Henry Weber was the vice president of Zion’s Watch Tower Society from 1892-1904 (his death). During this time several long-time associates left fellowship (see A Conspiracy Exposed and Harvest Siftings 1894) but Henry was well trusted and respected.
Henry was a horticulturist, and the one official photograph in general circulation is taken from the book American Florist. Although this book was published in 1900 we don’t know when the photograph was taken.
Henry’s story is covered in an earlier article on
this blog, which can be found here.
https://jeromehistory.blogspot.com/2020/03/henry-weber.html
Because of his long and faithful service, it seems
his photograph was on the wall in the Pittsburgh Bible House parlor. Below is a
photograph of the parlor and on the wall on the right, above the furniture, is
a portrait.
The original 5 x 7
inch glass plate negative of this photograph is owned by Brian K. Using 12,800
dpi scanning and some Photoshop manipulation, the picture below was rescued.
The sitter in this
picture is holding a volume of Millennial Dawn. Comparing the covers of the
editions of Millennial Dawn from that era, the most likely candidate in the
photograph is volume 4, The Day of Vengeance, which was published in 1897.
This photograph can
be found in the Watchtower Society’s historical exhibition. Below is a snapshot
taken by the author from a display in Brooklyn in 2014.
Now the exhibition
has been relocated to Warwick, Henry’s photograph may have been repositioned,
but there is no reason for it to have disappeared.
As noted above, Henry
died in 1904. His funeral service was conducted by CTR. Some of the family
remained in fellowship with the Society for many years. It was noted in The New Era Enterprise
for October 19, 1920
that the controversial “miracle wheat” had now been rebranded as “Weber wheat,”
and had won prizes for the company. The business H
Weber and Sons, was to last until 1978, and its records were ultimately donated
to the Smithsonian Institute by a descendant.
One more recent
reference shows how long after Henry some of his family remained in association
with the Watch Tower Society. The Cumberland
Evening Times (Cumberland, Maryland)
for April 3, 1971, carried a funeral notice for one of his daughters, Diane.
She lived to be 93, and the notice made the point that she was one of Jehovah’s
Witnesses.
Was only Weber (born 1835) older than CTR (born 1852) on the board of the Society in 1884-1892? Hence, maybe such an extra respect for him and putting him in the picture. (From Benek)
ReplyDeleteMost of the original directors came from the same era. Although it is true that some had died and others had left fellowship by the early 1900s. See article "The Magnificent Seven"
ReplyDeletehttps://jeromehistory.blogspot.com/2020/05/the-magnificient-seven.html
Thanks for the info Jerome. Indeed, they all had similar years of birth, but Weber was the oldest. (From Benek)
ReplyDeleteHi Jerome! Great article, thanks for sharing the information, and yes, the photo is on one of the displays at Warwick, you can see the current display here with Weber's photo here: http://www.tulees.blog/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/fromreadershiptofellowship-scaled.jpg
ReplyDeleteMany thanks, Leroy.
ReplyDelete