Yale University Library •^ %? >^. .. f '^^r?^' 39002007021398 1 If .^f ft' * *f -¦•-3'' ^ ¦* * -¦ •" I J. .... ' , .1 . ^ '¦ 1' I'S '*' *¦ h 1 jU''- - (U-^^'^ C^-^\^\_ PAGES EARLY HISTORY WEST AND NORTH-WEST: EMBRACINQ ¦REMINISCENCES AND INCIDENTS OF SETTLEMENT AND GROWTH, AND SKETCHES OF THE MATERIAL AND RELIGIOUS PROGRESS STATES OF OHIO, INDIANA, ILLINOIS, AND MISSOURI, ESPECIAL REFERENCE TO THE HISTORY OF METHODISM. REV. S. R. BEGGS. CINCINNATI: PRINTED AT, THE METHODIST BOOK CONCERN. K. P. THOMPSON, PEINTEE. 1868. Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1868, by S. R. BEGGS, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of Ohio. CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. Paoe. Autobiographical — ^Ancestry — Life in Southern Indiana — Con version 9 CHAPTER n. Early Methodism in Indiana — Notable Preachers — Confer ences — Districts and Circuits 17 CHAPTER ni. Compilations from Smith's "Indiana Miscellany" 31 CHAPTER IV. The Same continued — The Pious Wife and Impenitent Hus band — Remarkable Conversion 44 CHAPTER V. Received into Missouri Conference — Remarkable Experiences in the Primitive Itinerancy 61 CHAPTER VI. Introduction to the Illinois Work — Minutes of the First Con ference ..r. 69 CHAPTER VII. Pioneer Experiences — Home Again — Pleasant Conference Occa sions 67 CHAPTER VIII. Quakers and Infidels at a Methodist Meeting — A Primitive Baptism -. 75 4 CONTENTS. CHAPTER IX. Page. Marriage — Rough Experiences of a Young Bride — Painful and Perilous Journeyings ., 81 CHAPTER X Mission Work in Chicago, 1831-32 — Terrors of au Indian Raid— A Home-Made Fort 94 CHAPTER XI. Privations in Chicago — Division of Illinois Conference-^Inci- dents of Labor 103 CHAPTER Xn. A Clear Conversion — Statistics of Desplaines Mission — Rock River Conference formed 114 CHAPTER XIII. History of Peoria — A Curious Church-Building Enterprise... i22 CHAPTER XIV. Sketch of Rev. Jesse Walker — Interesting Narrative from his own Manuscript 131 CHAPTER XV. Statistics of Early Methodism in the Fox River Region — Au rora and Ottowa 143 CHAPTER XVI. Early Methodism in Middle Illinois — Sangamon County — ^First Settlement of Peoria , 151 CHAPTER XVII. Miscellaneous Statistics — The Plainfield Work — How Roberts became Bishop 161 CHAPTER XVIII. Biographical Episode — The Author's Work and Experiences on the Christian Commission, in 1864 169 CONTENTS. 0 CHAPTER XIX. Paob. Chicago Methodism — Great Religious Struggle and Victory.... 175 CHAPTER XX. The First Chicago Churches — Canal-Street, Clark-Street, and Indiana-Street 182 CHAPTER XXI. The Chicago Indian Massacre of 1812 — Mrs. Kinzie's Narrative 191 CHAPTER XXn. Mrs. Einzie's Narrative continned 200 CHAPTER XXTTT. The Author's Observations on the Indian Character — Causes of the Sauk War 213 CHAPTER XXrV. Indian Anecdotes — ^How Jesse Walker dealt with them 221 CHAPTER XXV. Chicago — Origin of Name — Incidents of Early Settlement — First Methodist Preaching 227 CHAPTER XXVI. Our Publishing Interests — The Methodist Book Concerns in New York and Cincinnati 236 CHAPTER XXVU. First Baptist Church in Plainfield — Methodism in Plainfield.. 241 CHAPTER XXVin. A Sketch of Methodism in Lockport 249 CHAPTER XXIX. History of the Illinois and Michigan Canal — A Great Under taking under Great Difficulties 260 b CONTENTS. CHAPTER XXX. Page. A Sketch of the Conversion and Ministry of Rev. John Hill — Extraordinary Effects of his Preaching 268 CHAPTER XXXI. Anecdotes of Bishops Roberts and Soule — Singular Incident — Sketches of Western Methodism 274 CHAPTER XXXII. Western Methodism — James B. Finley — Nolley — Bangs — M'Kendree 293 CHAPTER XXXIII. Administration of Discipline — Rev. John Sinclair 301 CHAPTER XXXIV. First Session of Eock Eiver Conference 311 CHAPTER XXXV. The Prairie State — Its Beauty, Resources, Population, and Destiny 317 CHAPTER XXXVI. St. Louis in the Olden Time— Its First Newspaper — ^Progress of Methodism in Illinois 321 INTRODUCTION. BY T. M. EDDY, D. D. Yeabs ago, when the writer first came to the North-West, among his earliest and most hearty greetings waa one from Stephen R. Beggs. We found so pleasant a spirit, so happy a disposition, so cheerful a retrospect that we sought further acquaintance. His experience ran back into pioneer days, swept along the rough places, and wound among the bridle paths of frontier settlements. So interesting were his reminis cences that, at our request, he wrote a portion of them, which appeared in successive numbers of the North-Western Christian Advocate. A;:tless, natural, just, they attracted favorable atten tion, and called out an expression favorable to publication in a more extended and permanent form. The thought of a hook came to him as an amazement. He, Stephen R. Beggs, become the author of a duodecimo volume I He had never thought of entering into history, much less writ ing it. When he made his way from one appointment to another by blazed trees, and stood up on a puncheon floor and preached in the dim glare of one or two tallow candles, kept alight by the snuffing of backwoods fingers, he would have laughed outright at the prediction that he should ever make a book to be read by the light streaming into richly carpeted parlors from patent gas-burners. ' Yet why not? These early Methodist pioneers have led an eventful life, and its record is almost as marvelous as any thing 0 INTEODUCTION. in the annala of chivalry, and possesses the glitter of romance They have a knowledge of persons, places, and events essential to a perfect history of our Church in the West, and, unless writ ten, it dies with them. Written, and not printed, it will be of no service to the future historian. A few years ago autobiographic literature waa overdone, and yet the poorest, stalest, and least enduring had its value, and from such ephemeral annals will history be enriched. The author was at the laying of foundations in the North- West, both political and ecclesiastical. He was in Chicago ere it was Chicago. He rocked the cradle of young Methodism here, but, musical as he ia, would never sing to it a lullaby. He has told the story aa he knew it, and as other careful observers have recited it. He was here among the Indian troubles when Black Hawk was devastating the country, and that, too, is told. He has labored in Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, and Missouri when there was more hard work than pecuniary compensation. With his own experience he has connected anecdotes, sketches, stray waifs of biography, and incidents in danger of being lost He sends it forth, especially commending it to his old friends, the associates, lay and cleric, of earlier days. There are many yet living, for of tough stock and hardy fiber were those pioneer folks. They will read, and "remember the days of former times." We commend it to younger readers. It is well to see, amid our present, what was the character of our near past Those days can never come again; changes of population and society make them impossible. The scream of the locomotive has scared the saddle-bags out of sight, and almost out of existence. New duties, new conflicts, new responsibilities are upon us. But let us keep in sympathy with the heroic aggressions, the chivalrous spirit, the daring and doing which made "the paths straight" for our present For this there is nothing like the facts as they were, and some of them the author h^s told. Office North -Westeen Christian Advocate, ) Chicago, April 25, 1868. J PAGES feig pstorg of % Mtsi anb Sort^-Mtst. CHAPTER I. Mt great-grandfathers were born, the one, James Beggs, in Ireland; the other, Charles Barns, in America, of English extraction. One of my great- grandmothers was born in Ireland, the other in En gland; the maiden name of one being Hardy, of the other, M'Dow. My grandfather, Thomas Beggs, was a native of New Jersey, where he married Sarah Barnes, and afterward emigrated to Virginia. He lived in Eockingham county, till the breaking - out of the Eevolutionary War. He joined the pa triot army, and became an officer in the commissary department, and died of camp fever in 1779 or 1780. He had four sons and one daughter. His three oldest sons had large families — that of John consisting of one son, James, and eight daughters. James had four sons — Charles, John, Stephen, and Thomas. John married Hannah Barnes; James married Mary Custer; and Charles married Dorothy Trumbow. 10 EAELY HISTORY OF THE All settled at an early day in Clark county, Indiana, John Beggs was Judge of the Court; James was State Senator for nine years, joining the Methodist Episcopal Church in 1791; Charles was a member of the Legislature for several years, and served as Captain of a light-horse company in the Indian War, participating in the battle of Tippecanoe. He moved to Illinois, in 1829. He still lives, at the advanced age of ninety-two ; and during the Eebellion was as bitter against the " Tories," as he. termed the rebels, as his family had been in '76. My father and moth er, James Beggs and Mary Custer, were members of the Methodist Church from 1791 to the day of their death, a period of three-fourths of a century ; ' and if I am an ultra Methodist, I came honestly by it. I was born in Eockingham county, Virginia, March 30, 1801. When I was four years old, my father moved West, stopping about two years in Kentucky ; and then settling in Clark county, Indiana, on the Ohio Eiver, about seventeen miles above the falls at Louisville, where my father passed the rest of his life. My father had scarcely cleared off a small piece of ground — he had bought a heavily timbered farm of one hundred and sixty acres — and erected a log cabin, when the whole family, father, mother, and five children, myself excepted, were taken sick with chills and fever. In the absence of a physician, a brother Methodist admiiiistered the novel remedy, calomel; and we all soon became convalescent. WEST AND NORTH-WEST. 11 Father, however, attempted work too soon, and one damp day took a cold, which resulted in an attack of rheumatism that kept him laid up for nine years, unable to do a day's work. This was a sore afflic tion to us all, especially to mother, upon whom it imposed heavy responsibilities. . These misfortunes induced father to exchange his large farm for a smaller one, with some improvements. My elder brothers held the plow, and I drove or rode the team; and we thus managed to raise grain enough for the supply of the family and the stock through the first Winter. Subsequently, father was elected to the Legislature, finally serving as a Senator more than ten years, greatly to the comfort of his family. He was a great stickler for grammar, receiving the name of " Mr. Syntax," by which he was known for years. Among other deprivations consequent on the new ness of the country, was that of shoes. I was seven years old before I ever rejoiced in the possession of a pair. Little did my parents or I myself see, in this pioneer life of the boy, God's hardening process, preparatory for the hardships of the uncultivated fields of his vineyard. During our youth we enjoyed all the manly out door sports, such as hunting, wrestling, jumping, ball-playing, etc.; but swearing, lying, and dancing were eschewed and detested. As for dancing, I felt something as Daniel Webster expressed it, who said he never had sense enough to learn. It really 12 EARLY HISTOEY OF THE seemed such hard work, that I had a fellow-feeling with the heathen, who, seeing how hard people exerted themselves in that " amusement," wondered why they did not make their servants dance as well as do the rest of their drudgery. My father, though not a very large man, was very athletic. I had the reputation of being the strongest man in Clark county. John Strange, one day, saw me walking at a~ short distance; and stop ping in amazement at my apparent strength, said that if I could only get my feet properly set, I could rock the earth. I was just six, feet in hight, and weighed from one hundred and eighty-five to one hundred and ninety-nine pounds. I have passed a generally healthy life; and now, 1868, my health is good, my lungs sound, and I am free from dyspepsia, or other chronic ailment. What little schooling we got was in the Winter, in a school-house, which it may be worth while to describe: built of round logs; the window, a rude opening filled with white paper, greased with lard to admit the light; the- benches made of "slabs" split from logs, and so high that the smaller chil dren's feet could not touch the ground, that being all the floor we had; one entire end of the structure being used for a fireplace, the chimney built of split sticks, plastered over with mortar. With the im provement of the country, our advantages became greater. The old Dillworth spelling-book used to cost one dollar, equal to four dollars of our money. WEST AND NORTH-WEST. 13 From early youth I had a desire to become a preacher. This I manifested in conducting meetings in innocent play among the children, or alone in the deep forest, going through with the regular order of exercises. I learned to think that if a man could read, and write, and sing, and pray, he had about all the qualifications needed for the itinerant work. When I was about twelve years of age, the Indian troubles began in Scott and Clark counties. My fears I can vividly recall.. I expected the savages would kill me; felt that I was not prepared to die, and would have ma^de any sacrifice, could I have felt that I -was not an accountable being. When the news came of the " Pigeon- Eoost mas sacre," nearly all the settlers north of us fled across the Ohio, leaving their effects behind. Eeturning, they built a fortification around my father's house, which was of stone. Here they remained for days, in constant expectation of the Indians. Several block-houses were built to the north of us, the occu pants of which would flee to our fort on every fresh alarm. The " Pigeon-Eoost massacre," of which I spoke, occurred at a settlement of that name, formed in 1809, and which, confined to a square mile of land, was five or six miles distant from neighboring settlements. On the afternoon of the third of September, 1812, Jeremiah Payne and a man by the name of Kauff- mann, were surprised and killed by a party of Indi ans while at work in the woods, about two miles 14 EARLY HISTORY OF THE from the settlement. The Indians then — Shawnees, ten or twelve in number — attacked the settlement about sunset, and murdered one man, five women, and sixteen children. The bodies of some of the victims were burned in the cabins where they were slaughtered. Mrs. John Biggs alone escaped wifli her three small children, reaching a settlement six miles distant near daylight. A number of the miiitia of Clark county proceeded to the scene of the massacre, where they found only the mangled and half-consumed bodies of the dead, and the ruins of the houses; aryi the remains were all buried in one grave. From a child I enjoyed the advantages of relig ious education, and was taught at school, as well as at home, to read the Bible. I formed the habit of prayer very young, and continued it regularly till my conversion in the nineteenth year of my age. At that time I visited a camp meeting at Jacobs' camp-grounds; seven miles above Louisville, which began October 6th. On Sabbath afternoon, after a powerful sermon by Eev. James Ward, of the Ken tucky Conference, I took my place at the altar, among seekers of religion. The deliverance, on which I had fixed my determination, did not come till sunset. I can never forget those first bright joys of pardoned sin, nor cease recalling, when I think of that blessed hour, the shouts of joy that arose like the "sounds of many waters," "Glory to God in the highest !" multiplied, as tHey were, by WEST AND NORTH-WEST. 15 scores, till two hundred were converted. Among these seven of us were licensed to preach, the most of whom entered the itinerant work. Soon after my probation expired I was appointed assistant class-leader. It was a heavy cross to ad dress in reproof and exhortation, as well as comfort, the old alike with the young; yet I found, as I have ever found. His grace sufficient for me. I was soon afterward licensed to exhort, by Eev. Samuel Glaze. Blessed in these labors, I was speedily licensed to preach. I had long felt this necessity laid upon me, though I shrank from the great duty; but the resolution once formed, and the step taken, I felt wonderfully blest. This occurred at the local con ference at a quarterly camp meeting near Salem, Indiana. I resolved that after two years' schooling, I would offer myself to the Annual Conference as a pro bationer. Eev. James Armstrong, who succeeded Eev. C. Enter — under whose untiring labors six hundred had been added to the Church on the cir cuit—insisted that I should at once receive a recom mendation to the next Annual Conference, which was to be held at St. Louis that Fall. He held that I could better receive my education and graduate in the "Brush College," as most of our preachers had done. After much anxious and prayerful reflection, I finally said: "Here am I." My recommendation was presented, and I was received; and glad am I to this day that I began when I did and as I did. 16 EARLY HISTORY OF THE This one lesson I learned : to look to the Lord, whence cometh our help. I know that I have thus formed a habit of trust stronger than I should have done, had I waited to receive a liberal education. Yet I realize what a blessing and what a power a sanctified education is. The great revival above mentioned was attended with many extraordinary physical manifestations, in which both the converted and the unconverted were alike exercised. Some laughed so excessively and so long that it seemed as though they would literally " die laughing." Bending backward as far as they could, they would laugh at the top of their voice, then bending forward almost to the ground, they would continue till they well-nigh lost breath, then straightening- up and catching breath, they would renew their convulsive laughter, repeating the same phenomena for an hour or more, till completely exhausted they would fall down in a swoon. The "jerks" were also very common in the prayer meet ings, particularly among the women. Sordetimes three or four were affected at once, being thrown flat on the floor, and when forced to their feet by a couple of strong men, "jerked " irresistibly back and forth. Often have I seen a frail woman surpass the utmost strength of two strong men. Elder Hamilton was preaching on one occasion when several became affected in this way. It pre vented his going on with his discourse, as he thought it all assumed, or at least a thing which could be WEST AND NORTH-WEST. 17 controlled. That very night, however, after retiring, he was himself seized with the "jerks." On finding them to be a reality, he fervently prayed the good Lord to deliver him from what he considered an affliction, promising that if similar occurrences took place again at his meetings, he would make the best of it. They were so prevalent in places, in these early days, that Peter Cartwright said that he had heard of the dogs and hogs having them; a fact to which brother John Stewart bears the testimony of personal observation. Brother Cartwright tells of one man whose neck was actually broken while thus exercised. The falling "exercise" was also very common; those affected by it lying apparently lifeless for hours. The subjects returned to consciousness with a bound, and generally with a shout of "Glory to God!" President Edwards, for his personal satisfaction, ex amined carefully into these phenomena, and gave it as his deliberate conviction, that these "foxfire" and "wildfire" conversions, as they were termed, were often among the most powerful and lasting that he had ever witnessed. 2 18 EARLY HISTOEY OF THE CHAPTER II. As early as 1802 Methodists ventured within the present limits of Indiana, among its few scattered settlers. The first was Nathan Eobertson, who moved from Kentucky to Charlestown, Clark county, in 1779. Three years later % small class was organ ized near Charlestown. This class built the first chapel in the State, on David Eoland's land. This was afterward burned down, and another erected a mile farther north, called Gassaway, or Salem meet ing-house. It was made of hewed logs, and still stands in a good state of preservation, though not used for worship. In the old church-yard in which it stands, lie the remains of my revered father and mother, of two brothers and a sister, all members of the Methodist Church. Within the walls of this church I was faithfully warned to flee from the wrath to come,: and pointed to the Lamb of God, who taketh away the sins of the world, by some of the best men the Church has ever produced. The class was very strong in faith and in numbers, em bracing a hundred members at the close of Calvin Euter's Conference year, 1820. Wm. Cravens made a practice of meeting the class . at his appointments, where he would examine each member, asking them if they drankr strong drink. WEST AND NORTH-WEST. 19 All who confessed to doing so and who would not promise total abstinence, he would direct to sit on a separate bench. At the close of the class meeting he- would have a prayer meeting in their behalf. If no reformation followed these efforts, he had them tried promptly and turned out of the Church. He was a very large man and of great strength. His sermons were original and powerful. His eccentric ity was proverbial. In one of his sermons before election he said he would as soon vote for a horse- thief as a dram-drinker or whisky distOler. Ou one occasion, in caUing for mourners, he set out three benches, one for seekers of religion, one for backsliders, and the other for hypocrites, and they all had occupants. On the hypocrite bench was a man who had two wives. Cravens was soon by his side, and said: "I understand that you have two wives; are you determined now to forsake this woman and go and live with your lawful wife?" The man replied "no." "Be off, then," said Cra vens; "you can't get religion here!" He could strike as hard in a few words as any man I ever heard. Once he was preaching at a camp meeting. Among the preachers on the platform were a slave owner and a lawyer. Speaking of the qualifications of the ministry, he said he "would as soon hear a negro play a banjo, or a raccoon squeal, as to hear a negro-holder or a petty lawyer preach;" then turning abruptly to the two men he exclaimed, 20 EARLY HISTOEY OF THE "How dare you lay your bloody hands on this Sacred Book!" He termed all instruments of music introduced into churches wooden gods. Eev. Mr. Fillmore once preached where brother Abbot led the singing in a choir in which they had instru- m'ental music. After the service he asked brother Abbot how he liked the music, whose only reply was, " Your wooden brother did very well to-day." A bass-viol being once introduced into a choir when Cartwright preached, he announced the hymn with the invitation, "We will fiddle to the Lord, my brethren." Brother A. E. Phelps told me the fol lowing story of the manner in which Eev. J. Gruber once disposed of a choir difficulty: there being a division in the choir, he wished to have the whole matter turned over to him. When the choir began to sing he began to roar on a shell which he had procured. This, of course, put a stop to the sing ing. On the choir starting again at his request, he began to blow again, exclaiming, "I can't sing, but I am a roarer on this shell!" To Joseph Williams belongs the honor of being the first itinerant preacher appointed to a circuit in Indiana. In 1809 the Indiana district was formed, embracing the entire area of the territories of Indi ana, Illinois, and Missouri. Samuel Parker was the first presiding elder. In this year Silver Creek cir cuit was formed. It embraced all the settlements in the southern part of Indiana, reaching up the Ohio Eiver to Whitewater circuit. Josiah Crawford WEST AND NORTH-WEST. 21 had charge of it; returning a membership of one hundred and eighty-eight. In 1810 Silver Creek waa a part of Green Eiver district, Wm. Burke presiding elder, and Sela Paine preacher in charge. This district embraced, besides Silver Creek, the foUowing circuits : Green Eiver, Bacren, Wayne, Cumberland, DanvUle, Salt Eiver, and Shelby. The Indiana dis trict was composed of Illinois, Missouri, Maramack, Coldwater, Cape Girardeau, and Vincennes circuits, Samuel Parker presiding elder. At the close of this year, 1810, SUver Creek returned four hundred and forty-eight members. In 1811 Wm. Burke was presiding elder on Green Eiver district, and Isaac Lindsey had charge of Silver Creek circuit. The number of members returned was 397. The total number returned from Indiana was 1,160. In 1812 two additional circuits were formed in Indiana, m Lawrenceburg and Patoka. Silver Creek was this year connected, under the charge of Wm. M'Mahon, with Salt Eiver district, James Ward presiding elder. In 1815 the Western Conference was divided into the Ohio and Tennessee Conferences. The Indiana circuits were assigned to two different Conferen ces; Whitewater and Lawrenceburg in the Miami district, and Silver Creek in Salt Eiver district, being within the bounds of the Ohio Conference. The total membership in the State was 2,176 — all gathered in within five years. In 1814 Charles Harrison was appointed to Silver Creek, Jesse Walker presiding elder. The number of members 22 EARLY HISTORY OF THE reported in Indiana was 1,759. In 1815, 1,504 were returned, the decrease being due to the War. Shadrach Euark was preacher in charge on Silver Creek circuit, Charles Holliday presiding elder. In 1816 Joseph Kinkaid went to Silver Creek. This year Blue Eiver was detached from Silver Creek circuit, under the charge of John Shrader. It ex tended down the Ohio and out to the head waters of the Patoka. There were now six circuits in Indi ana, with a membership of 1,877. In 1817 Joseph Pownal was sent to Silver Creek, and John Cord to Blue Eiver, Samuel H. Thompson presiding elder. This year there were six circuits in Indiana, with a membership of 1,907. In 1818 John Cord was sent to Silver Creek. A new circuit, Little Pigeon, was established; seven in all, with nine preachers and 3,044 members. I have been thus particular about the introduction of Methodism into Indiana, of the districts of that Conference, and especially of Silver Creek circuit, because it was there that I passed so much of my early life and entered upon the work of the ministry. Brother Wm. C. Smith thinks that the first Indiana meeting-house was erected in 1808. It was in this year that the first circuit — White water — was formed. I think the claim to precedence lies between the Meek's Church-, as it was termed, and the Eobertson meeting-house, three miles north of Charlestown, Clark county. There was also one built at an early day near my father's. The date WEST AND NORTH-WEST. 23 I can not give. It was the first that I recollect attending. Thomas AUen and James Garner were the preachers. I told a playmate that I liked the former the best, because he did not swear so much as old brother Garner. That building was subse quently burned, and afterward the old Salem meet ing-house was erected one mile further north. Since the first rude log cabin meeting-house was erected in Indiana, the work of church-building has gone on, till the number reaches about 1,300 ; many of them magnificent buildings, costing from thirty to seventy thousand dollars. What has God wrought through this "pioneer" Methodist Episcopal Church 1 Wm. C. Smith thinks the first camp meeting in In diana was held in Wayne county. I think that about the same time we held one on the Eobinson camp-ground, Clark county. Brother Smith, in his sketch of Miami district, says that T. Nelson and S. H. Thompson, who preached on Whitewater circuit in 1810, then went to Kentucky — NoUechuckie circuit — and neither of them ever returned to Indiana to labor. S. H. Thompson was on the Illinois district in 1817, and I recollect distinctly his sermon at our quarterly meeting at old Salem meeting-house, Clark county. His powerful sermon and his fresh, manly look, all left an ineffaceable impression on my mind. I thought him one of the handsomest men I had ever seen. He was so good a hand at soliciting aid for our Church charities, that he bore the name of 24 . EAELY HISTOEY OF THE "beggar-general." His strong appeals were almost resistless. On one occasion he closed his appeal by telling the people to come forward and lay their offerings on the table. Among those who responded was a gentleman who put his hand deep into his pocket and took out a handful of silver to get some change. Thompson saw him, and, as if supposing that he intended to lay all upon the table, exclaimed at the top of his voice, " Thank God for; one liberal soul!" By this time all eyes were fixed on the " liberal " gentleman, who could not help laying down the entire handful. But Thompson illustrated his precept in this respect by example. He generally headed the contribution; and so generous was he in his offerings, that he not infrequently had to'borrow money to get home with. Indeed, he was hardly an exception. The liberality of the Methodist preach ers was remarkable; giving beyond their means, they yet realized that it was more blessed to give than to receive. In this connection, I may appropriately introduce some account of the early history of Methodism in Northern Indiana, with sketches of a few of the prominent preachers. Among the many whom I heard preach, were brothers A. Joslin, James Con- well, A. Wood, James Havens, John Morrow, J. Strange, A. WUey, J. L. Thompson, Calvin Enter, James Armstrong, George Hester, and Eichard Har- grave. Wiley was a superb preacher; beginning slowly, and deliberately, and cautiously, but surely WEST AND NORTH-WEST. 25 making his way to the hearts of his congregation, till his deep feeUngs seemed to take charge of his tongue, and his whole soul would be poured out with his words. His appeals, always affecting, were some times overwhelming. James Havens, as the Hon. 0. H. Smith describes him, may be justly termed the Napoleon of Method ism in Eastern Indiana. He was hard to handle, physically, as weU as inteUectuaUy ; his strength of muscle being equal to his mental powers. At one of the ConnersviUe circuit camp meetings, I once saw him, just as Strange was beginning his Sabbath morning sermon, take hold of a ruffian who was making a disturbance at the altar. He threw him Uterally " heels over head," giving him a tremendous fall, then holding him so fast as almost to strangle him; having fairly subdued him, he took the hum bled rowdy to head-quarters for trial. Strange preached a most powerful sermon, resulting in the conversion of many souls. 0. H. Smith regards Strange as one of the most effective preachers he ever heard. He does not hesitate to say that Indi ana owes him a special debt of gratitude for his efforts through a long, laborious Ufe, to form her new society on the enduring basis of morality and education. A. Wood, D. D., and myself, were both young men when we became acquainted. He bid fair, at an early age, to become a useful man. He had a sound mind, a most felicitous elocution, and a zeal 26 EARLY HISTORY OF THE without bound. He preached always with aU his power, frequently becoming so exhausted as to fall helpless into the arms of those near him. He still enjoys the best of health in his green old age. The following sketches from his pen will give value to this book, written in reply to a request to furnish some recollections of the early Methodist societies in Laporte county, Indiana. He prefaces his personal sketches with some valuable statistics of the early Conferences: " Previous to the year A. D. 1832, all the settle ments of Northern Indiana were visited by mission aries from Michigan, which was then in what was called the 'North Ohio Conference.' "Erastus Felton, in 1830, and L. B. Gurley, in 1831, preached in Laporte county. But in 1832 there was made an ' Indiana Conference,' and James Armstrong was appointed missionary. He moved to the county and settled on a farm near Door Vil lage. James Armstrong was the evangelist of our Church in this county, influencing many Church members to move to it from older parts of the State; and remaining in the county as an enterprising missionary till his death, which occurred on the 12th of September, 1834. " N. B. Griffith came to the county about the same time, but he settled in St. Joseph, where he also died in 1834. The first societies in both these coun ties were organized by these men. It may be in place for me to give some pen-portraits of them. WEST AND NORTH-WEST. 27 "Armstrong was of medium hight, and weight. His chin, Ups, and nose sharp, eyes small, eyebrows heavy, forehead square and high, and hair thick set and dark. He was always neatly dressed in plain black. He had a good voice, with a free use of plain, English words of Saxon origin; nothing of the Irish brogue, but much of the fire, which, as he felt himself, he failed not to impart to others who gave him audience, tiU the bond became so strong be tween the speaker and hearer, that both were carried along with the force and beauty of the subject before them. He was what we called a ' topic preacher ;' and before a promiscuous congregation, his memory, his imagination, and tact enabled him to conduct a controversy with great ingenuity for success to any cause he espoused. As a man and a minister he attached personal friends, who liberaUy sustained his enterprises and boldly defended his measures. " Having been presiding elder over all the State of Indiana, from the Ohio to the lakes, he was a herald of the Gospel whom God owned and blessed, and his untiring industry and influence, devoted as they were entirely to the organizing of the Church in the then new settlements, place him on the page of our history as the leading evangelist. " In the order of time, the societies were formed : first, at Door Village; second, at Springfield; third, at Eobinson's; fourth) at Laporte; fifth, in Michigan City. At all these there were societies, and stated worship, before the year 1837. 28 EARLY HISTOEY OP THE " The first meeting-house was at Door Village ; the second at Laporte; the third, Union Chapel; the fourth at Michigan City ; and from these there have branched off all the societies in the county. " N. B. Griffith had a ready mind, well adapted to organize religious societies in a new country. He was remarkably quick and correct in his knowledge of human nature — a discerner of human character on first acquaintance. Earnestly devoted to the one work of bringing men to Christ, his congregations were large and his labors successful. He died August 22, 1834. "It is difficult to give a true history of our Church as bounded by county lines, for these were not the lines of circuits or societies in the first mission. In 1833 there was a missionary district, in which there was a Laporte mission. Elder Armstrong had charge of both district and mission. The former inclosed Ft. Wayne, Elkhart, St. Joseph, and Kala mazoo, as well as Laporte. On this district were four young unmarried men; namely, E. S. Eobinson, B. Phelps, J. T. Eobe, and G. W. Beswick. As the elder lived in Laporte county, this was the head of the district. These gave to the people not only the wisdom of the presiding elder, but the variety of these young men. "The returns of 1833 give to Laporte 140 mem bers; but this included Terre Coupee society, most of whom lived beyond the county line. The first camp meeting was on J. A. Osborne's lands, near WEST AND NORTH-WEST. 29 Door VUlage. At this meeting $300 was subscribed to build the first Door ViUage church; here, for some years, was the strongest society in the county. It had laymen and local preachers, whose general knowledge gave them influence, and whose devotion to the Church made them a power for usefulness. "F. Standiford was one of those who came to this county. He was brought up in Maryland in the midst of old Methodists, and graduated to the order of elder as a 'local' preacher. He moved to Laporte from Putnam county, Indiana, having lived first in Kentucky after leaving Maryland. He was a representative 'local' preacher, assisting the itinerating preachers by his experience in knowl edge of ' Scripture holiness.' There was, in the days of large circuits traveled by young men, a necessity for something more fixed than the occa sional visits of the itinerating evangeUst; and a society was favored when it had an ordained locEil preacher. This was the condition of the Door VU lage society. There were also tried laymen in that band of men, who, though they had come, some from Ohio, others from Virginia, and others from New York State, yet met with one accord in one place, and were blessed of God. Many of these have finished their careers, and rest from their labors. F. Standiford, A. Stearns, and J. Sale, have passed on, before those who yet remain to see the fruits of planting the Church in this beautiful prairie. " Of traveling preachers, who did betimes something 30.. EAELY HISTORY OF THE to build these societies, and who have passed away, I now call up E. Smith, A. Johnson, G. W. Baker, J. Garner, W.F. Wheeler, G. M, Beswick, J. Jenkins, and W. Poney. All these had at some time con tributed to the ministerial work of a quarterly meeting at Door Village. The first and strongest off-shoot from this old stock was Union Chapel, on the south end of Door Prairie, composed largely of a colony from Clark county, Indiana, relations ctf 'Eobertsons' and 'Garners,' who formed the first Methodist class in Indiana Territory in 1802. The leading laymen and local. preachers were sui generis Methodist, of old Maryland and Ohio stock — oral — hospitable— earnest — ^loyal." WEST AND NORTH-WEST. 31 CHAPTER in. Foe the subject-matter of this and the foUowing chapter, I am indebted to brother W. C. Smith's "Indiana Miscellany;" from different portions oi which they are compiled. It has generaUy been thought that Methodism was introduced into Indiana, in what is known as Clark's Grant, which included a portion of what is now Clark and Floyd counties. In later years it has been stated that a class of Methodists was formed in Clark's Grant, as early as 1802 ; but upon what evidence or authority we do not know. We do know that Eev. Hugh Cull, a local preacher, set tled in the Whitewater country as early as 1805, having visited the country the year previous. The first circuit in Indiana was caUed Whitewater, and belonged to the Ohio district, in the old Western Conference. It embraced all the country from the Ohio Eiver along the eastern line of the territory, as far north as there were any white settlements, which was in the region where Eichmond now stands, and west to the land belonging to the Indians. This circuit was probably formed in 1807. It ap pears upon the Minutes of the Western Conference, in the year 1808, with Joseph Williams as preacher in charge, and John Sale presiding elder of the 32 EARLY HISTOEY OF THE "district. The settlements visited by Mr. WiUiams were remote from each other ; the traveling was la borious and hazardous; the roads along which he passed were Indian traces and newly blazed ways; the streams were unbridged; the country was full of ravenous beasts and the much-dreaded Indians. The emigrants, to whom he ministered, could afford him but few accommodations. He labored faithfuUy, hunting up the Methodists who had pitched their tents in the wilderness, and at the end of the year returned 165 white members and one colored. Ac cording to the most reliable data, these were all the Methodists who had to this date been organized and numbered in Indiana. In 1808 Indiana contained but one circuit, with 166 members of the Methodist Episcopal Church. Now, 1866, there are four An nual Conferences, with a membership of about 100,- 000 in the State. How great the change in fifty- eight years ! Mr. WiUiams has the honor of being the first itinerant Methodist preacher appointed to a circuit in Indiana. We would, if we had the par ticulars of his .life and death, give them to the pub lic to perpetuate his memory. In 1809 he was sent to Scioto circuit, in the State of Ohio, and in 1810 he located. In 1809 Indiana district was formed, and Samuel Parker was appointed presiding elder. It was composed of the following circuits : Illinois, Missouri, Maramack, Coldwater, Whitewater, and Silver Creek. Though but two circuits of this dis trict were in Indiana, we give its entire bounds. WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 33 that the young men, who are now traveling circuits and districts in the State, may see the extent of the fields of labor our fathers had to cultivate. This district covered aU the territories of Indiana, IIU- nois, and Missouri. It required, surely, a man of strong nerves and stout heart to travel such a dis trict at such a time. In traveUng this district Mr. Parker had to go from the eastern boundary of In diana across Illinois, and then across the Mississippi Eiver into Missouri. In some places many miles of unbroken wilderness intervened between the settle ments he had to visit. This year Silver Creek cir cuit was formed, and embraced aU the settlements in the southern portion of the territory, and up the Ohio Eiver to Whitewater cfrcuit. Hector Sanford and Moses Grume were appointed to Whitewater, and Josiah Crawford to SUver Creek. The most northern appointment on the Whitewater circuit was the cabin of George Smith, which was about two mUes from where the city of Eichmond is now situated. At the close of this year the preachers retumed 352 members for Whitewater circuit, and 188 for SUver Creek, making an increase of 374. In 1810 Whitewater was placed in the Miami dis trict, with John Sale presiding elder, and Thomas Nelson and Samuel H. Thompson circuit preachers. This district was composed of the following circuits : Cincinnati, Mad Eiver, Scioto, Deer Creek, Hockhock- ing. White Oak, and Whitewater. Silver Creek was in the Green Eiver district, WiUiam Burke presiding 34 EAELY HISTOEY OF THE elder, and Sela Paine circuit preacher. This dis trict was composed of the following cfrcuits : Green Eiver, Barren, Wayne, Cumberland, Danville, Salt Eiver, Shelby, and Silver Creek. Indiana district was composed of Illinois, Missouri, Maramack, Cold- water, Cape Girardeau, and Vincennes circuits. Samuel Parker was returned to the district, and Wm. Winans was appointed to Vincennes. Nelson and Thompson, who traveled the Whitewater circuit this year, both rose to considerable distinction, par ticularly Mr. Thompson. The next year Nelson was sent to, Eapids circuit in Mississippi. Mr. Thomp son was sent to NoUechuckie, in the State of Ten nessee. Neither of these men ever returned to In diana to labor. Sela Paine, who traveled the Silver Creek circuit ' this year, was sent the next to Natchez circuit, Mississippi. Vincennes circuit appears on the Minutes of the Conference this year for the first time, making three fields of labor in Indiana. What the dimensions of this circuit were we have no means of knowing. Vincennes was an old French post, under the in fluence of the Eoman Catholics, a hard place in which to plant Methodism. Mr. Winans, who had been sent to Vincennes this year, had been admitted on trial in the Western Conference the year before. He was a young man of promising talents, and made a good impression on those who heard him preach. It was difficult for him to get the people of WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 35 Vincennes to come to preaching, so wicked and so much were they under the influence of the Eomish priests. The following incident is said to have occurred this year: General WiUiam H. Harrison was Gov emor of the territory of Indiana, and resided at Vincennes, Young Mr. Winans had an appointment to preach one night, in a smaU room in town. Gen eral Harrison and one other person composed the congregation assembled to hear the young preacher. There was but one candle to give Hght, and nothing to place that upon. The General held the can dle for the young preacher to see to read his hymn and text. Mr. Winans preached faithfnUy to those two hearers. After this he had no trouble in getting a congregation to preach to. At the close of this year the preachers returned 484 members from Whitewater cfrcuit, 235 from SUver Creek, and forty-three from Vincenn6s, making a total of 765, an increase of 418; showing that Methodism began to take a deep hold upon the pioneers in Indiana. In 1811 Whitewater cfrcuit was continued in con nection with the Miami district, Solomon Langdon presiding elder, and Moses Grume in charge of the cfrcuit. The people hailed Mr. Grume's return to them with great deUght. He had traveled the cir cuit as junior preacher two years before. He made his impress upon the people so deeply this year, that he was ever afterward a great favorite among them, Isaac Lindsey was sent to SUver Creek circuit this 36 EAELY HISTOEY OF THE year. It remained in connection with the Green Eiver district, with WiUiam Burke as presiding elder. Vincennes appears on the Minutes this year as "St. Vincennes," in connection with the Cumberland district; Learner Blackman presiding elder, and Thomas Stilwell circuit preacher. Mr. Blackman was a man eminent for his talents, piety, and useful ness. During the course of his life he traveled over a very extensive territory of country, ranging from Pittsburg to New Orleans, and was highly esteemed by all who knew him. This year the preachers reported 368 members from Whitewater circuit, 397 from Silver Creek, and 325 from Vincennes, making a total of 1,160, or an increase of -395. In 1812 two additional circuits were formed in Indiana; Lawrenceburg and Patoka. Whitewater and Law renceburg were connected with the Miami district, Solomon Langdon presiding elder. Silver Creek was connected with Salt Eiver district, James Ward presiding elder; while Vincennes and Patoka were connected with Wabash district, James Axley pre siding elder. Walter Griffith was sent to Lawrence burg, Eobert W. Finley to Whitewater, William M'Mahon to Silver Creek, James Turner to Vin cennes, and Benjamin Edge to Patoka. These men were all faithful and useful. Walter Griffith, who traveled the Lawrenceburg circuit this year, was afterward made presiding elder, and filled that important office with great WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 37 acceptabUity and usefulness. Eobert W. Finley had been a Presbyterian minister for several years, and was the father of Eev. James B. Finley, who rose to such distinction in Ohio. At the close of the year there were returned from the five cfrcuits in Indiana a total membership of 1,121, which seems to present a decrease in the number of Church members; but from some cause, there were no returns from Lawrenceburg and Patoka cfrcuits. This accounts for the apparent decrease in the number of members. In 1813 the old Western Conference was divided or discontinued, and the Ohio and Tennessee Con ferences were formed out of it. The cfrcuits in Indiana were placed in these two Conferences, Lawrenceburg and Whitewater were placed in the Miami district, and Silver Creek in the Salt Eiver district, aU within the boundary Unes of Ohio Con ference. Patoka disappears this year. WUUam Dixon was sent to Lawrenceburg, John Strange went to Whitewater, and Thomas Nelson to Silver Creek. At the close of this year the number of Church members reported were as follows : Lawrenceburg, 489; Whitewater, 847; Silver Creek, 555; Vin cennes, 175 ; Patoka, 110. Total membership, 2,176. In five years, two thousand, one hundred and seventy-six members had been gathered into the Methodist Episcopal Church in Indiana, and this though the country was new, and though but a small portion of the territory was inhabited by white people. 38 EARLY HISTORY OP THE This large increase shows that ¦ the men who had been sent into the wild wilderness to cultivate Im manuel's land, had done their work faithfully, and God had crowned their labors with success. In 1814 Moses Crume was sent to Lawrence burg circuit, David Sharp to Whitewater, Charles Harrison to Silver Creek, and Zachariah Witten to Vincennes. Patoka does not appear on the list of appointments this year. Charles HoUiday was ap pointed presiding elder of Salt Eiver district, and Silver Creek being in his district gave him connec tions with the work in Indiana; and Jesse Walker, being presiding elder of Illinois district, and Vin cennes being in that district, he was brought in con nection with the work in Indiana. The number of members reported at the close of this year was 1,759, showing a decrease, which was caused by the derangement of the work produced by the war in which the country was then engaged. In 1815 John Strange was sent to Lawrenceburg, William Hunt to Whitewater, Shadrach Euark to Silver Creek, John Scripps to Patoka, and John Shra der to Vincennes, with the same presiding elders that traveled the districts the year before. The number of circuits was not increased, but their boundaries were greatly enlarged. The terror among the settlers, caused by the war, and the constant danger from the Indians that infested the country by thousands, had caused many of the inhabitants to return to the old States for WEST AND NORTH-WEST. 39 safety. Among them were many Methodists, causing a great decrease this year. There were reported to Conference a total of 1,504. In 1816 David Sharp was sent to Lawrenceburg, Daniel Fraley to Whitewater, Joseph Kinkade to Sil ver Creek, John Shrader to Blue Eiver, Thomas A. King to Patoka, and Thomas Davis to Vincennes, Blue Eiver cfrcuit had been formed out of a part of Silver Creek. It extended down the Ohio Eiver and out to the head-waters of Patoka. We now have six circuits formed in Indiana, The war being over and the country becoming more quiet, the inhabitants who had fled for fear of the Indians be gan to return, with many new emigrants. The preachers were enabled to report this year a total of 1,877 members, an increase of 373 over the past year. In 1817 Eussel Bigelow was sent to Lawrence burg, Benjamin Lawrence to Whitewater, Daniel M'Henry and Thomas Davis to Patoka, James M'- Cord and Charles Slocomb to. Vincennes, John Cord to Blue Eiver, Joseph Pownal to Silver Creek. Missouri Conference having been formed, all of Illinois and all of Indiana, except Lawrenceburg and Whitewater circuits, were placed in that Con ference, The other circuits were in the Illinois dis trict, with Samuel H. Thompson for presiding elder. Moses Crume was placed over the Miami district, in the Ohio Conference; which brought him back to Lawrenceburg and Whitewater circuits, where he 40 EARLY HISTORY OF THE met a hearty welcome from the people. The preachers on the six circuits, in Indiana, reported at the close of the year a total membership of 1,907, being a small increase over the past year. In 1818 Samuel West and Allen Wiley were sent to Lawrenceburg, William Hunt to Whitewater, Charles Slocomb to Patoka, Thomas Davis to Little Pigeon, John Shrader and John M'Cord to Vin cennes, Othniel Taebert to Blue Eiver, and John Cord to Silver Creek. Little Pigeon was a new circuit just formed, and embraced the country south-west of Blue Eiver circuit. We have now seven circuits, traveled by nine preachers. The preachers reported to Conference at the close of this year a total of 3,044 members, an increase of 1,037. In the year 1819 the work in Indiana was so ar ranged as to place the circuits in two Annual Con ferences, namely, the Ohio and Missouri, and to form three districts; namely, the Lebanon and Miami, in the Ohio Conference, and the Illinois in the Missouri Conference. There were three new circuits formed, which appear upon the Minutes . this year for the first time ; namely, Madison, Indian Creek, and Harrison. The circuits were placed in districts as follows : Whitewater in Lebanon dis trict, with Moses Crume presiding elder; Lawrence burg and Madison in Miami district, with John Sale presiding elder; and Silver Creek, Indian Creek, Blue Eiver, Harrison, Vincennes, Patoka, and Pigeon, in Illinois district, with Jesse Hale presiding elder. WEST AST) NOETH-WEST. 41 Allen Wiley and Zachariah Connell were sent to Whitewater cfrcuit, Benjamin Lawrence to Lawrence burg, John T. Kent to Madison, David Sharp to SUver Creek, WiUiam Mavity to Indian Creek, John Pownal to Blue River, WUliam Medford to Harrison, John Cord to Vincennes, John WaUace and Daniel M'Henry to Patoka and Pigeon. This was a year of considerable prosperity. The whole number of members in Indiana was 3,470, giving an increase for the year of 426. In 1820 the districts and cfrcuits were again changed, and suppUed as foUows: Miami district, Ohio Conference, Walter Griffith presiding elder; Whitewater circuit, Arthur W. EUiott, Samuel Brown; Lawrenceburg, Benjamin Lawrence, Henry S, Famandis; Madison, Henry Baker, WUliam H. Eaper; Indiana district, Missouri Conference, Sam uel Hamilton presiding elder; SUver Creek circuit, Calvin Enter, Job M. Baker; Indian Creek, John Shrader, John Everhart; Blue Eiver, John Stew art, Joseph Pownal; Patoka, John WaUace; Vin cennes, Daniel M'Henry. Pigeon and Harrison do not appear on the Minutes this year. This year Calvin Enter commenced his labors in Indiana. He had been admitted into the Ohio Con ference two years before, and was now transferred to the Missouri Conference. The whole number of members returned this year was 4,399, giving an increase of 929, In 1821 Charlestown, Blooming ton, Ohio, Mount Sterling, and Corydon appear on 42 EARLY HISTORY OF THE the Minutes as heads of circuits. The presiding elders continued upon the districts as they were the past year. This year James Jones was sent to Whitewater, John P. Durbin and James CoUard to Lawrenceburg, Alien WUey and WiUiam P. Quinn to Madison, Calvin Enter and WiUiam Cravens to Charlestown, John Scripps and Samuel Glaize to Blue Eiver, Daniel Chamberlin to Bloomington, Job M, Baker to Vincennes, Elias Stone to Patoka, John Wallace to Ohio, George K, Hester to Mount Ster ling, and John Shrader to Corydon. The aggregate membership for this year was 7,314, Methodism was now advancing rapidly in the State, In 1822 AUen Wiley and James T. Wells were sent to Whitewater, Henry Baker to Lawrenceburg, James Jones and James Murray to Madison, with Alexander Cummins for presiding ¦ elder, James Armstrong was sent to Charlestown, George K, Hester to Flat Eock, John Wallace and Joseph Kinkade to Blue Eiver, Ji-hn Cord to Bloomington, David Chamberlin to Honey Creek, John Stewart to Vincennes, James L, Thompson to Patoka, Eben ezer Webster tb Mount Sterling, Job M, Baker to Corydon, and William Cravens to Indianapolis, with Samuel Hamilton for presiding elder. Indianapolis now appears on the Minutes as the head of a circuit, for the first time. In 1866 there were five Method ist preachers and one missionary stationed at Indi anapolis, and the charges in the city belong to four Annual Conferences. The borders of Methodism WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 43 had rapidly enlarged. The men, into whose hands the work had been committed, were fuUy devoted to their caUing. In 1823 the number of circuits had increased to fifteen. Two new ones had been formed in ConnersvUle and Eel Eiver. Cummins and Hamilton were continued as presiding elders. The appointments of the preachers were as follows: Whitewater, Eussel Bigelow and George Gatch; Lawrenceburg, W. H. Eaper; Madison, J. Stewart and Nehemiah B. Griffith; ConnersviUe, James Mur ray and James C. Taylor ; Charlestown, James Arm strong; Flat Eock, Dennis Wiley; Blue Eiver, W. M. Eeynolds and George K. Hester; Bloomington, John Cord; Honey Creek, Hackaliah Vredenburg; Vincennes, John IngersoU and Job M. Baker; Pa toka, Ebenezer F. Webster; Mount SterUng, Ste phen E. Beggs; Corydon, James L. Thompson; In dianapohs, James Scott; Eel Eiver, WUliam Cra vens. The whole membership this year was 7,733, giving an increase of nineteen. 44 EARLY HISTORY OF THE CHAPTER IV. The Divine Being will always take care of those who trust in him, and unreservedly devote all their time and strength to his service. He will support, sustain, comfort, and deliver them in. time of trouble. In the year 1828, when Stephen E. Beggs traveled the Wayne circuit, Mrs. H., who then resided in Eichmond, was deeply convicted of sin; she was awakened under a sermon preached by Mr, Beggs, from Psalm 1, 14, 15 : " Offer unto God thanksgiv ing; and pay thy vows unto the Most High; and call upon me in the day of trouble : I will deliver thee, and thou shalt glorify me." She had a long and hard struggle, but after weeks of deep penitence, found redemption in the blood of the Lamb; her burden of guilt was taken away, and her "mourn ing was turned into joy." So intense was her agony of mind before she found peace in believing, that she was almost incapable of attending to her domestic duties ; so great was her joy when she felt all her sins were forgiven, that she shouted aloud the praises of God, saying : " Now, Lord, from this time forth, in weal or in woe, in sickness or in health, in tribulation, in distress, poverty, persecu tion, living or dying; I am thine — thine forever!" She connected herself with the Methodist Episcopal west and NORTH-VraST. 45 Church, casting in her lot with the Uttle persecuted band in Eichmond. Her husband was a very wicked man, violently opposed to her piety, particularly to her being among the Methodists, who, on account of their religion, were not in the sweetest odor in the nostrils of most citizens in town. He not only refused to render her any assistance, but by every means in his power strove to block up the way, pre vent her from attending Church, and break her off from her piety, abusing the Methodists with oaths and curses, threatening her with violence if she did not desist from her reUgious course. He often crossed her in domestic concerns, trying in every possible way to get her angry, thinking, if he could only aggravate her to madness, the victory would be won and his triumph complete; but in this he faUed, while Mrs. H. was kind and affectionate, giving every necessary attention to the wants of her family, enduring the abuses heaped upon herseK and the Methodists by her husband, never uttering an unkind word, or allowing a murmur to escape her lips. She did not allow his opposition or threats to deter her from the discharge of her religious duties, but was faithful in all things, always at class and prayer meetings, and always in attendance upon the preached Word. Her steadfastness continued as time rolled on, though the oppositions she met from her husband increased. A two days' meeting was ap pointed in the country a few miles from town. When the time drew near her husband forbade her going; 46 EAELY HISTORY OF THE she flew to the Lord, who was her " stronghold in the day of trouble." Eeceiving, as she beUeved, an answer that it was right for her to go, she made every arrangement she could for the comfort of her husband during her absence. When the time ar rived she took her two children, and, being aided by some kind friends, made her way on Saturday to the place of meeting, intending to return on Sun day evening. As the meeting progressed she was greatly blessed. While she spoke in the love-feast on Sunday morning, the Holy Ghost came down; every heart was thrilled, every eye melted to tears. It rained throughout the day on Sunday, which raised Whitewater beyond fording, and Mrs, H, could not return. There being several persons at the house where she was, they held a prayer meet ing. During the exercises, Mrs. H. was called upon to pray. She poured out her burdened soul to God; never did woman plead for a husband with greater earnestness. During all this time her husband was at home, raging like a madman. When Sunday night came and his wife did not return, he became furious. About midnight, concluding his wife had given herself to the Methodists, caring nothing for him, he resolved to burn up his house and all it contained, and "run away by the light." He went to work and packed up his clothes. When all was ready and he was about to kindle the fire to consume his house, it oc curred to him that it would be too cruel to burn the WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 47 house and all its contents, and leave his wife and chUdren with nothing to help themselves. After a moment's pause, he concluded to leave the house and goods for her; but "he would go, and she should nevermore see his face," He took his pack and started, directing his steps toward Eaton, Ohio. When he had walked about four mUes, suddenly the thought entered his mind, "This is just what my wife and the Methodists desfre — to get rid of me." With an oath he determined they should not be gratified. " He would go back and devil them as long as he lived." Retracing his steps, when he reached town the day was dawning. He went to his house — which he had left after midnight, intending never to return — ^and put away his clothes. His passion had been wrought up to such a pitch that he felt he must have revenge some way. To this end he went to a Uquor-saloon and took a potion, to nerve him more fuUy for his purpose. He then went out on the streets, intending to whip the first man that gave him a harsh word or an unpleasant look. To his utter discomfiture, every one he met was in a most pleasant humor; none gave him an unkind word. At this he was so much chagrined, he determined to commit suicide; but soon the thought occurred: " This is what my wife and the Methodists desire — any thing to get rid of me." Toward noon of this. day, his wife returned home. As soon as she ar rived he commenced cursing the Methodists, hoping thereby to provoke her to reply. He was again 48 EARLY HISTORY OF THE doomed to disappointment. In this he did not suc ceed, though he kept it up till a late hour in the night. Finding this effort to provoke his wife into a dispute failed, he now tried another scheme ; that was to make her believe he would kill himself, hop ing she would yield, rather than " he should do that dreadful deed;" at least, that "she would try to dis suade him from his purpose." Mrs. H. did not make any reply, but with her heart uplifted to God in earnest prayer, felt that he would overrule all for good. In a few weeks after this, the first two-day meeting held in Eichmond was to come off. When Mrs. H.'s husband heard that the meeting was appointed, he gave her most positive orders not to bring any Methodists about the house at that time. She gave no promise, but as the time drew near made what preparations she could to accom modate a few friends. When the meeting came on she invited two mothers in Israel home with her on Saturday. 2er husband, finding they were in his house, would not go home till a late hour at night. On Sunday morning he ventured to the breakfast-table. While at the table the ladies invited him to go to the love- feast that morning. Instantly he said to himself, "That's my chance. The Methodists have door keepers when they hold love-feasts, and they talk to those who are not members of the Church before they let them in. I will go to the door, but I will not go in. When I get there and they begin to talk • WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 49 to me, I will give the Methodists — preachers and people — a round cursing in the hearing of them aU, and then turn away; that will be some gratifica tion to me." When the hour for love-feast arrived, he accompanied his wife and the two ladies to the school-house where the meeting was held. As they drew near the door — there being quite a crowd there — ^he concluded to fall back a little, tiU all had passed in, "lest the door-keeper might not speak to him, and then he would lose the opportunity of do ing up the job of cursing he had prepared himself for." When they had all passed in he stepped upon the door-step. The door-keeper swung the door wide open. He stepped in and halted. The door keeper, putting his arm around, drew him a little forward and closed the door without saying a word. Mr. H. turned pale, and, trembling from head to foot, sat down. The love-feast was a time of power. He never had been in one before — had not intended to be in this, "but was caught in a trap." He felt that his distress of mind was intolerable; tha.t if the tor ments of the damned in hell were any greater than he had been enduring for months, he could not bear the thought. In that love-feast he resolved if there was any such religion as the Methodists and his wife professed, he would have it or die seeking. From this time he sought the pardon of his nu merous sins. The struggle continued for weeks. So great was his distress of mind, that much of the 50 EARLY HISTOEY OF THE time he could neither eat nor sleep. Now did Mrs. H. most devoutly pray that God would have mercy on her husband. He was .clearly and powerfuUy converted at a camp meeting, joined the Church, and became as zealous in the cause of the Eedeemer as he had been in that of Satan, and as ardently attached to the Church as he had been bitterly op posed to it. How wondrous the mercy of God! During all the time he was so fearfully opposing his wife the carnal mind I was fearful of being cast out. He was often heard to say, " The steadfastness of my wife, with God's blessing, saved me." Had Mrs. H. yielded in the slightest degree, or faltered in her religious course, the probabilities are her husband never would have been converted, and she would have retrograded in her piety. The text from which the sermon was preached, that was the instrument in her awakening, made a lasting im pression on her mind : " Offer unto God thanksgiv ing ; and pay thy vows unto the Most High ; and call upon me in the day of trouble; I will deliver thee: and thou shalt glorify me." To this she clung till she realized the fulfillment of the blessed promise. WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 51 CHAPTER V. I WAS received into the Missouri Conference, Oc tober, 1822, and was appointed in charge of the Mt. Sterling circuit, Indiana, Samuel HamUton presiding elder. This was a four weeks' circuit, lying mostly on the Ohio Eiver, and extending north nearly to Pealey. It was a sore trial to my friends as weU as me. They wept as I wept ; and for the first few miles I indulged myself in a good "fit of crying." I constantly thought of what father said; that in a few years I would break down, and die poor and helpless, as he had almost nothing to give me. I was to have only $100 a year if I got aU my " quar terage;" and very many, I knew, labored the whole year and did not get one-fourth thefr dues. But all such thoughts I had to banish, and rely on the sim ple promise of God, "Lo, I am with you always !" I thank him that to-day I can look back upon the realization of more than my expectations, both as regards things spfritual and things temporal. Upon reaching my circuit, which was fifty mUes from home, I had a harder task yet — that was, to let the people know what I had come for. I was a mere boy. Many of them had no suspicion that I was thefr preacher, and my numerous questions did not give them the hint; so I had to make a clean 52 EAELY HISTOEY OF THE breast of it at last. I soon realized my inexperi ence — alone, on an old circuit, with no Hedding or Baker to instruct me in my duties in enforcing dis cipline. In no subsequent year ' did I have more Church trials to conduct, and more perplexing busi ness to transact. But the more crushing the respons ibilities, the more and more earnestly did I pray.- I was fortunate, however, in at last having the ad vice of a few old preachers who lived on the circuit, and got throilgh -the year without any charge or suspicion of maladministration ; at which I thanked God and took courage. After a few rounds on my circuit the good work began.' In spite of a three weeks' attack of pleu risy, I maintained the interest unremitted. Two camp meetings 'were held. At' the first Elder Ham ilton presided, f)reaching frequently with great dem onstration of the Spirit and of power, especially in the conversion of souls. This led the way to' a second, which was held among the hills of Patoka. Brother Hamilton was not present, but the local prekchers — ^one a colored man — rendered most effect ive assistance. I had heard the doctrine of sancti fication preached — the first time by William Cra vens — and now, believing it as Scripture doctrine, and because thousands had lived in its enjoyments, I preached it to others and besought it for myself. Before the meeting closed; I, along;, with many who heard me, was blest with a deep experience of its truth. God's will became my will, and I learned to WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 53 live in him continually. AU my soul was love, and for weeks I could continually sing, " There *b not a cloud that doth arise To hide my Savior from my eyes." My long rides this year, continuaUy breasting the storms of a very cold Winter, together with ex posure in open houses, brought on a violent attack of pleurisy. In May or June I was obUged to travel on foot, my horse having become lame. One moming I left brother Joseph Springer's for Rome, fifteen mUes distant, where I was to preach at 11 o'clock. I journeyed — carrying saddle-bags and great-coat — over the most hiUy portion of Indi ana. Calling at a house to inqufre the way, the owner was kind enough to assist, me for some dis tance across a stream, and as we journeyed I intro duced the subject of reUgion, and learned his reUg ious history, which was substantially as foUows: He thought reUgion necessary, and beUeved he would have experienced it had brother HamUton remained in charge of the district ; " For," said he, " I was at a certain camp meeting where he preached, and during the sermon I was affected with chills, alter nating with contractions of the skin on my head. The preacher's voice was soon lost in a general shout, scores of penitent sinners exclaiming as one man, 'What must I do to be saved?' Then HamUton paused for a quarter of an hour, as he said, to ' let the Lord preach;' then he began again, and in his mUd, pathetic manner told of the goodness of God, and 54 EARLY HISTOEY OP THE of the sinner's portion if he did not repent; and," said the friend, "he hurt me a devilish sight worse than when he preached loud." But, deprived of his favorite preacher, he was still in his sins, in which state I was obliged to leave him, after thanking him for his kindness, and exhorting him to go directly to God for the blessing. Having filled my appointment at Eome, and being unable to get a horse, I concluded to try a raft on the Ohio Eiver, I soon had one afloat, reaching my appointment, twelve miles down, in good time, I reached the next appointment — Troy — eighteen miles further down, in the same manner, by an ex tra use of the paddle; likewise, the next, six miles further down. Having no horse yet, I failed to reach the next appointment, sixteen miles distant, through a low, wet country; so I took my way across to a two days' meeting, to be held at brother Moore's the next Saturday and Sabbath. Here' I expected to meet some local brethren; but none came, and the work all came on me — four sermons, besides several exhortations, the results of which were very encouraging. On Monday morning, though iU prepared, I set out through a wilderness to my next appointment, the house of brother Combes, twenty miles away. After a vain attempt to get some rest at noon, among the busy subjects of the musketo kingdom, I resumed my burden, and my march through briers and obstacles numberless, and in due time reached WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 55 my appointment. How glad the people were in those days to see thefr preacher ! Tiie Gospel feast was a feast indeed, generally a whole month between meals ! This year may be summed up as a total of long, hard rides and great labor, both of preaching and settling Church difficulties. But it was a year of great spiritual comfort; not only for what I gained in it, but what I did, with God's blessing, for others. The membership on my charge had increased from 346 to 436. My horse never quite recovered, and I had to exchange for another; It may be worth while to remark that I was no exception to the general rule in regard to Methodist preachers and their horses. I never lost a horse till I had traveled twelve years. My cash receipts for the year were $40. In addition to the camp meet ings already spoken of, I visited another on the Blue Eiver circuit — ^preachers in attendance, James Garner, senior, George Hester, and Wm. M'Eeynolds. My efforts here were attended with such success that one brother came to me, and said that if I would go around the camp-ground and exhort, the people would all be converted. I returned to my circuit inspired with new zeal for my work, not only for the rest of the year, but for the next year's labors. Eeturning home at the end of the year, I spent a few days there, little thinking, and caring less, where my next work would lie, and what it would be-. The Conference was a large one, inclosing Arkan- 56 EAELY HISTORY OF THE sas, Missouri, Illinois, aud a large portion of Indiana; on which I aaight be sent 800 mUes from home, the only mode of reaching my destination being on horseback. The Conference met at St. Louis, Octo ber, 1823. I was not present ; but learned in a few weeks that I was appointed to Lemoin circuit — David Sharp presiding elder — in what was called the Boone's Lick country; the distance was 500 miles. Speedily getting my little effects together, I set out, leaving a circle of weeping friends and neighbors, to a land and among- a people that I knew not. I ¦* crossed the Wabash at Vincennes, and soon struck the Grand Prairie, not knowing where I should find resting places, and Winter close at hand. I was not a little comforted to meet brother Samuel H. Thompson — presiding elder, Illinois dis trict — late one evening, on his way to a quarterly meeting. He insisted on my stopping over night with him. After some religious conversation, in which he gave me very good advice, he led the family prayers, in which he remembered not only me but my horse — suggesting what Mr. Wesley said, that when he prayed for his horse, he never lost any. He then gave me a "way-bill" to my circuit, being acquainted with the whole 500 miles I had to travel, which embraced the inhabited por tions of Indiana, Illinois, and Missouri. I had not traveled far the next day before I encountered a snow-storm, which continued till late in the evening. WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 57 I at length reached old brother Padfield's, where I was received with open arms, and "received much assistance in preparing for my journey. I preached before I left — my first sermon I preached in Illi nois, some forty-four years ago. I crossed the Mis sissippi at St. Louis, spending the Sabbath with Eev. John Scripps, for whom I preached in the evening. I did not enjoy much liberty in this my first experience in the "pulpit," which was con structed in the old style, about six feet high and four feet square. I, however, did my best, no un common thing, perhaps; for if a preacher has not religion enough he has pride enough to do that. Next moming I left, crossing the river at St. Charles. I every-where found kind, Uberal friends. Passing through brother Eedmond's work — Boone's Lick circuit — I spent Saturday and Sabbath at his quarterly meeting. Being entirely out of money, I had the good fortune to borrow twenty-five cents to help me Eicross' the Missouri River to my cfrcuit. My horse being much worn down, I borrowed one that was both young and wild, to bear me on my first tour of my work. About thirty miles from the place I left in the morning, in the midst of a large houseless prairie, my horse took fright, and jumping from under me, left me and my saddle-bags by the wayside. In his haste homeward, he soon left the saddle also. I shouldered both and traveled back laboriously to the first house, where I left them and went on after the horse. Night soon over- 58 EAELY HISTORY OF THE took me. I missed my way and wandered I knew not whither, till, at length, I found myself on the banks of the Missouri. There was no house within two miles. It was very dark and the cold was be coming intense. At length, after prolonged halloo ing, I persuaded the people to come over for me. I spent the night at the house of a deist. It took all the little money I had to pay my bill and ferriage back in the morning. I presently found my horse, which had been stopped by a friend, and mounting " bareback," returned to where I had left my sad dle and luggage, and went on visiting my appoint ments, which were from eight to fifteen miles apart. I enjoyed good health, and was generally able to meet my appointments this year. WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 69 CHAPTER VI. It was some time in July that I went up to assist brother Harris of the Fishing Eiver cfrcuit. It was the first camp meeting held on brother Baxter's camp-ground, near Liberty, about one hundred mUes up the Missouri. Brother Harris and myself were the only Methodist preachers present; and we both preached and exhorted each in turn. The meeting grew in interest tiU Monday. I tried to preach on that day, and brother Harris was to preach a funeral sermon. When I closed, he com menced giving out the hymn, " And am I bom to die. To lay this body down 7" When he came to the second verse, " Soon as from earth I go. What win become of me ?" the power of the Almighty came down in such a wonderful manner as is seldom witnessed. Brother Harris feU back in the pulpit, overcome by the in fluence of the Holy Spirit, and caUed upon me to invite the people forward for prayers. During my sermon I had noticed that one powerfully built man in the congregation was so filled with the power of God, that it was with difficulty he restrained his feeUngs; now was the time for him to give vent to 60 EAELY HISTOEY OF THE his feelings, and his shouts of " Glory to God in the highest!" were such that the whole congregation seemed thrilled with the " power of God." It was as if a current of electricity ran through the assembly, setting on fire with the love of Jesus each soul in Divine presence. . It was a memorable time. The whole camp ground was convulsed, and the invitation was no sooner extended than the mourners came pouring "forward in a body for prayers, till the altar was filled with weeping penitents. It was as if the shouts of his "sacramental hosts were heard afar off." The meeting continued that afternoon and all night. Late in the night I went to brother Bax ter's house to get some rest; but the work was so urgent — sinners weeping all over the camp-ground — that I was sent for to come back and continue my exertions; and there we wrestled, the Christian and the sinner, in one common interest, like Jacob of old, " till the break of day." On Tuesday morning scarcely a soul remained unconverted, or not seeking pardon. The next Friday my camp meeting commenced, and bid fair for a great good; tiU a preacher of another denomination, who craved our success, re quested the privilege of preaching. He was at first denied, but he urged his request till I gave him liberty to speak on Sabbath evening. His words fell with such a dead weight on the congregation, and at the :close of his sermon so little interest was WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 61 felt, that we were obliged to close the meeting without the usual invitations. But on the following morning we laid hold of the work again. My faith was strong that we should succeed, and victory turn on Israel's side. A profane man, witnessing the spirit of the meeting, remarked with an oath that " Beggs was Uke to take the ground." Our meet ing proved a blessing to the class and neighborhood. I finished my work here on this circuit by hold ing a camp meeting. On my way to Conference I at tended a camp meeting, held by E. T. Webster, on the St. Louis circuit. We had good preaching and a successful meeting. Leaving the camp-ground we staid over night with brother M'AUster, and the next night arrived at St. Louis. Here for the first time I saw Bishop Soule. Our Conference in 1824 was held at Padfield's, soipe twenty mUes east of St. Louis. We had with us three Bishops — M'Kendree, Eoberts, and Soule. It was the first Conference I ever attended, and it was a very profitable time to me. By the act of the General Conference, held the previous May, the Illinois work was set off from the Missouri Confer ence, which however met, agreeably to adjournment, at the same place. As the session possesses a his torical interest, I shaU give in this chapter an ac count of its proceedings. After the introductory exercises, conducted by Bishop M'Kendree, who presided, the roll was caUed, and about a dozen brethren r.psponded to their names. 62 ' EARLY HISTOEY OF THE Jesse Hale and William W. Eedman were appointed Stewards, and J. Dew, James Armstrong, and John Scripps were appointed a Committee to prepare mem oirs of the deceased brethren, A resolution was in troduced by the latter Committee, requesting Bishop Soule to preach on the camp-ground, at 11, A. M., October 24th, a funeral sermon, in memory of our much-revered father in Christ, William Beauchanip. Bishop Eoberts then formally introduced Bishop Soule to the Conference, the members of which rose to receive him. The Committee also requested Bishop Eoberts to preach the funeral of brother Samuel Glaze in the afternoon of the sarae day. The Committee to examine candidates for admission into full membership consisted of brothers Thompson, Walker, Scripps, Armstrong, and Cord, The Bishop then informed the Conference that Peter Cartwright and Andrew Monroe, elders of the Kentucky Con ference, had, by transfer, become members of this Conference; also, by transfer, Uriel Haw and Edwin Eay, deacons in the same Conference; also, brother E, J, Dungan, a member on trial. The President announced that the Conference could draw on the Book Fund for $150, and on the Chartered Fund for $80, The Conference then took up the question, "Who remained on trial last year?" The following were examined and continued: Orsenath Fisher, Andrew Lopp, Edward Smith, James E. Johnson, William Shores, William Moore, John Miller, Benjamin S. WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 63 Ashby, Joseph Edmondson, Eucker Tanner. The characters of the deacons were then considered, and the following were examined and passed : David Chamberlin, Dennis WUley, Ebenezer T. Webster, James Bankson, John Glanville, John Blasdell. The morning session was concluded by prayer by J. Hale, At 2, P. M,, the Conference was opened by Bishop Soule, who presided. The character of dea cons was taken up, and WiUiam W, Eedman, H, Vre denburg, George K, Hester, and William M'Eey nolds were examined, approved, and elected. The foUowing brethren were then, on recommendation, admitted: George Eandle, Samuel Low, Daniel An derson, James Garner, Jacob Varner, John Fish, Shadrach Casteel, CasseU Harrison, Green Orr, GU bert Clark. The stewards then caUed on the preach ers for their claims and receipts, and Conference then adjourned, after prayer by brother Walker. At 9, A. M., Monday the 25th, brother Eoberts opened by prayer. Bishop Soule in the chair. The following brethren answered to their names : J. Wal ker, Jesse Hale, S. H. Thompson, Thomas Wright, J. Scripps, J. Patterson. John Scripps was elected Secretary, on the nomination of brother Armstrong. Bishop M'Kendree then announced God's afflictive dispensation in the removal, by death, of our highly esteemed brethren in Christ, WiUiam Beauchamp and Samuel Glaze, accompanying the announcement with deeply interesting and affecting remarks. Dur ing his remarks the Divine presence was sensibly felt. 64 EAELY HISTORY OF THE After the singing of a suitable hymn, Bishops Soiile and Eoberts severally prayed. Proceeding to busi ness, Bishop Eoberts in the chair, S. H. Thompson and John Dew were appointed a Committee to super intend Divine service. J. Scripps, Thomas Davis, John Harris, J. Cord, T. Medford, Thomas Eice, James Armstrong, J. L. Thompson, Jesse Green, A. Munroe, William W. Eedman, H. Vredenburg, Davis Willey, E. T. Webster, James Bankson, J. Glanville, J. Blasdell, William M'Eeynolds, U. Haw, E. Eay, Samuel Hull, character passed and elected deacons; S. E. Beggs, F. B. Leach, Cornelius End- die, T. Eandle, WUliam H. Smith, Isaac N. Piggott, examined and approved-; Deacon George Horn — transferred from the Tennessee Conference — examined and approved. Bishop M'Kendree then addressed the Conference on Missions, The afternoon session was opened with prayer by Jesse Hale, Bishop Eoberts in the chair. The follow ing brethren were examined and approved as -elders : Walker, Thompson, Hall, Scripps, Wright, Patter son, Harris, Davis, Cord, Stephenson, Sharp, Dew, Green, Cravens, (superannuated,) Medford, (located,) Armstrong, Thompson, Enter, Hamilton, Delap, and- Glaze, (deceased.) Eichard Hargrave, who had traveled under the elder — Beauchamp, deceased- was, on recommendation, admitted. J. Scripps was superannuated. A resolution was passed requesting Bishop Eoberts to furnish his funeral discourse — of Beauchamp^ — for publication. Jesse Walker, mission- WEST AND NORTH-WEST. 65 ary of the Missouri Conference, reported in regard to his work among the Indians. On motion of brother Dew, brother Walker's mission was continued under the patronage of the lUinois Conference. At the afternoon session, Charlestown was fixed upon as the place of the next meeting of the Confer ence, August 25th. The Missouri Conference was appointed to meet August 4th. On Tuesday morn ing the Conference adjourned. The ninth session of the lUinois Conference was held September 5, 1832, Bishop Soule presiding. It had twenty-five members, of whom six are stiU living : Peter Cartwright, A. L. Risley, John Vancleve, S. R, Beggs, Robert Delap, J. S. Barger. I extract a curious item from the minutes of the tenth IlUnois Conference, held at Union Grove, September 28, 1833, Peter Cartwright in the chafr. After prayer by Samuel MitcheU, the foUowing resolution was introduced by brothers S. H. Thompson and Stith M. Otwell : " That we, the members of the IlUnois Conference, do agree to wear hereafter plain, straight- breasted coats." The yeas and nays were called, with the following result : Yeas — ^Taylor, M'Kean, Massey, Hadley, Fox, Mavity, Barger, Robertson, Vancleve, Thompson, Handle, James Walker, Deneen, OtweU, Beggs, MitcheU, Benson, Peter, Hale, Royal, (21). Nays — French, Phelps, Cartwright, Roylston, Sinclair, Trotter, Crawford, Fisher, Jesse Walker, Starr, Dew, (11). The . ministers of that day held to plainness of 66 EARLY HISTOEY OF THE dress, both for male and female, the straight coat and plain bonnet being insisted on by many. After a considerable debate, we agreed, before taking the above vote, to have brother Samuel MitcheU deliver an address on the plain, straight-breasted coat — old Methodist style. One of the voters for the straight coat was ap pointed agent of M'Kendree College. In visiting some of the eastern and southern cities he for some reason changed the cut of his coat, and returned to Conference the next Fall in a frock-coat. The brothers were quite astonished, and must know the reason, as he had been among the most strenuous in contending for the straight coat. He took the op portunity, a great many questions being asked, to explain to the Conference in a body. He said, ad dressing Bishop Roberts, who presided : " As a num ber of the brethren have asked me my reasons for changing the cut of my coat, I wish to state that I have been reading Mr, Wesley on dress; and he does not fix upon any fashion or cut of coat, only let it be comfortable and plain. This frock-coat which I wear comes as near fulfilling 'that recom mendation as any thing I can fix upon." The Bishop replied in his pleasant vein, telling the brother that he reminded him of a man who was made a Calvin- ist by reading Mr, Fletcher's writings. The anec dote was so applicable, that the brother wished no further time for explanation, and retired amid a rOar of laughter. i WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 67 CHAPTER VII, The Missouri Conference being divided, as stated in the last chapter, I was stUl continued in the Missouri division, and was appointed to Fishing River cfrcuit. There were eighteen preachers then stationed in the Missouri Conference. Jesse Hale was my presiding elder. Members returned, 143. It was a great trial for me to be absent another year from parents and friends. To visit them would necessitate a ride of six hundred mUes, and I should then be three hundred miles from my cfrcuit. Win ter was close at hand. I made it a subject of prayer, and, after many tears and struggles, resolved to give up all for the Master's sake. In company with brother Benjamin Ashby, I set my face westward. We journeyed on together very pleasantly, some times preaching in the evening when an opportunity offered. One evemng, having found a resting-place rather earUer than usual, we sent out runners to call the people together for evening service. We soon had a house fuU, and it was decided that brother Ashby should preach and I exhort, as was the custom in those days. Being exceedingly weary, and having a comfortable seat, I soon fell asleep. Brother Ashby's voice faUed bim in the midst of his discourse and 68 EARLY HISTOEY OF THE he called upon me. Some one who sat near had been kind enough to awaken me, and after rubbing my eyes I took his place, supposing he had finished his sermon. I told them I supposed they had heard enough from the preacher if they would improve it; yet, if they would bear with me, I would exhort for a short time. Very soon there seemed to be a deep interest felt, and loud responses of "Amen" were heard, and from the "amens" the responses arose to a shout. Many were greatly blessed, and it was an occasion of benefit to all. After brother Ashby left me I was almost alone till "I reached my circuit. I had scarcely commenced my labor, when a deep snow fell. My appointments were far apart; the country new; the roads often blind, or, worse, none at all, so that it was very hard getting back and forth from the stations. My circuit extended about seventy miles along the Mis souri River, embracing some of the settlements west of the State line. I crossed the river twice in every journey, and once on a bridge of boards thrown across two canoes. My quarterage this year was twenty-three dollars. My clothing that I had brought from home was by this time so nearly worn out that it was necessary to replace it with new. Some of the sisters spun wool, and made me a coat of blue and white cotton, a pair of white cotton pants, and one of mixed. One of the brothers gave me his old hat, which I got pressed, and then I was fitted out -for Confer- WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 69 ence. It was held on the fourth of August, 1825, at Bailey's meeting-house, Sabine Creek, Missouri. The weather was very warm and the roads dusty, and, by the time I had reached my journey's end, my new coat had changed from its original color to a dusty brown. There were, however, kind hands and willing hearts who soon set me to rights. Un der the combined influence of soap and water my coat came out as good as new, and, thanks to the '^Marthas" of modern times, "who care for many things," I appeared in the Conference room next morning, looking quite respectable. During the Conference, Bishop Roberts requested all the preachers who wished any private conversa tion with him to stay behind; I was among several who had requests to make, and when my time came to speak, I asked for a transfer to the Illinois Con ference. My request was granted, and I started on a journey to Charlestown, Indiana, where the Con ference met this year. On my way, I fell in with Samuel H. Thompson and Jesse Walker, at a camp meeting near Padfield's, and a most glorious time we had there. On our way, near Mount Carmel, Illi nois, we attended another camp meeting, and the gracious outpouring of the Spirit converted many souls, and quickened the believers. The meeting closed, and we journeyed on, reaching Conference the first day after its session. I was then within five miles of my father's house. My parents and family were all at the Conference, but attending Divine 70 EAELY HISTOEY OP THE service at Church. On hearing of my arrival, after two years of absence, they all left the meeting, and ran to greet the long-absent son. It was like the meeting of Joseph and his brethren. Weary and worn by sickness, with my travel-stained garments, they hardly recognized me. After resting a few days, and receiving from my father a better suit of clothes, I started for my new circuit at Eushville, John Strange presiding elder. It lay mostly on Blue Eiver, and east tb Greens- burg. This was a four weeks' circuit ; appointments scattered over a large and thinly settled country, with mud and high water, at some seasons of the year almost impassable. The principal villages were ^Eushville, Greensburg, New Castle, West Liberty — now Knightstown — and Shelbyville. At the three last-named places, we had a good work, especially at West Liberty. Twenty or thirty of the leading inhabitants were converted and joined the Church. We held a camp meeting under the charge of the presiding elder, near West Liberty, Brother Strange preached at the opening of the meeting, and, in one of his prophetic and electrifying strains, told us that God would convert many souls then within hearing of his voice. Saturday, in the afternoon, he arose to advertise the order of exercises; and, seemingly without intention, began to exhort. One thought led to another, and in a very few minutes the whole encampment was trembling and crying. Several souls were happily converted to God ; and from this WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 71 to the close of the meeting we had a succession of conversions, some of which were most powerful and clear; many of the believers were quickened with such blessings of full salvation that its fruits may be seen at the present day. My last quarterly meeting was also a camp meeting, and we had a sea son long to be remembered, I seldom left a circuit where the people seemed more unwiUing to give me up. This year I attended four camp meetings — two on my own — one in Connersville circuit, and the other one mile east of Indianapolis. This was on my way to Conference. John Strange, James Havens, and others, with my self, were the preachers. 0 what a blessing we received! The meeting, closed on Monday, with many converts. On our way to Bloomington, where Conference was to sit that year, as Strange and myself were riding along together, a stranger rode up by my side, and in conversation with us soon found out that we were preachers. Our plain coats, saddle bags, and other equipage might have told him that. He tumed to me and said, " Your name is Strange?" "No!" said I, turning to my companion, "that is the Eev. Mr. Strange." He seemed a little con fused at his mistake, and had no more to say to me, but addressed his conversation to brother Strange. This year our members numbered two hundred and eight. Bishops Eoberts and Soule were with 72 EAELY HISTOEY OF THE US, and our Conference was exceedingly pleasant and profitable to me, John Strange was a man of sur passing personal beauty, eloquence, and piety. Once, at the close of the sermon, he administered the sac rament. After a most impressive introduction, he was greatly annoyed by some boys throwing nut shells over the floor. Starting suddenly, as if awak ening from a reverie, he said, "Did I say Ohrist was the Son of God? He is, to the humble, penitent believer; but to you" — pointing with his long fin ger toward the young men — "to youj sinner, arouse him, and he is the Lion of the tribe of Judah ; and, by the slightest exertion of his power, could dash you deeper in damnation than a sunbeam can fly in a million of ages!" The effect was awful; the transition from the gentle and pathetic to the ter rible was so unexpected that one of the young men afterward said that he felt his hair raise on end at the imagination of himself going with the velocity of thought toward the doleful regions. The leader of the disturbers is still living, and is a worthy mem ber of the Church in Lafayette, This ended the year 1826. At the Conference I received my appointment to Vincennes circuit, Charles Holliday presiding elder. I had a labori ous year. The circuit lay one hundr-ed miles along the Wabash Eiver. Samuel Cooper was my assist ant, supplied by the presiding elder. Our stations consisted of all the principal towns from Vincennes up to Cole Creek. WEST AND NORTH-WEST. 73 This year I attended four camp meetings. One of them was my own, and a precious time we had. On Sabbath afternoon Joseph Oglesby preached a most powerful sermon from the words, " The Master is come, and caUeth for thee." No words of mine could do the sermon justice. It seemed as if every sentence uttered was a dfrect inspfration from on high. It was the eloquence of the Holy Ghost, and it eame with power. I felt that I could not preach for a week afterward. This year we had efficient help from the local preachers, J. M. Baker, Samuel Hull, and Hugh Eoss, all good preachers; the two former having served in the ranks of the itinerancy. We had several re vivals this year, some unpleasant occurrences also. At a watch-night meeting, held at Carlyle, some graceless scamps shaved the tail of brother Coop er's horse, and, to add to our mortification, followed us with derisive shouts, as we were passing out of town. This year I came nearer getting my quar terage than any previous one. It amounted to near ninety dollars. The membership numbered 442. I found brother HoUiday, my presiding elder, a great help in establishing me in the work of hoUness of heart. What a man of God was he ! A Methodist preacher in very truth. I am afraid I should have gone astray had he not held me to the vfrtue of wearing plain apparel. Our Conference was held this year, 1827, at Mt. Carmel, IlUnois, I was one among the forty preachers 74 EAELY HISTORY OF THE who left Vincennes to attend Conference. Bishop Eoberts presided, and we had a pleasant and prof itable session. John Strange preached one of the most powerful sermons here that I ever heard from him or fr -m any one. Several older preachers re marked that he excelled even himself, and it was said by those capable of judging, that he was more eloquent than Henry Bascom. His text was, " Be hold, I send you forth as sheep among wolves." To those of us who had taken our lives in our hands, and gone forth as pioneers in the wilderness to preach the Word of God, the text came home to our very hearts, and, more especially, when it was so ably dwelt upon by one who had shared our perils. The leading preachers at that time were Strange, Calvin Enter, A. WUey, Jas, Armstrong, Peter Cart wright, S. H. Thompson, A. Wood, Eichard Har grave, 0. HoUiday, S. 0. Cooper, and Jesse WaUier. WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 75 CHAPTER VIII, The next year, 1828, I was sent to Wayne cfrcuit, on which Eichmond and CenterviUe were the prin cipal towns. My circuit bordered on the Ohio State Une. WiUiam Evans was my colleague, and John Strange my presiding elder. This was a four weeks' circuit, and in it I preached nearly every day, and often twice a day. I found here some as devout Christians as I ever met, and often took encourage ment by thefr holy walk and godly conversation. It was here, also, that I feU into doubts, and for six months there hung a deep gloom over my mind. I think that if ever I labored to save souls it was during this great darkness and fearful struggle with the archenemy. This struggle continued till I vis ited my parents, in Clark county, Indiana, Here, one evening whUe retfring for secret prayer in the old famUiar place where I had wrestled many hours in prayer to God, I passed through another great struggle, and the day dawned, the clouds broke away, my sky became clear. For six months my peace was like a river, and I stUl lived an expectant of a better world. This year I held a protracted meeting in Eich mond, assisted by some of the local preachers. We were very successful. Some of the Quakers joined 76 EAELY HISTOEY OP THE US, and the children of infidel parents were soundly converted to God. Here I administered the rite of baptism in Whitewater — the first time, at that point, that the waters of the forest stream had ever served that holy purpose. Brother William C, Smith gives a full account of this meeting, which he introduces with a reference to the prosperity that attended my labors on the circuit at large. Now that a two days' meeting was announced for Eichmond, he says, the attention of the people generally turned in that direction, A Methodist meeting was something new to most of the citizens, and created no little excitement, partly because they were curious to know what it would be like, and partly because these "hireling preach ers" were about to disturb the quiet of the place. Some were anxious to keep the people from attend ing, and others to see the great sight. The meet ing was held in the brick school-house on the public square. When the time appointed arrived the Methodists came in from different parts of the circuit. Mr. Beggs and two or three other local preachers were in attendance. At their first coming together there was a very good congregation, and an excellent ser mon was preached — one that stirred the hearts of the people to their very depths, and kindled anew the holy fire. At the close of the sermon the tide of feeling was running so high that the songs and shouts of the congregation were heard at quite a WEST AND NORTH-WEST. 77 distance. This increased the excitement in the town, and at night the school-house was crowded. The Holy Ghost attended the Word that was preached, and also the exhortations that followed. An invita tion was extended, and five or six presented them selves as seekers of salvation. This was a strange sight to many in the house. The pious gathered around the penitents, singing and praying tiU a late hour. On Sunday moming a love-feast was held, and it was a time of -great power and of religious enjoy ment. At its close there was an invitation given to those that wished to unite with the Church. Sev eral came forward. Among the number were three sisters, the Misses K., belonging to one of the first families in the town. Their father was rather in- cUned to infidelity. He had taken great pains to educate and prepare his daughters to move in the first circles in society, not dreaming that they would ever become Methodists. When the young ladies came forward some evU-designing person on the out side, who saw through the window what was going on within, hastened to Mr. K. and told him that the Methodists had got his daughters befooled, and that they were acting disreputably, lying prostrate upon the floor, etc. This statement, of course, exasper ated Mr. K, very highly, and he immediately made his way to the school-house where the love-feast was, and demanded admittance. The door-keepers, not knowing who he was, refused to let him enter. He 78 EARLY HISTORY OP THE forced open the door, aijd went in trembling with rage. Going to where his daughters sat weeping, he took them by the hand and led them away. As they were going out the prayer, in' subdued tones. Lord, have mercy on their souls, was heard in sev eral places in the congregation. When they reached home with theit father, and explained to him that all that they had done was to unite with the Church, he, upon learning the deception which had been prac ticed upon him, at once led them back to the school- house, and to the seat whence he had taken them. He then went to Eev, Mr, Beggs, and requested him to make an explanation of his course and offer an apology for him that morning to the public. He remained to hear the sermon,- and at its close asked the preacher home to dine With him. He expressed an entire ' willingness, since it was the wish of his daughters, that they should become members of the Methodist Episcopal Church.-^ They did so, and have long been pious and influential members. Thus Sa tan was thwarted in his design, and preaching con tinued fof some time, resulting in much good. At the close of these meetings there were several applicants for the rite of baptism ; some wished for pouring, others for sprinkling, i and one wished to be immersed. As we went down to the stream for the purpose of baptism, it was just at the close of a quarterly meeting held by the Quakers. Some of them were on their way home, and had to cross the stream just below the place which I had chosen for WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 79 the rite. They stopped in the stream to witness the sight, it being the first that had ever taken place in that region. Some of the young Quaker boys ran, whooped, and haUooed as if they were go ing to a fafr. So great was the curiosity of the people, that they had coUected by hundreds at the water's edge, and stood from fifteen to twenty deep along shore. One man took up a large boy and waded several feet into the water, that he might have a better view. As I was leading the sister out, I found that this man had roiled the water, and I asked him to change his position; he did so by going farther into the stream. After the im mersion, the«ister came out, shouting and praising the Lord. As an instance of the rudeness of the times, I heard, mingled with these sounds, also the shouts of laughter from some of the bystanders ; and on turn ing to see from whence they came, I discovered that the man in the water had made a misstep, and had with his boy fallen backward into the water; I waved my hand, and all were quiet, but none seemed sorry. We closed this year with a powerful union camp meeting. The preachers present were John Strange and James B. Finley, presiding elders; George Mai- lory, Thomas L. Hitt, and others. The Lord was present, and we felt his power to arouse sinners to conviction and to grant them pardoning mercy. The meeting proved a great blessing to the cfrcuit. 80 EARLY HISTOEY OF THE Near the close of this year I was brought very low, by a violent attack of bilious fever; and when my life was despaired of I was visited by brother Strange, who prayed with us, and for me especially. I dated my recovery from that day; and when I met brother Strange at Madison, in the Conference room, he grasped my hand and said, " There is no man on the Conference floor whom it gives me greater joy to meet than you." It was no less a matter of rejoicing to me that I had been spared; that another year's labor had closed; that I had been faithful to my calling, in the midst of my trials and afflictions, and that I could yet look to Jesus for my exceeding great reward. Brother Eoberts presided in his usual pleasant and agreeable man ner, very much to the satisfaction of all present. In order to prepare us for our different fields of labor, he addressed us in a solemn and impressive manner, which I shall never forget. The whole Conference was in tears, and every man seerned ready for any field of labor that, in God's good providence, might be assigned to him. WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 81 CHAPTER IX. This year, 1829, I was sent to the CrawfordsviUe cfrcuit, brother Strange presiding elder. I soon reached my field of labor, and commenced in truth to be a successful Methodist minister. I was alone in the work on a four weeks' circuit, which em braced the foUowing towns, in the order given : CrawfordsviUe and Lafayette; from thence to Del phi and on to Logansport; once out to Fort Wayne, and back to Attica; then down to Portland and Covington. My general health was good, although I was confined for about three weeks in Crawfords viUe with chills and fever. Lafayette was very new at that time, having only five brethren and a class of twenty members. We had several revivals, one especially in CrawfordsviUe, where I was assisted by brother James Armstrong. This revival gave a new impetus to Methodism in that place, which was for some time afterward the prevaUing denomination in the town. Our camp meeting was also a success. Strange, Armstrong, and others were present. The object of our preach ing was to convert souls, and our brethren were mighty in prayer. The result was that convictions followed fast upon each other, till its close. I left in company with brother Armstrong on the way 82 EAELY HISTOEY OF THE to Conference, which was to be held at Edwards- ville, Madison county, Illinois, September 18, 1829, We soon met with other preachers, and before we reached Conference our company increased to twenty. We journeyed together three hundred miles on horseback) and enjoyed our ride very much. Traveling in those days had many pleasant features, but sometimes those which were not so pleasant. At one place where we staid over night, our horses were fed upon oats, mixed with castor beans, :The result was that several of them were sick and unfit for use the next morning. We hired what horses could be obtained, and used some of ours that were sick, and at last found ourselves at Con ference safe, and in good time. We .were very pleasantly entertained, and a more agreeable com pany of brethren I have seldom met than those at the Conference at Edwardsville; Bishop Soule pre sided, ' and did so most acceptably. On Sabbath morning he preached a very ex;cellent sermon. John Strange and James Armstrong followed in the afternoon. Their efforts were attended with great power. While Strange was preaching, the congre gation almost involuntarily arose to their feet, and shouted "Halleluiah!" till their deafening hosan nas almost drowned the voice of the preacher. He was in turn affected by their enthusiasm, and sat down, shouting " Glory to God in the highest!" At this session a collection of one hundred dollars was taken up for superannuated preachers. WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 83 Prom this Conference 1 was sent to Logansport mission, embracing Lafayette, Delphi, and Logans port. With this charge I had an appropriation of fifty doUars missionary money. I remained here tUl the first quarterly meeting, and then my presiding elder, J. Strange, removed me to Bloomington cfr cuit. I had Jesse Hale for my coUeague. We had a prosperous year, and a number of conversions. We visited several camp meetings, every-where meeting with great success. It was a four weeks' circuit, and numbered seven hundred and eight members. We came nearer getting our quarterage than we ever had since I began my labor, each receiving one hundred dollars. We left here, I trust, with seals to our ministry and spfritual profit to our souls. Our next Annual Conference was held at Vin cennes. Bishop Roberts was taken sick at St. Louis. S. H. Thompson and Peter Cartwright were pres idents pro tenn. The Conference was very pleas ant, and ended in a manner very satisfactory to aU of the brethren. I was sent to the TazeweU cfr cuit. After spending a few days with my parents I started for my cfrcuit, in company with A. E. Phelps. Our circuits joined each other, and lay on the Sangamon River. We were in good time for our work, and during the year had several pleasant interviews. Mine was a four weeks' cfrcuit, and very laborious. There were twenty-eight appoint ments, including a distance of more than three 84 EAELY HISTOEY OF THE hundred miles travel. We had a most delightful Fall, which lasted till near Christmas, The most prominent places were Peoria, HoUen's Grove, now Washington ; Mud Creek, Walnut Grove, Mackinaw Town, Stout's Grove, Dry Grove, Blooming Grove, now Bloomington ; Randolph Grove, Big Grove, Cherry Grove; from thence down Salt Creek to the Falling Timber country ; brother Beck's on Sugar Creek, Hittle's Grove, and Dillon's, where I had two appointments; from there I went to Grand Prairie; from thence to several neighbor hoods, and back to Peoria. On Christmas eve there was a most fearful snow storm. The snow fell to the depth of three feet, so that the remainder of the season my labors were confined to the western part of the circuit. In many places there were immense drifts, and the snow was so crusted that it was impassable. It was March before the snow went off, and then the heavy rains, added to the snow, caused such a freshet as had seldom been known in that region. We had a few conversions during the Winter, and the members were much revived. This year was one of special interest to me. As usual, there was a young lady selected as suitable for the minister's wife, and such she proved in very truth. . Brother William Heath, a brother-in-law of Rev. Samuel Hamilton, of the Ohio Conference, had lately settled in HoUen's Grove. It was to his daughter that my attention was directed. I brought her an undivided WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 85 affection, for I had never proposed marriage before. I had traveled nine years on the circuit, and often in loneliness. She consented to share with me the toils of an itinerant life, and on the 1st day of Sep tember, 1831, we were joined in marriage by Rev. Jesse Hale. It is a saying that "to every man there is one good woman." My wife haa proved so to me. For thirty-five years we journeyed on life's pathway to gether, and each succeeding year grew happier in each other's love. I thank God for the helpmeet he gave me. Would that she had Uved to bless all the remaining years of my Ufe as she did those that are past ! From the pleasant picture of home-life I must turn once more in my narrative — as I did in reaUty in the years gone by — to the scenes of my labors. The year was a prosperous one. Our members numbered two hundred and fifty-two. Peter Cart wright was my presiding elder. We closed the year, as usual, with a camp meeting. Mrs. Beggs accompanied me to Conference this year, which was held at Indianapolis. It was a long and tedious ride for a woman to perform on horse back, and we were also to ride one hundred mUes beyond to visit at my father's. We remained there but a few days, and then started north-west for a three-hundred-mUe ride to my father-in-law's, near Peoria. The evening before we arrived at Washing ton we had to cross Mackinaw River. Not having been apprised of its depth, we ventured in, and 86 EAELY HISTOEY OF THE found ourselves in very deep water. It was up to the horse's back, and we were both thoroughly wetted. When we got to the opposite bank we found it to be about five feet high, and it was im possible for the horses to get up. I climbed up and secured a strong limb, which I placed along side the horse. My wife then reached me her hand, and, with my help, succeeded in climbing up this limb till she reached the bank. "Perils by sea and per ils by land." I then led the horses some distance up the stream, till they could land. We remounted, and had before us a ride of fifteen miles ere we reached my father-in-law's. We arrived there wet and tired, yet thanked God that we were safe, and took courage for further efforts in this great cause. This year I received my appointment to' Chicago mission station. , In July of the previous Summer I had attended two camp meetings — one at Cedar Point, and the other at Plainfield. They were both successful, the one at Plainfield especially so. From this latter place father Walker and myself started for Chicago, about forty miles distant. When we arrived brother Walker gave out an appointment for me to preach in the garrison, in old Dr. Har mon's room. After the sermon was over he gave it out that I was to preach again next morning at nine o'clock ; and this was the beginning of a happy time here. I opened the door for the reception of mem bers, and I think ten joined the Church. Among the number were brother Lee and wife, and Elijah WEST AND NORTH-WEST. 87 Wentworth, with his mother and two sisters. We formed a class of these few members, and it was this class, the first ever formed in Chicago, that now awaited me at my new appointment. I commenced my work here alone, and the pros pect seemed gloomy enough. The garrison consisted of two or three frame houses, and some huts occu pied by the French and Indians. This, only about twenty-five years from the time I now write, was aU that there was of our now mighty city. Some changes had taken place since the preceding Sum mer, and on my arrival 1 felt somewhat encouraged. Several famiUes had moved in — ^father Nobles, with a wife and two daughters. Colonel Richard HamUton and wife, .and Dr. Harmon Irwin, a son of the above- mentioned, with his wife. There were six more members added to my class. I remained here preaching nearly seven weeks be fore I could obtain any accommodations for my fam Uy, and then went back to my father-in-law's after Mrs. Beggs. It was the middle of January, 1832. It wiU be difficult to those of my readers who never braved the perils of pioneer life to reaUze how great were the hardships of the first settlers, and among these there were not many who passed through more toil and discomfort than the Methodist itinerant; and yet there are veterans in the cause who are stUl Uving, and rejoicing that God gave them the privi lege, in thefr younger days, of laboring for him. Now that the fields are aU white, and the harvest is 88 EARLY HISTORY OF THE ready, we forget past toUs in the joyful present, and count ourselves blessed that we are still laborers. But let me return to my perilous journey. It was just after the January thaw, and we had mud and ice, high waters and no bridges, and long dis tances between houses, which made my journey of one hundred and forty miles very tedious and diffi cult. I had traveled some distance, and was still thirty-five miles from Washington, now Magnolia, I had but two biscuits in my pocket, and, as .the be ginning of a hard day's journey, was obliged to swim Sandy Creek. My next obstruction was Crow Creek. At the old ford there was so much water and ice that I was obliged to ride up the stream for a num ber of miles over the open prairie. I crossed several of the largest branches, and was congratulating my self that I had conquered my greatest difficulties, I was shaping my course toward Washington, when I came to the main branch. Here the water was low, but it had frozen hard to the very bottom. The thaw had caused the water to overflow the ice to the depth of three feet. This water had also frozen over, but not hard enough to bear up my horse on the new-made ice. He broke through the ice at the top, and also at the bottom of the stream. After making several fruitless attempts to cross, I again rode out on the prairie. I rode on and on till I lost sight of timber and of my course, out on the sea of open prairie without a compass or a guide. It was cloudy and cold, and near night. I must WEST Afro NOETH-WEST. 89 either cross the river or Ue out aU night upon Grand Prafrie. I chose the former, and attempted to cross at the risk of being swamped in the mud and ice. I broke the ice as weU as I could to about the middle of the stream, when the under ice gave way, and down went my horse, throwing me off at one side. This broke the surface ice around the horse, and also in front of him; I then gave him the word, and he struggled nobly, bringing me out upon the right side without any serious injury. I was weU drenched. I took off my boots, and emptied the water out of them, and wrung out my socks, and the skfrts of my overcoat. It was very cold, yet I mounted my horse, thanked God for my safety, and took courage, although I-still had great obstacles before me. It was stiU cloudy, and there was no road and no timber in sight. The sailor out of sight of land, with no compass, is no more at loss than is one on the open prafrie where no shrub, or tree, or dim speck in the distant horizon is to be seen. I was in greater straits than ever. I did not know what dfrection to take, and there was no time to be lost; I started, and soon found myseU on a sUght elevation of prafrie ; from this point I could at a great distance discover a patch of timber, and I dfrected my course toward it. After riding tiU a late hour in the night I reached the timber, and found there a small farm inclosed by a fence. I took down the rails and rode through, where I found 90 EARLY HISTORY OF THE stacks of wheat aind straw.. After vainly searching for more evidences. of a human- habitation, I con cluded to make the best of my situation, and pass the night there with what comfort I could.. I fed my horse some of ithe wheat, and in my frozen clothes lay down in the straw. I remained here but a short time, when I recollected, the apostle's advice, that "bodily exercise is profitable." I re sorted to violent exercise, in order to bring my blood into circulation, and then lay down in the straw again; I kept this up all night. In the morning my prospects brightened; I heard some one calling hogs, and, homely as was the sound, it was a most welcome one, I saw some one on the opposite side of a. creek, and called out to him, I learned that' this stream was Panther Creek, and that I was .twenty miles from Washington. He asked me . where I had staid over night, and I told him, and also the liberty I had taken in feeding my horse. He said the stacks were his, and that it was " all right." He then told me that I must ride three miles up the creek, where I would find a bridge, and that by the time I came down again I would find some breakfast prepared for me. It was a wel come ^ound; for I had eaten nothing for twenty- four hours, except those two biscuits. My break? fast was a feast, for I orought. to it the best' of sauces as a relish — a .good appetite. It was as great a 1 joy to those ¦ early .settlers to welcome a stranger to their board, was it as to the hungry WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 91 traveler to partake of their hospitality. May God's blessing rest on bim and his for his kindness that moming ! I thanked him, and attended moming devotions. The thanks and the prayers of the Methodist min ister in those days always settled the reckoning with thefr hosts. I mounted my horse, who had also shared the hospitalities with me, and was soon well on my way to Washington. On reaching Wal nut Creek I found I must swim it, and also many other smaUer streams before I reached my father-in- law's. I was much comforted to find them aU weU, and Mrs. Beggs impatient to join me even in my arduous labors. I remained here but a few days, and had my scanty effects packed on a sled. Having a good snow we reached the Big VermU- ion late in the evening; it was too high to ford; and being nearly opposite the house of Martin Rey nolds, I shouted at the top of my voice, tiU I made myself heard. He soon came down to our reUef with his sled and horses. We traveled down the stream, he on one side and I on the other. At last we found a place on the ice, where we ventured to meet. With certain precautions we attempted to cross on the ice. -I took the rails of our old-fashioned bed stead, and by walking on one whUe I shoved the other along in front of us,' we at last found ourselves safely landed on the other side. After having a comfortable night's rest, we went back ip the morn ing to see to the horses and look after my effects. 92 EAELY HISTOEY OF THE As we were crossing in a canoe, we came very near being capsized ; and in case we had been, we should have been drowned. But God in his good provi dence saw fit to spare us for further labors. I took my goods back about five miles, and left them till the roads should become passable. I staid at brother Reynolds's a few days; and in the mean time walked over to Ottowa, a village about twelve miles dis tant, where I preached a sermon. After this I again went after my horses and goods, and brought them to the river-side once more, in hopes to get them across. We did so by making a bridge sixteen feet in length, which reached from the river's edge to the ice in the middle of the stream. I ran them across the ice by means of a hand-sled, and brother Eeynolds with his team moved them up to Ottowa. Brother Green took them farther on the way to his house ; and there they remained till the next Spring. To give some idea how the early settlers lived, I will tell the reader of our fare while at brother Eeynolds's, and how we obtained it. There was no flour to be had, and no mills for grinding. Our corn, of which we had great plenty, had to be pounded in a mortar. The only pestle we had was made by driving an iron wedge into a stick, which served for a handle. While going from brother Green's to Plainfield we were overtaken by a storm of rain and sleet, which made the ground literally one sheet of ice. The horse which Mrs, Beggs rode had no shoes. WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 93 When we reached Platteville the creek was swollen so high that it could not be crossed at that point. Brother Eeed, who was with us, managed to get across, but judged it was not safe for us to attempt it. So we traveled, he on one side and ourselves on the other, some distance along the stream, till at last we found a crossing-place. The storm continued till we reached Plainfield. I was fearful the exposure would cost Mrs. Beggs her life. It was several weeks before she recovered, and then not entirely, from the effects of her stormy ride. There was yet . no room to be had in Chicago, and it was thought best for my wife to remain at Plainfield till the en suing Spring, while I kept up my appointments tiU May. 94 .EAELY HISTOEY OF THE CHAPTER X. Jesse Walkee was superintendent of the mission work from Peoria to Chicago, and also had a nom inal appointment at Chicago. His labors, however, were so extensive that he preached here but a few times during the year. Brother Walker was not able to attend Confererice, held in Indianapolis, in 1831. After consulting me, to know if I was will ing to take charge of the mission at Chicago, to which I consented if Conference should so decide, he wrote to Bishop Eoberts to appoint me to that work. So this was my home for the coming year, and I hastened to take charge of the Uttle class I had formed a few months previous. I found them all standing fast in the liberty of the Gospel. Our meetings were generally held in the fort, and they increased in interest till our first quarterly meeting, which was held in January, 1832. I had been helping brother Walker hold some meetings at Plainfield, and we left there on one of the coldest days of that Winter for my quarterly meeting at Chicago. It was thirty miles to the first house. Brother T. B. Clark started with us with an ox team, for the purpose of carrying provisions to help sustain the people in Chicago during the meeting. Provi sions were very scarce here at that time. Late in WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 95 the evening we became alalrmed lest he had perished in the cold, and went out on a fruitless hunt after him; He a,rrived, at eleven o'clock that night, at our stopping-place. The next day saw us all safely in Chicago, where we met with a warm reception from brother Lee and family. Here, to-day, amid the presence of this great and prosperous city, let us reconsider our humble begin nings. Thirty-six years ago a load of provisions was brought by an ox team from the viUage of Plainfield to sustain the friends that met here for a quarterly meeting ! The meeting commenced with power, and increased in interest till Sunday morning. My first sermon was preached on Sabbath moming at ten o'clock, after which brother Walker invited the peo ple around the sacramental board. It was a season long to be remembered. Every one seemed to be baptized and consecrated anew to the great work to be accomphshed in the village that was destined to become a. mighty city. Jesse Walker was my successor in 1832. He moved his family up to Chicago as soon as possible, and set to work. I attended his first quarterly meeting; it was held in an old log school-house which served for a parsonage, parlor, kitchen, and audience-room. The furniture consisted of an old box stove, with one griddle, upon which we cooked. We boiled our tea-kettle, cooked what few vegeta bles we could get, and fried our meat, each in its turn. Our table was an old wooden chest; and 96 EAELY HISTOEY OP THE when dinner was served up we surrounded the board and ate with good appetites, asking no ques tions for conscience' sake. Dyspepsia, that more modern refinement, had not found its way to our settlements. We were too earnest and active to in dulge in such a luxury. Indeed, our long rides and arduous labors were no friends to such a visitant. This palatial residence, which served as the Chicago parsonage, was then situated between Randolph and Washington streets, the first block west of the river. The Winter previous I had purchased a claim, the .only title to be had. Then I paid three hundred dollars for a claim upon two hundred and forty acres, eighty of which was covered with timber land, por tions of which to-day sell for one hundred dollars per acre. My aim then was to secure a home, when the time should come that I could no longer travel on the itinerant work, which I had laid out as the business of my life while health and strength re mained. The Lord prospered me in my purchase. I was well paid for my land, for which blessing I am yet thankful, and trust that I shall ever be found a good steward of the manifold mercies of the Lprd. This year there were no returns of members. At this time a little incident occurred in the life of Jesse Walker worthy of note, as showing the intol erance we had sometimes to meet with, even in a new country. At an early day he was in the habit of holding meetings for the handful of Americans then in St. Louis. Finding that, there was a need WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 97 for regular appointments, he made them for once in four weeks. The Catholics hearing of this great outrage: — that a Methodist was to preach regularly among them— ^ent to their priest with a complaint against such presumption. " Never mind," said the priest, " they can 't do much ; if nothing else will do, we will starve them out." "Starve them out," said the complainant, "why, they will live where a dog would starve to death!" And it was through the untiring efforts of Walker that the foundations of Methodism were so deeply and broadly laid, that neither CathoUcism nor the "Prince of the power of the air " has been able to withstand its growth. The handful of seed which he then planted has now become like the "Cedars of Lebanon," May we ever manifest his zeal in all good works which the Lord may appoint unto us ! Amid our other trials and hardship we suffered some from fear of the Indians. I had laid in my store of- provisions for the coming Summer. It was during my absence that Mrs. Beggs was greatly annoyed by the Potawatomie Indians, who frequently brought rumors that the Black Hawks would kill us all that Spring. It was not long before the in habitants came flying from Fox River, through great fear of their much-dreaded enemy. They came with their cattle and horses, some bareheaded and others barefooted, crying, "The Indians! the Indians!" Those that were able hurried on with all speed for DanviUe. All the inhabitants on 9 98 EAELY HISTORY OP THE Hickory Creek and in Jackson Grove took fright also, and fled. A few of the men only staid behind to arrange their temporal matters as best they could under the circumstances. In the mean time some friendly Indians who knew of their fright were coming to inform them that their dangers were not so great as they supposed. The men, seeing these, and sup posing that they were hostile, mounted their horses and fled for life, before they could be informed of the friendly intentions of their visitors. The latter then tried to head them in, in order to correct their mistake. This, of course, only made matters worse; and the men hastened on with greater speed till they reached their families, who had by this time come to a halting place for the night. Their cattle and horses were turned out to feed and scattered over the surrounding country. They were making arrangements for supper — some of them having their meals prepared, others just commencing to prepare them — when here came those men, flying in hot haste, one of whom had lost a hat, and their horses jaded and ^orn, with a ten-mile race. When they told of their narrow escape, and how the Indians had tried to head them, there was confusion and dismay in the little camp. It was urged that all should remain quiet till they could get their cattle and horses together; but there was too much "demoralization" for that. One team could not be found, and it was thought better to WEST AND NORTH-WEST. 99 sacrifice one than that the whole should suffer. So it was decided that they should move off as sUently as possible; yet there was one ungovernable person among them, who made noise enough in driving his oxen to have been heard a mUe distant. Of course this was very annoying to the others, who felt the necessity of being quiet. The hatless man and one or two others found their way to Danville in ad vance of the rest, and told their fearful stories — how the Indians were kiUing and burning all before them, while at this time it is presumed that there was not a hostile Indian south of Desplains River. At Plainfield, however, the alarm was so great that it was thought best to make aU possible efforts for a defense, in case of an attack. My house was considered the most secure place. I had two log pens buUt up, one of which served for a barn and the other a shed. These were torn down, and the logs used to build up a breast-work around the house. All of the people living on Fox River who could not get farther away made my house a place of shelter. There were one hundred and twenty-five, old aind young. We had four guns, some useless for shooting purposes. Ammunition was scarce. All of our pewter spoons, basins, and platters were soon molded by the women into bul lets. As a next best means of defense, we got a good supply of axes, hoes, forks, sharp sticks, and clubs. Here we intended to stay tUl some relief could be' obtained. This was on Thursday; and we 100 EAELY HISTOEY OF THE remained here till the next Sabbath; when the people of Chicago, hearing of our distress, raised a company of twenty-five white men, and as many Indians, who came to our aid,. They remained with us till the next morning, (Monday,) and then concluded to re connoiter along Fox River. The Indians, with Mr. Lorton at their head, were to go to Big Woods, (now Aurora,) and Gen. Brown, with Col. Hamilton and their men, were to visit Halderman's Grove, and then fix upon a place to meet in the evening, where they might spend the night together in safety. In the afternoon Mr. Lorton came back, with two or three of his Indians, and brought us fearful stories of how they had all been taken prisoners, and kept two or three hours; the Indians,, however, being on good terms with Black Hawk, he had aUowed him, with an escort, to have his liberty,' in order to go up to Chicago, where he intended to take his family for safety. He must go that night, and had but a moment to warn us of our danger. He told us our fort would be attacked that night, or the next at the longest, and that if they could not storm the fort" at first, they would continue the siege till they did. He advised us to fly to Ottowa or Chicago as soon as possible. . Such a scene as then took place at Fort Beggs was seldom witnessed, even in those perilous times. The stoutest hearts failed them, and strong men turned pale, while women and children wept and fainted,, till it seemed hardly possible to restore them WEST AND NORTH-WEST, 101 to life, and almost cruel for them to return from their quiet unconsciousness to a sense of their danger. It was no time to hesitate or deliberate. Immediate departure was the word; but they were divided as to the best means to be taken in finding a place of security; some wished to go to Chicago, others to Ottowa, whUe some proposed to separate and scatter for the woods. After several short and pithy speeches were made, James Walker was elected Captain, and formed us into a company. We were advised that Indians would never attack a fort, unless driven to it, and that it was safer to remain where, we were, at least tUl we heard from the remaining men. AU possible preparations were then made for our defense, and we determined to seU our Uves as dearly as we could. A long piece of fence was tom down and strewed about the fort. We set fire to these rails, so that we might see .the Indians when they came for attack. We had several alarms; yet we remained here safe tUl Wednesday evening, and then every man was ordered to his post to prepare for an onset from the enemy. To our great joy the white men retumed that evening ; but they brought us news of the massacre of fifteen white inhabitants on Indian Creek ; also that they were burning houses and kiUing cattle. They advised us to leave the fort at once, and go either to Ottowa or Chicago. We chose the latter course. One circum stance I had forgotten to mention. When the in habitants fled from Fox River, there was one infirm 102 EARLY HISTORY OF THE old man who was confined to his bed with the rheu matism. He advised them to leave him, as he had not many days to live at all events. They left him, and it was several days before they ventured back to see what had become of him. They found him, and learned that the Indians had been there and brought him food. He was brought to our fort, and there was as much rejoicing as if one had been _ raised from the dead. It was decided that we should take him with us to Chicago. We spent the night in busy preparations for our departure the next day. In getting our oxen and horses together, it was found that we had only teams enough to carry the people. Nearly all of our effects had to be left behind; some of my iron- ware and bed clothes I hid in hollow trees, in hopes of finding them again, should I ever return. I did return a long time after that. ' I had been detained by sick ness, and found that my bed-clothes were nearly spoiled, and a great destruction of property besides, although no houses were burned. We left our fort at seven o'clock on Thursday morning, with our company and the twenty-five Chicago men as guard; we made quite an imposing appearance. We arranged ourselves so as to cover near a mile in length on the road. It was after ward said that the Indians were watching us, and would have made an attack but for our formidable appearance and numbers. We traveled forty miles that day, and reached Chicago by sunset. WEST AND NORTH-WEST. 103 CHAPTER XI. There was no extra room for us when we arrived in Chicago. Two or three families of our number were put into a room fifteen feet square with as many more famUies, and here we staid, crowding and jamming each other, for several days. One afternoon, as if to increase our misery, a thunder storm came up, and the end of our room was broken in by a stroke of lightning whUe we were taking a lunch. None of us were hurt, but the lightning passed down the waU to the room below us, leaving a charred seam within a few inches of a keg of pow der. But our room, which was in the second story, was fiUed with a distressing odor of sulphurous smoke, and the report was the loudest I ever heard. The next morning our first babe was born, and dur ing our stay fifteen tender infants were added to our number. One may imagine the confusion of the scene — children were crying and women were com plaining within doors, while without the tramp of soldiery, the rolling of drums, and the roar of can non added to the din ; and yet out of this confusion we tried to arrange order. The soldiery were drawn up in BoUd column near one of the houses, whose friendly steps were my only pulpit. Here I stood 104 EAELY HISTOEY OF THE and pointed, out to them the "Lamb of God, who taketh away the sins of the world." In a few days the inhabitants. of Walker's Grove, now Plainfield, returned to the fort with fifty meh for a guard, and Captain Buckmaster in command. They were able to raise, that year, some buckwheat and a few potatoes. Mrs. Beggs was yet too deli cate in health for me to think of leaving. She was still confined to her room, yet our stay here was of short duration. Major Whistler came on with his troops, and at the first roar of his cannon on the lake shore there was great rejoicing. But our joy was soon turned to heaviness. Instead of receiving protection, we were turned out of our shelter in or der to give place to his men, who had been exposed to the rough winds on the lake, ' The order came for us to leave the garrison. We should have, re belled could it have been of any use, but there was no help for us but to obey. The Major and his fam ily came into our room, and we were turned out into the pitiless rain-storm that afternoon. We found shelter in an open house, where, from the dampness and exposure, Mrs. Beggs and the child took a severe cold. Colonel Eichard Hamilton then gave us the use of one of his small rooms. We made up our bed on the floor, where the cold and dampness caused both mother and child to take additional cold. I also became sick from the exposure, and matters indeed wore a gloomy look to us. I trust, however, that on the day of reckoning it will be said unto WEST AND NOETH-WEST, 105 Colonel Hamilton for his great kindness unto us, " I was a stranger and ye took me in; enter thou into the joys of thy Lord." I then proposed to-Mrs, Beggs to go to Plainfield. She consented, saying it would be no better to die here than to be kiUed by the Indians on the road. Forty railes through the wUderness! Some had been kiUed but a few days before, although, happily for us, we did not know of it at that time. We started on our journey, our only defense beings, one loaded pistol, a strong faith in the Uving God, and the promise, "No harm shaU befall thee." We reached the fort late in the day, quite safe, but much fatigued. I then decided to secure a guard to Ottowa, and to get Mrs. Beggs on to Washington to her mother's. There had been a company of men detached to go either to Ottowa or Chicago to draw rations for the soldiers. They decided to go to Chi cago. They were to start the next moming. That aftemoon, however. Colonel Owens, Indian agent, came down with the news that General Scott had come to Chicago with his men, and also brought the cholera, a worse-dreaded foe than the Indians. This decided the men to go to Ottowa for rations, and by that means we obtained a guard. The drive to Ottowa through the hot sun and over the rough road came very near exhausting my wife and child, yet we ventured on to Washington alone. The Indian difficulties being by this time pretty much over, I concluded to return alone to 106 EARLY HISTORY OP THE the fort. In the mean time the inhabitants had fled from the cholera, leaving Chicago almost deserted. Some of them had come to our fort, while others went to Danville. Numbers died of the cholera, and General Scott's men had to remain till the epi demic had subsided. It was not long after this that General Scott gave chase to Black Hawk, and effect ually drove the Indians away. We now had peace in all our borders. There was no hope now of my doi^ any thing in my station, so I concluded to go on a visit to my father's, in Clark county, Indi ana. From this place I started again for Wash ington, a journey of three hundred miles, which cost me an outlay of six cents. I found my wife and child very much improved in health, which gave me renewed courage, and I thanked God for his great blessings. After a few days' rest I started for Conference, which was held at Jacksonville, lUinois. Our mem bers numbered ten, with Jesse Walker presiding elder. The Illinois Conference having been divided, there remained to us twenty-five preachers. The most prominent were M, Taylor, Peter Cartwright, Jesse Walker, J. Dew, S, H, Thompson, Simon Pe ter, and J, Sinclair, Bishop Soule presided, and we had a very pleasant session. There were only forty preachers, traveling and local, to supply the whole State of Illinois. I was sent to the Desplaines mis sion, with an appropriation of two hundred dollars from the Missionary Society. WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 107 This year, 1833, my mission embraced the foUow ing appointments: Plainfield, NaperviUe, E. Scar- riott's, (East Dupage,) Oswego, Halderman's Grove, John Green's, Ottowa, Martin Reynolds's, (twelve mUes down the river,) Jackson's Grove, Reed's Grove, Hickory Creek, and Yankee Settlement. The pros pects of peace, and the fact that we could retum again to our worship, gave us many hearty amens from the brethren, especiaUy at a camp meeting at JoUet, on the claim of brother Gongers, where the scattered inhabitants had but just retumed from thefr flight from the Indians. It was a year of hard labor; for I had a number of long rides. Then, too, came our first great sor row. We lost our only chUd, Mary EUen. We bowed our heads- in submission, as we thought that " our loss was her gain." If the Lord had given her unto us, was it not meet that he should take her unto himself again? And we Uved in the hope of one day being welcomed by her to our mansion in the skies. It is many years since she died, and her mother has now joined her across that Jordan of death, whUe I yet remain, after a conflict of near a half century, on the confines of that brighter world, faint, yet pressing onward, with the joyful prospect of thefr welcoming me to my home in heaven. Desplaines retumed thirty-four members. Jesse Walker was superintendent. In 1834 our Confer ence met at Union Grove, St. Clair county. Bishop Roberts presiding. Our business was dispatched 108 EARLY HISTOEY OP THE with the usual satisfaction to all. I was . reap pointed to Desplaines mission, and I returned with renewed zeal, which in this case was the more neces sary, as the rage for speculation was - just com mencing among both settlers and emigrants. It was an earnest struggle, and it. sometimes seemed impossible to hold the attention of a sinner long enough to impress him with the great claims which the Gospel had upon him. Those who would not come out to church I followed to their houses, con versing with them on the highways and by the wayr side. It was a doubtful struggle; but, by the help of the Lord and his efficient instruments, in the persons of brothers Walker, E, Scarriott, and F. Owens, I saw many souls converted and believers strengthened. I was enabled to -form new classes, and our quarterly meetings, two days' meetings, and camp meetings were crowned with abundant sue cess. Our numbers increased to fifty-seven, J. Sin clair our presiding elder. My worldly goods increased, so that, if one could use the paradox, I was cursed with blessings. Three years before I owned a horse and sixty dollars. Now my farm of two hundred and forty acres was nearly paid for; and I had four horses, seven cows, and forty hogs. My farm also yielded bountifully; and now it had come to that, that -^I must either give up farming or the itinerancy. I chose to cling to the latter; for I remembered the solemn promise I had made at the time of my ordination, to give WEST AND NORTH-WEST. 109 myself up wholly to the work of saving souls. Ac cordingly I sold out my stock, and with the pro ceeds buUt a bam; I then rented my farm for one year. I had made a sacrifice; yet I believe it worked together for good to me and mine; and, which was my higher aim, for the good of the cause. It is with the greatest pleasure that I now look back, and think that I have given up my best days to the service of the Lord; and I now call upon my soul, and aU that is within me, to bless his holy name; and I pray that the "words of my mouth and the meditations of my heart may ever be accepta ble in His sight," The Conference was held at Union Grove, about three hundred miles distant ; and I, in company with Rev. Z. HaU, rode to it on horseback, at the rate of fifty mUes a day. Our stay at Conference rested us, and we retumed to the moral conflict with renewed zeal. I was sent to the Bureau mission in 1835, In the Summer of 1834 I accompanied John Sin clair, presiding elder, to his quarterly meeting at Gralena. Barton Randle and J. T. MitcheU were laboring on that circuit. After a profitable and pleasant meeting we started for a camp meeting that was to be held near Princeton. The meeting was somewhat advanced, and there was prospect of a good work. Two Congregational ministers came to the camp-ground, and proposed to join us in our efforts. There was to be no doctrine preached, and at the close of the meeting the converts were to 110 EARLY HISTORY OP THE join where they pleased ; to this our presiding elder strongly objected. He said he was a Methodist, and he must preach their doctrines, and that there could be no union on such terms. We had an unusually suc cessful meeting, the fruits of which I trust will be seen in eternity ; and from that time Methodism has taken deep root in that quarter, growing even till now. When I arrived at my mission that year with my family, the only shelter I could get was a small log- house fourteen feet square. It had but one window, and that with four panes, of glass. There were no shelves, and only a stick chimney. Most of our things had to be stowed away in boxes. To add to our discomfort the Winter was unusually severe. A sister of mine lived with us. A short time before our second child, James Williams, was born, I moved into a log-cabin, somewhat larger than the first, but little better in other respects. I had a large four weeks' circuit — Ottowa, Dayton; two appointments on Indian Creek, Pawpaw, Mulligan's Grove; three appointments on Bureau, and four miles to the west. Old Indiantown; then three appointments up at Peru, and one at Judge Strong's, five miles below Ottowa; and another at Troy Grove — making sixteen appointments in all ; J, Sinclair presiding elder. This year we had a good revival; returned one hundred members ; raised about eighty dollars for missions. Our next Conference was held at Springfield; Bishop Eoberts presided. Our number of preachers stationed was about sixty. There were several WEST AND NOETH-WEST. Ill transferred — A. Brunson, W. B. Mack, W. Wigley, H. W. Eeed, and S. F. Whitney. I was sent back to my mission of last year. There had been a new mission formed, which took off two of my appoint ments, namely, Indian Creek and Ottowa. We had this year a glorious revival, much more extensive than last year. We also had an excel lent camp meeting. A. E. Phelps was present, and preached with great liberty and with powerful effect. W. B. Mack foUowed with another very effective sermon, and the meeting closed with a number of conversions and accessions to our number; yet we received a blow this year that was greatly to the injury of Methodism. Tins was the downfall of our brother W. B. Mack; but the Lord overruled the af^ction, and Methodism in that quarter yet Uves. The number of members returned in 1836 was two hundred and thirty-one. In the year 1837 Conference was held at Eush- vUle, Illinois, Bishop Eoberts presiding. It was a season long to be remembered, especially for a mis sionary meeting, a thing unheard of in that day. P. E. Borein spoke in favor of the missionary cause. His speech greatly moved his hearers, so much so that Bishop Eoberts sat trembling in his chair, while the tears- coursed rapidly down his cheeks. This speech was the beginning of Borein's brilliant career, John Clark had just come down from the Lake Su perior mission, and presented the claims to education of two or three Indian boys for the mission field 112 EAELY HISTOEY OP THE among the Indians. Great was the work and great the occasion, and our brother caught the inspiration, and his speech sent an electrifying thrill for the mis sionary cause through the whole Conference. The result was a very large collection for the work, many of the preachers paying their last dollar, and then having to borrow money to get home with. This year I was sent to Joliet, My colleague was ^ Matthew A. Turner, and presiding elder John Clark. My circuit embraced all the counties south of the Desplaines Eiver, It was a glorious year to me. We had several conversions, with strong evidence of their being bom into the kingdom; and especially at our c^p meetings did the work of grace thrive. One circumstance is worthy of note, as showing God's care over- his children. We had two local preachers and two exhorters, and there being no pre siding elder the charge of the meeting and preaching fell upon me. Brother Joseph Shoemaker gathered up his family and came up to the feast of the taber nacles, as was the custom in that day. Our aim was to get spiritual good to. our souls, and to do good unto others. His wife had been a member of some years' standing, yet was not satisfied with her - attainments, and throughout the whole meeting earn estly sought the blessing of acceptance. .It was a ' time of melting power; yet sister Shoemaker left the meeting under great depression. They left, and on their way home they continued' singing, shouting, and praying, brother Shoemaker having WEST AND NOETH-WEST, 113 in charge a spirited team of horses. All at once there went up from the wagon a shout of "Glory to God!" and as it burst upon the ears of the driver, he let go his reins and fell back in the wagon, joining the general shout. Away went his horses, at the top of their speed, making a circuit of several miles. Some of the brethren who were behind caught the horses as they came in from their detour, and found all safe and still praising God, unconscious of all that had passed, God had watched over them, and given his angels charge concerning ^ them, and how could harm befall them? .^his year I commenced the first church in Joliet, and it was completed in time for our last quarterly meeting, I preached the first Methodist sermon in Joliet, with only the inmates of a private house for my congregation. There were but few present, and they were hardened in sin; but now, by the grace of God, the Church there numbers hundreds, and may the Lord prosper them unto the end ! Here I transcribe the inscription taken from the tombstone of Eev, Jesse Walker, It was written by Bishop Hamline, at my request. His remains lie in the Plainfield cemetery, JESSE WALKER. Died Oct. i, 1835, AGED SIXTY-NINE YEAES. At the Rock Eiver Conference, in 1850, his remains were removed to this place by his sons in the Gospel, who erect this stone to transmit his revered name to coming generations. 10 114 EAELY HISTOEY OF THE CHAPTER xn. In the year 1837 I traveled the Forked Creek circuit, living at Wilmington. Our accommodations were very .unpleasant, yet they were the best to be had. We lived in the second story. The weather was very hot, the season sickly, and the musketoes intolerable. I have frequently sat up all night to keep them off- from those who slept. There were some very sudden deaths among my flock, yet we had some reason to rejoice in the good work that I was still urging forward. Our quarter age was light, as we had but few members, and all were very poor. Yet they were the Lord's poor, and had large -souls, and shared liberally with me of their scanty means. John Clark was presiding elder. We had a camp meeting at Eeed's Grove, where we had such wonderful displays of God's power and glory, that it remains like a bright light in the memory of those who survive; and they speak of -it as most triumphant and successful in its powerful conver sions. When the meeting closed, and we had the last mourner down for prayers, there were but two unconverted souls left. There was one man, now brother Thomas Underwood, who called him self "a hard case." He came on the ground with many others, steeped in sin like himself. On WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 115 Sabbath, with others, he came forward for prayers. After a long struggle, and many prayers in his be half, late in the evening he raised his head, and said, "I think I feel better." "Yes," said he, "I do feel better; I think I have got religion." Then he arose, and in the most earnest tones said, "Yes, I have got religion." One "could almost see his face shine; and yet he so feared that others might doubt his sincerity, that he began exhorting sinners in the most earnest manner, pointing them to the Lamb of God as their all-sufficient Savior ; and enforced the exhortation by alluding to himself as the most hard ened of sinners. If God could save him, what might he not do for others if they would only repent? He then took hold of one hardened sinner that sat near him ; said he, " You are going to get religion too." "No!" said the sinner, "I am not." "Do not say so," said he ; " I once said so too ; but I thank God that I have come here." He continued urging him for a long time; yet the man persisted in his refusal. At last he said, "0, do not say so; you will, you must come with us yet." The man turned pale, and down he came and commenced praying; soon Israel was victorious. This man's efforts and success were so great that he had but to ask a sinner to yield, and he gave himself up to the Savior. When the invitation came for the young converts to come forward to join as probationers, he was the first to come. Seeing that others hesitated, he begged the privilege of 116 EAELY HISTOEY OP THE helping them to take their final resolution. " 0 yes," said I, " bring them in by all means," By his persistent efforts he brought in several. One of them said to him, "You are going to heaven, brother Thomas," "Yes," said he, "I am going, if I have to go alone; still I am going." His face is yet Zion ward, he is still on his way to heaven; but not alone. Some time after this, when, on being ex amined in class meeting, he was feeling very gloomy, he said -he could best describe his condition by com paring himself to a pile of drift-wood, hedged in the swollen river, and to move forward was out of the question. The meeting went on, and it became a heavenly place in Christ Jesus, Brother Underwood arose and said, " Glory to God, brethren, I 'm afloat," At our present meeting J, Clark, presiding elder, came and preached once, and then left on a visit to his father's, William Crissey, Francis Owens, and some others composed the group of ministers. From among our brethren of the laity we had the Fra zier's, Kelly's, and old brother Watkins. From Forked Creek we had brother Shoemaker, George Lyonbarger, and a few others. In those, days when I could get these lay brethren, and old brother F. Owens, we seldom failed of having a time of refresh ing from the " presence of the Lord." This year was a great spiritual feast to my poor soul. The number of members returned was one hundred and ten. From the Alton Conference, September 12, WEST AND NORTH-WEST. 117 1838, Bishop Soule presiding, I received my appoint ment to the JoUet cfrcuit, with WiUiam S. Crissey, A. Chenoweth superintendent. This was brother Crissey 's second year ; and he was an indefatigable laborer, attending to aU matters both smaU and ^eat, and completing the churches that I had commenced two years before — one at Plainfield and another at JoUet; J. Clark was presiding elder. The number of members retumed this year was one hundred and eighty-eight. This was my first ex perience under a superintendent. The cfrcumstances and events of the relationship were any thing but pleasant; and I prayed to be deUvered from the Uke again. I may appropriately introduce here a connected view of the work in the locaUty embrac ing Wilmington, JoUet, and Ottowa from its origin to a very recent date. In 1832 I was appointed to the Desplaines mission, embracing aU the settlements from twelve mUes be low Ott-owa up to Oswego, NaperviUe, Plainfield, Yankee Settlement, (four mUes east of Lockport,) Hickory Creek, Jackson's Grove, and Reed's Grove. This latter was at the limits of the white population, and the number of members was thirty-four. Jesse Walker was my presiding elder. In 1833 I was re turned to the same charge — smaU congregations, reached by long, slow rides, by Indian trails, or over the trackless prairie. This was a hard year's labor, resulting in but Uttle apparent good. This FaU the preachers met in Conference at brother 118 EARLY HISTOEY OP THE Padfield's, Union Grove, about twenty miles east of St. Louis — an account of which session is elsewhere given.* David Blackwell was appointed to Desplaines mission, John Sinclair presiding elder. It embraced all the white settlements this side of Ottowa, except Chicago, extending south to Forked Creek. Black- well formed the first class in the last-named locality in John Frazer's log-cabin, brother Frazer leader; members, Mrs. Frazer, John and Elizabeth Williams, Eobert and Ann Watkins, James and Nancy Kelley, James Jordan and wife, John and Elizabeth Howell, and Hamilton and Martha Keeney. Number of members this year, fifty-seven. Blackwell was re appointed in 1836, Wilder B. Mack presiding elder. Number of members returned, one hundred and sixty. The following year, (1836,) myself and Matthew Turner were appointed on the Joliet cir cuit, brother Mack presiding elder. Number of members returned, two hundred and fifty-three. In 1837 I was appointed to Forked Creek, embracing Wilmington, John Clark presiding elder. William Oreery was on Joliet circuit. There were numerous corfversions on both charges; members returned, two hundred and eight. In 1838 Milton Bourne went to Wilmington, and William S. Crissey, Asbury Chenoweth and myself, to Joliet, John Clark pre siding -elder; members returned, one hundred and forty-eight. In 1839 WUliam Vallette to WUming- ton, and William Wigley to Joliet; John Sinclair presiding elder. WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 119 In 1840 the Eock River Conference was formed, Wigley being retumed to JoUet, and Eufus Lumery going to Wilmington; number of members, one hundred and forty-eight. In 1841 Simon K. Lemon went to WUmington; John Sinclafr presiding elder — a good preacher and hard worker, whose labors were blessed with a revival; members returned, two hundred and sevepty-six. MUton Bourne went to Joliet. In 1842 Joliet circuit embraced Wilming ton; preachers, Elihu Springer and S. K. Lemon; membership, two hundred and eighty-four. In 1843 I was returned to JoUet circuit, Levi Jenks and James Leckenby, assistants; S. Stocking presiding elder; membership, five hundred and twenty- nine. In 1844 H. Minard to Joliet cfrcuit, WUUam Graddis to Wilmington; James MitcheU presiding elder. In 1845. 0. A. Walker and E. E. Thomas at JoUet, William Gaddis at Wilmington. In 1846 brother Walker was returned to Joliet; brother Mitchell presiding elder. In 1847 John Nason to JoUet, S. P. Burr to WUmington; members returned, one 'hundred and fifty-three; Milton Bourne presiding elder. In 1848 to Joliet, 0. W. Munger; to WU mington, S, P. Burr; members returned, one hund red and fifty-three. In 1849 T. F. Doming to Joliet, C. Lazenby to Wilmington; A. L. Eisley presiding elder. In 1850 James P. Vance to Joliet, 0. W. Munger to Wilmington; 0. A. Walker pre siding elder. In 1851 B. C. Swartz to Joliet, (mission station); to WUmington, brother Munger; 120 EAELY HISTOEY OF THE brother Walker presiding elder. In 1852 M. L. Eead to Joliet, W, Fidler to Wilmington; brother Walker presiding elder. In 1853 brother Eead to Joliet; Wilmington, A, Reker; brother Walker presiding elder. In 1864 to Joliet, J, Gibson; to Wilmington, C. Reeder. In 1855 brothers Gibson and Reeder were both returned. In 1866, Joliet, Wm. Goocjfellow; Wilmington, to be supplied; J, Gibson presiding elder; members returned, one hundred and sixty-seven and one hundred and seventy-one, respectively. In 1857 to Wilmington, F. P. Cleveland; members, one hund red and twenty; Joliet, J. Vincent; members re turned, one hundred and fifty-eight; J. Gibson presiding elder. In 1858 to Joliet, N. B, Slaugh ter; members, two hundred and two; to Wilming ton, Wm, Keegan ; members, one hundred andT fifty- three; J. Gibson presiding elder. In 1859 same preachers and presiding elder; members, Joliet, one hundred and eighty-seven; Wilmington, two hund red. In 1860 to Joliet, H. Crews; members, two hundred and twenty; to Wilmington, R. N, Morse; members, one hundred and thirty- three; S. A. W. Jewett presiding elder. In 1861 preachers and presiding elder returned; members at Joliet, two hundred and twenty-two ; at Wilmington, one hund red and ninety-two. In 1862 to Joliet, S. G. La- throp; members, two hundred and three; to Wil mington, S. Washburn; members, two hundred and seven; brother Jewett presiding elder. In 1863 to WEST AND SOETH-WEST. 121 JoUet, S. A- W. Jewett; members, two hundred and three; to Wilmington, R. R. Bibbens; members, two hundred and twenty; W.H. Glass presiding elder. In 1864 preachers and presiding elder retamed; members, JoUet, two hundred; Wilmington, one hundred and ninely. In 1865 to JoUet, W. P. Gray; members, two hundred and seventy-one; to Wilmington, brother Crews ; members, two hundred and sixteen; WiUiam F. Stewart presiding elder. In 1866 to JoUet, W. P. Gray; to WUmington, W. H, Glass; brother Stewart pr^iding elder. In 1867 both preachers retumed; increase of membership not reported. 11 122 EAELY HISTOEY OP THE CHAPTER XIII. Feom the Bloomington Conference in 1839 I re ceived my appointment for Peoria, at the hands of Bishop Morris. A brief history of Peoria may not come amiss here. It is the oldest settled town on the lake, west of the Alleghanies. In 1722 it was in the hands of Virginians; but it was first gov erned by the French. The State of Illinois has been owned by four na tions — the Indians, French, English, and Americans. East of the present city of Peoria, La Salle with his party made a small fort in 1680 ; and, to com memorate his hardships, called both it and the Lake " Crave Cceur," which means in our language " Broken Heart." The Indian traders and whites engaged in commerce with them, resided at the old fort from the year 1680 till 1781, when John Bap tiste Maillet made a new location and village about a mile and a half west of the old village, at the out let of the lake. This town was called La Ville de MaUlet ; that is, MaUlet City. At the old fort there was no gardening or raising of vegetables ; .but the inhabitants depended mostly upon the Indians and the chase for support. But at the new settlement gardens were cultivated and fields of grain were raised. WEST AND NORTH-WEST. 123 In the year 1781 the Indians, under British in fluence, drove off the inhabitants from Peoria; but at the treaty of peace in 1783 they retumed again. Then in 1812 Capt. Craig wantonly destroyed the viUage; but the city of Peoria now occupies the site of the viUage of MaiUet, and bids fafr to be come one of the largest cities in lUinois. At that time the whole frontier, from the Mis sissippi down to the Wabash and above Vin cennes, increased rapidly every year. The interior also grew more dense and more wealthy. In 1820 Abner Gads, with others, settled in Peoria. Soon after, an Indian agency was established; WiUiam Holland was appointed Government blacksmith for the Indians. They were at that time very trouble some, and his family were at times in great perU; and yet he remained at his post of duty for several years. After the whites commenced settUng in Peoria, it was selected by the commissioners, WU Uam HoUand, Joseph Smith, and Nathan DiUon, as the county seat. James Latham obtained a floating claim, and laid it on the town site. After it had been a subject of Utigation for some time the matter was compromised, and his claim was located at Peoria. The French had a claim in the upper part of the city, which was recognized by the Govem ment. The claimants were Burboney, Beeso, Serett, and James Mutty, the latter being the interpreter. It is said that they realized but Uttle for thefr claims. 124 EARLY HISTOEY OP THE 1 At ;thei.time of my appointment Peoria was a station, and had a circuit colmected with it. Brother E. Thompson was sent, with me. He preached on the circuit while I remained at the station. I have been thinking lately how very great the contrast is in the managing of appointments now as compared with that time — ^howthe preacher nowadays makes ar rangements , withi the people for his next field of labor; how high salaries, are offered as an induce ment ; and how the people's wishes are consulted in these matters. It was very different in those days. At, the Bloomington Conference, Bishop Morris hav ing heard ; that certain arrangements had been made, and some agreements entered into by the people of Peoria, for the purpose of securing the services of brother C, set his, foot, firmly down and' said, "He shall not go." , This brother C, it seems, had a brother-in-law. Dr. M,., at Peoria, who, together with himself, felt a strong interest in securing the station for him that year. The Doctor raised by subscription a sum of three hundred dollars, and promised to risk the rest of his support. A request was then sent in to Con ference, which, as I have said, the Bishop perempto rily refused. I preached my first sermon here en tirely ignorant of the state of feeling then existing. As I rode up. to the place,, on Sabbath morning, where I was to preach, I was met at the door and asked, "Where is brother C? We sent for him, and we expect him." I knew nothing of the matter. WEST AND NORTH-WEST. 125 and could only reply, " I am sent as your preacher." After the sermon I went home with brother Bristol to dinner. While there. Dr. M. came in to make inquiry about brother G. When he was told that brother C. was not coming he seemed n\uch excited, and said, "That is the way they always serve us here. I raised three hundred doUars, and could have easily raised more, and now, to be put off in this way, it is reajly too bad. If brother C. had come he would have built us a church, and Method ism would have been something; but now we shall have nothing done." The Doctor felt badly at the prospect, but I do not think he felt worse than I did at the wdoome I had received. Entering upon my work under such a depression made me cUng closer to the Lord for help. On Monday morning, before I left, I visited all the members in town, and then started after my famUy. I had to remove them one hundred and twenty mUes, and begin another year's hard labor. When we got to Peoria the only house we could obtain was a dUapidated dweUihg which had long been the abode of rats, whose rights to our home were pretty actively contested for three months. One day whUe I was absent from home Judge Parker, although not a member of our Church, nor even a professor of religion, went and rented a comfortable house on his own responsibiUty, and offered it to my famUy as a home. They were moved and comfortably settled be fore I came back. It was with no little satisfaction 126 EARLY HISTORY OF THE to myself and family that this change for a better home had been effected. Our only place of worship was brother Bristol's carpenter-shop, and there I preached, among jack- planes and chisels. The shop was situated on an alley, but I had got, by this time, thoroughly and earnestly at work, and we had excellent meetings, many souls being born into the kingdom. One even ing while holding meetings we had a crowded house, and many came who had to go away again. I pro posed the building of a new church, and told them if they would be led by me they would soon have a new church to worship in. The. next morning I was met on all sides by objections. It was out of the question, they said, to build a church, the times were so hard and money so scarce, as every one would agree who khew the gloomy prospect of '39 and '40; besides, what made matters more discour aging, was the fact that about two years previous an attempt had been made to build a frame church. It was decided by a reverend brother that a frame church would be a disgrace to Peoria, and they must have a brick church or none. The lumber which had then been collected was sold, and the inoney ob tained for it pocketed by Mark Hiken, a steward. My informants were brothers Bristol and Markle, both members of the Official Board. In face of all these objections I was still decided that we could have a church. I said to them, " Well, now, let 's 4ecide upon a place; get your axes, and let's go into the WEST AND NORTH-WEST. 127 woods, fell our own trees, haul them up on the snow, and we can score and hew our own logs. I will beg lumber at the different saw-miUs to raise it, and we can have a house." A majority fell in with my plans, and we went to work, and by the opening of Spring we had the tim bers for all of the sills and plates. Then I made a "bee" to get the timbers hewed, and also secured the studding. One Sabbath, after service, I told the brethren that I wished to see them all on the ground the next morning, as I intended, by the next Satur day night, to have the timbers all framed and raised. The invitation was extended to all; every one that could -bore with an auger or mortise a hole was urged to be on the ground. Next morning only four or five came in answer to the call. "Now," said brother Bristol, "where are your men? I felt exceedingly small when you were urging them to come out; you know so Uttle of the amount of work necessary to be done. I thought, by the way you talked, that you expected to see aU Peoria obedient to the call." Said I, "Brother Bristol, I appoint you foreman of the work. Only go at it and lay out the work, and I will have hands here yet." So he and those who were present went to work in good earnest. About noon our foreman was taken sick, but I soon found another, and the work went on. Every toper that I found in the village I urged into the work, and "their name was legion," because the stagnation was so great that there was no work to 128 EARLY HISTOEY OF THE be had. Still, up to this time, I had no foundation for my church. In circulating among the people I found one man who would donate brick, and seeing a friend in the street with his horses and wagon, I had but to ask and I received. He hauled in the brick. Then I came across some masons, who kindly offered to lay up the wall, and by twelve o'clock on Saturday afternoon I requested all the workmen to go about and invite every one they should meet to come and help raise the church that afternoon. They came pouring in from all quarters, and just as the sun was setting the frame of the first Methodist church ever built in Peoria was standing. It was predicted, even after this effort, by all the other denominations, that our church would never be completed. Nothing more would be done, they said, and the timbers would rot down. The next step, and the hardest one, was to raise money. A plan was soon hit upon. I was to take my horse and buggy, and traverse the State. I was to ask each man for a dollar, and as much more as he would give. So off I started. My largest subscription was twenty- five dollars. I took a tour through Alton, St. Louis, and Belleville, and returned with sixty-five dollars. Then my next resort was to go to the saw-mills again, I was successful in begging flooring, siding, and sheeting. One friend gave me a large red oak tree; this was for the shingles. So the brethren went out and felled the tree, sawed it up, hauled it in, and hired some one to turn it into shingles. One WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 129 of the brethren donated poleS for rafters, which were carted four mUes; another brother hewed, fitted, and put them up. Then I resorted to another " bee," in order to get the siding planed and put on. Into this siding I drove the first nail. I then pressed another brother into the good work, and he laid the floor. We were now ready "for plastering, which brother Loomis agreed to do if some one would put on the lath. Another "bee," and another, tUl we had the buUding nearly complete. We put in a temporary pulpit and seats, and I held my last quarterly meet ing in it. We were less than ten doUars in debt, and nearly aU the money spent on it was raised on my tour South. At our last love-feast, which was conducted with closed doors, I felt tmusually liberal. I was door keeper, and I let in several without questions. Brother King, one of the official board, came to me and said, " Brother Beggs, what do you mean by letting in so many to our love-feast ? You have even let in . old Heaton." Said I, " I do n't know old Heaton; but go back, brother King, take your seat and pray on." He did so, and our meeting grew in interest, tiU I opened the door to receive members. The first man who presented himself was " old Hea ton" — as they called him. He, with a number of others, joined our Church; and by this time the moral thermometer in Peoria stood at salvation heat ; and the power of the Lord came down in such a won derful manner that there was one general shout of 130 EARLY HISTORY OF THE " Glory to God in the highest I" Our shouting was heard almost over the whole city, the church being nearly central. People had come in from every direction to see our new church, and it was not large enough to hold aU that came. One of the local preachers got so filled with holy zeal that he ran out of doors and shout5d at the top of his voice, " Glory to God in the highest!" They had not even ceased their manifestations of religious fervor and zeal when the hour arrived for preaching. This meeting closed up my Conference year. The Church had been much revived, and many members joined on probation. All seemed thankful to God, and took courage for the future; and from this time on ward Methodism had a stronghold in that city. It is now the leading denomination. My presiding elder for that year was Newton Benjamin. WEST AND NOETH-WEST, 131 CHAPTER XIV. Some years after I had the pleasure of being at the dedication of the new brick church in Peoria, and Bishop Janes preached the dedicatory sermon; after which Dr. M'Neal read the history of the Church. He spoke of Rev. Joseph Arington as hav ing formed the first class in Peoria. I could not but 8nq|e at the misstatement. This was in 1834. Nine years before, in the year 1825, Jesse Walker formed a class of sixteen members. I give thefr names: Jesse Walker and wife; James Walker and wife; sister Dixon, the wife of the proprietor of Dixon- town, on Rock River; sister Hamlin, and another sister, converts that Winter; Wm. Holland and wife; Wm. Eads and wife; Wm. Blanchard, Rev. Reeves M'Oormick, and Mary Clark. The next Summer he held a camp meeting one mile above Peoria, on the west side of the lake; Wm. HoUand moved up an old log-cabin for his tent; and the old hero, Jesse Walker, had with bim his son and others; Reeves M'Cormick also assisted. Wm. Royal was T. Hall's predecessor in 1832. It was then called Fort Clark mission. The botmdaries of Hall's mission in 1832 and '33 were as foUows : Peoria, Lancaster, now La SaUe Prairie; brother Jones's, on Snack River; PrinceviUe, Essex school- 132 EAELY HISTOEY OP THE house; Fraker's Grove, now Lafayette; thence to •Princeton, some thirty miles distant; and thence to Troy Grove, twenty-five miles farther; brother Long's, near La Salle ; and thence down the river to Miller's school-house, five miles below Peru. Then next to John Hall's, one hundred and fifty miles around. Some time in the Spring he formed a class of six or eight persons. Their names are as follows : Wm, Eads and wife, sister A, Hale, sister Waters, David Spencer, and some others, John Sin clair, presiding elder; members returned, forty- eight, Wm, See traveled the Peoria circui^ in 1827, and Smith L, Robertson in 1828. It was then a large circuit, and he held a camp meeting three miles east of Peoria, on Farm Creek, Sam. H. Thompson presiding elder. Jesse Walker j; and, I think, Wm. See, assisted. Gov. Edwards, the first Governor of the State, was then present. They had a gracious time ; yet even in that early day they were not free from disturbance. A certain individual was sent after whisky,- and who, in going for it, had to pass the camp-ground. He stopped to hear the presiding elder's sermon. After its close a collection was taken up, and the money designed for whisky (fifty cents) was thrown into the hat. When he returned and was asked where his money was gone to replied, "01 thought the preacher needed it more than you did the whisky." A. E. Phelps was my predecessor in [the station, and sustained himself well, The court-house was WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 133 occupied by a Unitarian preacher as well as him self. One day the former, in preaching on the Divinity of Christ, ran across the track of A, E. Phelps, and so he pitched into the Unitarian cham pion rough-shod, and so completely showed the fallacy of his doctrine that he had to leave, and A. E. Phelps had the house to himself. By this he rose fifty per cent, in the estimation of his hearers. Here commenced his brilliant career as a successful cham pion against Unitarians, Universalism, Deism, and Exclusive Immersionists, as practising the only mode of baptism, I do not think any one of his antagonists ever got the better of him. He excelled as a his torian, and was truly an able defender of Methodism. He increased in usefulness till he was called from his labors to his long rest. In his footsteps follows a son that bids fair for a useful minister. What greater star could be added to the crown of glory of a departed saint than that his sons were follow ing in his footsteps? Jesse Walker was born in Virginia, Buckingham county, near James River, June 9, 1766. He was not blessed with religious parents, yet they were moral, and taught him to pray while yet in early life, and attend Divine worship regularly. Lying and profane language were strictly forbidden. His father was neither rich nor poor, and taught him to work. From his youth his education was very limited, his schooling, all told, consisting of but twenty days. 134 EARLY HISTOEY OF THE When he was nine years old his mother took him to a Baptist meeting; here, under the influence of the sermon, was his first awakening to his individual responsibility to God. After this he often reflected on the judgment-day, and the miseries of an interm inable hell, till a trembling would seize him, and then wQuld he begin to pray in earnest. Soon after this, he says : "I heard another preacher, who told me how to pray and exercise faith in believing on the Lord Jesus. The next morning, as I was walk ing along, the Lord gave me such a spirit of wrest ling that my faith took hold on God; and, in a moment, such a light broke in upon my soul, and such beams of Divine love, that I praised his hal lowed name for the unspeakable riches he had be stowed upon my poor soul. I enjoyed his presence for years; but no one having spoken to me about joining the Church, I consequently did not present myself,, I soon began to mix with the wicked, and lost my enjoyment, backsliding from one thing to another till I became very wicked, and even doubted my conversion. Then, to quiets my conscience, I tried to believe the doctrines of Calvinism, besides going to every Baptist meeting to confirm myself in the dogma of fate. In my most solemn moments I could not believe these things myself, and yet I often labored hard to make others believe them. My besetting sin was profanity, which was often a great cause of grief to my mother and sister. The strivings of the Holy Spirit had left me and I often WEST AND NOETH-WEST, 135 feared that my damnation was sealed, and that the earth wonld open and swaUow me up. I thought men and devils had combined to take away the last vestige of comfort that was left me. At last I feU on my face, and, with aU my guUt and weight of sin, heU seemed to move from beneath to meet me at my coming. "But in my extreme Anguish of spirit God showed himself unto me ; and by :^th I reaUzed such a fuU- ness in Jesns that I once more ventured -out on his precious promises ; and I found, of a truth, that the virtue of his blood shed for me had healed every wound that sin had made. Then I felt to exclaim, O loving Savior ! blessed Jesus I I now consecrate my aU to thee, for time and for eternity; thou art the one altogether lovely, and I wUl praise thee with aU my powers. Then I went out to find a fel low Christian, that I might talk with him of my newly found happiness. It was on the Sabbath day; and I had barely commenced telling him, when he proposed to me to swap horses. I regret to say that this man was a member of the Baptist Church; but so it was, and it had the influence to turn me to seek some other denomination than that toward whose members I had always felt such a brotherly love. I remembered that there was a Methodist class meeting about twelve mUes distant; and I tumed my horse, in hopes of getting there before the meeting closed. I was too late; and I dis- moimted and knelt down and prayed for dfrection. 136 EAELY HISTOEY OP THE Then I remembered that the members were to re turn by a certain house, and I staid there and awaited their arrival. Their songs seemed so heav enly that they exceeded any thing that I had yet heard. When they began to talk on the subject of religion, I found that thefr experience was like my own, and that it was no more nor less than the love of God shed abroad in the heart. Then, when I be gan to tell them what God had done for me, the power of . the Lord came down. WhUe some prayed, others were praising and singing; and sinners began to cry for mercy. The meeting continued all night. In the morning I returned home, rejoicing on my way, and blessing God for what I had seen, and for what my poor soul had'enjoyed. Whfen I got home, and told them of God's goodness, they thought I was crazy ; and my exhortations to them to seek the Lord were ,so strange to them that I feared that my message was as seed sown by the wayside. " It was not long before I visited again my brethren in class, and I was called upon to lead the class. It was a great trial to me, and yet I bore the cross. During our exercises the Lord poured out his Spirit again. Some shouted aloud, and others cried for mercy, and such a time of power was it that it lasted till dawn of day. Such a meeting I had never wit nessed before. Soon after this our new preacher came on from Conference, He preached with great power, and invited such as wished to join on trial to remain in class. I embraced this, my first opportunity. WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 137 and joined the Church in July, 1786. I was ap pointed class-leader; and the burden of lost souls was so roUed upon me that I gave myself up whoUy to the work. Seeing me such a laborer in the vine yard, the preachers soon wished me to accompany them on the cfrcuit. My inabUity kept me back for some time; but at last I felt the command — 'Go ye into all the world and preach the Gospel' — ^in such an imperious manner that I gave myself up to the great work. I offered myself, and was received on probation in 1804, and appointed, as the Minutes show, to the Red River circuit; in 1805 to Living ston; in 1806 to Hartford cfrcuit, WilUam M'Ken dree presiding elder." Thus far I have given the narrative as I found it in manuscript. I shaU now complete it as I heard it from the Ups of a thfrd person. In the Spring of 1806 brother Walker accompanied WiUiam M' Kendree to lUinois to spy out the promised land. He found it so beautiful that he determined at once to come over and possess it, believing that here was to be a great moral conflict, and that he was to be the Joshua to lead on his spiritual Israel to possess it. On his retum he continued to preach on his cfrcuit tiU Conference, and then he was sent to Illi nois. He hastened home to his famUy, and arrived there about twelve o'clock. He told them of his new field of labor, and, after some refreshment, com menced packing up for a removal. By ten o'clock the next moming he and his family were on thefr 12 138 EAELY HISTOEY OP THE way to lUinois. : Horses were their only means of conveyance — ^fpUr in all^-one for himself, and one for his wife and youngest daughter, who rode be hind her; one for his eldest daughter, about eighteen years of age — now sister Everett, who gives me this interesting account of the early settling in the West^-rand a fourth for his library, or books which he had for sale. It was one of the duties of preachers in those days to sell books to those among whom they labored, and it was one of the great means in, dis tributing the truth and helping to build up the cause of Christ. The family had each but one change of apparel, and that- they had spun and woven before they left home. They brought no fur niture, not even a bed, but started for the wilder ness with as few worldly goods as possible. Soon after crossing the Ohio River he found him self and family fully entered into the Indian Terri tory. At this tinae a fearful rain-storm met them, and they were rejoiced at being able to take shelter in a deserted wigwam, even drenched with water, besides the discomforts of cold and hunger. They remained here three ,rayer, and godly example, would soon give evidence of the work of grace upon their hearts. At the removal of his father to Ohio, Samuel was in the fifteenth year of his age. His mind was early impressed with the importance of reUgion, and his tears and pray ers gave evidence that the world and its pleasures could not fiU the aching void in his aspiring soul. In the year 1812, when he was in the twenty-first 286 EARLY HISTORY OF THE year of his age, he attended a camp meeting, held on the lands of Joseph Thrap, in the bounds of Knox circuit, where he was powerfully awakened under the ministration of God's Word. It was impossible for him to suppress the deep and overwhelming con victions of his soul, and in agony he cried aloud for mercy. For- days and nights, in a distress border ing upon despair, he sought for pardon. We had witnessed his anguish, and the' unavailing -cries of his heart for mercy, and all the sympathies of our nature were deeply aroused in his behalf. We took him to the woods, and there, in the solitude and deep silence of the night, with the curtains of dark ness around us, we fell prostrate before God in prayer. We arose upon our knees, and embraced him in our arms, while, with streaming eyes and faltering voice, he exclaimed, ' 0 Lord, I do be lieve! Help thou mine unbelief!' Then, in a mo ment, quick as thought conveyed by lightning, the blessing of pardon carae down, and heaven filled his soul. Instantly he sprang to his feet, and, like the man iiff the 'beautiful porch,' he 'leaped, and shouted, and praised God' for the delivering grace he had obtained in that distressful hour. At this time we were traveling the circuit on which his father lived, and we had the pleasure of aiding the young convert in taking up his cross. He was zealous, deterrained, and active, and the Church and world alike saw that God had a work for him to do. He exercised his gifts in exhortation, and sinners WEST AND NORTH-WEST. 287 were awakened and converted through his instru mentality. In the year 1814, at the Conference held in Cincinnati, he was admitted on trial as a traveling preacher. His first field of labor was the Kanawha cfrcuit. The circuits in Western Virginia at that time were called the CoUeges of the Meth odist Church, where the young preachers were sent to get thefr theological education, or, in other words, take thefr theological course. Sometimes they were caUed 'Brush CoUeges;' at other times, the fields where the Conference broke its young preachers. Some of the most prominent of our Western preach ers took their first lessons in the itinerancy upon this field. Here, amid the dense forests and flowing streams, the logical and metaphysical Shinn pored over his books, on horseback, as he traveled to dis tant appointments; and here, among the craggy mountains and deep glens, the eloquent Bascoin caught his sublimest inspfrations. In this wild re gion the preachers had to encounter much toil and hardship; and while they lived on the simple fare of the country, consisting of hominy, potatoes, and 'mountain groceries,' they were not afflicted with those fashionable complaints denominated dyspepsia and bronchitis. As a specimen of the trials of Methodist preachers, we wiU relate an incident that occurred in the year 1836. One of the preachers of the Ohio Conference, having reached his cfrcuit, and finding no house for his family, built for himself a shanty out of slabs, on the bank of the 288 EARLY HISTORY OF THE GauUey River. Having furnished his wife with pro visions for a month — that being the time required to perform his round — consisting of sorae corn-meal and potatoes, he started out upon his circuit. To reach his appointments, which were sometimes thirty railes distant, it was necessary for him to take an early start. One morning, after he had progressed about half round his circuit, he started for an ap pointment which lay on the other side of one of the GauUey Mountains. It had rained through the night, and having frozen, the earth was covered with a sheet of ice. The travel was difficult even on level ground, so slippery was the surface; and unless it should thaw, the itinerant felt an apprehension that it would be difficult to ascend the steep sides of the mountain. Instead of thawing, however, the weather grew colder; but there was no retreat. His appointment was before him, and the mountain must be crossed. At length, after passing for sorae distance through a narrow valley, he came to the point where his narrow path led up the ascent. It was steep and difficult, and his horse would fre quently slip as he urged him on. On the right the mountain towered far above, and on the left, far down, were deep and frightful precipices; a single misstep, and horse and rider, would be dashed to pieces on the rocks below. After ascending about two-thirds of the elevation, he came to a place in his mountain path steeper than any he had passed over. Urging his tired but spirited steed, he sought -WEST AND NORTH-WEST. 289 to ascend; but the horse sUpped. Seeing his dan ger, the preacher threw himself off on the upper side, and the noble animal went over the precipice, bounding from rock, to rock, deep down into the chasm below. The preacher retraced his steps, and on coming round to the point where his horse had faUen, he found him dead. Taking off the saddle, bridle, and saddle-bags, he lashed them to his back, and resumed his journey, reaching his appointment in time to preach. The balance of the round was performed on foot, and at the expfration of four weeks from the time of starting, he joined his com panion in her cabin, on the bank of the river, thank ful for the providence which had returned him safely home. " Here young HamUton studied theology and hu man nature, in both of which he' became weU versed. His preaching talents were pecuUar, and often did he make his discourses sparkle with wit and elo quence: Sometimes he would indulge in a rich vein of humor, which, without letting down the dignity of the pulpit, would send a thriU of deUght among his audience. No one enjoyed a little pleasantry more than himself; and having a peculiar horror for any thing like a sour godUness, he may, at times, have gone a Uttle too far over to the other extreme. He had a quick perception of the ridiculous, and was not very weU able to command himself even in the pulpit when any thing occurred to excite that sense in his mind. We recoUect of his teUing us 25 290 EARLY HISTORY OF THE of an occasion of this kind, which occurred at a meeting on the waters of the Little Kanawha. At a certain appointment there lived a Colonel whose family were members of .the Church, and who had a respect for religion, though he was too fond of the world to make a profession thereof. He was regular in his attendance, and on the occasion to which we have alluded, he was in his seat, attended by a neighbor of his, who was respectable enough, with the exception that at times he would lose his balance under the influence of intoxicating liquor. He had taken on this occasion just enough to make him loquacious without being boisterous. Hamilton, after singing and prayer, arose' and gave out for his text the first Psalra, which reads as follows: ' Blessed is the raan that walketh not in the coun sel of the ungodly, nor standeth in the way of sin ners, nor sitteth in the seat of the' scorner,' etc. He entered upon the discussion of his subject by showing what was to be understood by walking in the counsel of the ungodly ; and as he entered upon the description of the ungodly, and their various wicked ways and bad exaraples, he saw the friend of the Colonel punch hira in the ribs with his elbow, and overheard him say, ' Colonel, he means you.' 'Be still,' said the Colonel, 'you will disturb the congregation.' It was as much as the preacher could do to control his risibles; but he progressed with his subject ; and as he described- another char acteristic of the ungodly in standing in the way of WEST AND NORTH-WEST. 291 sinners, the force of the appUcation was too strong to be resisted, and the Colonel's friend, drawing up closely, elbowed him again,, saying, ' He certainly means you. Colonel.' 'Be quiet, the* preacher wUl see you,' whispered the annoyed man, whUehe re moved as far from him as he could to the other end of the seat. The preacher had arrived at the third characteristic of the ungodly; and as he, in earnest strains, described the scorner's seat, the Colonel's friend tumed and nodded his head at him most sig nificantly, adding, in an under tone, 'It's you, it's you. Colonel; you know it's you.' By this time the most of the congregation were aware of what was going on, and cast significant smiles and glances at one another. Those who understood the features of the speaker could easily discover that he was moving along under a heavy press of feeUng, and unless something should occur to break the excitement, he must yield to the impulses of his nature. Just at this crisis a little black dog ran up the- aisle, and, stopping dfrectly in front of the pulpit, looked up in the preacher's face, and commenced barking. The scene was ludicrous enough; but how was it hight- ened when the Colonel's friend rose from his seat, and deliberately marching up the aisle, he seized the dog by his neck and back, and began to shake him, exclaiming, 'Tree the preacher, wUl you? tree the preacher, wUl you?' Thus he kept shaking and repeating what we have written, till he arrived at the door, when, amid the yells of the dog and the 292 EARLY HISTORY OF THE general , tittering of the audience, he threw him as far as he could into the yard. This was too much for Hamilton, and he sat down in the pulpit, over come with laughter. It would have been impossible for him to have resumed his subject, or even to have dismissed the congregation. Suffice it to say that preaching was done for that day; and ever after, when the Colonel went to Church, he was careful that his friend was not by his side. "Samuel Hamilton was well instructed in the doc trines, and Discipline, and peculiarities of Methodism, and wherever he went his labors were appreciated, and souls were blessed," WEST AND NORTH-WEST, 293 CHAPTER XXXIL "Ah important Western character appeared in this field in 1816. Young fidled to reach the district after the Greneral Conference of that year. James B. Fin ley came to supply his place, and continued to super intend it tUl 1819, with extraordinary zeal and succ^s. Few men have attained more distinction as evangeUcal pioneers of the West. He was, in aU respects, a genuine chUd of the wUdem^s — one of its best 'typical' men — of stalwart frame, 'feature rather oc^rse,' but large, benevolent ey^, 'sandy hair, standing erect,' a good, expressive mouth, a *voi{» Uke thunder,' and a courage that made riot ous opposers, whom he often encountered, quaU before him. He did not hesitate to seize disturbers of his meetings, shake them in his athletic grasp, and piteh them out of the windows or doora. Withal, his heart was m(»t genial, his discourses fuU of pathos, and his friendships the most tender and lasting. AU over the North- West he worked mightUy, through a long life, to found and extend lus Church, traveling cfrcuits and districts, laboring as missionary to the Indians, and chaplain to prison ers, and, in his old age, making valuable historical contributions to its literature. • "Though bom in North Carolina — ^in 1781^his 294 EARLY HISTORY OF THE childhood was spent in Kentucky, where he grew up with all the hardy habits of the pioneer settlers. In early manhood he and all his father's family were borne along by the current of emigration into the North-Western Territory, where he lived to see his State — Ohio — become a dominant part of the Amer ican Union, He had been a rough, reckless, and entirely irreligious youth, associating with Indians, a 'mighty hunter' among the 'backwoodsmen,' fond of nearly every excess, and of the most hazardous adventures with savage men and beasts. The camp meetings of the Presbyterians and Methodists in Kentucky had spread, about the beginning of the century, a vivid religious interest all over the West. Finley's sensitive, though rough nature, could not escape it. He went with some of his associates to Cane Ridge, Kentucky, his former horae, to wit ness one of these great occasions. His own story gives us a striking view of them in their primitive, thefr rude Western grandeur and excesses. 'A scene presented itself,' he says, 'to my mind, not only novel and unaccountable, but awful beyond description. A vast crowd, supposed by some to have araounted to twenty-five thousand, was collected together. The noise was like the roar of Niagara. The sea of hu man beings seemed to be agitated as if by storm. I counted seven ministers, all preaching at the same time, some on stumps, others on wagons, and one, William Burke, standing on a tree which, in falling, had lodged against another. Some of the people WEST AND NORTH-WEST. 295 were singing, others praying, some crying for mercy in the most piteous accents. While witnessing these scenes a peculiarly strange sensation, such as I had never felt before, came over rae. My heart beat tremendously, my knees trembled, my Up quivered, and I felt as though I must fall to the ground. A strange, supernatural power seemed to pervade the mass of mind there coUected. I became so weak that I found it necessary to sit down. Soon after, I left and went into the woods, and there strove to rally and man up my courage. After some time I returned to the scene of excitement, the waves of which had, if possible, risen stUl higher. The sarae awfulness of feeUng came over me. I stepped up on a log, where I could have a better view of the s.urg- ing sea of humanity. The scene that then presented itself to my eye was indescribable^ At one time I saw at least five hundred swept down in a raoraent, as if a battery of a thousand guns had been opened upon them. My hair rose up on my head, my whole frame trembled, the blood ran cold in my veins, and I fled to the woods a second time, and wished that I had staid at home.' He went to a neighboring tavern, where, amid a throng of drinking and fight ing backwoodsmen, he swaUowed a dram of brandy, but afterward felt worse than before; 'as near hell,' he says, ' as I could wish to be, in either this world or that to come.' Drawn frresistibly back to the raeeting, he gazed again, appalled, upon its scenes. That night he slept in a bam, a most wretched man. 296 EARLY HISTORY OF THE The' next day he hastily left for his home, with one of his companions. They were both too absorbed in their reflections to converse as they journeyed; but, says Finley, 'When we arrived at the Blue Lick Knobs I broke the silence which reigned between us, and said, "Captain, if you and I don't stop our wickedness the devil will get us both." ' Tears gushed freely from the eyes of both. The next night was spent without slumber, at a place called May's Lick. 'As soon as day broke,' adds Finley, 'I went to the woods to pray, and no sooner had my knees touched thp ground than I cried aloud for mercy and salvation, and fell prostrate. My cries were so loud that they attracted the attention of the neighbors, many of whom gathered around rae. Araong the nuraber was a Gerraan, from Switzer land, who had .experienced religion. He, under standing fully ray condition, had me carried to his house and laid on a bed. The old Dutch saint directed me to look right away to the Savior, He then kneeled by my bedside, and prayed for me most fervently in Dutch and broken English, He rose and sang in the sarae manner, and continued singing and praying alternately till nine o'clock, when sud denly ray load was gone, ray guilt reraoved, and presently the direct witness from heaven shone fully upon my heart. Then there flowed such copious streams of love into the hitherto waste and desolate places of my soul that I thought J should die with excess of joy. So strangely did I appear to all but ¦WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 297 the Duteh brother that they thought me deranged. After a time I retumed to my companion, and we started on our joumey. O what a day it was to my soul!' "Astonishing — superhuman, almost — ^as seem the travels and labors of many of the earUer itinerants, none of them could have surpassed the adventurous energy of NoUey, on his Tombigbee cfrcuit, among the rudest settlements and Indian perils. For two years he ranged over a vast extent of country, preaching continuaUy, stopping for no obstructions of flood or weather. When his horse could not go on he shouldered his saddle-bags and pressed forward on foot. He took special care of the chUdren, grow ing up in a half-savage condition over all the coun try, and catechised and instructed them with the utmost diUgence as the best means of averting bar barism from the settlements. To his successor on the cfrciUt he gave a list of them by name, solemnly charging him, 'Be sure to look after these chUdren.' He labored night and day, also, for the evangeliza tion of the blacks. When Indian hostiUties pre vaUed the settlers crowded into isolated forts and stockades. NoUey sought no shelter, but hastened fr-om post to post, instructing and comforting the alarmed refugees. He kept 'the Gospel sounding abroad through aU the country,' says our authority. The people could not but love him, admiring and wondering at his courage, and the very savages seemed to hear a voice saying unto them, 'Touch 298 EARLY HISTORY OP THE not raine anointed, and do my prophets no harm. It was in this wild country that happened the fact often cited as an illustration of the energy of the priraitive Methodist rainistry. ' The inforraant, Thomas Clinton,' says a Southern bishop, 'subse quently labored in that region, and, though a gen eration has passed, he is not forgotten there. In making the rounds of his work Nolley came to a fresh wagon track. On the search for any thing that had a soul, he followed it, and carae upon the emigrant family just as it had pitched on the ground of its future home. The man was unlimbering his team, and the wife was busy around the fire. "What!" -exclaimed the settler upon hearing the salutation of the visitor, and taking a glance at his unmistakable appearance, "have you found me already ? Another Methodist preacher ! I left Vir ginia to get out of reach of them, went to a new settlement in Georgia, and thought to have a long whet, but they got my wife and daughter into the Church; then, in this late purchase — Choctaw Cor ner — I found a piece of good land, and was sure I would have some peace of the preachers, and here is one before my wagon is unloaded." Nolley gave hira small comfort. "My friend, if you go to heaven you '11 find Methodist preachers there, and if to hell I am afraid you will find some there; and you see how it is in this world, so you had better raake terms with us, and be at peace." ' . . . . "Nathan Bangs was at this Conference as a WEST AND NOETH-'WEST. 299 spectator. He had been laboring on Canada cfrcuits, and had hardly heard of M'Kendree, whose fame, nevertheless, now fiUed aU the West. Bangs went, on Sunday, to Light-Street Church, the center of interest, the cathedral of the occasion and of the denomination. He says: 'It was fiUed to overflow ing. The second gaUery, at one end of the chapel, was crowded with colored people. I saw the preacher of the moming enter the pulpit, sun burned, and dressed in very ordinary clothes, with a red flannel shirt which showed a large space be tween his vest and smaU-dothes. He appeared more like a poor backwoodsman than a minister of the Gospel. I felt mortified that such a looking man should have been appointed to preach on such an imposing occasion. In his prayer he seemed to lack words, and even stammered.- I became uneasy for the honor of the Conference and the Church. He gave out his text: "For the hurt of the daughter of my people am I hurt; I am black; astonishment hath taken hold on me. Is there no balm in GUead? is there no physician there? why, then, is not the health of the daughter of my people recovered?" As he advanced in his discourse a mysterious mag netism seemed to emanate from him to aU parts of the house. He was absorbed in the interest of his subject; his voice rose gradually tiU it sounded like a trumpet. At a cUmactic passage the effect was overwhelming. It thriUed through the assem bly like an electric shock; the house rang with 300 EAELY HISTOEY OF THE irrepressible responses; many hearers fell prostrate to the floor. An athletic man sitting by my side fell as if shot by a cannon-ball. I felt my own heart melting, and feared that I should also fall from my seat. Such an astonishing effect, so sudden and overpowering, I seldom or never saw before.' "Bangs refers again, in his History of the Church, to this sermon, and says he saw ' a halo of glory around the preacher's head.' M'Kendree's general recognition as leader of Western Methodism, to gether with his evident fitness for the Episcopal office, doubtless led to his nomination, but this re markable discourse placed his election beyond doubt. ' That sermon,' said Asbury, ' will decide his elec tion,' Asbury had formerly fa,vored Lee's .appoint ment to the Episcopate. M'Kendree ; had become endeared to him in the conflicts of the West, and he now saw reason to prefer him even to Lee, The .Church had become rich in great and eligible men." ¦WEST AND NORTH-^WEST. 301 CHAPTER XXXIIL I had' a mode of administering Discipline which, though not tn the usual way, was in order, and ef fective. Several years since, in the first quarterly meeting of Clark county, it was my lot to have a presiding elder who fiUed that important office for the first time. After he had asked me the regular questions, and I had answered them, he asked me what was my method* of admitting probationers into fuU membership at the expfration of six months; also, if I admitted seekers of reUgion after they had given satisfactory evidence that they desired to flee from the wrath to colne and be saved from thefr sins, upon the recommendation of thefr class-leader, after having met with the class six months. I said that I admitted aU such into fuU membership. Said he, "You are not Methodistical in that particular; for none ought to be admitted before they profess reUgion." " WeU," said I, " before I can change my practice I must have higher authority." He repUed, "I shaU have an Episcopal decision next Conference." It seems that some reporter had un derstood Bishop Hamline to say that professors of reUgion alone were to be admitted into full member ship, and it was published in the Christian Advo cate. 302 EAELY HISTOEY OF THE The Bishop discovered and corrected it as follows : " CORRECTION. " New Youk, June 4, 1847. - "Rev. Messrs. Bond & Coles — Dear Brethren, — One thought in the address reported in the Advo cate was so inaptly set forth by me that it was mis understood; and as it bears on the Discipline, it were better to notice it. The fifth paragraph, in stead of reading, ' Our rules require members,' etc., should have expressed the following sentiment : " ' Our rules do not require that persons received into our Church profess conversion, and in more than half our bounds they are often received' with out conversion. Possibly there may be fifty thou sand such, marked " S," on our class-books, as " seek ers;" and in harmony, too, with our Discipline, which makes " a desire to flee frora the wrath to come, and be saved from sin," duly " manifested " the only con dition. But is there nothing in the Discipline to be set off against these terms of merabership ? The class is one thing. Here the catechuraens mingle with the more mature in grace, enjoy their prayers, and from them, with God's blessing, learn the way. But we can not safely receive and retain members who refuse to visit the class-room. If they become in curably neglectful, let their names, by due forms, be taken .from the class and Church records, I sol emnly believe that if this plan,' etc., as reported. " I do not know that I used these words, but such is the sentiment I aimed to express. The error is west and NOETH-WEST. 303 not at all surprising, as the remarks were strictly extempore, and no doubt wanting in precision, as hastily uttered thoughts often are. "RespectfuUy yours, L. L. HiStLiNE." At the next quarterly meeting I asked the elder if he was stUl of the same opinion respecting the reception of seekers into the Church. "Yes," said he; and then very confidently quoted Bishop Ham- Une's views, as pubUshed in the Christian Advocate. I then handed him the correction. He read it 'over. twice; and I then requested him to read it to the merabers of the quarterly conference, which he refused to do. This was the last I heard, however, of an Episcopal decision, on receiving seekers into fuU membership. In 1844, when I traveled MUford cfrcuit, John Hunter was my coUeague. It was his fii'st year. He was a young man of great promise, and, al though his attainments were Umited, had more than ordinary abiUty. Luke Hitehcock was my presiding elder. This year was the first and only time that any thing Uke a charge ever came up against me at Conference. This charge was for maladrainistration. Brother M. had been on trial for several years, and he wished to be admitted into fuU membership, and if not found worthy, that he might be dropped out of probation. As there were some members who were bitterly opposed to his admission, on ac count of some reports not favorable to him having 304 EAELY HISTOEY OF THE been circulated, in order to decide the matter satis factorily to all parties, I gave M. the privilege, which he wished, of answering to all the charges or coraplaints which Were afloat concerning him, before a number of male members of the Church. This was more than the Discipline required, yet I wished. to give all a fair chance. I thought it the most satisfactory course to pursue, and when he was permitted to answer for himself, the comraittee de cided that nothing worthy of " death or of bonds " could be found against him. He came up the next day for admission. The class-leader and nearly all ' of the class were present, and I then said: "If any one has any objections to this brother, let him speak now, or let him hereafter hold his peace." There being no objections raised, I then received him into full membership. One of our preachers, hearing of the matter, objected to the manner in which I put the question. He said that I should have asked the class-leader if he could recommend him, and made out a charge against me. When the Bishop asked Hitchcock, my presiding elder, if there was any charge" against me, he said : " There is nothing against brother Beggs." "Yes," said the preacher, " there is- a charge of maladministration." The Bishop a'sked the elder again : " Is there anything against brother Beggs?" and he again replied: " There is nothing." Said the Bishop : " Pass his character." And here ended the charge of mal adrainistration. WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 305 I give a sketch of the Ufe of the Rev. John Sin clafr, to whom reference has been frequently made in this volume. He was born in Vfrginia. At the age of five -years he came with his father into East Tennessee, and there, in the midst of privations and many hinderances to inteUectual training, he remained during his boyhood. The opportunity for attending school was limited; the qualifications of teachers were very inferior. Brother Sinclair used to relate that his first teacher in East Tennessee was a Mr. Rowe, who could read and write a little. He taught • us to pronounce the vowels as foUows : A was able- some, fa; E was eblesome, fe; I was iblesome, fi; 0, oblesome, fo; U, ublesome, fu; Y, yblesome, fy; & was called ampersand; and Z was called izzard, or zed. Rowe knew nothing about figures. In speUing Aaron, it was, Great A, wee a, r-o-n. The few advantages, however, that he possessed in rela tion to acquisition of letters in the schools, he la bored to improve under very trying and pecuUar cfrcumstances. He states in relation to himself, that by reading by fire-Ught, he was enabled to re tain what little leaming he had, and made some ad vancement. He remarked that he had heard it said that "A little leaming is a dangerous thing," but he had never had enough to expose him to that danger. At the age of twenty, with his father and famUy, he removed to Kentucky, and on the 19th of Feb ruary, in 1819, he was married to Lydia Short, who 26 306 EAELY HISTOEY OF THE is now his bereaved widow. It was about one year after this when God forgave his sins, and renewed his heart in so gracious and powerful a manner, that he could never doubt the change that was wrought. Shortly after his conversibn he was made a class- leader, and soon the impression was made upon his mind that he ought to preach the Gospel, This im pression seems to have at first found no response in his companion. Many now dread the trials of an itinerant life; many still look upon it as connected with privations that they could not endure, but, compared with what then must have been presented to. any one that would dare look into the future be fore engaging in such a work, it must now be an easy task. How she felt as to any particular trial I do not know. We learn, ho^wever, from a little scrap that he has left, probably written in 1855, that one night, when he supposed that all were asleep, and that no one on earth knew any thing of his anxiety, when struggling in relation to his duty, he heard a voice, df which he says, " It was not the voice of God — it was not the voice of an angel, but it was the voice of my wife, saying, 'Go, and do all the good you can.' " This was in September, 1825, and some time between the 15th and 20th of that month he was admitted on trial in the Kentucky Conference. In 1831, however, having for sojne time felt that the existence of slavery in the State of Kentucky was a serious thing, and dreading its consequences upon after generations — and this was ¦WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 307 the feeling generaUy of Methodist ministers at that time — he resolved to take a transfer to the IlUnois Conference. He came, and was appointed to the JacksonviUe cfrcuit. Here his labors in this State comraenced. They continued tUl, perhaps, 1836, when they were sUghtly interrupted, and he sus tained a supernumerary relation, and took work in Peoria. It was probably in 1846 that for one year he was returned upon the Minutes as superannuated. With the exception of these brief interruptions, till here he took the superannuated relation, each year, from the time he came — 1831 — ^he continued to per form "effective labor," and I wUl add that it was also effldervt labor — ^labor that told" favorably upon the Church in buUding it up in hoUness, extending its borders, and multiplying its numbers. I discover from the Minutes, that when, in 1833, he was placed upon the Chicago district, that whUe it em braced what now is the city of Chicago, it also took in Galena on the west, and Peoria on the south! Think of such a district as that !- — ^traveUng around it ! — ^what is now two Annual Conferences ! To this field of labor he went, leaving an afflicted wife in the wUds of Fox River. But privations could not deter him. It was frontier work, a sparse popula tion, neighborhoods remote from each other, roads without bridges, and vast plains without a stake or mark to direct his course, except the points of tim ber, mUes apart; but he undertook and did accom plish the work of superintending such a district. 308 EAELY HISTOEY OF THE The next year he was returned to the sarae district, with a little change. Galena was taken off on the west, but it still extended from Chicago to the San gamon River on the south, including all the region of country intervening, or Peoria, Bloomington, and all the settlements in that extent. This will give j70u some idea of his toils and conflicts. I am sorry ;hat I can not give the details of his labors on this extended district. In 1835 he was removed from the Chicago district. It was a painful occurrence to hira, of which he thought and spoke to his own per sonal friends; and though he felt there was sorae mistake, still he harbored no resentment, and spoke of it as a man of God. He was placed upon the Sangamon district. I was then in charge of the church at Springfield, Owing to his financial con dition, his poor health and that of Mrs. Sinclair, it was quite inconvenient, if not alraost impossible for him to remove his family. They had been some years on Fox River, five or six miles above the city of Ottawa. He came to one quarterly raeeting; he became sick, and nearly five weeks elapsed before he was able to leave. During this time, when I sat by his bedside, laid my hand upon his forehead scorching with fever, I have heard him talk of his invalid wife at home, and tears would wet his pil low. Yet amidst all the trials of such occurrences I never heard him coraplain. I never heard hira wish he had not entered the work; I never heard hira raention a word of retreat; no — it was "Onward!" ¦WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 309 and as soon as he was able to sit alone he was de sfrous of reaching his home, and by the aid of friends soon set out to accompUsh that object. For several years before his death he was a resi dent of Evanston — for two years as pastor — ^and after that tUl his death as a superannuate. Up to the time that he entered upon this pastoral charge, I had never foimd a man who cared for consistent practical piety that did not love John Sinclafr. Men were so universaUy impressed with the honesty of this minister and his Christian fideUty, that when, through the common infirmities and weaknesses of our nature, he erred, for I do not pretend to say he did not err — ^that he was not falUble — ^none charged him with evU motives. "It was a mistake — ^it was not intended." He was emphatically, in the. judg ment of men, as the apostle warned the Church to be, "without offense, blameless, harmless — a, son of God without rebuke." When he was tried, God took him to receive his crown. Long was it his wish that he might not Unger when called to pass away, and if he did, he earnestly hoped that it might be under cfrcumstances where he could care for himself without troubUng — as he was wont to express it — ^his friends. God favored him in this matter I After aU his wander ings to and fro amidst the pelting storms and the dreary wastes; after his going out and his coming in from an afflicted femUy for so many years; after aU his privations, what a pleasing thought to have him 310 EAELY HISTOEY OP THE die at home! Doubtless he desired to die without lingering; but, sudden as was his death, he was not unprepared. But a short time since he said to his faraily and friends, and especially his wife, " Do n't weep, for me when I go away." What an idea was that of death! "Do n't weep for me when I go away!" We think about it as death. Me did not see it. ITe looked on the shore of immortality. To him it was going away; it -was faUing asleep. Jesus said, "He that keepeth my saying shall not see death." "Don't," said he, "put" on mourning; it seeras to rae that it is very iraproper to mourn for a minister who has gone to so good a place as heaven!" This was his dying request. Death found him ready, no doubt. All the time he was ready. WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 311 CHAPTER XXXIV. The first session of the Rock River Conference was held on the camp-ground near the Seminary. There were sixty-four large regular tents, besides many small temporary ones. We had heavy rains at the beginning of the meeting, but no one seemed incUned to leave the ground on account of it, and so graciously were they preserved that no case of sickness originated on the ground, and those who were sick recovered in the course of the meeting. The congregations were large, and very attentive, and many were brought from darkness to light, and from the power of Satan unto God. It was esti mated that about four thousand persons were pres ent on the Sabbath, who listened with eagerness to the sermon preached by the bishop. It is worthy of note that no guard was necessary, and that no disturbance took place during the meeting. The closing exercises of the Conference, which were de livered in the presence of the congregation, were short, but deeply impressive. An address was deliv ered by the superintendent, and the appointments read off. Our Conference room was an inclosure of twenty feet square, which consisted of logs hastily thrown up. The large cracks between the logs were badly chinked, and the earth was strewn with straw 312 3AELY HISTORY OF THE ^ as a fli 3arpeting. A large canvas tent was erected auu uUed with beds for the accommodation of the preachers who boarded with the tent-holders. Bishop Waugh; who was President of the Confer ence, took up his lodging with a private family. There had already been held three Conferences in this State where the preachers were accommodated in the sarae raanner — the two first at Shiloh, and the last at Padfield's — and another, also, in Missouri. The rainutes of this Conference are very iraperfect, in consequence of the reports which have been mis laid, such as the report of the stewards, and, also, those of the missionary, centenary, and temperance questions. Among those who were admitted on trial were P. Richardson, C. N. Wagar, H. Hubbard, N. Swift, W. B. Cooley, S. Wood, A. White, M. F. Shinn, D. Worthington, H. Whitehead, Jaraes Ash, E. A. Blanchard, A. M. Eariy, E. P. Wood, C. CampbeU, P, Judson, H. P. Chase, H. Hadley, Those who remained on trial were S, Spater, A, Hadd-leston, George Copway — an Indian — William Vallette, John Johnson, J, W. Whipple, 0. H. Walker, J. G. Whiteford. Those who were admitted into full con nection were J. L. Bennett, N. Jewett, J. Hodges, J. M. Snow, E. Brown, H. J. Brace, M. M'Murtry, D. King, S. BoUes — all of whom were ordained this year, besides others — Jesse Halstead.and Joseph L. Kirkpatrick — who were not ordained. The dea cons were H. W. Frink, William Simpson, T, M. "WEST AND NORTH-^WEST. 313 Kfrkpatrick, M. Bourne, WUUam Graddis, B. H. Cart wright. Those elected and ordained elders were J. Crummer, J. PiUsberry, J. J.- Stewart, E. Springer, J. Halstead, J. L. Kfrkpatrick. Located — ^F. 0. Chenoweth. Supernumerary preachers — none. Su perannuated, or worn-out preachers — ^A. Brunson, Eobert Delap, T. Pope. None were expeUed from the connection. None had withdrawn. The eleventh question, "Were aU the preachers' characters examined?" was strictly attended to by calling over thefr names before the Conference. None had died this year. Total number of mem bers, 6,154. The fourteenth question, "What amounts are necessary for the superannuated preachers, the wid ows and orphans of preachers, and to raake up the deficiencies of those who have not obtained the reg ular allowance on the cfrcuits?" was not answered. Question 15th — "What has been collected on the foregoing accounts, and how has it been applied?" Stewards' report, not found among Conference papers. Question 16th — "What has been contributed for the support of missions, what for the pubUcation of Bibles, tracts, and- Sunday school books?" Not answered. Question 17th — "Where are the preachers sta tioned this year?" Chicago District, J. T. Mitchell, P. E. — Chicago, .to be suppUed, H. Crews, WilUam Gaddis. Wheeling, J. Nason, one to be suppUed. Elgin, Sims BoUes.* 27 314 EARLY HISTORY OP THE Crystaiville, 0. H. Walker. Eoscoe and Belvidere, M. Bourne. Eockford, S. H. Stocking.* Sycamore, L. S. Walker,* N. Swift. Dupage, WiUiam KirabaU.* NapierviUe, C. Lamb.* Ottowa District, J. Sinclair, P. E. — Ottowa, Jesse L. Bennett. Milford, E. Springer. WUming ton, E. Lunnery, Joliet, W, Weigley.* Lockport, W. Bachelor.* Indian Creek, A, White. Princeton, J. M, Snow, Bristol, H. Hadley. Mt. Moeeis Disteict, John dark, P. E., and A. M'Murtry, Superintendent. — Buffalo Grove, E. H. Blanchard,* Dixon, L, Hitchcock.* Portland, WUliam VaUette.* Stephenson, C. N. Wager. Sa vannah, P. Judson.* Galena, J. W. Whipple. Apple Eiver, E. P. Wood.* Freeport, S. PiUsberry.* T. T. Hitt, agent for Eock Eiver Seminary. Dr, Hitchcock, a member of the Oneida Conference, located and came araong us this year. He was a supply at Dixon till February, 1841, and then he was elected agent of the Mt. Morris Serainary, and E. A. Blanchard supplied Dixon the remainder of the year, Burlington District, A. Sommers,* P. E. — Bur Ungton, J. J. Stewart.* Mt. Pleasant, T. M. Kirk patrick.* Eichland mission, M. F. Shinn. Fox Eiver mission, to be supplied. Philadelphia, Joel Arrington. Fort Madison, Moses H. M'Murtry, William B. Cooley. Bloomington, Nathan Je^vrett.* CrawfordsviUe, Joseph L. Kirkpatrick.* Iowa District, Bartholomew Weed, P. E. — Iowa WEST AND NORTH-WEST. 315 mission, Garrett G. Worthington^* Eockingham, Chester CampbeU.* Camanche, Barton H. Cart wright.* Marion, John Hodges.* BeUview, Phi lander S. Eichardson. ClarksvUle, Henry Hubbard. Dubuque, Washington Wilcox. Indian Mission, Benjamin T. Kavanaugh, Su perintendent. — St. Peter's and Sioux mission, one to be suppUed, David King. Chippewa mission, Henry J. Brace, George Copway, Henry P. Chase, Allen Huddleston, John Johnson.. Sandy Lake, Samuel Spates. Platte^ville District, WMiam H. Beed,* P. E. — PlatteviUe, to be suppUed. Lancaster and Prairie du Chien, WUUam Simpson, Alfred M. Early.* Mineral Point and Wiota, James G. Whitford, one to be sup pUed. Monroe, James Ash. Madison, to be suppUed. Fort Winnebago, Stephen P. Keys.* Fon du Lac, Jesse Halstead. Green Bay, to be suppUed. Oneida, Henry E. Coleman. Milwaukee District, J-uMus Field,* P. E. — MUwaukee, John Crummer.* Eacihe, Leonard F. Malthrop.* Eoot Eiver, Henry Whitehead.* South- port mission, Solomon Stebbins.* Burlington and Rochester, D. Worthington. Troy, James M'Kean. Watertown, Sidney Wood. Summit, Hfram W. Frmk.* Austin F. Rogers, transferred to the Illinois Con ference. The next Conference was held at PlatteviUe, Au gust 25, 1841 316 EAELY HISTOEY OF THE Those whose names are marked with a star are yet living. There were three Indians laboring as preachers araong us — George Copway, H. P. Chase, and John Johnson. Our Conference district then erabraced Iowa, Wis consin, and Minnesota, besides our own, the Eock Eiver Conference, At that time there were 71 min isters stationed, and now we have 781. Its mera bership then was 6,164, now 79,405. What was then embraced in one. Conference now is ground enough for eight. In the place of six churches, we now, in seventeen years, have increased to 801. INCREASE UP TO 1867. CoNFERBNCBS. Memben. Preachen. Diat. Chnrohea. Value, Iowa 17,234 96 7 150 $251,975 Upper Iowa 14,540 97 7 106 322,700 Minnesota 7,193 75 7 59 174,800 Wisconsin 10,712 130 5 13^ 427,050 Eock Eiver 18,859 171 6 180 1,447,100 DesMoiues 11,159 85 6 63 154,905 West Wisconsin 6,932 79 5 86 161,650 North-West Wisconsin.... 2,796 48 3 25 64,700 Total 89,425 781 46 801 $2,994,880 ¦WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 317 CHAPTER XXXV. The most remarkable and striking feature distin guishing Illinois from the other States consists in her extensive prairies, covered ¦with a luxuriant growth of grass, and forming exceUent natural meadows, from which cfrcumstance they received thefr present name, from the early French settlers. They extend from the western part of Indiana more or less to the foot of the Rocky Mountains. Illinois is properly caUed the Prairie State; as it is, gen eraUy speaking, one vast prairie, intersected by strips of woods, chiefly confined to the banks and the vaUeys of the rivers. Thefr soU is from one to three feet deep; whUe nearly aU of them possess an inexhaustible fertUity, and but few are sterUe. The eye sometimes surveys the green prairie without discovering, on the UUmitable plain, a tree, bush, or other object save a wUderness of grass and flowers. The charms of a prairie consist in its ex tension, its green, flowery carpet, its undulating surfece, and the skirts of forests whereby it is sur rounded. The congenial rays of the sun soon ripen the plentiful harvest; and in Autumn the yellow har vest is gathered into the weU-fiUed gamer. Soon the green-carpeted prairie is changed to deep yeUow, as Indian Summer dries up the grass, and then 318 EAELY HISTORY OP THE comes on the preparation against the flood of fire that sweeps over the broad surface. Of this I wish to give an idea, as I have seen it, run from it, and fought it till I could- hardly stand, covered with sweat and dirt, and ray eyes almost sightless amid the black clouds of sraoke, to save the scanty drop of the settler's first year's toil, aiid the little cabin that I had preached in, in the inorning of the same day. I will relate an incident that took place in the Missouri Bottom, above Boonville. A few families had settled on a very rich, broad bottom of prairie. The grass was as high as my' head when on my horse, and so thick that: it was with the utmost difficulty that I could ride through it. There was a heavy body of timber west of the settlers, and the fire had not passed through^ it for several years; and, of course, a great body of ! combustible vegeta ble raatter had accumulated upon the ground, to which the last Summer's growth had added greatly. One family had moved into a small house about midway in the prairie. One warm, dry, windy day, one of the girls had started to a neighbor's house, about two miles, on the bluff, and having proceeded about half way, she heard a roaring as of a mighty tempest; and looking west toward the tiraber, she saw the flickering blaze kindled into a fierce torrent of fiaraes, which curled up and leaped along with re sistless force. The air was filled with clouds of crimson smoke, while the crashing sounds, like roar ing cataracts, were almost deafening; danger and WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 319 death filled the air, and seemed to scream for vic tims. At such a fearful crisis, one becomes irreso lute, and almost unable to withdraw or seek refuge; As there was not a moment to lose, the girl fled back to the old domicile. The family had thrown aU the household goods into one pile,, and covered them as best they'cbuld; closing: the door and win dow. The fire hastened in its devouring mairch, till its far-reacning flames enveloped] -the house, the in mates being almost stifled with heat and smoke. It lasted, however, but for a few raoraents. The green, brown carpet had been consuraed, and black destruc tion sickened the heart. The inmates threw open the door, by which time the fire had began to blaze up through the cracks of the fioor. They gathered up aU the articles that they could, and threw them out into the yard, where the flames had consumed every thing, and having a well of water, saved most of their household goods; but the old house was soon in ashes, and the inmates left to do as best they might. Some perished in these terrific fires in an early day. It is said that two betrothed lovers perished on the banks of the Kankakee, their crisped forms being found near that of thefr horse the next day, by a hunter. The river flowed along to lee ward of them, but the flames had outstripped their fleet charger, upon which both were riding, before they could reach the stream. Why did they not have the presence of mind to set a " back fire " or take refuge on the burned space? 320 EAELY HISTORY OP THE IlUnois seems destined, in a short time, to play a great part in the United States, being entitled to this not only by the vastness of its area — three hundred and seventy-eight miles from Cairo to Wis consin, from south to north, and its greatest breadth, two hundred and twelve miles — ^but, also, by the fertility of its easily cultivated soil, the multitude of its rivers, railroads, canals, coal-beds, and its beautiful and abundant stone quarries, its water powers, and the rapid increase of its population, at once enterprising and intelligent. May our moral zeal increase, and our victories multiply in behalf of all that is good, till God shall " make us an hund red times so many more as we be!" WEST AND NORTH-^WEST. 321 CHAPTER XXXVI. The first newspaper printed in Missouri was at St. Louis, in 1808, by Joseph Charles. It was first caUed the Louisiana Gazette, then the Missouri Gazette; and in 1832, going into the possession of other parties, it took the name of Missouri Bepub- liean. The census taken in 1810 gives 20,845 inhabitants in Missouri. In 1818 St. Louis com menced a greater progress in its buUding and' com mercial enterprises. During that year more than three miUions of bricks were made, and one hundred buUdings erected. The first brick dweUing-house was buUt in 1813 or '14, by Wm. C. Carr. The first steamboat that ascended the Mississippi, above the mouth of the Ohio, was the "General Pike," which reached St. Louis the 2d of August, 1817. It was commanded by Capt. R. P. Guyard. The country above Cedar Creek, a small stream on the western border of GaUoway county, Missouri, which was then regarded as the boundary of the district — afterward the county of St. Charles — ^was called Boone's Lick, from the tiine of its first settlement, in 1797, tiU the organization of the State Govem ment. In 1808 there was a small viUage, caUed Cote Sans Dessein, from a singular oblong hill in its •vdcinity. In 1810 a few enterprising famiUes struck 28 322 EARLY HISTORY OF THE out into the wilderness, and formed a settlement in what is now known as Howard county. Here were several large salt springs and "Licks," at one of which Daniel Boone had his hunting camp, and where his son. Major Nathan Boone, made salt as early as 1807. This gave name to the " Lick," and, also, to a large district of counties. Boone's Lick settlement, at the commencement of the war with Great Britain, numbered about one hundred and fifty families. In 1815, throughout the county and town of St. Louis, the inhabitants numbered 9,396, the town population alone numbering 2,000. I add a few more reminiscences of Chicago. Early in the Spring of 1834, brother Henry Whitehead and Mr. Stewart contracted with Jesse Walker to build a small but coraraodious house of worship, on the north side of the river, on the corner of Water and Clark streets. Father Walker and the local preachers occupied it every Sabbath alternately. In looking over the annals of Methodism found here and there in books, in my own experience, and in the relation of the experience of others to me, it seems as if God had sifted the whole inhabited re gion of North America, and selected the choice spirits therefrom, with their iron constitutions, to plant and cultivate the tree of Methodism in the West. Stevens says : " We have often been reminded of the adaptation of Methodism, by some of its prov idential peculiarities, for its self-propagation. Its class and prayer meetings train most if not all its ¦WEST AST) NOETH-^WEST. 323 laity to constant practical missionary labors; so that three or four of these, meeting in any distant part of the earth, by emigration, are prepared immedi ately to become the nucleus of a Church. The lay or local ministry, bome on by the tide of emigra tion, was almost every-where found prior to the ar rival of the regular preacher, ready to sustain re Ugious services." The year 1790 was not the real epoci of Method ism in the United States, The sainted Barbara Heck, foundress of Methodism in the United States, went with her chUdren, it is probable, into the prov ince of Canada as early as 1774. Mrs. Heck and her three sons were members of a class at Augusta, under the leadership of Samuel, son of PhUip Em bury. Brother WiUiam Smith has truly said that there weare many pious women amcaig the early set tlers who were Oiristian hOToines in the true sense of the word. Having left thefr native State to ac company thefr husbands to territories where was naught but a howUng wUderness, they have proved themselves to be helpmeets for the naen who braved the dangers of- a frontier Ufe. They were equaUy brave in every moral conflict in battUhg far the Lord. In singing, what have they not done in con gregations? I have often sat and listened tiU my own eyes, as weU as those around me, were suffiised with tears, and especially in -prayer ofrcfes, when the heart of some mother in Israel went out in irresistible pleadings with her Lord and Savior for 324 EARLY HISTORY OP THE an only child or an erring husband, as if every word were an inspiration, every utterance an irarae diate communication from above, the language of the heavenly host. Indeed, it has often seemed to me as if ¦woman, as if the mother of the Son of God was nearer the throne in earnest supplications than man can be. And then, like the women of the Bible, she will take no denial. She will not cease her im portunities till the unclean spirit has gone out, and the soul is made a fit temple for the indwelling of the Holy Spirit. Sometimes, after an earnest prayer, I have known them to arise and exhort till it seemed like a visible influence all over the house, as if the powers of darkness had yielded, saints were rejoicing, and heaven had corae down to earth, and the whole congregation- would be shouting "Glory to God!" The Presbyterian definition of true eloquence — namely, shouting and tears, shouting and tears- may be justly applied to the women of early Meth- odispi. But, alas! how few of them remain among us! I have followed one and another of them to their last resting-place, and, standing by their dying beds, have heard them testify "all is well," till their voices were lost in death. A few years more, and none of them will reraain; they all will have passed over the swelling tide, and become inmates of the mansion on high. Though it may hardly seem in place here to mention these things, yet it has often seemed to me. such a cruel, unjust thing that we have to cast so many unjust slurs upon our WEST AND NOETH-WEST. 325 women. I have often thought of these things — the use of so many foul sayings which are looked upon as so many ¦witticisms — ^uch, for instance, as the rib out of which mother Eve was formed, denoting her crooked disposition; that woman is" all tongue," be cause she is gifted in conversation; that Mary Mag dalene had seven devils cast out of her, whUe they seem to forget that one of the male sex possessed a legion. We have good authority for that, and we can not estimate how many more possessed the same number, for Paul gives one of the most fearful epit omes of man's unparaUeled wickedness; and, from his summing np, one would think that man pos sessed not only a legion, but legions. If our State prisons contain more men, ¦wiU not heaven contain more women? In either case it is a fearful thing to beUeve in the loss of a souL THE END. YALE 3 9002 Ss YALE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY The EDWESf J. BEINECKE, '07 FREDERICK "W. BEINECKE, '09 S WALTER BEINECKE, '10 FUND 4 d U ..• i '1. I I I . > : I % ¦i t L ^ ¦ ' 'i 1 ¦w ^l'', 1.-,'', ¦' 'S ^^ ^1 ,ii„^-...^'' jtJ''^j|fS,^' /' ¦-. U I 1 ' ¦?»(! ^ I ! 1 '» I 1