North Star, and the Olivet
Churches had been burned, great anxiety was felt everywhere
lest the Metropolitan Church also was in ruins. Dr. Richard
Fuller wrote from Baltimore on October 12, "I hope our
noble house is safe, but I am still anxious. Assure all of my
love and sympathy." Dr. W. C. Richards wrote from Pitts-
field on October 16, "I rejoiced in heart when I could finally
persuade myself that your beautiful temple was not de-
stroyed." While the fire was still raging, brethren in New
York City met, and after expressing sympathy and recom-
mending " collections next Sunday at each service," con-
cluded as follows : " The wish was expressed at this meeting
that the relief you send shall not be restricted to any de-
nomination or class. It was thought proper, however, that it
should pass through the hands of those whom you hiow as
Christian men in Chicago, rather than through the hands of
strangers, especially if we can hope that by this way you may,
in a douhh sense^ give ' the bread of life' to the perishing.
58 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
Packages of clothing sent to 76 Warren Street, or East
Ninth Street, will be forwarded to Eev. Dr. Everts, of Chi-
cago, free of charge." Dr. Armitage, the chairman of the
committee, wrote a few days later, " The design was that all
money, clothing, or other goods sent to you should be used
as you thought most necessary. Please so use them." Like
action was taken at Boston in response to an appeal sent out
by Mr. B. F. Jacobs for " at least a part of your contribu-
tions as a churcli or school to be sent to the Belief Committee
of the First Baptist Church." The Boston committee. Dr.
G. C. Lorimer, chairman, recommended that " collections of
money and clothing be forwarded to Dr. Everts, of Chi-
cago." Belief came to the First Church from nearly every
State in the Union. Three hundred and seventy-two boxes
were opened, and clothing was distributed from the church
all winter. Twelve thousand meals were supplied to the
hungry in the basen;,ent of the church. Fifteen thousand
seven hundred and seventy dollars and seventy-nine cents was
received by the committee appointed by the church to dis-
tribute wisely the benefactions of the denomination.
The day after the fire, the pastor had written to the
mayor of Chicago proposing to establish upon the site of the
North Star Mission, in the heart of the burnt district, a base
for the distribution of relief. The ofi"er was accepted im-
mediately, the lumber was contributed by the city, and the
large structure was erected, so as to furnish a home for the
mission without interfering with the building of the per-
manent church edifice. This was the first place of worship
provided in the burnt district, and in a few years, by the con-
tribution of a third of the Baptist Belief Fund, and of six
thousand dollars raised largely in the East by Bevs. G. L.
Wrenn and J. M. Whitehead, a property worth seventy-five
thousand dollars was realized out of a piece of land with a
GROWING UP WITH CHICAGO. 59
mortgage of seven thousand dollars upon it. The property
and history of the North Star Mission are perpetuated in the
stately Lasalle Avenue Church. In a letter inviting Dr.
Everts to be present at the laying of the corner-stone of
this edifice, Mr. J. H. Smalley writes, " It has been your
privilege to make much of the history of the North Star and
the North Church in former years. You well know your
labors of former years have resulted in the organization of a
new church on the North side. What more proper than
that you should give us your words of cheer."
A report of all the moneys received and disbursed by the
committee of the First Church was read before a commission
of the Chicago Association, and the distribution was com-
mended by a unanimous vote as having been " carefully and
wisely made." Nevertheless, the honor of being chosen as
the almoner of the bounty of the denomination was the occa-
sion of much local criticism. The declining fortunes of the
North Church, which had received a large amount from the
Relief Fund, seemed to justify a part of this criticism, but
before that body disbanded the amount received from the
Relief Fund was invested in another and more successful
organization. Another ground of complaint was found in
the unwillingness of the uon -English speaking Baptists to
occupy the quarters that had been prepared for them in the
new North Star building.
A less painful — an almost amusing — episode of the fire is pre-
served in a letter bearing date of October 17, from a prominent
but somewhat visionary member of the First Church : " Pew-
renting is an evil in our churches which is grievous in
the sight of God, is demoralizing the churches, and is depriv-
ing the masses of the means of grace, and thus leaving them
to irreligion, vice, and final perdition, and it is the great
hinderance to works of grace throughout the land. It is an evil
60 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
that must and will be reformed, even though it require the de-
struction of ten cities to bring the churches to a realizing sense
of its necessity. I have prepared this resolution : Recogniz-
ing in this fearful dispensation of Divine Providence a judg-
ment against our churches in that they have adopted a system
which excludes the common people from participation in the
observances and blessings of God's house, therefore we declare
the seats in our house of worship free to all."
In March, 1872, Dr. Everts received another urgent call
from the First Baptist Church in San Francisco. " There is
a field of usefulness open here for yourself such as has never
been presented to you," wrote the deacons, and one of them
added, in a private note, " Humanly speaking, I see nothing but
disbandment before us unless you come to us." But no field in
the world appeared so promising at that time as Chicago, and no-
where, unless it be at Richmond, Va., was the Baptist denom-
ination so clearly in the lead of all others. While Presbyterians
and Congregationalists together counted but four thousand,
and Methodists but three thousand six hundred and forty-
eight, the Baptists reported in the year 1873 no less than
five thousand four hundred and thirty-eight members. This
showing was made possible by the immediate occupation
of fields devastated by the fire which others had abandoned.
That the First Baptist Church with its one thousand members
was at the head of every good work, appears from a letter
of the Telugu missionary, Rev. J. E. Clough, who writes,
April 30, 1873, " I wish all the brethren in Chicago were
awake, as the members of the First Church are. They then
would not only take care of the Telugus, but turn Chicago as
they pleased within five years."
Dr. Everts's views of foreign mission work were brought
prominently before the denomination at this time in a report
to the Missionary Union, which appeared as a pamphlet with
GROWING UP WITH CHICAGO. 61
the title, a " New Departure in Foreign Missions." In this he
endeavored to revive the policy first advocated by Judson and
Wayland. In his farewell address to American Baptists
on his return to Burmah, the great missionary had urged that
" the churches should assume more specific relation to missions
and do some more specific work in missions.' ' The president
of Brown University had proposed that " Churches or associ-
ations should establish and support missions." These views
Mr. Everts, as chairman of a committee of conference, sought
to impress upon the executive committee at Boston. He
said : " Secretaries and agents maybe men of profound piety
and of unsparing industry, but if the method of work and
appeal is defective, success will be limited. The only true
principle of benevolence is to bring giver and receiver together.
Executive officers should seek to increase the points of imme-
diate contact between the churches at home and the mis-
sion fields abroad. The question of opening new fields should
be referred to churches, associations, or conventions for de-
cision. Thus every new claim that a general Board might
not dare to assume of itself, some responsible body might as-
sume, and thus, by freedom and specific appeal, resources might
be doubled. The original correspondence, now stunning the
ear, and almost paralyzing the heart of a local Board, through
magnitude, force, and intensity of claims, distributed to a score
of cities, might become just the amount of stimulus needed
to awaken enthusiasm and devotion in all parts of the land.
Overruling this supernatural order by our commercial pru-
dence, technical rules, traditional methods, and accepted or-
ganizations, is like a navigator who insists on steering his
vessel by buoys, light-houses, projecting head-lands, and
form and course of the clouds, and refuses to follow the
pointing of the stars and compass, across the trackless sea.
He may be a safe coaster, and avoid uncertain perils of the
62 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
ocean, but he will never cross the mighty deep or enter in-
viting ports of commerce beyond his narrow vision and timid
enterprise. A missionary society, without adventurous faith,
may honor its bank account, and make a good exhibit at the end
of the year, but can never marshal the hosts of the churches
for the conquest of the world."
About this time the Journal and Messenger made the fol-
lowing comment upon an appeal of Dr. Everts for the Theo-
logical Seminary : " Every sentence showed the secret of his
great administrative power, to which, and the live, bold heart
moving him, the prosperity of the Baptist cause in Chicago
is largely to be attributed." In one of his letters he falls into
an unusual mood, and soliloquizes, " I avail myself of the
quiet enjoyed on my birthday to write to you. Yet my health
is better than for several years past. But as to a rational and
Christian enjoyment of life, I seem only to have been always
in a hurry getting ready for it= So I fear it will be till feeble-
ness and pain come upon me and the public service that
ought to be a constant joy and triumph is ended. I am dis-
satisfied that I could not more fully enjoy contentedly and
happily the companionship of my children."
The following suggestions to his son may be of value to
other young preachers : " Never enter the pulpit from any
social circle or tea-table without an hour's seclusion before the
service. Don't tax your nervous energy in private, or you
may be less effective and magnetic in public. Warily re-
press your enthusiasm in conversation before Sabbath or
other services, and it may glow out in greater pathos and
fervor in your public service. If you are too much in Moody's
meetings or in visitation through the week, your sermons on
the Sabbath will suffer for it. One's nervous state may make
a difference of fifty per cent, in the effectiveness of a ser-
vice. Study each sermon as you would an essay or an ora-
GROWING UP WITH CHICAGO. G3
tion. Let sermonizing be your chief study. Never fail in
skilful application."
Soon after '•' the great j5re" an effort was made to induce
the Indiana Avenue Church to abandon its field and unite
with another church. Against this project Dr. Everts re-
monstrated : " I trust it will not seem officious for one
sharing so largely the cares, labors, and sacrifices of founding
the Indiana Avenue Church to address you at this time.
Churches are wisely located in a growing city, not so much
with reference to present as prospective population, and in a
few years the population around you will be quadrupled. In
surrendering such a position, what Providences, prayers,
sacrifices, and successes seem abandoned. Did God lead you ?
All for naught ? How discouraging your surrender would
be to all enterprise. Permanence encourages endeavor. If
a church with a property worth thirty thousand dollars in
the best field in the city is not an established church, there is
no established church." It was not consolidation with another
church so much as abandonment of territory that was objected
to, for the mother-church soon offered to unite with this church
and occupy the field as a branch for the present, with a view
to ultimate removal of the main body in the same direction.
The wisdom of this plan and the necessity of removal
were apparent in 187-4, when the second great fire occurred,
and laid waste the beautiful edifice of the First Church.
When the flames had kindled upon the hallowed structure,
several brethren, who had exhausted every effort to save it,
said one to the other, " Our house must go, but let us have
one more prayer within its walls." And they bowed before
God in face of the coming flames, while one who had been
wont to lead in the fire and thunder of battle led the cry of
these faithful heroes before the mercy-seat. Then rising to
their feet, they sang as they retreated :
64 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
*' From every stormy wind that blows,
From every swelling tide of woes,
There is a calm, a sure retreat, —
'Tis found beneath the mercy- seat."
This holocaust caused wide-spread sorrow, for there was no
church edifice so well known or so much admired in the
denomination. The Chicago Standard contained the follow-
ing editorial tribute to the pastor, members, and house of
worship of the First Baptist Church : "It has been the
scene of more than one memorable gathering, and to West-
ern Baptists a rallying centre and a beacon. It is hard to
pass, now, its charred and desolate walls without taking up
in the very spirit of the old prophet his touching lament,
' Our holy and our beautiful house, where our fathers
praised thee, is burnt up with fire, and all our pleasant things
are laid waste.' The part which the church and its present
pastor have had in the denominational growth in this city
during the last ten years is well known. Four additional
churches may be traced, more or less, directly to this source.
Since the pastorate of Dr. Everts began, the activity, zeal,
and effective power of the church in works of Christian
enterprise have probably been unexampled anywhere in this
country. The First Church and its pastor have a title to
recognition unsurpassed by any other. The names of both
pastor and church have been synonymes of Christian enter-
prise, while the direct instrumentality of the former has been
the most potent influence felt among us anywhere in the
West in the department of church growth. We think it
mainly due to his influence that we now hear so seldom of
church debts, — an evil which twenty years ago was sapping
the very life of the denomination. If we have not always
been prepared to follow his lead, we have never doubted of
the large views that inspired him, or of the magnificent
GROWING UP WITH CHICAGO. 65
impulse which many a good work in the West has gained
directly from him. To him and to his church in their
present affliction we offer a right hand of denominational
fellowship and sympathy, and the assurance that many are
praying that this hour of calamity may be but the opening
of a yet brighter career." The reference in the editorial to
the payment of church debts calls attention to a part of
his public life while in Chicago which is worthy of a special
chapter.
(JG THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
CHAPTER V.
IN THE SERVICE OF THE DENOMINATION AT LARGE.
The National Baptist anniversaries, which were held in Chi-
cago in 1867, drew the attention of the whole denomination to
the magnificent cathedral on Wabash Avenue and to the pastor
who had dedicated it free of debt. He was at once and con-
tinuously during the remaining years of his pastorate besieged
by churches both East and West to do for them what he had
done for his own people. He had boundless sympathy with
his brethren in the ministry, and fully appreciated the critical
importance of dedication day, especially if, as generally oc-
curred, a debt hung over the finished structure. His people were
magnanimous, and frequently voted him a leave of absence
over the Sabbath, but most commonly this kind of service was
rendered during the week. Not more than half of these in-
vitations were accepted, and these only after repeated and
urgent entreaty had been made, for, unless the demand was
imperative, unless the church as a body made the request, he
declined to go. His earnestness, enthusiasm, hopefulness and
good humor inspired the outside world on such occasions, but
he was careful to meet the leading men of the church before
the service, to impress them with the solemn responsibility of
the hour and to arrange with them to be ready to pass up and
down the aisles with pencil and paper during the appeal for
subscriptions, to secure names and to announce the amounts
thus secured. He seldom failed of success, and then only on
account of division existing on the field. His appeals met
IN THE SERVICE OF THE DENOMINATION AT LARGE. 67
with a response sucli as only the most hopeful dreamed possi-
ble. It was a labor of love with him. His receipts barely
met his expenses. But no man ever enjoyed " bringing
things to pass," to quote a phrase of Martin B. Anderson's
which he often used, better than he. To raise a considerable
sum of money from a community that has already given all it
thinks it can afford, an orator, a general, a man of the people
is needed, and such he was. The letters received before dedi-
cation tremble between hope and fear, while those written
after the struggle was over are exuberant with joy.
These excursions from Chicago were begun soon after
his settlement in that city. On March 1, 1861, in a let-
ter from Grass Lake, Mich., the writer exclaims, " Joyfully
we hasten to inform you that your efforts in our behalf have
been successful in ridding us of our entire indebtedness.
Within a few minutes after you left our whole debt was pro-
vided for by friends without distinction of class or sect. May
God's distinguished goodness lead us to repentance and
keep us humble." About the same time. Champaign, 111.,
was visited, and after a sermon in the Presbyterian church,
resolutions were passed to the effect that " No large commu-
nity can be considered complete in its ecclesiastical appoint-
ments without a Baptist place of worship," and two thousand
dollars was thereupon pledged towards the erection of an edifice
of brick. In the years immediately following, Howard, Wis., and
Galena and Elgin, 111., rejoiced in Dr. Everts's visit as Paul at
the coming of Titus. In the fall of 1867 there were calls from
many churches in the Northwest that were in the throes
of building enterprises ; Macon, Mo., Sarnia, Mich. Marshall-
town, Iowa, besides Kewanee, Bushnell, Orion, and Tuscola,
111., urgently press their claims. " We are extremely anxious
that you should preach the sermon. Please do not dis-
appoint us. The brethren and sisters here need the en-
68 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
couragement that your presence and good counsel would
afford. Shall we stop with building unfinished with a debt
of two thou.sand dollars, or finish with a debt of four
thousand dollars, or will you come to dedicate if we finish ?''
These requests were all declined, because still more pressing
letters were received from other places. On August 29,
Rev. W. H. Card says. "I am very desirous that you
should preach the dedication sermon at Gardner, from the
fact of our former acquaintance, and because we shall have
quite a debt to liquidate on that day." On October 2 the
troublesome burden of two thousand dollars was removed
from the property by grateful and jubilant hearts.
The property of the Second Church, Belvidere, 111., costing
twenty thousand dollars, was encumbered with a debt of eight
thousand dollars when dedication day came on September 8,
1867. However, before the day was over, five thousand
dollars had been pledged. The following letter finishes
the story :
" Belvidere, September 16, 1867.
" Rev. Dr. Everts :
" Dear Sir, — Glory to God ! we had a glorious meeting last
night, and good feeling prevailed ; the Members and Citizens
Came up to the Help of the Church and subscribed bounti-
fully, and at last there was a sound as the rushing of mighty
waters, and Andrew arose and added to his subscription five
hundred dollars. There was Tremendous Cheering, and when
order was again restored, Elder Benedict made a proposition,
that if all in the House would give one dollar each, he would
assume the rest. Requesting all that would do that to arise,
a large portion of the Congregation arose and pledges were
made to Clear the amount on the House. A happier minister
could not be found than was our pastor; he hardly knew what
IN THE SERVICE OF THE DENOMINATION AT LARGE. 69
to say, and after a few remarks by luiii, that good old tune
Coronation was sung by the Congregation with a hearty good
will, and then came the Benediction, and a happier People
never walked the aisles of a church than went forth last night,
and I say praise God for His Goodness to this people.
" Yours in the Bonds of Love,
"Jno. Plane."
The church building at Wheaton, 111., was cleared of a
debt of one thousand dollars, December 5, 1867, and on the
24th day of the same month two thousand dollars was raised
in White Pigeoo, Michigan. The interesting feature at the
latter place was the length of the service, which continued
three hours and a half It might not have taken so long, had
not the richest man in the church refused to give. The jubi-
lation was all the greater when the victory was won. As the
Board of the State Convention were present on this occasion,
the calls for help from Michigan became numerous. On
April 2, 1868, the dedication sermon was preached at Gales-
burg, 111.
Bev. H. L. Morehouse writes from East Saginaw, Michi-
gan, November 30, 1867 :
" I suppose you have many similar calls, but yet hope you
will not pass over this. This city is in spirit the ' Chicago'
of Michigan. The Methodists and Congregationalists are
each building far more costly edifices, but though we were
the last to begin we shall be the first to occupy, and it is the
wonder of the people how we have got along so rapidly.
Having worshipped for three years in a very small and poor
building, people have in a measure judged us by our house ; but
we wish on the day of dedication to call them out to the new
building, and make an impression on their heads, hearts, and
pockets, and I have felt you were just the one to do these
70 THE LIFE OF REV. W. ^Y. EVERTS, D.D.
three things. Should you wish to know anything about the
writer of this, Dr. Northrup can give it, and I could heartily
wish that he might accompany you here. The house has cost
twenty thousand dollars, and there is a floating debt of three
thousand dollars, besides mortgage of six thousand dollars."
March 25 he writes again :
" I wish to produce on the minds of the business men a
stronger and better impression of the Baptists, in order that
our influence may be greater over and through them. The
Baptists have had and are having a hard time of it here, and
I hope our dedication services may become a new starting-
point in our career. I have labored for three years, and it will
cost me for our building a very large proportion of my three
years' services, far more than half of my total income. Eight
thousand dollars must come some way on the day of dedication.
I do not know how to get along without you, and I do hope the
Lord will open the way and enable you to come and help us over
this hard place. There is not a place in this State so important
as this, where Baptists are struggling to get a sure foothold, and
no Baptist church that so much needs aid. Besides, I want
a little from your experience in managing such matters, for
this is my first undertaking of this kind, and I hope, unless
there is less care and labor connected with it, that it may be
the last. I anxiously await your reply, hoping and praying
that it may be favorable to us."
Then on April 8 :
"I know not what to do without your presence. The fact
is, everything depends on that day for our prosperity finan-
cially, for we have a debt of nine thousand dollars, in addition
to a mortgage of six thousand dollars. The whole cost has
been twenty-four thousand dollars. I have asked the church
to make it a matter of prayer. What shall I do ? The church
has less than one hundred thousand dollars capital all told."
IN THE SERVICE OF THE DENOMINATION AT LARGE. 71
The prayers were heard, for, as Dr. Morehouse writes, De-
cember 4, 1890 :
" Your father was at his best, preached a splendid sermon,
and rendered magnificent service every way. We secured that
day in pledges ten thousand dollars, to the astonishment of
everybody."
More invitations were declined than accepted in 1868 also.
From Beaver Dam, Wis., came three letters.
" There is no money to raise. We will delay a week, if
need be, to have you with us. Our persistence will certainly
assure you that we are very anxious to have you with us."
From Fall River in the same State comes word : " The
house has cost five thousand dollars. There will be some of
the ' beggarly elements of the world' in connection with the
dedication." The pastor at Wauseon, 0., boasts: "We
have nearly completed a house of worship of which no village
need be ashamed. I send you a photograph of it." One in
Red Wing, Minn., entreats : " In the scriptures we read
of one who was importunate in her request, and hence was
successful." Other requests came from Eochelle and Twelve
Mile Grove, 111., and from Keokuk, la. Whenever an invi-
tation was accepted, as that to Woodstock, 111., the favor of
God and man attended the service.
On August 23 at least fifteen hundred people thronged
the new edifice at Janesville, Wis. Says the local paper : " It
was pretty generally understood that an effort would be made
to raise the debt, and consequently every one came prepared,
and there seemed to be a generous rivalry as to who should
do the most. Twelve thousand five hundred dollars was sub-
scribed, and the finest edifice for religious worship in the
State was dedicated free of debt." As at Janesville, so at
Fort Wayne, Ind., where the next effort was made, instead
of asking compensation for his toil, the preacher requested
72 THE LIFE OF REY. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
the people to give a thank-offering to the struggling Fifth
Baptist Church in Chicago. " We are greatly indebted to
you," writes Gr. L. Stevens, from Fort Wayne. " The dedi-
cation left a good impression upon the public mind. All are
encouraged."
On October 25 the house of the Ninth Street Church,
Cincinnati, which had been rebuilt at an expense of ninety-four
thousand dollars, was dedicated. The plan of pastor F. M.
Ellis did not include the removal of the whole debt of
thirty thousand dollars, but twelve thousand five hundred
dollars was secured before the day was over. Rev. S. F.
Holt, of State Street Church, Rockford, 111., writes, November
2, 1868, " The cost has considerably exceeded our estimates,
and we are in debt now about fifteen hundred dollars. But
the interest and spirit of the brethren have also increased, and
the society has unanimously voted to try to clear off the
entire indebtedness." On December 2, after the struggle
was over, he adds, " Our new house is well filled morning and
evening. Congregations have nearly doubled at once. We
have just purchased a new organ. Your work on dedication
day promises to be of lasting benefit."
Upon his return from Europe, in the summer of 1869, letters
poured in upon him from Knobnoster, Mo., Peru and Evans-
ville, Ind., and from Covington, Ky. " Having learned that
Grod made you unusually successful in securing means for the
cause of Christ," writes one, and, " as usual on such occasions,
we will need a little begging, for which you have a good
reputation," writes another. But all his strength was needed
to attend to the cares which had accumulated during his
long absence. However, in the year 1870 this form of ser-
vice was renewed. From Mendota, 111., with a debt of seven
thousand dollars, came the first call for aid. Pastor W. M.
Haigh writes, February 16, " These are fearful times in which
IN TBE SERVICE OF THE DENOMINATION AT LARGE. 73
to face debts on churches. I am now at work to bring up
the courage and consecration of the brethren to the rio-ht
point. Ask your people to pray for us. Their interest in your
labors here would reconcile them to your absence." The times
were good when Dr. Everts arrived and the debt was lifted.
On September 19, Rev. J. T. Sunderland, of Omaha,
writes, " Your father has been here and done us a grand
service." This refers to the dedication of the Tabernacle
Church, when the debt of five thousand dollars, to the sur-
prise of every one, was cancelled. The same date is on a
letter from Y. A. Elliott, of the First Church of the same
city. " Our indebtedness is fifteen thousand dollars. Our
members number about one hundred, are mostly poor and
exhausted. Our creditors, who have been lenient, are now
moving, and will be able to obtain an order of sale about the
first of January. We are negotiating a loan of ten thousand
dollars, which will pay liens, and then we rely on raising
a subscription of from seven thousand to ten thousand
dollars, to pay ofi" the floating debt, and finish the main audi-
torium and dedicate. A sale of the property would com-
pletely dishearten, if not disband, us as a church. We may
be compelled to ask your further counsel and assistance."
On October 13, W. H. Churchill writes, " The good done by
your labor here is not lost, and a much better brotherly feel-
ing exists. Great good will come out of it, I trust and pray.
We want of you, my dear brother, three thousand five hun-
dred dollars, and if you raise the amount for us our church
property is saved. I saw and have since learned the deep
interest you took in us. To save the church, I will give
five hundred dollars more, besides the five hundred dollars
already given. If the house can be saved, you are God's
instrument to do it, I trust. My dear pastor, I can write no
more." In response to these appeals, arrangements were
74 THE LIFE OF REV- W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
made with Rev. N. F. Ravlin, who often seconded such
efforts, to go to Omaha and see what could be done. The
happy results of this mission are recorded in the following
letter :
''Omaha, November 28, 1870.
" W. W. Everts, D.D. :
'■^Dear Brother^ — The work is done, and done nobly. I
arranged union meetings for all day last Sabbath. I preached
in the Tabernacle in the morning, made a brief appeal for all
to come up to the work at the First Church in the evening,
but took no subscription at the morning meeting. In the
evening the lecture-room at the First Church was filled^ and
after preaching, I began raising the subscription, determined
to hold on till the whole amount was made up. God was
manifest in the congregation. An excellent spirit prevailed.
The first Sunday and diying the week we raised three thou-
sand five hundred dollars. At this union meeting last Sunday
evening five thousand one hundred and eighty dollars was
secured, making a sum total of over eight thousand five hundred
dollars. The thing looked fearfully blue at one time, and to save
it from a hopeless failure I took the responsibility of pledging
five hundred dollars from Chicago. The moral effect of this
pledge was grand, and from that the work went on. This
subscription of eight thousand five hundred dollars does not in-
clude the fifteen hundred dollars pledged from Boston. You
can scarcely imagine the change that has come over the spirits
of the brethren of the First Church. Everybody is rejoicing
and praising the Lord for what is done.
" Affectionately, yours,
" N. F. Ravlin."
The Baptist Church in Winona, Minn, was delivered
from the bondage of debt in the summer of 1870. Next
IN THE SERVICE OF THE DENOMINATION AT LARGE. 75
the pastor of the First Church in Detroit, wrote : " We have
been waiting with anxiety to hear from you ; we cannot excuse
you," and this persuasive appeal led to the extinction of a
debt of three thousand dollars. In Cambridge, 111., there was a
similar debt on a house costing nine thousand dollars. " Yet
we trust in God," they wrote, November 22, and their trust
was not put to shame, for all the money needed was subscribed
amid a perfect jubilee.
Richmond, Ind., was then visited. In this chief city of east-
ern Indiana, Rev. J. P. Agenbroad, under appointment by the
Home Mission Society, had gathered in an engine-hall a congre-
gation numbering at first a short score. The next move was into
an academy building, then into still larger rooms. At this time
the first small payment was made on a lot and a revival that
added twenty-one members by baptism guaranteed the remain-
ing payments. Special encouragement was next received from a
legacy of four hundred dollars in the will of a sister in Yin-
cennes. To secure this legacy a beginning must be made in
building a house within a year after the will was probated.
The church voted, " Trusting in God, we will now attempt to
build a house of worship," and broke ground. Two days later
the legacy would have been forfeited. The new building was
entered January 3, 1869, and immediately a revival added
fifty-seven members by baptism. When the main building
was ready for dedication the church numbered one hundred
and forty-five members. The total cost had been eleven
thousand dollars, of which amount three thousand dollars re-
mained unpaid. " If out of debt," wrote the pastor, Novem-
ber 17, 1870, " we will be on the highway to success. Although
we have already strained wellnigh to a break, we want to try
our utmost."
After a perfectly successful eff'ort, he writes again : " The
moral impression has been grand, glorious, sublime. It has
76 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
taken everybody by surprise and given us an immense advan-
tage here.
The Baptist cause in Leavenworth, Kansas, Rev. Winfield
Scott, pastor, passed through a long and painful struggle, a
struggle that aroused the keenest interest of the denomination.
The house was the most expensive in the city. Several times it
had been advertised for sale, and it seemed as though it must
be abandoned before it was finished. Finally, Deacon Chase
of Boston came to the rescue with a generous pledge and the
great building was completed. At the last moment, the task
of raising the debt of five thousand dollars that still re-
mained was undertaken, and Leavenworth was reached at
midnight of a Saturday in February, 1871. Misunderstand-
ings were found to exist that threatened to defeat any sub-
scription. However, a fair beginning was made in the morn-
ing, the difficulties were arranged in the afternoon, and in the
evening, to the surprise of church, congregation, and com-
munity, the whole debt was lifted and the long imperilled
cause was saved.
The Euclid Avenue Church, of Cleveland, 0., started as a
mission, but a mission of such wealth that one hundred and
seven thousand nine hundred dollars had been expended on
its property within a few years. " We are behind in our
finances about twenty thousand dollars," wrote pastor S. W.
Duncan, February 18, 1871. "We were sanguine that no
special efi'ort would be required to raise the needed funds at
the dedication. We hope to raise at least a part of it. I
trust that no ordinary circumstances will deter you from being
with us. You will confer a personal favor upon me by doing
so. You have been interested in our enterprise from its be-
ginning, and I want you to be identified with its consumma-
tion. Our trustees cannot relinquish the idea of hearing
you." After conference with the officers and friends of the
IN THE SERVICE OF THE DENOMINATION AT LARGE. 77
church on Saturday evening, it was agreed, though with hesi-
tancy and fear, to attempt to raise the entire debt of twenty-
six thousand eight hundred and eighty-one dollars. The
preacher read the hymn beginning, " To Thee this temple we
devote," and the pastor read the psalm beginning, " How
amiable are Thy tabernacles, 0 Lord of Hosts." " I would
rather have my name on the subscription paper about to be
passed," was the appeal, " than to have it on a marble pillar."
The reporter says, " the speaker kept walking from one side
of the platform to the other, inciting the congregation in a
cheerful and effective manner to give." In less than fifty
minutes eighteen thousand dollars was pledged, and when
this had been noised abroad, in the evening many others
came in who joined in the final and successful effort to lift
the remaining nine thousand dollars. The enthusiasm and
joy rose higher than in the morning The people lingered to
exchange congratulations, smiles alternating with tears as
their thoughts reverted from their great deliverance to the
diflaculties through which they had passed. The whole com-
munity seemed to share in the surprise and triumph. Imme-
diately several churches in the city, provoked by the example
of so young a church, arranged to pay off their debts. " They
have furnished the first instance, we believe, in our city," an
editor said, " where a church has been entirely completed and
paid for before being dedicated."
On the 8th of March, 1871, the church at Long Island
City, N. Y., was dedicated. Within two years the organism
had grown from nine to one hundred and ten members, and
under stimulus from without, rather than of their own impulse,
they erected a building far beyond their means. Pr. Everts
was not surprised that the debt of ten thousand dollars could
not be lifted under such circumstances. Whenever a com-
munity plans a structure, he found that the community was
78 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
willing to pay for it, but when outside friends were allowed,
as in this case, to expend the money, there was no assurance
that the expenditures would be met by the community.
On June 3 an entreaty comes from Tuscola, 111. : " You
are the representative of our denomination here ; we cannot
command the same congregation here to hear any other
minister. Dedication will make a critical point in our his-
tory. Let me ask you, for Christ's dear sake, for our church's
sake, which has struggled so long, and, last and least, for the
sake of your unworthy brother who writes this." If circum-
stances prevented attendance at Tuscola, arrangements could
be made to go to Wyoming, in the same State. Here a little
church of forty-five members had been encouraged by the
gift of lots from citizens of the town to erect a house costing
three thousand dollars. Although they had secured but one-
third of that amount before the day of dedication, they were
a happy band before they went home that night.
On the 14th of July the pastor of the new town of Greeley,
Col., writes, at the suggestion of Dr. E. E. L. Taylor, " We
are far away from anything and anywhere. There is a debt
of two thousand five hundred dollars." The local paper, in
its account of the afi'air, says, " Last Sunday was the most
important day Greeley has seen. The people began to gather
at an early hour. It was a cheerful scene, and it was difficult
to imagine that only eighteen months before the ground where
this church stands was a part of the Great American Desert,
from which not a human being nor habitation could be seen.
The prospects of raising so large a sum seemed to those best
informed of the condition of our people exceedingly gloomy.
We have not yet raised a full crop. New houses have been
but recently built, and many are more or less in debt. Dr.
Everts stands erect and firm, and his whole appearance is
dignified. In form and feature he resembles General Sher-
IX THE SERVICE OF THE DENOMINATION AT LARGE. 79
man. Subscriptions were offered so liberally that everybody
was encouraged. In the evening only five hundred dollars
more were needed, and the Methodist and Presbyterian
ministers contributed to place the first completed church in
Greeley out of debt. No motives of a worldly nature could
have prompted such unselfish contributions." The preacher
wrote home : " We were full of fears. The pastor was sick,
and leading members were away, but the people did nobly,
and the entire debt was raised."
A new building had been talked of in Jackson, Mich., since
1864, when, in 1870, Mr. B. G. Mosher agreed to pay his
subscription of three thousand dollars by putting in the
foundation and the walls up to the roof, if the brick was
furnished him. This cost him twice the amount of his sub-
scription. In the spring of 1871 the building was enclosed
and the floor laid, and sixteen thousand dollars were borrowed
to finish and furnish. In December the money was gone, but
the house was not complete. The most hopeful were dis-
couraged. However, a few gentlemen were found who were
willing to advance the money necessary to complete the struct-
ure. The debt had now increased to twenty-six thousand
dollars on a total cost of seventy-one thousand dollars.
There were two high towers, and seats were provided for six-
teen hundred persons. The dedication drew ministers and
people from surrounding towns. The magnificent edifice was
crowded with people. " I hope that the debt may be liqui-
dated this day. You are not willing to let a half-dozen Bap-
tists do it all. I know you are not, for I see it already. Now,
will you not close up this little church debt ? This building
is not for the church alone, but for your city." Thus ran
the appeal. Some gave lots of land, one gave a horse valued
at two hundred dollars, another a gold watch, some gave for
their children, others pledged for their Sunday-school classes,
80 THE LIFE 03 REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.P.
until seventeen thousand eight hundred and fifty-seven dol-
lars and twenty-three cents had been offered. In the evening
the amount remaining was pledged, and a beginning was made
in a subscription for a church-bell.
Another call came soon from New York State. " The
church in Binghamton will hold fifteen hundred people. It
has cost eighty thousand dollars, with a debt remaining of
seventy thousand dollars. I have long noticed your great
success all through the West in raising money on such occa-
sions, and am exceedingly anxious to have you present."
Then, later, " I am deeply anxious that you should preach.
I shall continue to ask God to incline your heart to come.
We are in the midst of a precious work of grace." At
length, January 30, 1872, " I am, indeed, thankful that you
have finally concluded to come." So pleaded Pastor Wright,
and he came, too late to consult and form plans before ser-
vice, but by a wonderful struggle forty thousand dollars were
pledged on one day.
On February 18 his services were required at Salem, 0.,
a town of five thousand inhabitants. The Baptist church
had once occupied a leading position, but became divided by
the anti-slavery agitation. The house of worship was offered
for sale and was bought in by infidels. At length the church
revived sufficiently to begin another and better building.
They succeeded in enclosing it, but then were unable to
proceed further. However, a new pastor came at last, who
succeeded in finishing the building. A debt of three thou-
sand five hundred dollars, large for so small a church, hung
over the completed structure. The dedication was a great
surprise. Though the largest contribution was but two hun-
dred and fifty dollars, and that by the pastor, the entire bur-
den was removed. The struggle was greater because the
wealthiest man, from whom much had been expected, stayed
IN THE SERVICE OF THE DENOMINATION AT LARGE. 81
away in the morning and refused to give in the evening, thus
disheartening every one, until his wife, failing in her per-
suasions, and rebuking the perilous delay, took off her gold
watch and chain and sent it to the pulpit as her sacrifice.
Fully two hundred persons contributed, giving and doublino-
their gifts, until they had achieved a glorious triumph.
There were tears and shouts of joy after the exciting effort
was over. The church was at the head again. Its position
in the community was established. All faces beamed the
next day with victory and the air was full of congratulations.
Siege was laid on the 22d day of the same month, Wash-
ington's Birthday, at Allen's Station, Mich. Here was a
house costing nine thousand dollars, the finest in Hillsdale
County. It was the pet project of the town and of the rich
farming district surrounding it. The church-members were
few and generally in humble circumstances. The building
. committee were non-professors. Many were despondent at
the large deficit of four thousand dollars, but every one
came to the dedication services. By their education and
in their habits of thinking the congregation had not been ac-
customed to large giving. But they were patient during the
appeal, and before adjournment one hundred and fifty persons
had contributed three thousand dollars, and when the subscrip-
tion was re-opened in the evening they added five thousand
dollars more, and the building committee assumed the rest.
The victory was due to numbers and to unity.
On the 4th of April, Dr. Everts returned to New York
State, where the Central Church of Syracuse, H. J. Eddy,
pastor, was overwhelmed with a debt of thirty-five thousand
dollars. The pastor had written, " We want to raise twenty
thousand dollars, and leave the rest on mortgage." Such was
the interest in the dedication that more than fifty ministers
were present, among them three ex-pastors of the church.
6
82 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
" After an hour of lively bidding, we found that sixteen thou-
sand five hundred dollars had been pledged. The former pas-
tors assisted in the call for pledges, and we found at the close
that we had secured twenty-six thousand dollars. A great
burden was lifted from my heart," wrote the pastor. " God
bless the First Baptist Church of Chicago for consenting
to the coming of their pastor to our assistance in this great
emergency. He not only saved us from crippling embarrass-
ment, but he made friends for the scorched interests of Chi-
cago, one of whom sent by him one thousand dollars for the
salvation of one of the churches and for the University. The
following Sunday the subscription was increased seven thou-
sand dollars, so that the debt is virtually extinguished. How
we sang the doxology ! "
That summer a letter from Vernon, Ind., told of the " very
heavy load for a few of us to get as near through as we have,"
and another from Adams, N. Y., told of being "behind about
eight thousand dollars, but we have good purses on which to
draw," but a third from Waukesha, Wis., secured the next
effort, which was made July 24, 1872. The house had cost
but twenty thousand dollars, although with its one-hundred-
and-fifty-foot spire it was said by the townspeople to be the
finest in the State. On the evening before the dedication there
was a meeting for consultation, where all were encouraged
to expect a favorable result on the morrow. The debt of
sixty-five thousand dollars was largely reduced after the
morning sermon. The afternoon was spent in rallying the
forces, and in the evening, in answer to much prayer, the whole
mountain was removed. The venerable Dr. Boyd's subscrip-
tion of twenty-five dollars was at once courteously paid by
Colonel Dunbar, who was not a member of the church. The
large crowd seemed loath to disperse after the evening service,
and spent much time in exchanging congratulations over the
IN THE SERVICE OF THE DENOMINATION AT LARGE. 83
victory. " The First Baptist Church, Chicago, deserve many
thanks for loaning its pastor. Should it suffer temporarily
through these frequent drafts on its generosity, or even should
it with its pastor soon cease from its labors, they have both an
enviable record in the work of church extension." Thus
wrote Rev. J. W. Fish on this occasion.
The 14th day of September, 1873, was devoted to Anoka,
Minn., where the lumbermen proved that the beautiful church
was not too expensive for them to pay for, and the 21st at
Green Bay, Wis. Here the church numbered but thirteen
members, and seventeen thousand dollars was still due on the
building. Tuesday evening was spent with the little church,
and Wednesday and Thursday with the sister churches at
Fort Howard and Lapeer. All promised to be present,
although they had not been accustomed to help each other.
At the dedication all classes of the community were present.
" The speaker expressed his surprise," the paper said, " that
in so large and thriving a city as Green Bay a church of
this denomination had not before been established." He was
sure that many families had been kept away by the fact
that there was no Baptist church here. A denomination
which is second only in numbers and second to none in
power should have a church in every first-class town. Then
Dr. Everts made some remarks touching the danger and
annoyance of the incubus of a church debt. Even Roman
Catholics responded ; men, women and children and strangers,
whose home nobody seemed to know, vied with each other in
giving. With such a spirit manifest in the community, and
with the gift of memorial windows from Chicago Sunday-
schools, it was not strange that the appeal was successful.
In the year 1874, two churches, costing twenty thousand
dollars each, were dedicated, the one at Fair Haven, Vt.,
among the slate quarries, the other at Franklin, Pa., among
84 THE LIFE OP REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.l).
the oil wells. Times were hard, but the debts of thirty-two
thousand dollars and seven thousand dollars respectively
were quickly paid. About this time still another costly
structure was dedicated at Kankakee, 111., where a Brother
Gamble invested six thousand dollars in the enterprise, and
thus made possible the liquidation of the large debt of thir-
teen thousand dollars. At Bay City, Mich., the deficit was
still larger, amounting to twenty-six thousand dollars on a
property that had cost seventy-two thousand dollars. Of this
amount sixteen thousand dollars had been contributed by
Mrs. MacMaster, of Toronto, formerly Mrs. Fraser, and five
thousand dollars each by two daughters of James Fraser.
Inspired by such generosity, the congregation contributed on
dedication day fully twenty thousand dollars.
There was scarcely a dedication in and about Chicago during
these years when the services of Dr. Everts were not in de-
mand. His presence was felt to be a power in all such enter-
prises that was sure to arouse public spirit. He was always
willing to sacrifice himself for such occasions that appeared to
him second to none in importance. He thought of churches
planted out of debt that would spread and spread like banyan
trees until the earth should be full of churches of Christ. He
saw the advantage of making an appeal at the crisis of the
enterprise when every one's sympathy was aroused. He de-
lighted in the intellectual and moral benefit conferred upon
a community, and anticipated in each instance the out-
break of a genuine revival of religion such as that which
followed the dedication of Solomon's Temple.
He raised large sums of money in 1876 at Topeka, Kan.,
in 1877 at Grand Rapids, Mich., and in 1878 at Elgin,
111., and at Laporte, Ind. In 1879, the first year of his
settlement at Jersey City, he brought joy to Nassau, N. Y.,
and to South Plainfield, N. J., and removed an old debt
IN THE SERVICE OP THE DENOMINATION AT LARGE. 85
of eight thousand dollars from the church in Providence,
R.I., of which his son was pastor. A similar service for his
son he performed in the year 1887 at Haverhill, Mass.,
where he secured pledges for thirteen thousand dollars.
In seeking for an explanation of the almost invariable
success of Dr. Everts in raising money, notice must be
taken not only of his warm sympathy, contagious enthusiasm,
patient confidence, and eloquent speech, but also of certain
practical measures which he always adopted. The pre-
liminary services were shortened, so that the appeal could be
made before the audience was weary. Large subscriptions
were asked for first, and to insure success the first contribution
was placed as high as one-tenth of the whole amount. A
committee was kept busy in the aisles to gather and announce
subscriptions, while expert secretaries frequently encouraged
the audience by reporting the total amount reached. Appeals
were made to different organizations in the church, and advan-
tage was taken of any remarkable display of generosity to
arouse the more conservative portion of the congregation. He
was always ready with an expedient for any emergency, and if
the morning service dragged he would predict victory for the
evening, and as soldiers following a general who never lost a
battle, the congregations usually proved worthy of the confi-
dence of their leader.
Dr. Everts's work in dedicating churches, and in church
extension generally, is thus referred to by Dr. G. C. Lorimer,
in a letter dated November 13, 1890 : " Dr. Everts's career
marked a change in the entire policy of the Baptists in
America. I do not say that it was wholly due to him, for
that would be unjust to others, — nor do I care to affirm that
there may not have been times when he pushed it too far, —
but I do aflfirm that it was more distinctly marked and formu-
lated (so to speak) in him, and probably received from him
86 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
its earliest and most persistent expression and inspiration.
The policy I refer to is that of church extension and denomi-
national (not sectarian) aggressiveness. His first pastorate
occurred at that period of transition in the history of the
Baptists from a condition of comparative apathy and defen-
siveness to a time, happily not yet ended, of extreme
activity and advancement. Dr. Ijjverts, from the beginning
to the end, was the incarnation of self-denying, intense, im-
passioned, independent, irrepressible leadership."
FIERY TRIALS. 87
CHAPTER VI.
FIERY TRIALS.
While thus engaged in assisting other pastors, he was
compelled, after the second Chicago fire, which occurred in
the year 1874, the year after the panic, to lead his scat-
tered and distressed people in another effort to build a
meeting-house. The church had to begin Ufe over again.
There was but little insurance money, and the congregation
who had just contributed to the completion of the tower of
the old structure were now compelled with crippled resources
to face another large building operation on a different site.
The settlement of the new location was rendered more diffi-
cult, because some of the member were in favor of consoli-
dation with a sister church. The rejection of this proposition
involved the loss of valued members, but it enabled the
great body of the church to move together to the territory
held by the Indiana Avenue branch. On June 5, 1875, at
the northwest corner of old Camp Douglas, where Dr. Everts
had officiated in the year 1862 as chaplain of a regiment
enlisted for three months to guard prisoners from the South,
the corner-stone was laid. The rear building was finished
in September and the main building in April, 1876.
Of the dedication, Dr. Arthur Edwards writes as follows in
the Northwestern Christian Advocate :
"Visitors to Chicago before the fire well remember the
costly, spacious, convenient, massive edifice belonging to the
First Baptist Church, Rev. Dr. W. W. Everts, pastor. During
88 THE LIFE OF REV. "W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
its life it was, perhaps, the nonpareil temple for Protestant
uses on the continent. Like so many of our churches, it
went down into ashes, and, like so many other bands of
worshippers, the people have wandered from place to place,
comparatively poor, and without heart or adequate courage
to hope for another permanent house of worship. Sweet,
however, are the uses of adversity, since, when nothing else
seemed potent to keep that society together, its common his-
tory and fellowship in suffering made the people dear to each
other. Dr. Everts, like General Taylor, never knows when
he is whipped. In the face of desolation, crippled resources,
prophecies of failure, reproaches hurled in the teeth of his
faith, and with burdens sufficient to crush Atlas down to the
earth, he began the work of rebuilding. Last Sunday revealed
the completeness of his victory, and we again heard the invin-
cible pastor present to his people a finished temple that
excels even the one which before the fire called forth the
admiration of all. In beauty, in varied modern appoint-
ments, and for earnest working purposes, the church is a
model. We have never seen a more chastened, united, self-
sacrificing, and triumphant assembly than that which so
gladly and humbly brought their offerings before the Lord
last Sunday. Dr. Everts's sermon was a clear, forcible, elo-
quent, effective presentation of the truth that all that is
sacred, permanent, inspiring, and valuable to humanity is asso-
ciated with the house of God. The discourse was worthy of
print in gold. We most heartily congratulate all concerned,
and every Christian in the Northwest is thus concerned."
The first year in the new house was a continual harvest-
time, and more than one hundred members were added to the
roll. The spiritual life of the church was broad and deep.
But the miscalculation of the architect and the failure of the
contractor left the people with a debt of eighty thousand
FIERY TRIALS. 89
dollars. A bright incident in those dark days is thus described
in a letter written in the spring of 1878: " Sunday morning
I presented the peril of the church as immediate. An inci-
dent occurred in the evening that seemed so wonderful as to
impress all, and may have almost turned our destiny by its
influence on others. Remember, from Friday evening the
church were waiting in intense suspense, — mauyin importu-
nate prayer. Sunday morning Deacon Hammond's face
shone, and he said ' The Lord will save us.' Yet the money
subscription was moderate and left disappointment. Meantime
my old friend Greenough, whom I baptized and married in
New York, who has been in R,io de Janeiro for the last
thirteen years, and has been locating an invalid son in Col-
orado, arrived in Chicago late Saturday evening. Sunday
evening he set out to find our church, and was directed to
Plymouth Church, Pastor Everest, then to another church,
and only at half-past eight, wearied, himself and wife reached
our church. At the close of service they came forward
and greeted us with the affection of brother and sister. After
looking about a while and admiring the church and observing
we had no organ, he remarked, quietly, ' When you get ready
to put in your organ, let me contribute the first thousand
dollars.' I was amazed, and inquired, Would you allow us to
use it for present necessities ? and he consented. This event
had a marked effect upon the church, and proved a point of
my sermon that we cannot limit the assets of the kingdom.
As long as Moses and the pillar of cloud are with us, there
can be no danger."
But greater trials were before them. To be sure, prayer-
meetings, Sunday-school, and preaching services were largely
attended, but there was no strength to meet more than the
interest of the debt, part of which soon became due, and the
sale of the property was threatened. Extracts from letters
90 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
written during those most trying days in the history of the
First Church and its pastor, show that though they were in
the furnace, God was with them. " September 21, 1878,
church affairs are at a great crisis. We may succeed. All is
in suspense, but there is much prayer. I am preaching great
foundation doctrines. September 23, we found we could, by
great struggle and sacrifice, pay off thirty thousand dollars of
the indebtedness, provided the remaining fifty thousand dol-
lars can at once be placed at six per cent. We can take
twenty-five thousand dollars. If we are helped to carry
twenty-five thousand dollars more, the future may be brighter
than the past If not — church dishonored, perhaps dissolved.
Prayer-meetings over this crisis are deeply affecting. If we
are saved, we shall be blessed by this trial."
On February 2 and 9, 1879, subscriptions were taken by
this people trained to sacrifice, and the terrible load was re-
duced to thirty thousand dollars. This was done without the
encouragement of a pastor, for the service of Dr. Everts
had closed with the previous year.
During this ministry he had received in the church eighteen
hundred persons, and had raised among his own congregation
an average of twenty- five thousand dollars a year. " It is not
an overstatement," Mr. J. M. Vanderlip writes to the Western
Recorder, " to say that no Baptist preacher of this generation
has done more effective work for the denomination than what
Dr. Everts did in the Northwest during his twenty years
pastorate in Chicago." Dr. Henson published the following
estimate of his predecessor : '' His pastorate covered a score
of years, and those the most eventful and fruitful of all the
church's history, — years in which the church won a national
fame, and came to the very front as a leader in all great denom-
inational enterprises. During his administration the church
built what was the most massive, and possibly the most costly,
FIERY TRIALS. 91
Baptist house of worship in America, and paid for it, in
addition to giving away tens of thousands of dollars to aid
other struggling churches in Chicago and vicinity. Under
the same adventurous and sagacious leadership, after the
Wabash Avenue building had been destroyed by fire, the
present noble structure was erected at Thirty-first Street and
South Park Avenue, which is one of the most capacious,
complete, and beautiful specimens of church architecture in
the city of Chicago. The location at the time of its selection
was ' away out on the prairie,' and so the project of building
there was scouted as absurd by not a few short-sighted critics,
and the panic of 1873, following closely on the disastrous fire
of 1871, did seem for a time to put the church in mortal
peril ; but now the location that was regarded as preposterous
is in the very heart of the most magnificent residential quar-
ter of the city, and the church, with its threatened perils
safely passed, has entered upon its second half-century with
prospects of usefulness and possibilities of power for which
all Baptist hearts should be devoutly thankful. The man to
whom, under God, more than any other man, the denomina-
tion is indebted for all this, is Dr. W. W. Everts, who, for so
long a stretch of years, presided over the church, and guided
its aff'airs, and with his own irrepressible enthusiasm inspired
it to undertake great enterprises, and to make heroic sacrifices.
" He came here in 1859, at the age of forty-five, at the
meridian of his fame. Nor did his fame decline during the
long stretch of his twenty years' ministry in this Western
metropolis. His stalwart faith, his leonine courage, and his
boundless enthusiasm prominently fitted him for successful
leadership. And he led superbly. No church ever had a
more daring or devoted leader than the First Baptist Church
of Chicago, in the person of Dr. Everts. And no pastor
ever had a more loyal and loving following than Dr. Everts
92 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
found in the membership of that same First Baptist Church.
And yet his heart was too large for its love to be bounded by
the church he served.
" So far from seeking selfishly to centralize all available
Baptist forces at the point where his own head-quarters were,
as many a pastor is tempted to do, he was almost too ready to
imperil his own position with the view of seizing and holding
important strategic points in the regions round about him. He
believed in planting new churches, even if he had to deploy
the very flower and chivalry of his own ^church to do it ; the
very crucial test of a pastor's devotion to the cause of Christ.
He was a typical Chicagoan in his breadth of view, energy
of action, and boundless ambition, — only his was a sanctified
ambition, whose highest aim was God's glory in man's salva-
tion. Here in Chicago he did, perhaps, the greatest work of
his life. He was here in the prime of his powers, and in the
very crisis of our denominational history, and what Sheridan
was at Winchester, that Everts was in Chicago. He led the
way and saved the day, and gave the Baptist forces a vantage-
ground from which, please God, they shall never be dis-
lodged."
Among the speakers at a farewell reception was Bev. Dr.
Byder, who had labored by his side from the beginning of his
ministry in Chicago. " Dr. Everts has a vigorous organiza-
tion, and his whole being appears to be the incarnation of an
earnest purpose. He seemed to me for several years to be
almost ubiquitous. What his denomination asked of him he
was ready to do, — East or West, North or South. It is not
given to many men to have so wide an opportunity for good.
And in how many hearts, over a large portion of our country,
has this kindling enthusiasm found a response. Of churches
built, of schools strengthened, of souls rescued from sin, the
record is surely large and most worthy. See you not the
FIERY TRIALS. 93
goodly sheaves that he bears in his arms and in his heart ?
Who of us has a better return for his labor ? Who of us
more truly lives in organized institutions and in individual
life, as the result of twenty years of labor ?" Before closing
the record of his life in Chicago, reference should be made
to Dr. Everts's labors in behalf of education, secular and
religious, in that city.
94 THE LIFE OF REY. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
CHAPTER VII.
THE OLD UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO.
•' A work of danger and distrust
You treat, as one on fire should tread,
Scarce hid by treacherous ashen crust."
Horace^s Odes (Covington's Translation), Book ii,, 1, 6-8.
The old University of Chicago originated in the brain of
Stephen A. Douglas. One day in 1853 he was walking over
his lake shore property in that city with his friend Dr. Eddy,
a Presbyterian minister, when he broached to him the idea
of founding a university. " If you will accept the presidency
of that institution, I will give ten acres of land as a founda-
tion for it." Dr. Eddy accepted the offer for himself, but
found that the feeling against the senator for securing the
passage of the Kansas and Nebraska Bill, which was enacted
in May, 1854, was so intense among Presbyterians that their
co-operation in the proposed enterprise could not be secured.
While this offer was still pending. Judge Douglas mentioned
it at a political gathering at the Tremont House to Charles
Walker. During a pause in the conversation around the
table, Douglas turned to Mr. Walker and said, " By the way,
Mr. Walker, I have determined to have a college at Cottage
Grove. I have made an offer of ten acres to the Presbyte-
rians through Dr. Eddy, but they do not seem to be doing
much about it, and will probably fail to meet the conditions.
As I am half a Baptist, I will make the same offer to you for
the Baptists, if Dr. Eddy fails." Mr. Walker arose, paced
THE OLD UNIVERSITY OP CHICAGO. 95
the room a few minutes in his nervous way, and finally said,
" Mr. Douglas, I think we will take that offer. I will let
you know this afternoon." Not long after, Mr. Walker's pas-
tor was sent to Douglas with letters from Thomas Hoyne, J.
W. Sheahan, and Daniel Cameron, commending him for not
joining in the manifesto of Chicago ministers against the sen-
ator. The visit was successful, and in July, 1856, the organiza-
tion of the University was effected, the legal incorporation
dating from January 30, 1857. On his return to Chicago,
Douglas attended the First Baptist Church, whose pastor. Dr.
Howard, was a warm friend of the new enterprise, and whose
members had already shown their interest in higher education
by subscribing seven thousand dollars to the college at Alton.
The most prominent Baptist laymen in the inauguration of
this movement were Charles Walker, Levi D. Boone, Samuel
Hoard, and John K. Pollard, with whom were associated
James H. Woodworth, William B. Ogden, and William
Jones.
The first agent of the institution was Kev. J. B. Olcott,
and the first president was Mr. Walker's former pastor. This
arrangement, however, was understood to be temporary, to
cease when the buHding operations were completed. With
this understanding, Mr. Olcott succeeded in securing sub-
scriptions amounting to sixty thousand dollars in the West,
outside of Chicago. As these subscriptions were not payable
at once, they were anticipated by placing a mortgage of
twenty-five thousand dollars on the property for the purpose
of completing the south wing of the proposed structure.
This loan was a weak place in the foundation of the insti-
tution.
When Dr. Everts arrived in Chicago, in the fall of 1859,
he frequently heard on the street that the University would
be sold out and fall into the hands of some other denomina-
96 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
tion, but he replied, " It will never be given up. The Bap-
tists will retain it." The panic of the year 1857 had pre-
vented the payment of subscriptions, but the chief obstacle
in the path of the financial secretary was the condition of
the large subscriptions obtained in Chicago by the presi-
dent. These had been given with so many reservations
that they were not considered binding, and Mr. Olcott was
frequently bluffed and laughed at for attempting to collect
them. Totally discouraged on account of the lack both of
money in the treasury and of prestige in the presidency, Mr.
Olcott became convinced that without a change of adminis-
tration the University would be lost. The president said
that he was willing to take the financial agency and leave his
office for another, but his friends objected to any change in
the administration, and jrhile they claimed for the president
all the successes, they charged all the failures to the secretary,
who soon after, in despair of the enterprise, ended his noble
service. It was a dark hour in the history of the University.
The most hopeful had become despondent. There was a debt
of thirty thousand dollars, upon which the interest had not
been paid. Subscriptions had ceased, and yet nothing was
being done to avert destruction.
Thoroughly persuaded, by acquaintance with the professors
and by the lamentable experience of Mr. Alcott, that the main
difficulty in the way of success would be removed if the chief
office were vacated. Dr. Everts invited the president to his
home in the summer of 1863, and in a long conversation
pleaded with him to resign his office and thus permit others
to save the University. He was assured of the distinction
of being one of the founders of the institution, and that it
was no discredit to surrender a place that not six men in the
denomination could fill. He was further promised a trip to
Europe or any other honor he might wish. As he was un-
THE OLD UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. 97
successful in this personal interview, Dr. Everts began to urge
upon members of the Board of Trustees that as the presi-
dent had assumed so serious and important a trust he should
faithfully discharge it or relinquish it. In full Board meeting
he said he feared the result if prompt action was not taken to
remove the debt. One of the trustees replied, " I should
rather have reverses or destruction overtake the University
than have the president suffer."
Thus the lines were drawn, when Rev. M. G. Clarke was
induced, in the summer of the year 1863, to take charge of
the finances of the imperilled institution. " No man," wrote
Dr. Clarke, " so inspired and cheered on the work to push the
great enterprise at least to safety as yourself. Such were your
convictions of the great value of the institution to liberal
learning and religion, to the Northwest and to our common
country, and especially to our denomination, that you put its
well-being above your own personal interest or the interests
of any single individual." Dr. Clarke soon saw the need of
doing something to awaken enthusiasm, and he proposed the
erection of the main building. This proposition seemed like
madness to some, but it was ardently supported by Dr. Everts,
who finally secured the passage by the trustees of a motion
instructing the financial secretary to put in the foundations of
the main building, but holding him responsible for the collec-
tion of money suflficient to pay for the work as it progressed.
On these terms fifty-five thousand dollars were secured to
erect the main building, twenty-two thousand dollars for a
telescope, and thirty-five thousand dollars for an observatory,
and a grand total of one hundred and fifty thousand dollars,
chiefly by the exertions of Prof. A. H. Mixer, was raised
during the year. " My poor success," wrote Prof. Mixer,
" was due largely, as I felt, to the constant encouragement as
well as direct aid received through you."
98 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
The story of the telescope is worth telling in Prof. Mixer's
own words : " Before beginning the work I went to Mr. J.
Young Scammon, had several interviews with him, and finally
secured from him a pledge to build a tower for the telescope,
if I would secure the means to buy it. He afterwards gen-
erously promised in addition to take care of the head astron-
omer. These items together amounted to some fifty-five
thousand or sixty thousand dollars. In the meantime I had
got on the track of Mr. Clark's great telescope. Before say-
ing anything about it to the committee, I went very quietly
to Michigan University and saw Dr. Brlinnow, to get his en-
dorsement of it. He ridiculed the idea of our getting it, but
pronounced it the prize of the world. I returned to Chicago
and to the committee quite crazy on the subject, and begged
of them to send a committee at once to Boston, empowered to
buy if we could get it. None sympathized with my zeal
and haste or saw its importance. In this state of suspense
and agony with me, nearly two weeks thus passed before I
could get any one started. Mr. Hoyne was at last going to
New York and Boston on business, and he did the work for
us. You know how we barely escaped losing it by a single
day, an hour almost. So impressed was I, and I alone,
that I wrote a letter, which I put into the pocket of Mr.
Hoyne just as he was leaving for the East, and begged him
to read it on the way. It was to urge him not to stop in
New York over Sunday, as I knew he intended to do.
This letter, as he afterwards wrote me, decided him to go
on and decide the fate of Chicago in regard to the great
telescope."
The Board of Trustees, meantime, had unanimously passed
an order to compromise with contributors of long standing
who could not pay their subscriptions in full. This action
offended one of the trnstees, Mr. Wm. Jones, who had
THE OLD UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. 99
advanced money on these old notes, and when he was asked
to subscribe for the main building, he oflfered to give twelve
thousand dollars, on condition that the mover of that
resolution to compromise should resign his seat in the
Board. To this Dr. Everts, the offender, cheerfully assented,
but Prof Mixer, with Mr. Jones's consent, retained the res-
ignation in his control until Mr. Jones pledged him it should
not be called for ; he " would let it pass."
Dr. Everts let everything pass for the sake of the institu-
tion, and obtained leave of absence from his church in the
fall of the year 186 J: for the purpose of raising in New York
City a fund of twenty-five thousand dollars for the endowment
of the Greek Chair. After he had made a good beginning, he
left the completion of the work in the hands of others, while
he returned to attend to the building of a new church edifice
in Chicago. But no one else was able to complete the task,
as appears from the following letter which he received on
November 18 :
" We are impressed with the great importance of your re-
turn to New York with Professor Mixer, and completing the
work began by you there on behalf of the University of Chi-
cago. It seems to us you should not hesitate for one moment.
It is important that you act now and energetically. We know
not what changes may take place.
" We are respectfully, in behalf of the University, your
friends and collaborateurs,
J. Young Scammon,
E. B. McCagg,
C. N. Holden,
J. H. WOODWORTH."
Among his old friends in New York he was received with
much favor, and names that are as familiar as household words
100 THE LIFE OF REV. W. AV. EVERTS, D.D.
to those representing struggling Baptist interests — Wyckoff,
Bishop, Pratt, Phelps, Gellatly, Davis and Stout — are found
among the contributors to the Greek Chair. One or two sub-
scriptions failed, so that the total amount received fell two thou-
sand dollars short of the full endowment. The cash collected
for the endowment reached Chicago as the main building was
nearing completion. Winter was at hand, the roof must be
added, and a loan must 'be made, or the structure would be
seriously injured. Under these circumstances the Board of
Trustees authorized, during the absence of Dr. Everts, a tem-
porary loan of fourteen thousand dollars from the Greek Chair
Fund. When the magnificent Douglas Hall, modelled after
the Smithsonian Institution, was completed, the assets of the
institution had increased one hundred thousand dollars, but the
liabilities had also increased from thirty thousand dollars to
fifty thousand dollars. But with the oflPer of Wm. B. Ogden
to put up the north wing on condition that this debt should
be lifted, Messrs. Clarke and Mixer devoted themselves to their
task with redoubled energy, and had secured in good pledges all
but ten thousand dollars of the amount required to make good
the ofi'er of Mr. Ogden, when the Board of Trustees by a ma-
jority of one dismissed Prof. Mixer and let Dr. Clarke go.
This action was a death-blow, and from that hour the Uni-
versity began to sink. There were occasional movements
afterwards, but they were only death-struggles. There was a
frequent change of doctors, but the patient was none the bet-
ter, but rather grew worse. By that small majority of one
the University was doomed. It continued to exist, because
the insurance company was willing to compound interest upon
interest upon the valuable property. But confidence was
gone. The friends of the president had removed the officers
whose magnificent success they feared, and in fearing it they
betrayed a spirit that often destroys but never saves great
THE OLD UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. 101
enterprises. In reviewing this catastrophe a few years later, one
of its chief victims writes to Dr. Everts : " The firm mainte-
nance of my conviction cost me my position with a family on
my hands. What of the great enterprise ? Must it not be saved
at any cost ? No, not at the cost of the sacrifice of moral prin-
ciples. I have faith to believe that the whole will come to
naught if the good people will only let it alone. You have
been supporting your enemies while they have been fighting
you. You speak of the change of sentiment of Dr. .
Don't trust it for a moment. He is too weak to make the
sacrifice which the cause of righteousness would have cost.
Let the University die of starvation, as it will if all only let
it alone. It may be that not a vestige of all our hard work
will then remain, but as sure as God lives, honest hearts and
helping hands will be left to then take up the work." Dr.
Everts was not yet utterly discouraged, as a reflection jotted
down at the time of this revolution indicates : " I do not see
how I could have pursued a different course, and have been
faithful to my convictions and to the University. I fear it
will not rise as rapidly to intellectual greatness and power as
we had hoped."
The reference to Dr. Everts " supporting his enemies" is
explained by the effort he made to clear the University of
debt by what became known as the " land scheme." In
the year 1871, the University debt had increased to one
hundred thousand dollars, and the outlook was so discour-
aging that the trustees did not attend the annual meeting,
and the president told his friends that he was willing to re-
sign. At this moment of apparent dissolution, Mr. Jas. E.
Burchelle and Mr. B. F. Jacobs, members of the First Bap-
tist Church, proposed to their pastor that one hundred and
sixty acres of land be purchased near the stock-yards, and
platted and sold in lots at such an advance on the cost price
102 THE LIFE OF REV. W. AV. EVERTS, D.D.
that the profit should liquidate the entire debt upon the Uni-
versity. These gentlemen, without any endorsement from
the Board of Trustees, but with the promise of fifty thousand
dollars from the president for the first payment, bought the
property. Their pastor took five thousand dollars' worth of
the land ; they invested ten thousand dollars in it at the advance
price, and disposed of twenty-five thousand dollars' worth of the
property besides among members of the First Church. The
managers were ultimately compelled to advance themselves half
of the amount which the president had promised to meet
the first payment, and they still owed nearly two hundred
thousand dollars on the property when the great Chicago fire
came and put an end for the time being to business in outside
real estate. What was to be done ? Was there a forlorn
hope anywhere ? On January 5, 1S72, in reply to the ques-
tion, Can the land be sold in the East ? Mr. Phelps answers,
" It may be^ if you can spend two or three months in accom-
plishing it. I do not believe that any other man can do it."
Encouraged by this word. Dr. Everts yielded to the urgent
petition, dated March 1-4, 1872, and signed by the professors
of the University and Seminary, and went East.
The land was ofi'ered for sale, not so much as an invest-
ment, as on moral considerations, to save the University. In
Cleveland, Buffalo, Albany, New York, and Boston, the
Baptist churches were visited, and in the latter city the
noble Shawmut Avenue Church, under Dr. Lorimers in-
spiration, subscribed twenty thousand dollars. In all, sixty
thousand dollars was thus secured, and by this wearing, un-
compensated, and thankless labor, the threatened defeat was
averted, and fifty thousand dollars was put to the credit of
the University of Chicago. But, as had been predicted, he
was but " supporting his enemies." The president was not
allowed to resign, but, on the other hand, was publicly credited
THE OLD UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. 103
by his adherents with the success that others had achieved
for him. Xot satibfied with this injustice, they inserted bitter
articles in the local papers, in which they attributed the long,
arduous, and successful labors of the pastor of the First
Baptist Church in behalf of the University to an insane
ambition on his part to become its president.
Perceiving the impossibility of further effort for those who
put an evil interpretation upon the most unselfish actions,
and with the promise that his withdrawal from the Board of
Trustees would be followed by the resignation of the presi-
dent, Dr. Everts, early in October, 1872, wrote the following
letter : " To hasten unity of counsel and facilitate a new de-
parture in the progress of the University, I hereby tender my
resignation as a member of the Board. But in the future,
as in the past, I shall be happy to do all in my power, by word
or deed, to assure the greatest prosperity of our noble insti-
tution." A year later, on December 30, 1873, the promise
was nominally fulfilled. The chair of president was resigned,
but the office of chancellor was created at the request of the
trustees, and filled by the ex-president.
The Cldcago Standard, in commenting on this action of the
Board, expressed the hope " that so far as the Baptist denom-
ination is concerned, as well as others, differences and debates
will now cease." But the conduct of the Board called forth
such " difference and debate ' in the Eastern papers that it
was compelled to submit its affairs to the investigation of the
American Baptist Educational Commission. It was said, '• As
to the statement of the Executive Committee of the Board of
Trustees as to the financial and other affairs of the Chicago
University, they must not expect to be believed. When we have
the report of the Investigation Committee of the Educational
Commission, then we shall know where we are." Samuel
Colgate, Gardner R. Colby, Dr. Edward Lathrop, Dr. S. S.
104 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
Cutting, and Mr. J. F. Wyckoff accepted, in 1875, the ap-
pointment of the commission to examine thoroughly into the
affairs of the University, and to report whether it was worthy
of a share of the gifts of the denomination in the Centennial
movement of the year 1876 to endow institutions of learning
throughout the country. No report or investigation was
ever made, because a telegram was received from Chicago
informing the committee that the books of the treasurer
"would not be submitted to their inspection.
Dr. Everts had been chiefly instrumental in arousing the
conscience of the denomination to a sense of its responsibility
in saving the University, and in producing the conviction that
wrongs must be righted and justice done, or the University
could not be saved. " The stimulation of public conscience
by exposure of wrong," he said, " is far more important than
a concealment of wrong, thereby confusing public conscience
and creating distrust. Ingenuous confession of wrong obtains
the forgiveness of men as well as of God. Purity is to be
sought before peace, and peace can be assured only by purity.
But with just history of the past locating responsibility,
at least approximately, upon wrong-doers, and approximately
vindicating the innocent and true, may assure confidence and
success of future administrations. If God graciously over-
rules the wrath of men for good, they should not deny their
sin ; especially they should not claim credit for their betrayal
of trust, and boast of the honor God may bring out of their
wrong-doing. Let history of public enterprises be fully and
impartially written, for the truth and justice of history,
whoever may suffer for it. The Scriptures impartially re-
cord the rebellion against Moses, the vices of David and
Solomon, and the dispute between Paul and Barnabas."
But the successful agitation of such sentiments did not
pacify the administration of the University. A responsible
THE OLD UNIVERSITY OP CHICAGO. 105
and prominent citizen called attention in the Chicago Trib-
une to certain shortcomings of the president and of the
administration ; whereupon, on January 17, 1874, the Ex-
ecutive Committee of the Board of Trustees addressed a
note to the deacons of the First Baptist Church, announcing
that their pastor was held personally responsible for these
allegations, and they found it necessary to institute measures
to vindicate both the Board of Trustees and the late presi-
dent of the University from the aspersions cast upon them.
In replying to this effort to sow discord among his own people,
the pastor says : " What public-spirited man in Chicago
could look on indifferently while our University remained at
a stand-still, as largely in debt and with less endowment to-
day than seven years ago ? What if I, a member of the
Board, was a little restless under it,'and felt that the adminis-
tration was to blame for its inefficiency ? The correction of
false statements may seem, to those whose lives have not been
devoted to public objects, of trifling importance, but to those
concerned there is nothing more important. The greatest
injustice is done me in the charge that I seek the presidency.
Why have not witnesses been found to support the charge ?
If true, some one must have been asked to promote that
object. I despise those who sacrifice public trust either to
personal friends or prejudice. If I have been beside myself
in this matter, it has been for the sake of no office or emolu-
ment. If the incompetency of the president has been
jeopardizing the promise of the University, my opposition
may have been but scant loyalty." Notwithstanding con-
tinuous attacks upon himself, Dr. Everts wrote to William B.
Ogden in the fall of the year 187-4, " We still believe Chi-
cago University will yet take rank with the greatest institu-
tions in the country. He also advocated, the next year, the
Centennial movement and the dollar roll, and referred to the
106 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
University as an institution whose field and promise, tliougli
brought into great doubt and peril, are yet second to none on
the continent."
A contemporary estimate of the relations of the pastor of
the First Church to the University is found in the Examiner,
of New York, from the pen of Dr. A. K. Potter, of Spring-
field, Mass. " Men sometimes receive very hard pay for hard
work in a good cause. So it seems to be with our friend Dr.
Everts, of Chicago. An ill-natured paragraph is going the
rounds of the press representing the University and Seminary
at Chicago as heavily in debt, and giving Dr. Everts a thrust,
for wishing to be ' bishop or pope,' and ' possibly president
of the University.' We do not know why the doctor should
wish to be a ' bishop,' for he is that already, and has been for
many years. He could not wish to be a ' pope,' for he knows
very well that popes are at an especially large discount just
now. And as to his having aspirations for the presidency of
Chicago University, we really do not believe that he has ever
had the feeblest hankering for a position of the kind. That
he has earnestly desired to see the University liberated from
its embarrassments, and in a career of high prosperity, we
have no doubt. That he has sought to do all within his
power to give it such prosperity we have just as little doubt.
It would be interesting to know precisely where the weak
spot in the University administration is, if it has a special
spot of this kind. But we apprehend that it will prove to be
unproductive business to throw upon Dr. Everts the respon-
sibility of any weakness it may have. It is not his way to
make things weak."
Dr. Henson wrote, in March, 1885, soon after coming to
Chicago : " There have been suspicions, at least in the East,
and possibly nearer home, that there have been so many
irregularities, to put it mildly, in the institution's life, that
THE OLD UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. 107
death is doom that is richly deserved. If there have been
irregularities, let us not ignominiously cover them up in the
grave, lest their ghosts arise to plague us, but let us heroically
right them."
The closing years of the Chicago pastorate witnessed the
call and violent removal of President Lemuel Moss, the des-
perate attempt, in January, 1877, to wrest the institution from
Baptist control, and then the mortifying effort to save the
wreck by repudiating the debt due the insurance company.
But nothing, however humiliating, could destroy his hope in
the University. " I have great hope for the future of the
University," he writes. " God will bless it. I have prayed
and labored for it, and it will be blessed." While in the
East, and after returning to Chicago, Dr. Everts sought to
raise the drooping courage of old friends of the institution,
and to secure new support for the lost cause. When the
Inter-Ocean^ of Chicago, said, " Let it be buried forever out
of sight, let it be forgotten," he replied, " But what should be
forgotten and buried out of sight ? Surely not the cause of
higher education in Chica2;o. Nor should we bury out of
sight the honor of Douglas, Chicago's most eminent citizen.
Nor yet should we bury out of sight the names of other public-
spirited citizens, who gave two hundred thousand dollars to
the University. If it is attempted to bury the cause, there
will be a resurrection like that at the tomb of Joseph."
Hope did not expire until the work of destruction had
actually begun. Then he wrote this lament : '' Day by day,
from the window of my dwelling, I look out with tender
feelings upon the demolition of the old University buildings
now going on. Already windows have been removed, tur-
rets toppled over, and sections of the walls thrown down.
Passers-by behold the apparent vandalism with wondering
inquiry. Old friends stop to gaze with painful regrets and
108 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
tearful eyes upon the broken monument of noble sacrifice.
Alumni come to view the ruins, as Nehemiah to the desolation
of Mount Zion." Then, as he writes, he hopes against hope.
" As myriad husks, annually falling into the ground, perish,
while the precious seed they cover germinate and grow into
boundless harvests for the nourishment of the race, so the
precious seed of believing prayers, of noble endeavor, conse-
cration, and self-sacrifice, remaining after the destruction of
official administrations, and external embodiments which ob-
structed rather than guarded their normal growth, will spring
up and flourish in varied and comprehensive Christian culture,
diff"using that wisdom and knowledge which shaft be the sta-
bility of our times and the strength of our free institutions. A
new University shall emerge, Phoenix-like, from the ashes of
the past, in grander proportions, more beautiful harmonies, and
more glorious achievements than were anticipated by the most
hopeful projectors and builders of the past." When the fond
dream was so speedily realized by the offer by Mr. J. D.
Rockefeller, first of six hundred thousand dollars, and then
of one million dollars, to establish a new University of
Chicago, the feelings of one who had been working and
praying, hoping and weeping, over the University for thirty
years can only be expressed in the language of Simeon : " Now
lettest thou thy servant depart in peace, for mine eyes have
seen thy salvation."
THE THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY AT CHICAGO. 109
CHAPTER VIII.
THE THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY AT CHICAGO.
At the semi-centennial of the First Baptist Church,
Chicago, observed in 1883, Dr. G. W. Northrup declared
that " the most notable thing in the history of Baptists of
Chicago during the past fifty years is the work done in estab-
lishing here two first-class denominational institutions." Dr.
Everts's part in the work of founding the Theological Semi-
nary is of no slight importance. " He was a born strategist,
and always believed in seizing the strong points and holding
them with a strong hand. Very naturally, therefore, his
whole soul was enlisted in the work of Christian education,
especially as related to the evangelization of the great North-
west. The Theological Seminary now located at Morgan
Park was conceived in his brain and born in his study."
Such are the words of Dr. P. S. Henson. When he arrived
in Chicago, the question of establishing a Seminary in the
West was being agitated in the press, and there was some
thought of calling a convention to agree upon the best loca-
tion. " It seemed to me there was no room for two opinions,
and I was satisfied that waiting for a convention to discuss
the location might only divide the denomination and delay
the enterprise." Hence, at the commencement of the Uni-
versity, in 1860, eight gentlemen, among them Revs. J. B.
Olcott, A. J. Joslyn, and J. A. Smith, were called by the
pastor into a small room of the First Baptist Church, and
persuaded to begin the new enterprise then and there, upon
110 THE LIFE OF REV- W. W. EVERTS, D.D,
the basis of a constitution he laid before them. Imitating
the example of the men who established the school at Ham-
ilton, N. Y., each one present contributed one dollar, and
thus planted a grain of corn for the coming harvest. Year
by year they met in increasing numbers, awaiting the indi-
cations of Providence. Rev. Messrs. Branch, Olcott, and
Clarke were sent out in turn to kwaken an interest in the
proposed Seminary among the churches.
During the winter of 1864-65, Dr. Everts found time,
while he was in New York City, raising the endowment for
the Greek Chair in the University, to make a beginning in
the property foundation of the Seminary. He approached
Mr. Samuel Colgate in behalf of the University, but found
him unwilling to give for classical education so far away.
" If you ever start a theological institution, we may give you
an acre of land we own on the west side of Chicago."
" Thank you, Mr. Colgate ; we must have such an institution,
and then we will hold you to your offer." At a later visit,
though with great reluctance, Mr. Colgate placed his name on
the list of subscribers to the University, with the understand-
ing that his donation should go to that object only on condi-
tion that no effort was made to put up a building for the
Seminary. His name was needed on the list, because no sub-
scription to the Greek Chair fund was binding until twenty five
thousand dollars were subscribed. The acre was valued at
five thousand dollars, and increased the total amount secured
to twenty-seven thousand dollars. The subscribers were in-
formed of the condition attached to the Colgate subscription
and were satisfied. " We have had but one opinion," writes
Mr. Colgate ; " it is to aid in the education of the ministry. We
want the Seminary to have it. We think well of the Univer-
sity, but more of the Seminary." This acre of land was soon
deeded to the Seminary, and in time doubled and trebled in
THE THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY AT CHICAGO. Ill
value. It became the subject of grave charges against Dr.
Everts, who was arraigned by the Board of the University
for " taking away their property."
Others besides Mr. Colgate preferred to give towards a the-
ological institution, so that before Dr. Everts returned to Chi-
cago he had secured for this purpose thirteen .hundred dollars
in cash, besides property valued at five hundred dollars. With
this capital to invest, the Board of Trustees, who had been
regularly elected August 28, 1863, were encouraged to pur-
chase two hundred and twelve feet of land on Rhodes Ave-
nue, opposite the University. This property was purchased
for twenty-five dollars per front foot, but it has since reached a
valuation eight times as great, and is still in the possession of
the Theological Seminary.
The first teachers employed were Dr. Nathaniel Colver and
Rev. J. C. C. Clarke, and among the first students was D.
L. Moody. This young clerk was encouraged to give up his
business and engage wholly in religious work by the profiered
hospitality of Mrs. Phillips, a member of the First Baptist
Church, and in Miss Revell, another member of the same
church, he was blessed in finding a worthy companion.
There had been some hope that the First Baptist Church of
Cincinnati would support Dr. Colver, when he left their pulpit
for the Seminary, from certain trust funds in their possession.
This hope failing. Dr. Everts accepted the invitation of Mr.
Kingsland, a Chicago friend who had returned to Vermont to
live, to visit Burlington for the purpose of interesting Messrs.
Lawrence Barnes and Mial Davis in the new undertaking, and
he was much encouraged by their promise to consider the
matter and to come to an early decision. Soon after Dr. Col-
ver went to Boston, his old tramping-ground, to secure help
for the Seminary, but he accomplished nothing until on his way
home. He reached Burlington, where the way had been pre-
112 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
pared for hiro. There he secured the promise of fifteen
hundred dollars a year for five years, a pledge that was after-
wards changed into an endowment fund of seven thousand
five hundred dollars. The third contributor to the first
large gift to the institution was Mr. W. W. Cook, of White-
hall, N. Y.
The next great need of the Seminary was books, and Dr.
Everts was a prime mover in the acquisition in turn of the E.
W. Hengstenberg, George B. Ide, and American Bible Union
Libraries, which together constitute one of the most complete
collections of the sources of theology in the world. In June,
1869, Dr. Everts received in Liverpool the following letter
from his son, who was in Berlin :
" Sitting down to finish this letter, whose late conclusion
may prove providential, I am very much wrought up on
account of our Theological Seminary. May my enthusiasm
not be helpless. May you be better, so as to bear it, even
happy and well enough to favor it, and that quickly, or you can
never. Hengstenberg's library is the matter that excites me,
and well it may, for Prof. Steinmeyer just told me that proba-
bly no finer theological library was ever collected by or for a
private person. Prof Dorner is moving to secure it for the
University. Perhaps I may stir up a little of your Chicago
loyalty by saying that the Neander library, now at Rochester,
can stand no comparison with this. You have weighed, while
reading this, what this library might be worth to Chicago
and to our Baptist name. I will add no airy flights, only
this : America would thereby find its Christian scientific centre
in its material and artificial middle-point. Oh that you dared,
with your far-sighted wisdom and faith, to write to me to
secure its refusal, or the permission, perhaps, to bid such and
such a sum for it. Do you think Chicago would reject it,
or do you fear she would not share in purchasing it ? Dear
THE THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY AT CHICAGO. 113
father, do as you please about all this. If the burden is too
heavy for you to bear, if your crowns are already enough, do
not wear yourself out, even for the Seminary." To this he
replied on the 16th of June : " If there is time and the pro-
fessors are in Chicago, possibly they might authorize the pur-
chase and send on one thousand dollars as first payment.
Write immediately to Professor Northrup or Jackson, stating
the case to them, so that they could answer by letter or tele-
graph." On June 25, a letter addressed to the Board of
the Seminary leaves Berlin. " According to the will, the
library should be sold to a Lutheran institution, but the
brother of Dr. Hengstenberg is eager to seek my acquaint-
ance. Dr. Dorner is confident the collection could not have
cost less than twenty thousand thalers, and could not be col-
lected for that to-day. There are shelves of folios that cost
five or ten dollars a volume. Can you calculate the imme-
diate and possible value, gentlemen, of such a library in our
opening Seminary? It would dignify your more material
preparation for the school. Scholars would be drawn to our
halls and spread our fame. Chicago Baptists are like the pools
of Solomon, — never empty. I am assured, too, that, taken
together, they are as wise as Solomon. I might as well explain
a political fact to Solon as the expediency of this theological
purchase to you. My selfish services will naturally be at your
disposal as long as the matter is on hand. Excuse my bold-
ness, which you may refer to the hearty interest I feel in this
affair."
On the 7th of July, Dr. Everts writes from Chicago : " Pro-
fessor Northrup and myself have taken the responsibility of
purchasing the Hengstenberg library, if not already disposed
of. Hence the telegram of July 5 ordering the purchase,
and two thousand dollars accompanying this sheet." (The
cablegram, costing seventeen dollars, was sent at Dr. North-
8
114 THE LIFE OF REV. AV. W. EVERTS, D.D.
rup's expense, so eager was he for the purchase.) " Act with
commensurate tact and shrewdness, and get the library as
cheaply as possible. Brother Northrup and myself are not
able to take the responsibility we have assumed, and it should
be made as light to us as possible. You may agree to pay
the balance in sixty or ninety days. Let there be no blunder
or slip in the purchase." July 30 : " All feel the importance
of the library, but know not how we shall pay for it in these
distressed times." September 19 : " Collect notices of press
and testimonies of scholars. If allowed to be depreciated
by incompetent or envious criticism, it would greatly hinder
raising money to purchase it." October 1 : " We are glad
you have taken refusal rather than complete purchase. Our
finances are so straightened that many of the Board deemed
it folly to undertake the purchase. Some Western educators
question the value of the library to a poor Seminary unable
to purchase many newer books. This increases our difficulty.
To protect ourselves against these objections and awaken
sympathy, letters have been sent to Drs. Hovey and Galusha
Anderson, of Newton, to Williams and Conant, of New York,
and others, inquiring whether they deem it wise for us on
general principles to attempt the purchase. While waiting
their answers, Mr. J. Young Scammon has proposed the
founding of a general free theological library and purchasing
the German library as a nucleus. This might be just as well
for us, and pledge earlier and greater enlargement of the en-
terprise. Mr. Scammon might do much for it himself in
that case." Upon receiving notice that the refusal would
be withdrawn at a near date, Mr. James E. Tyler went with
Dr. Everts to Mr. Scammon's office and induced him to ad-
vance the additional four thousand dollars needed, and thus
the library was secured, the contributors, excepting Mr.
Scammon and Dr. Northrup, being members of the congre-
THE THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY AT CHICAGO. 115
gation of the First Baptist Church. The library was kept
in the University building until the year 1874, when the
claim of Mr. Scammon's estate was purchased by Mr. E.
Nelson Blake, and this wealth of learning thus came into the
full and permanent possession of the Seminary.
Meanwhile the library of Dr. George B. Ide, of Spring-
field, Mass., had been secured. This collection of three
thousand books, which were written chiefly in the English
language, was a much-needed supplement to the Hengsten-
berg library, whose ten thousand volumes were almost en-
tirely in other languages. Dr. Everts sent his son to Spring-
field to examine the books upon the shelves, and then to
Philadelphia to negotiate with the heirs. The following
extracts from letters tell the story of the purchase. June 26,
1872 : " It is a rare treasure for our Seminary if we obtain
it. God grant we may." July 2 : " We must buy these
books ; we ought to have every one of them (except the
' Church Fathers,' which are in the Hengstenberg library),
or we will have to pay large prices for them in poor or no
bindings. But how in the world can you get up determina
tion to try to raise any more money for any other object ?
What's done must be done quickly. Mr. Keen was about to
advertise it." July 3 : '' The library is of such excellent
character, containing so many works we must have, so few
we will not need, most of them very recent, that we would
never regret the purchase." August 9 : Mr. Charles B.
Keen writes from Philadelphia, " Messrs. Smith and English
have examined the library for me, and Mr. English says, ' I
am free to say I never saw a library of its size in such good
condition, so free from poor books, and in every way so de-
sirable for a clergyman of culture and studious habits.' He
expresses the opinion that they are very cheap at four thou-
sand dollars. As you had the refusal from me, I want to
116 THE LIFE OF REV- W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
know very soon wliether you are likely to buy them." When
the matter came before the Seminary Board, Dr. Everts ex-
pressed such confidence that the churches would contribute
towards the purchase of such a valuable collection of books,
that the trustees were persuaded to purchase this treasure of
literature.
In those early days the Seminary rested for its financial
support upon four laymen, Messrs. Goodyear and Holden, of
the Second Church, and Sheldon and Tyler, of the First. In
November, 1874, Dr. Everts visited Cleveland, where he had
dedicated the Euclid Avenue Church, and drawn out large
contributions from Mr. John D. Rockefeller, and sought to
interest the coming benefactor of Chicago in the educational
interests centring there. Six years later he persuaded Cap-
tain Ebenezer Morgan to purchase the American Bible Union
library, with the idea of presenting it to a theological institu-
tion either at Hamilton or at Chicago. Through a business
transaction with Bev. Dr. Col well, of Lowell, Mass., this library,
under the name of the Colwell library, came into the possession
of the Theological Seminary at Chicago. It is an exhaustive
collection of editions and versions of the Bible and of dic-
tionaries, grammars, and commentaries, gathered at an esti-
mated cost of seventy-five thousand dollars, for the use of
the revisers of the English Bible.
LABORS IN BEHALr OF PURE VERSIONS OF THE BIBLE. 117
CHAPTER IX.
LABORS IN BEHALF OF PURE VERSIONS OF THE BIBLE.
Though nearing his sixty- j&fth birthday, and overwhelmed
by financial diflBculties in which his enterprise or generosity
had involved him, his superb health and buoyant spirits did
not forsake him. The First Baptist Church in San Francisco
for the third time in vain sought his services. The unani-
mous call extended on January 29, 1879, by the Bergen
Church in Jersey City was accepted. " They would consider
your coming an act of condescension of which they felt them-
selves unworthy, in which I join." Such were the senti-
ments of a leading member of the New Jersey church. The
enthusiasm produced by the new pastor was at once turned
to account by the successful removal of a debt of thirty-five
thousand dollars. In a service of five years harmony was
restored to a sadly-distracted chufch, one hundred and
seventy-five members were added to its roll, and everything
was done to make its prosperity permanent. After his resig-
nation of the pastorate, which was tearfully accepted, he con-
tinued to reside in Jersey City, and was happy in assisting
his young succes^br by every means in his power. But the
providence of God in his settlement in Jersey City was spe-
cially marked in the revolution of sentiment of Northern
Baptists that took place under his leadership with regard to
the publication of what had been derisively called a " Baptist
Bible."
This question of a complete translation of the Bible into
118 THE LIFE OP REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
English naturally arose out of the question or making accurate
versions of the Word of God into other languages. When
Baptist missionaries began to translate the Bible into the vari-
ous languages of India, they were invited to co-operate with
the British and Foreign Bible Society. As early as the year
1813, they were asked by the corresponding secretary of that
society whether in the versions they had made they had trans-
lated the Greek word " haptizo^^^ immerse, or had transliter-
ated it, that is, transferred it bodily. As the missionary en-
terprise was in its infancy at that time, and translations were
few, the versions made by these missionaries, on the principle
of translating every word that can be translated, were adopted
by the society and widely circulated. But at length, through
these pure versions. Baptist ideas were found to be spreading
rapidly throughout India. Consequently the society decided
adversely the petition of Messrs. Pierce and Yates for assist-
ance in printing a new addition of the Bengali New Testament.
These Baptist missionaries, having been refused help in Eng-
land, then appealed to the American Bible Society. Mean-
time, in April 1833, the American Baptist Board of Foreign
Missions instructed their missionaries " to make their transla-
tions as exact a representation of the mind of the Holy Spirit
as may be possible ; to endeavor by earnest prayer and diligent
study to ascertain the precise meaning of the original text ;
to express that meaning as exactly as the nature of the lan-
guage into which they shall translate the Bible will permit,
and to transfer no words which are capable of being literally
translated." Thereupon, October 1, 1835, the Board of the
American Bible Society favorably considered a resolution that
it was " inexpedient to appropriate any funds in aid of trans-
lating or distributing the aforesaid Bengali New Testament."
However, the offer was made to contribute the amount asked
for if the translation of the Greek word for baptism was
LABORS IN BEHALF OF PURE VERSIONS OF THE BIBLE. 119
corrected. Dr. S. H. Cone, one of the Board, objected to the
injustice of demanding a correction before the translation had
been proved to be incorrect. " The Board of Managers have
no right to forbid the translation of baptize or of any other
word, the meaning of which is satisfactorily ascertained, or
the missionary hereafter, in the work of translation, instead of
making it his single aim to please God, must consult primarily
the view and wishes of earthly patrons. The idea suggested
that the versions to be approved must not materially diflfer
from ' the sense of the authorized English version ' is most
strange. We have been taught to believe that the sense of
the Holy Ghost is to be invariably and most critically pre-
served. Had the principle been candidly stated and uniformly
acted upon by the society in the appropriation of its funds for
foreign distribution, the Baptists never could have been guilty
of the folly or duplicity of soliciting aid for translations made
by their missionaries."
Deacon William Colgate likewise protested against the pro-
posed action : " I plainly see we are kindling a fire in this
room that is destined to burn in every city, town, and village
throughout the United States. I must think the resolution
before you is quite uncalled for. Heretofore each denomina-
tion had the responsibility of its own translations, and it has
worked well. Let each one continue to do so. I can assure
you the Baptists will take the responsibility of theirs, and will
not covet a share in the responsibility of others. But, sir,
the resolution is aimed at the Baptists, and at them only. Let
not this noble institution be severed on this question ; for
we have never on this question used deception. We have
maintained in our pulpits and by the press and beside all
waters that the meaning of this word is immersion, and im-
mersion only, and I believe no Baptist ever did or ever will
translate it differently. Would it not, sir, be very unreason-
120 THE LIFE OP REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
able to expect us to surrender the authority of God's Word to
the behest of this society?"
On April 27, 1836, it was determined by leading Baptists
that, if the American Bible Society sustained the action of
the majority of its Board, a convention of delegates from all
Baptist churches should be summoned to meet in Philadelphia
for counsel. This action was taken in response to the offer of the
Board of the American Bible Society of five thousand dollars
for translations made by Baptist missionaries, provided they
were conformed in the principles of their translation to the
common English version," that is, provided the Greek word
" haptizo''^ was transferred into other languages as it had been
into English, untranslated. When Adoniram Judson heard
of the new condition imposed on Baptist missionaries, he said,
*' I would rather lose my right hand than tamper with the Word
of God." This utterance voiced the sentiments of the delegates
who assembled at Philadelphia, April 26, 1837; to deliberate as
to the duty of the hour. In the opinion of Professor Knowles,
it was " the largest and most intelligent assembly of Baptist
ministers and laymen that has ever been held. There was a
display of talent, eloquence, and piety which we venture to
say no other ecclesiastical body in our country could surpass."
There was unanimity as to the principle of translation ; but as
to the best way of raising money for translations, there was dif-
ference of opinion. Wayland and Sharp, AVilliams, Brantley,
and Ide thought that funds might be raised through the Foreign
Mission Board, but the great majority of the convention fol-
lowed Cone, Welch, McClay, Kendrick, and Cushman, who,
on the ground that the American Bible Society had forfeited
the confidence of the denomination, insisted upon the neces-
sity of another Bible Society. The scope of the work of
such a society was a question that caused another division
in the convention. Whether the revision of the English
LABORS IN BEHALF OF PURE VERSIONS OF THE BIBLE. 121
Scriptures should be included in the programme or not was,
for the sake of harmony, held in abeyance, and the Board
of the new society were instructed to confine their attention
to versions in foreign languages until otherwise ordered by the
society.
Dr. Everts was one of the youngest delegates to this con-
vention. " I have always felt an elation of joy in being thus
early and from principle associated in a humble way with a
movement destined to reflect such honor upon the Baptist
denomination. I became convinced at the outset of my public
life that pure versions of the Scriptures are the true point of
departure in all future reformation and reunion of Christian
churches ; that the restoration of the divine organic laws of
the Church in the constitution, the Bible of the people, would
do more to popularize and champion the Baptist faith than all
the books ever written. When we set forth in the Bible
what we do in the pulpit, people may believe us. Preaching,
and not printing, is inconsistent."
During his settlement in New York City he was a member
of the Board of the new " American and Foreign Bible
Society," and drafted the appeal to the Legislature for the
charter that was so bitterly opposed by the old society. Year
after year the question, Has not the time come for English
revision ? was raised in the meetin2;s of the Board.
Dr. Everts secured the passage of a resolution at an associa-
tional gathering in Putnam County, N. Y., in favor of such
action, and at an anniversary meeting of the society in Phila-
delphia he advocated the appointment of a court of critical
scholars to take into consideration the alleged faults of the re-
ceived version, and to be continued from year to year till the
English Bible should be as nearly perfected as the best scholar-
ship could make it. A few years later Dr. A. C. Kendrick
and a few others prepared, at the request of the president,
122 THE LIFE OP REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
and at the expense of the treasurer of the society, a tentative
revision of the New Testament. This was sent out to the mem-
bers of the society to prepare them for enlightened action at
the annual meeting, but it was regarded as an attempt to fore-
stall action and as a usurpation of authority by a few men who
would rule the denomination. When the anniversary arrived,
the tentative revision was repudiated, the administration of the
society was overturned, and the most bitter and destructive
controversy in the history of the Baptist denomination began.
Dr. Cone and Deacon Colgate, who had separated from the
Pedobaptists for the cause of a pure Bible, now separated from
their own brethren for the same reason, and, with other
friends of English revision, formed the American Bible
Union.
It was formed in New York in the summer of 1850, on
the day after Dr. Everts had arrived in New York from a
sojourn in Europe. He found at his house old friends who were
in the new movement, and offering him the vice-presidency
of the society that was to be formed on the morrow. But
they had been anticipated by the deacons of his church, who
had met him on ship-board and entreated him not to attend the
meeting. Out of regard to their wishes he declined the office
tendered him, but he assured his visitors that he would sup-
port the new enterprise.
" He was quick to see the right," writes Dr. J. W. Sarles,
" and was quick to do it without stopping to count the per-
sonal cost of it to himself. When he committed himself to
English revision with the enthusiasm that belonged to him, it
was likely to blast the reputation of a young man like him-
self. He conferred not with flesh and blood. But the Lord
saw that a commanding reputation was given to him in
spite of it."
In the spring of 1879, after a long absence in the far
LABORS IN BEHALF OF PURE VERSIONS OF THE BIBLE. 123
West, he returned to the scene of his early labors. The
sentiment concerning the revision of the English Scriptures
had, in the meantime, completely changed, for England and
America were awaiting the appearance of the Canterbury
version. But both the Baptist Bible Societies had become
exhausted by their " thirty years' war." The American
Bible Union was on the verge of bankruptcy, and the other
had sought, on several occasions, to merge its existence in
that of some other organization, and had become as unpopular
as its rival. Twelve of the leading Baptist educators and
divines recommended that the denomination return to the
American Bible Society, allegiance to which had been broken
with such righteous indignation fifty years before. Such were
the conditions when, in April, 1879, Dr. Everts attended
meetings of the Boards of the two Baptist Bible Societies.
He was at once elected a director of both societies, and be-
came a peacemaker between the two, and urged immediate
union of Baptist forces for the better prosecution of the
work of each society. As the right to revise the English
Scriptures had been generally conceded, there was nothing
left to divide the denomination any longer. The moment
was auspicious to complete the Bible Union version. " Save
the cargo, the principle of pure versions, if one or both of
the crafts go down," he said. " Remove the scandal of divi-
sion and together appeal to the denomination once more."
Both bodies appointed committees of conference.
Meanwhile, to popularize the new movement. Dr. Everts
arranged for a mass-meeting at Martha's Vineyard that
summer, and a sermon on the fundamental importance of
" Divine Ordinances," which he preached there, was circu-
lated in an edition of ten thousand copies. Friends of both
societies were encouraged to assemble at Saratoga just before
the Baptist anniversaries of the year 1880. These, twenty-
124 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
seven in number, prepared by Dr. Everts, were discussed by
the convention, and all but two of them were adopted. Dr.
Everts, whom E. Thresher in the Journal and Messenger'
described as " the all-inspiring genius of the occasion,"
preached the sermon Sunday morning, at the close of which
the moderator, Captain Ebenezer Morgan, of Groton, Conn.,
arose and said, " This great question lies at my heart, and
takes the pre-eminence over all other calls under heaven, the
pure word of God to all the nations. If we owe anything
to our Divine Master we owe this, since it was given to us in
its purity, by Him to the apostles, by the apostles to us. ' He
that lacketh wisdom, let him ask.' I have only to ask and
I feel to do without another word ; the real necessity is upon
me, the privilege of bearing the burden in this great work.
I have had it upon my mind. I appreciate it. To-day I
would make an offering : in your presence I guarantee in five
years to pay twenty-five thousand dollars." This great gift
secured once more the long-suspended service of Dr. T. J.
Conant upon the revision of the Old Testament. It did
more. The whole denomination were compelled to commend
the gift, and thus, indirectly, the cause of English revision.
When Captain Morgan and Dr. Everts, as representatives of
the convention, in June visited Philadelphia and Boston to
secure a joint conference of representatives of the Boards of
the Publication Society and the Missionary Union, to confer
with like committees of the Bible Societies upon the best
methods of magnifying, and if possible of unifying, Baptist
Bible work, they were promised the desired co-operation, and
the conference was actually held in November. Thus the
Bible question had gained a hearing and soon became the
chief topic in the denominational papers. To make the most
of this new interest in the denomination, and to provide an
organ to advocate the new movement, Dr. Everts, in Decem-
LABORS IN BEHALF OF PURE VERSIONS OF THE BIBLE. 125
ber, induced his old friend, Captain Morgan, and members of
his church in Jersey City, to purchase the Watch- Tower, and
•to publish it in behalf of pure translations of the Bible
everywhere. Free copies of the paper were sent to the mis-
sionaries, many of whom wrote back in favor of the rehabilir
tation of a Bible Society. The Baptist Missionary Union
felt the effects of this agitation and increased its appropria-
tions for Bible work. Dr. Dean wrote from Siam, " It may
be said to the Missionary Union, thy brother, the Bible So-
ciety, is not dead, thy brother shall rise again." On the 5th
of May, 1881, the change in the constitution of the Ameri-
can and Foreign Bible Society, which Dr. Everts had been
urging for two years, was effected by the passage of a vote
that the constitution be and now is amended by striking
out the words '' and that in the distribution of the Scrip-
tures in the English language, the commonly received version
will be used until otherwise directed by the society." The
gradual enlightenment of the denomination was apparent at
the anniversaries at Indianapolis that year, when the chief
address before the Publication Society took strong ground
in favor of a pure English version. The very dread mani-
fested towards the friends of the Bible Society was a con-
fession of its rising power.
With the view of furnishing head-quarters for the Bible
Society and a location for the Bible Union Library, Dr.
Everts, in July, 1881, encouraged the two chief stockholders
in the Watch-Toioer to purchase an elegant church property
on Fifty-third Street. Here Dr. Gr. W. Samson conducted
for a time a Bible- Workers' College, and the edifice was held
by the friends of the Bible Society until the Baptist City
Mission Society secured it for a colored church.
As soon as the constitution of the American and Foreign
Bible Society had been changed, arrangements were at once
126 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
made to revise and perfect the American Bible Union Testa-
ment. This work was placed under the general direction of
Dr. J. C. Wightman, of Taunton, Mass. " May you, my
dear brother," Dr. Wightman writes, February 9, 1882, " to
whom I owe this high honor, never have occasion to regret
the kindly recommendations which you have given me." At
the Baptist anniversaries of the year 1882, the Bible Society
had recovered its former place among the great denomina-
tional societies. Jubilantly Dr. Everts writes, " The attempt
to bury the Bible Society, assuming its death or moribund
condition, has met with such resistance as to show it is still
throbbing with a vigorous, though obstructed, life. To pro-
ceed further with the funeral, considering the numbers de-
voted to the society, would be like burying a hundred persons
alive. Such premature pageant, longer persisted in, will fill
the land with scandal, discredit the undertakers^ and be fol-
lowed by a resurrection to a prolonged and effective life."
In response to a New York correspondent of the Religious
Herald^ of Richmond, Ya., who remarked, with irritation,
" But for the energy, resources, and persistency of Dr. Everts,
the Bible question would have been settled ere this," he said.
" The championship of the truth is the only leadership a
Christian should covet. Its fruit may spring up along the
path and over the graves of God's servants. We are not ready
to exchange places with our critics in the history and final judg-
ment of the great Baptist Bible movements." At the sug-
gestion of the Bible Society, concurrent action was taken by
the other denominational societies to arrange for a general
Bible Convention. The effort to secure a representation from
the churches in this convention, as in that of 1837, failed, as
did the plan to secure delegations from the Southern States,
by meeting in Cincinnati. The result was, " We went to
Saratoga with the rope around our necks, ready to be hung."
LABORS IN BEHALF OP PURE VERSIONS OP THE BIBLE. 127
But Dr. Everts secured the passage by the Bible Society of
this ultimatum to the convention : The American and Foreign
Bible Society will not dissolve unless " the continuance of the
revision of the English Scriptures on the basis of the Bible
Union revision of the New Testament and Dr. Conant's
revision of the Old Testament be provided for."
Captain Morgan had planned to complete the revision of
the Old Testament at his own expense, and had made ar-
rangements with Harper Brothers to publish the work when
completed by Dr. Conant. After expending nine thousand
dollars on the operation, the plan failed on account of an in-
junction threatened by a member of the American Bible
Union. In spite of determined opposition, the Publication
Society has sacredly honored the ultimatum of the Bible So-
ciety, and is now completing the revision of both the Old
and the New Testaments. Thus the cargo, the principle of
a pure English version, has been saved, though the crafts,
the American Bible Union and the American and Foreign
Bible Society, have both gone down. As Dr. G. W. Samson
says, " Many a cause that he loved — Bible, mission, and col-
lege work — took a shape unlike what he had conceived ; but
the Master of Assemblies was overseeing His own work,
marshalling His builders, giving every one his place to drive
a nail, but allowing no one to comprehend His plans as the
great Architect."
" Sometimes, in the crisis of a great battle," wrote Dr.
Everts, " through misapprehension of orders amid the din,
smoke, and hasty movements, the line of an army is thrown
into confusion, and divisions and battalions are found attack-
ing and slaughtering each other rather than a common enemy.
At length the smoke of battle clears away, the common banner
is seen floating over terrific and tumultuous scenes, and each
corps, battalion, regiment, and company hastens to fall into
128 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
line in its proper place, facing and fighting the common foe.
So Christendom, misapprehending the order of the Great
Commander of the sacramental host of God's elect, and fol-
lowing unauthorized standards, spends more of her resources
of culture, piety, and official organization in mutual rivalries
and antagonisms than in the spiritual conquest of the unbe-
lieving world. But when above the Babel of sects they hear
the one majestic voice of the one Lord of all, and, uplifted
above the standards of the sects, they see floating in serene
majesty the exclusive banner of the Christian faith, they will
disengage themselves from all partisan alliances and unite in
the simple order and discipline of the one apostolic church
of Christ, answering the prayer of the Messiah for His
church, ' that they may be one.' "
THE JOURNEYS END. 129
CHAPTER X.
THE journey's END.
After the termination of his successful labors in uniting
the Bible Societies and in leading the denomination to more
aggressive work in the distribution of a pure Bible, he natu-
rally found his way back to kindred and friends in Chicago.
The winter of 1886 and 1887 was spent in the South under
appointment of the Missionary Union. The specific purpose
of this tour among the home mission schools was to arouse
an interest among the colored people in the Congo mission-
field. " My men have of their own spontaneous promptings
prayed for you in the meetings," wrote Principal Ayer, of
Jackson, Miss., " and they have a certain reverence for you
which I have never seen in them for another." The students
at Spellman Seminary at Atlanta expressed the hope that
'' the near future will show a beautiful harvest in the sending
forth of missionaries to the dark continent."
Dr. Everts's reception in Chicago and Illinois, on his return
to the West in the fall of 1886, was exceedingly gratifying.
The following clipping from the church paper tells the story
of the reunion with his old people : " Welcome home. At
our last communion, on December 5, among the number of
those who received the right hand of fellowship were Dr. W.
W. Everts and his wife. The whole church, as the pastor
extended his hand, rose to their feet in token of the hearti-
ness of their welcome. There were many wet eyes as the
pastor in appropriate words referred to the noble work which
9
130 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
Dr. Everts had done during his long and laborious ministry
in Chicago, to the eminent sagacity he displayed in the
choice of the church's present location, and the broad and
deep foundations that he laid, upon which the church now
so solidly rests, for all of which his successors in ofl&ce should
never cease to be profoundly thankful. Dr. Everts, himself,
was deeply moved, as well he might be, and all felt that the
occasion was one of very deep and tender interest."
Then, at the next meeting of the State Convention at Rock
Island, to his surprise he was elected Moderator of that body.
To this honor at the hands of his own denomination was
added another from others in the presidency of the Illinois
Sabbath Association. But he was not content with honors,
for his restless energy sought an outlet in ministering to strug-
gling city missions and suburban churches. His pen was
kept busy in furnishing optimistic articles for the press,
and especially in putting in prominent form the ideas and
principles to which his life had been devoted. This was done
in a volume entitled " The Christian Apostolate," and as he
finished the last page he exclaimed " I have an impression I
will finish my life with my book."
The heart which had inspired so many was now incapable
of sustaining the life of one, and, according to his predic-
tion, life and book were finished together, September 25,
1890. With eye undimmed, with faith undaunted, with
hope that never questioned the ultimate realization of the
principles to which his life had been so ardently devoted,
he heard the knocking of his Master at the door, and as a
watchful servant he arose to let him in. " If true of any
man since the author of the sentence, ' I have finished my
course, I have kept the faith,' it is true of Dr. Everts." So
wrote Mr. Arthur Peter, from Louisville.
On the following Sabbath afternoon a great concourse of
THE journey's end. 131
people gathered to his burial. There was the silver-haired
clerk who wrote the letter inviting him to Chicago in 1852, a
deacon who had served with him in Louisville, pastors whom
he had helped at dedications and in revivals, brethren from the
feeble churches who were always stronger after meeting him,
many whom he had baptized, representatives of other denom-
inations, rabbis, priests, leaders in reform, and noble women
not a few. " Though more than a decade had passed since
he ceased his active ministrations in this city, he seems to
be as vividly and gratefully remembered as though he
had vacated the pastoral office only yesterday. And that
this should be the fact in a city so changeful as Chicago
speaks volumes as to the depth and permanence of the im-
pression left by his life and labors."
The Rev. Dr. P. S. Henson delivered the following beauti-
ful eulogy : " ' May my death be that of the righteous, and
may my last end be like his.' It seems to be appropriate that
his own pastor should lay the first wreath upon this coffin.
And yet not a wreath, but just a few flowers of memory
fragrant at least with love, however lacking they may be
in beauty. It was my privilege to be his pastor. He had
been my predecessor. It is not commonly counted by a pastor
a privilege to be the pastor of his predecessor, and yet out of
the depths of my heart I want to say that no pastor ever had
a truer yoke-fellow, ever had a more earnest co-laborer, ever
had a more faithful counsellor or a truer friend, and, as Jacob
said, ' If I am bereaved, I am bereaved indeed.' My arm
is weaker and my heart is fainter and my way is lonelier be-
cause he is gone, and this church is poorer, and this city and
this world. I honored and revered him, I loved him,
and he was worthy of it all. He was a man every inch, an
honest man, a Christian man, a noble man, a man of convic-
tion,— as you know and as all know, — deep-rooted, intense,
132 THE LIFE OF REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
a part of his being ; and he had the courage of his con-
victions.
" If you look for his prototype in God's book, you will find
it in Caleb. Caleb said, ' Let us go up and possess the land.
Let us at once go up and possess the land, for we are able to
overcome it.' So spake. Caleb, and so spake William Wallace
Everts. They said he was visionary — so they said of Caleb ;
impracticable — so they said of Caleb. And when Caleb was
now an old man he crossed the Jordan with his fellow-patriot,
Joshua, and they asked him what he would take as his choice,
what should be the portion of his inheritance, and he said, ' I
am not so young as I used to be, but there is still some fire in
my bones. I said we could thresh the sons of Anak, and I see
them now. They are insolent yonder amid the crags of that
stronghold of theirs in this mountain. Give me this moun-
tain ! Not some fair, fat valley, far toward yonder sea, but
give me this mountain !' And he stormed that mountain, he
threshed the sons of Anak out, and made it his strong-
hold. Our beloved brother was a warrior, A hero of
DAUNTLESS COURAGE. He never sighed for a soft place, but
evermore his language was, ' Give me this mountain,' and many
a mountain did he storm, many a stronghold did he take. An
intrepid leader, and God blessed him with intrepid followers.
You know how he carried himself among you here. You
know, like Henry of Navarre, he led in battle, and where the
plume of your chieftain waved you followed in the ranks of
war. A soldier, courageous, with convictions, having faith in
God and faith in the future of God's cause in the world.
" And while he had convictions, and the courage of his con-
victions, he had a charity as broad as humanity. The most
chivalrous of warriors was he ; no trace of unkindness, mag-
nanimous, generous. He fought when principle was at stake,
and yet even to a foe he showed generousness and love. No
THE journey's END. 133
malice bore he to any living man, nor did I ever hear those
now sealed lips utter a word of bitterness. I have listened to
him when, with tongue of fire, trumpet-tongued, he thun-
dered his convictions, but never were those lips defiled with
words of bitterness that ever I heard. He was a man op
GREAT BREADTH. He loved the world. He longed for the
salvation of the world. He loved this church. God only
knows how he loved it. He laid its foundation-stone, its top-
stone. He rejoiced over it as a father over a child. He
wrought his love into these walls, and they resounded with his
eloquence. He loved this church. But he was not bounded
by this church. He loved this city. He believed in
Chicago. But he was larger than Chicago. He loved
this country. He believed in America. If ever a patri-
otic heart beat in a human bosom, it was that heart in
that bosom. But he was broader than America. His field
was the world. For it he prayed. He was a foreign mis-
sionary. His sympathies went out to the ends of the earth.
He loved his denomination. He was a Baptist out and out,
through and through, on conviction. He had the courage of
his convictions, and in no presence did he hesitate to utter his
conviction. But he loved all that loved the Lord Jesus Christ
in sincerity, and the presence on this platform of the rep-
resentatives of other denominations, the presence in this audi-
ence of the representatives of all denominations, declares how,
in spite of the thoroughness of his denominational beliefs and
his fearlessness in their proclamation, he impressed himself upon
all this great community as a man of the broadest and most
CATHOLIC Christian sympathies. A more unselfish man
never lived. His last thought was of himself.
" There were some things that he dearly loved, and that
he thoroughly believed in. First of all, in the Lord Jesus
Christ, whose loyal, devoted servant he was through all
134 THE LIFE OF REV- W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
these years of battle. And he loved the old book (point-
ing to the great Bible on the desk). If there was anything
on earth that he loved, it was that book ; anything in this
world that he believed in, it was that book. The great pur-
pose of his life and desire was to give that book to the
world. You remember how devoted he was to the interests
of the Bible Society, whose purpose it was to give that word
in its absolute purity to all the world. He loved that book.
He believed that if salvation is to come to this world it is to
come out of that book. And so he hugged it to his heart,
and cherished it as his life-blood.
" He was full of enthusiasm. A characteristic thing about
him was conviction, courage, faith in God, a faith so strong
that he was inspired with enthusiasm in pursuit of it, and
even to life's latest hour so joyous, exuberant, bounding,
buoyant, full of zeal, full of that spirit of spontaneous,
gushing, hearty sympathy with all things beautiful and noble,
that it was a refreshment and an inspiration to commune with
him. His eye was not dimmed nor his natural force abated.
Only yesterday, it seems to me, I saw him as he marched
the streets like a soldier. We walked together, arm in arm,
and his invincible buoyancy asserted itself. As we neared
his home he said, ' I feel better now.'
" I thank God that he was spared to see the dawn of a new
day. If there was anything that came nearer than all other
things to breaking his heart, it was the terrible disaster that
overtook our educational interest. The Theological Seminary
had its origin in his study. To the work of education he
was devoted all through life, and when the University, the
old University, toppled to its fall, he bowed his head like Eli
in the gate when the ark of God was taken. But when the
new day dawned he was exultant and jubilant ; he felt like
Simeon when he said, ' Now, Lord, lettest Thou Thy servant
THE JOURNEY S END. 135
depart in peace, for mine eyes have seen Thy salvation.'
And in his home, when the last million crowned the noble
benefioence of Mr. Rockefeller, he could scarcely refrain from
shoutiog, such was his exultant joy. The day before his
death he put the last touches to his life's crowning work,
' The Christian Apostle.' ' It seems to be finished,' he said,
* that I should go now. My life work is done. My book is
done. My work is done.' And the next day he closed his
eyes. God said. It is enough, it is enough ; come up
higher. A great man has fallen in Israel. May his mantle
fall on his unworthy successor."
The following poem, written by his life friend. Dr. W. C.
Richards, was then read by the author :
When at the dawn I learned that thou wast dead,
A numbness seized this heart of mine ;
Its strength, its joy, its consciousness had fled ;
It failed, but only not like thine.
Thou dead ! and since the sun of yesterday
Had in the western sky declined,
My half-bewildered senses gone astray —
I queried had it ever shined.
How could I less than seem with thee to die, —
Thou but some short, quick steps in front, —
And always brave and strong with conflict nigh,
To shrink not from the battle's brunt.
Thou wert a warrior from thine ardent youth,
Yet never gentler soul drew breath ;
Thy zeal was that for God, and man and truth,
And loyal to thy Lord to death !
Schoolmates, companions, comrades, friends,
Our hands nigh sixty years had grasped ;
Nor faithful memory one glance backward sends.
Where only hands — not hearts — were clasped.
136 THE LIFE OP REV. W. W. EVERTS, D.D.
My "brother bt a fatherhood divine,
So near me then, I saw thy face.
And pressed thy hand, — thy summons was not mine ;
And thou alone hast done the race.
And it is mine still less to say, " Well done !" "
And if I might, mute yet these lips ;
As stars fade out before the shining sun,
Thy Master's words must mine eclipse.
And His ""Well done !" has greeted now thine ear
And rapt thy soul to ecstasy ;
My faith the marvellous echo seems to hear
KoU softly o'er the jasper sea.
Who called thee from us, "doeth all things well,"
And He in perfect time and way
Eent thy pure spirit from its mortal spell,
And to a crown transformed its clay.
" Well done of heaven in this" — my faint lips sigh —
To take thee ere I saw the sign ;
Farewell, sweet, sainted soul, now throned on high,
Till I shall share thy bliss divine.
If such my faith, O widow, daughters, son.
Who droop and weep beneath Death's pall,
Kestrain your tears. His life is just begun;
In God's great home he waits you all !
THE END.
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