The leaflet
The newspaper
advertisement
The location
E W Brenneisen (1874-1956) was later involved in the publication of ANGELS AND WOMEN.
The history of the 19th century Bible Student movement, with occasional more recent developments among those who stayed with the Watch Tower Society. A place for historians who love this subject. Not a place for polemics or for debating beliefs; simply history written as neutrally as possible. Enjoy! Some reprinted pieces first appeared on: truthhistory.blogspot.com
The leaflet
The newspaper
advertisement
The location
E W Brenneisen (1874-1956) was later involved in the publication of ANGELS AND WOMEN.
Some may have seen this photograph before. It has been published in the
past in glorious monochrome with permission from Tower Archives, and this is a
colorized version prepared by Leroy. Again with thanks.
The rear of the original snap has a handwritten description: ‘Monday,
September 11th, 1922. Brother Rutherford took first car to go on initial
"service day" house to house preaching work.’
This more or less ties in with the
official write-up of the 1922 Cedar Point (Ohio) Convention. From the report of
the Service Director, Richard Johnson, in Watch
Tower November 1, 1922, page 349:
The report states that 203 cars were involved.
A handwritten caption on the back of the photograph suggests that this was a
photo of the first vehicle off the blocks, whereas the Watch Tower review suggests it was the last; but either way it
featured JFR looking at the auto license plate, which reads – 144,000.
No wonder someone took a photograph.
The whole event is written up in the 1975 Yearbook (pages 132-133) which has an eyewitness report of JFR in the first car, even if he couldn’t resist posing by the last.
Grace Mundy was buried in the Watch Tower Society’s Rosemont United Cemetery in Ross Township, Allegheny, in Section T, Lot 33, grave number A1. Note that this grave number corresponds with modern records. The original numbering as found on the sides of a pyramid monument (removed in 2021) squeezed in more grave spaces than were realistically available.
The plan below shows the whole of Section T, Lot 33, but with just the names of those buried before the pyramid was put in place.
The East face of the
pyramid monument showed the names of Grace Mundy, Lorena M Russell, John Perry,
H L Addington and Flora J Cole.
When the pyramid was removed in 2021 it was replaced
by nine flat grave markers pictured below.
Grace is named in the
top left hand corner.
Who
was Grace Mundy?
The plan above
shows that Grace was buried in the same row as Charles Taze Russell, but at the
farthest corner of the site. According to her death certificate she died on
December 4, 1914, aged 25, and the interment took place on December 8. She was
the first to be buried in this special area. Sadly, she made the front page of
the Brooklyn Daily Eagle when she was fatally injured.
The
Brooklyn Daily Eagle for December 4, 1914 carried the
heading, WOMAN IN FLAMES RUSHES INTO STREET – Miss Grace Mundy Perhaps Fatally
Burned – Neighbors Beat Out Fire.
The story tells
how the street was greeted by a “flaming apparition” as Grace rushed into the
street, and several bystanders were burned trying to extinguish the flames.
Grace’s father was away at the time, her mother was ill in bed, and she had
been cleaning feathers in the kitchen in their home on the fourth floor of 539
Throop Avenue, using gasoline. She got too close to the stove and the fluid
ignited and set her clothes on fire. She managed to get down three flights of
stairs and out into the street but was severely burned. She was taken to St John’s
Hospital, where she died.
The newspaper makes
no connection with the Bible Student movement, but the death certificate
confirms that this is the Grace who was the first to be buried at the Society’s
plot. She may have been a colporteur, and her mother, Sarah, was a Bible
Student. They had lived in Throop Avenue for three years at the time of the
accident. They were not mentioned by Menta Sturgeon when he detailed who was
part of the regular Bethel family in January 1913. (See trial transcript
Russell vs. Brooklyn Eagle, 1913). The 1910 census has the family living in New
Jersey, with the father a carpenter and Grace’s younger brother, George, a
machinist in an auto factory. Grace was born in Missouri, and the census has
her down as a step-daughter, with the original surname of Wilson.
Grace’s
step-father, Peter Mundy, only survived her by a matter of weeks. In January
1915 he died of pneumonia and his funeral was held in the local M.E. Church.
Her mother, Sarah, died in January 1917, and according to the funeral notice in
The Courier-News (Bridgewater, NJ)
for 8 January 1917 her funeral was held in the Brooklyn Tabernacle. Grace’s
brother George, born in 1891, lived on until 1970.
Grace and some
of her family must have been heavily involved in the work of the IBSA for her
to be given the ‘privilege’ of being the first to be taken all the way from New
York to the United Cemeteries in Pittsburgh. No other family members were to be
buried near her.
Excerpted from GRAVE MATTERS – published in 2024 by Lulu. See: https://jeromehistory.blogspot.com/2024/12/grave-matters.html
For a collector of Watch Tower history and memorabilia, one of the prized items would have to be an original copy of the very first issue of Zions Watch Tower magazine for July 1879. Originally only 6000 copies were printed (Proclaimers page 48), which at the time – even with links to existing readers of Adventist and Age to Come papers – was still quite ambitious.
But now we know that there was not just one
published paper for that July. Like the 1611 King James Version Bible (with its
two versions, a “he” and a “she” Bible) there are two known printing of the
July 1879 Zion’s Watch Tower. If you
are one of the very, very few with an original, which one do you have?
The article involved was on pages 4-5 of the very first
magazine. It is called ‘God’s “Little While”’ and, unlike some of the other
articles which give the writer’s initials, this one is uncredited. There are
around five examples where changes were made in just this one article. One
assumes that some copies were printed and then additional proof reading caused
the typeface to be adapted before the remainder came off the production line.
We will examine the changes as version 1 and version
2, and then explain where these can still be seen today, even if you don’t have
an original. Most readers today will either have scans of the original issues,
a text file of the Watch Tower for
1879-1916, or the reprint volumes – or probably all three. They reflect the two
different versions of the magazine for July 1879.
Change number one – version 1 above and version 2
below:
The scripture is changed to show the correct chapter
and verse, not two chapters.
Changes number 2 and 3. This covers the end of one column and the start of a new column. First, version number 1:
In the second version at the end of the extract there
is an extra dash for punctuation. But the biggest change is at the start of the
extract. Version 1 has a question “How long, Paul, until the fullness of the Gentiles be come in?” Version 2 splits
this into two sentences – the first is the question, but the second is the
answer to the question: “How long, Paul? Until the fullness of the Gentiles be
come in.”
Change number 4 has version 1 reproduced first,
followed by version 2.
The words “high calling” are now in inverted commas.
And finally, example number 5. This too has version 1 first, followed by version 2:
We note that the word “may” is added to second
version, and the whole phrase is now placed within inverted commas. This is
because, although the paragraph ends with a reference to Romans 11 v.2-25, this
is actually a paraphrase of verse 31 of that chapter. The words inside inverted
commas now reflect that, although it is still slightly adjusted from the
standard King James’ Version words, which read: “Even so have these also now not believed, that through your
mercy they also may obtain mercy.”
So where do we find the two versions preserved
today?
Most collectors will have scans of the first Zion’s Watch Tower in general
circulation. This scan takes its material from version number 1.
It is also found in the text edition of Watch Tower 1879-1916 that many will
have.
Apart from the reference to Acts 15-16 which an
eagle-eyed transcriber noticed and changed, this was all taken from the first version.
But then in the early 1920s the Watch Tower magazine
was reprinted in seven volumes. The organization had to borrow some issues from
the friends to complete this because their own file was incomplete. But the
reproduction of the first July 1879 was now all taken from the second version.
This
indicates that both versions must have been in general circulation at some
point for this to happen.
We know that version 2 with its
amendments comes from a copy originally in private circulation. It is now
inaccessible in a display under glass, but the key graphics were extracted some
time ago.
We don’t
know the story behind all the small changes and why they were made in 1879. But
if you want to have the very first Watch
Tower in your personal collection – now you need to have TWO.
Good
hunting!
(With grateful thanks to Leroy who noted the changes and provided the scans for version two)
This blog invites comments on historical matters, but sometimes receives responses of a highly speculative and negative nature. As indicated in the blog heading, these normally just get deleted. But a recent comment was forwarded to me on an old post that I wrote elsewhere way back in 2012. It raised questions that crop up from time to time related to Joseph Lytle Russell and Emma Ackley and their marriage.
This post is to address
the issues, although I’m not going into great detail as researchers can
easily check matters out for themselves. On THIS blog the material was covered
in general detail in the article
https://jeromehistory.blogspot.com/2020/04/1-three-weddings-but-no-funeral-this.html
The issues relate to
the 1880 census return for Allegheny. This establishes that over a year after
CTR and Maria married, JLR and Emma were still single but living in the Russell
household. The census return for their street, Cedar Avenue, is dated June 14,
1880. It is reproduced below.
The reproduction is not
very clear, but deciphering it shows the following:
There are four
occupants of the house, C T Russel (sic), married, occupation: merchant; Maria
F, married, wife, keeps house; J L, widowed, father, occupation: merchant; and
E H Ackley, single, sister (step), occupation: at home.
The relationship entry
for Emma as recorded in the schedule is incorrect. Her relationship to the head
of the household (CTR) at this time should be sister-in-law.
The issues raised in
the comment are basically threefold.
1. Did Joseph and
Emma ever actually marry?
2. What was going
on in that house with four of them there?
3. How to explain the
difference in ages between Joseph and Emma?
The writer starts with
a confident statement: “I’m good at genealogical investigations and I cannot
find any record that indicates that Joseph Russell and Emma Ackley married.”
I would agree there is
no apparent record. But there is a good reason for that which any genealogist
should know. The State of Pennsylvania did not require marriages to be
officially registered until 1885, and “common law” marriages continued to be
“common” for years thereafter. If you married before then, generally your
immediately family would know, and maybe the officiating minister might keep
his own personal record or a specific church might do so. However, no-one else would know unless you put it in
the newspaper or had legal matters to attend to. If you wanted a “quiet”
wedding, it really was quiet.
To illustrate the
situation, perhaps readers can find an official document for CTR and Maria’s
marriage? Like Joseph and Emma’s, it is just not there. But we know it happened
because they chose to put an announcement in the local paper and CTR was
sufficiently well known in Allegheny for it to make a short paragraph in the
papers as well. Both the Pittsburgh
Gazette and Pittsburgh Post
(March 14, 1879) carry news of the marriage at the home of Maria’s mother the
day before with J H Paton officiating.
As an aside, this lack
of documentation did not just apply to marriages. You will not find a primary
source for J F Rutherford’s birth in 1869. When he needed to renew a passport,
his mother Lenora, had to extract a reference from a family Bible and sign an
affidavit to that effect. There were no other records extant.
Returning to Emma, when
it came to JLR’s last will and testament, part was queried by Emma who believed
that as his wife she should have inherited more. In the documented arguments he
is the husband and she is the wife. Joseph’s obituary found in several
newspapers calls her his wife. It is easy enough to check.
The second criticism is
that it was somehow strange for the four to all be in the same house. The
writer hints at misconduct without a shred of evidence.
I am not going to even
dignify this with much comment, other than to say that I see no problem with the
four people living under the same roof in the snapshot of June 1880 for Cedar
Avenue. I’ve visited Cedar Avenue and the houses are large. Years later Maria
was able to take in a number of lodgers in one.
Why were they in the
same home? Well, why not? CTR and Maria were close at this time, committed to
their religious work. Emma and Maria were very close and would spend the last
decades of their lives together. CTR and his father Joseph were very close.
There would be nothing surprising about them being under the same roof at some
point, and that may well have led to the two unattached becoming a married
couple. As already noted the property was large with plenty of space.
We do not know how long
they were all at same address. The census is simply a snapshot of one day, June
14, but one can assume that any marriage came quite soon after that date since Emma’s
daughter Mabel appears to have been conceived around December that year.
The December date comes
from Mabel being born in September 1881, and that can be confirmed from her
marriage certificate when she married Richard Packard in 1903. It gives her
birth date as September 1881 but does not give the actual day. If she was born in
September 1881, then obviously she was conceived around December 1880. That
would be 5-6 months after she and Joseph were living under CTR’s roof while both
single. That gives us a window of a few months for a marriage.
We might here note that
to try and bolster slurs against Charles and Joseph, the writer comments on the
period June-December 1880 with an off-the-wall statement: “That does not leave
a lot of time for the two (Joseph and Emma) to fall madly in love and wed.” What
sort of logic is that? Who is to say they didn’t “fall in love” some time
before the census, and were at the same address on census night planning the
wedding for the following week? We just don’t know. We certainly have no basis
for filling in the gaps with supposition.
When married, and after
a baby came along, it would make more sense for the couple to look for a
separate home (and in fact the property next door came into the family’s
possession at some point). But they continued to live near each other for some
years until Joseph eventually retired to Florida, along with Emma and Mabel.
The suggestion that there
was something amiss about all of this is a huge leap of imagination with an
obvious agenda. They were all close at the time. It is very sad what happened
later.
The third issue raised is
the disparity in ages. Why would a woman in her 20s want to marry a man in his
60s?
This is not a unique
situation. Just look around in the world of entertainment and politics today.
As it happens, the same occurred in my own extended family. But back in the
1880s an obvious reason for a woman was to be provided with stability and
financial security. That is something I venture the Ackley girls were always most
concerned about by their later actions. And as a potential bonus, Emma was able
to have a child, which may have been very important to her.
So, whoever chose to
make the comments referenced above, please leave such speculation alone. And if
you can’t do that, just don’t send it here.
The circumstances surrounding the death of Charles Taze Russell in 1916 have attracted much comment over the years. The fairly recent discovery of a document from an undertaker in Waynoka, Oklahoma, prompted this research, which makes use of various accounts in the Watch Tower magazine and newspapers like the St Paul Enterprise to explain what actually happened at that time and why. Serious criticisms of how matters were handled were made later, and we will examine these. The whole story is obviously a very sad one for those holding CTR in high esteem, but ultimately is quite straightforward.
CTR had been seriously
ill when undertaking a series of visits to congregations in the far West and
South West of America in the second half of October 1916. As his health
deteriorated, he, along with traveling companion Menta Sturgeon, tried to get
home to New York by train. He died on that return journey near Pampa, Texas,
around 2 o’clock in the afternoon of Tuesday, October 31.
As CTR’s traveling
companion, Menta Sturgeon tried to deal with the final stages of his illness
and the immediate aftermath of the death, but then found he could not travel on
the railroads out of State without the body being embalmed. Sturgeon was to be
later criticised for not just keeping quiet about the death until the train had
traveled further on, and we will come to that in due course. Sturgeon wanted to
reach Kansas City, but once the authorities knew of the death, had no
alternative but to stop at the first place on route that could handle matters.
That was Waynoka, a city in Woods County, Oklahoma, population in 1910 of 1160
people. Here a death certificate was obtained. And here, as the advertisement below
shows, Josiah Bushy Kepner was the only choice you had.
From the Woods County Enterprise, April 2, 1915.
Kepner was the only
person in Waynoka who was licensed to perform the task. We note from his
advertisement that he was involved in several other ventures under the one
roof. In the Enterprise for 14
November 1916, a Mrs Norah Voyles Keith wrote that “there in the back of a
furniture store was all that remained of our beloved Pastor.” This was very
common. Undertakers only had full-time work in the larger cities. Otherwise, many involved in furniture
production simply branched out into making coffins. The only extra skill an
undertaker needed to learn was embalming. Kepner perhaps had a head start
because back in the 1880s he had also been involved in pharmaceuticals. From
the Nemaha County Replican for 9 October 9 1884:
Josiah Bushy Kepner
(1852-1944) had been in the undertaking business for nearly thirty years by the
time he attended CTR, first in Sabetha,
Kansas, and then in Waynoka, Oklahoma. He had been mayor twice in Sabetha, and
was well respected in Waynoka, where he was to serve as president of a local
bank.
His work was well
spoken of in the St Paul Enterprise.
From the Enterprise for 21 November 1916:
Kepner finally retired in 1929, but his second wife kept on the business at least until the 1940s. The advertisement below is from 1943.
It was eventually taken
over by the Marshall Funeral Home (now in nearby Alva, Oklahoma) and it is from
their inherited records that the copy of his bill to Menta Sturgeon was
retrieved.
There are three
charges. $5.00 for washing and dressing the body – the washing with
disinfectant was normally done twice, both before and after the embalming
process. Then there was $20 for the actual embalming, although Kepner doesn’t
specify on the bill what fluid was used, and then $35 for the coffin for
transportation on the railways.
The process for
embalming that Kepner would have used really came into its own during the
American Civil War. Those who could afford it wanted their loved ones who died
on the battlefield to be returned to them for a family funeral with – if
possible – an open coffin or casket. The procedure was not just to preserve the
body but to make the person appear as loved ones would want to remember. There
was a ghoulish trade of embalmers following armies around offering soldiers
about to go into combat a pre-paid plan. At one point these outfits were banned
because of the bad effect on morale. When the railways objected to unembalmed
bodies being transported for health reasons, it became common practice. Finally
there were laws in each State stipulating that the procedure was necessary if
the body had to be transported over a certain distance or out of State. The
custom really took off after Abraham Lincoln was embalmed. His body went on
tour and over a million people saw him lying in state over a 20 day period
before his funeral in 1865. Thirty six years later in 1901 his coffin was
opened and the body was immediately recognisable. If this was good enough for
Abraham Lincoln then it was good enough for the general population.
The actual procedure
involved using the circulatory system, discovered by William Harvey, to replace
blood with a preservative solution. Originally this was arsenic based, but that
wan’t too good for the living. By
Kepner’s day it was generally formaldehyde, and this is still the case today.
The procedure took between 2 and 4 hours. CTR’s body was taken off the train
around 7 pm on the Tuesday evening, and returned to the train at 3 am the
following Wednesday morning.
So this is the
background as to why Menta Sturgeon could not just take CTR’s body back to New
York. Once the death was made public, Sturgeon was forced to stop at the first
place the embalming service could be provided.
Criticisms of these
events received a public airing in 1923, when W H Wisdom published his book The Laodicean Messenger aka Memoirs of Pastor Russell.
The book was reviewed -
critically – in the Watch Tower for 15
September 1923.
On page 242 Wisdom made the criticism that “through
some more bungling the body was removed from the train at the first small town,
where it was very improperly cared for in the way of embalming.”
He then
indicated that further embalming work was done in Kansas City en route and
finally again on arrival at New York.
From where did Wisdom get his information?
There are two probable sources from that era.
The first, and least compelling, is a letter found in
the New Era Enterprise newspaper.
This was the newspaper used by Bible Students at the time for news and views
and much found in it cannot be found elsewhere.
In the 27 December 1921 Enterprise,
Joseph Greig while visiting Texas, including Pampa (where CTR actually died on
the train), wrote a short column “Pastor Russell’s Death Route.” Recounting the
story he said: "Orders were given to remove the body at Wynoka, Okla.,
where an old gentleman cared for the embalming. One who knew this person said
while he was not expert in his profession by reason of poor eyesight,
nevertheless, he was possibly the only embalmer who never extracted the blood,
but used his fluid in connection with the blood as a preservative."
There are several problems with Greig’s account. “Old
gentleman” has to be subjective – Kepner was younger than CTR. Then the concept
of embalming by just introducing embalming fluid without replacing cadaver
blood does not make sense. The whole point of embalming was to replace the
blood to preserve the body temporarily
and give a lifelike appearance for viewers. The procedure was quite
straightforward for anyone with the basic training and equipment – with or
without good eyesight. Embalming fluid was pumped into the body, generally through
the carotid artery, and was able to displace the blood through an incision in a
vein (often the jugular). It used the human circulatory system to work.
Sometimes massage was applied to help the embalming fluid to circulate fully.
As we have seen, the procedure was refined and popularized during the American
Civil war when a body needed preservation for transportation or a delayed
funeral.
This account came from someone touring Texas, who never
visited Waynoka in the next State and never met Kepner, even though he was
still very much in business in Waynoka at the time. It was written several
years after the event. It falls into the category of “an unnamed person told
me…”
Of greater weight is a talk given by A H MacMillan
called The History of the Society from
1910-1920. The talk was transcribed,
as was a short question and answer session after it, and some of the material –
almost word for word – was to later appear in MacMillan’s book Faith on the March (1957). The actual transcript shows this particular version
of the talk was given as late as c. 1951 because it also mentions Jesse Hemery leaving
fellowship with the IBSA. However, it reflects MacMillan’s view of events and
of course he was there in Brooklyn Bethel at the time.
Taken from this transcript:
MacMillan was scathing about Menta Sturgeon. Quote:
“Poor Sturgeon didn’t know enough to take care of a sick chicken, much less a
dying man. What he said himself about Brother Russell was enough to kill the
man if he was half alive.”
Reading Sturgeon’s detailed description of CTR’s
last hours and his attempts to care for him; and in the heightened emotion of
the moment “spiritualizing” some of those events, one can understand
MacMillan’s comments.
MacMillan also blamed Sturgeon for the body having
to be removed from the train at Waynoka, where Kepner Undertaking was the only
game in town. Sturgeon had chosen to publicize the death and Railway and State
regulations kicked in. As MacMillan states “if he had any sense and kept his
mouth shut” the situation could be been avoided.
There also appear to be other issues at the time. In
his talk MacMillan was to further criticise Sturgeon for not giving the Bethel
family the news. Sturgeon wrote to his wife, Florence, in Bethel, and told her.
Only by intercepting the letter did MacMillan and others learn the news, before
the newspaper reporters started banging on the doors.
MacMillan could be caustic about Sturgeon because he
had died way back in 1935, and long before then had ceased fellowship with the
IBSA. He ultimately left all strands of the Bible Student movement and ended up
canvassing for a Universalist group, The Concordant Bible Society.
MacMillan’s distain for Kepner came across in his
continued description: “They pulled the body off the train in Pampa, Texas, and
took him to a furniture store.” (Being pedantic, CTR died on the train at Pampa,
Texas, but the furniture store was in Waynoka, Oklahoma, which was about 150
miles further along the track). However, as already recognized, it was quite
normal in smaller settlements for the undertaker to have several businesses.
With only a little over a thousand inhabitants, Waynoka was not going to have
that many funerals in any given period, even with an extended catchment area.
Then there is the most serious criticism - in MacMillan’s estimation, Kepner was
not qualified. His account continues: “There a man who didn’t know how to
embalm tried to embalm the body and made a mess of the whole thing.”
Did Kepner know how to embalm? We have established
he was licensed and was the only licensed embalmer in the city. When he moved to
Waynoka in 1913 and took over new premises The
Woods County Enterprise (Waynoka) for 18 April 18 1913, stated he had been
in business for 30 years and praised him
as a graduate of the best schools of embalming in the U.S.
Even allowing for self publicity, embalming was
something Kepner did. He remained in active practice for over a decade after
attending to CTR, only retiring in 1929. His company, managed by his second
wife likely hired someone else to do the embalming, and was still advertising in
the 1940s. While embalmers may bury their mistakes (literally!) this man ran a
successful business for decades. There was no hint of any issues in the many
references to him in the newspapers of the day.
So what was the problem? We must remember that his
brief was not to present a body for lying in state, rather simply to preserve
it to meet existing laws for transportation. Kepner appears to have done what
was required. Again, as noted above, contemporary accounts of the events
surrounding CTR’s death spoke highly of him and there was no criticism from
those who first saw the body before it continued on its journey.
MacMillan is then critical of finding suitcases
packed around CTR’s feet in a twenty dollar casket. But this was not a casket
for viewing; it was a simple coffin (actually costing thirty five dollars) to
meet the requirements of transporting a body across America. Possessions that
had been taken off the train with the body also had to be forwarded, personal
effects, clothes etc. and the logical thing was to store them in the coffin if
there was room. This may have been Kepner (and Sturgeon) just being practical,
but MacMillan seems to have taken it as insensitive and disrespectful. It is
interesting to note that MacMillan blames Kepner rather than any undertaker in
Kansas City, where, if further work was needed, the body would have been
removed from the coffin. So MacMillan either didn’t know or had forgotten this.
Or – Wisdom in his Memoirs of Pastor
Russell got the details wrong. And it is perfectly possible that Sturgeon,
having intended to have the body treated in Kansas City, wired ahead to set
wheels in motion, before being forced by the authorities to leave the train
earlier at Waynoka.
So
in the end what was the real issue? Everyone was very upset. Their beloved
Pastor Russell had died. He looked old before his time, had been failing in
health for quite a while, and sadly died in great pain. Opening the coffin and
seeing him was very distressing for all concerned. There was turmoil in Bethel
at the time. After giving the Bethel family the news, MacMillan described how
“they met in little groups to talk and whisper, "What is going to happen
now?"” Once the glue that held them together – Pastor Russell in person –
was gone, there were going to be problems, as events later proved.
So there was an inclination to lash out. Sturgeon
came under fire and Kepner came under fire. That CTR’s remains would need
further attention after leaving Waynoka is not disputed. The coffin was loaded on and off trains and bumped
about in motor vehicles and in and out of various buildings – the Bethel home,
the New York City Temple, Carnegie Hall in Pittsburgh, etc. – and his remains
were also re-dressed and transferred to a more substantial casket In New York
for the funeral services. Whether the
embalming had to be reinforced or not, it was no doubt necessary to make what
the November 21, 1916 St Paul Enterprise
simply called “such little touches as the long trip would call for.” These
cosmetic adjustments meant that each time CTR lay in state, the mourners could
see him as they remembered him, as best as was possible in the circumstances.
The open casket was seen first in the Bethel Home
and then in the New York City Temple. Finally, there was another long railway
journey back from New York to Pittsburgh where he lay in state for the final
part of the funeral services. So nearly a week after he passed away, mourners
saw him for the last time, on Monday, November 6, at Carnegie Hall in
Pittsburgh. There exists a photograph taken of the platform and the Carnegie
Hall audience on the day that is reproduced below.
You will notice a blur across the photograph in
front of the platform. This was actually a queue of mourners filing past the
open casket, which the long exposure can only show as a smudge across the
picture.
After this final service in Pittsburgh the body was
taken for burial at dusk on the 6th at the Society’s own plot in
United Cemeteries. The casket would be interred inside its packing case and the
whole encased in concrete.
The Aurora Convention was held over August 8-13, 1917 at Fox River Park, Aurora, Illinois. This candid snapshot of a car with the cross and crown pennant at the front features (from left to right), Daniel Toole (1875-1938), John Adam Bohnet (1858-1932), Richard Harvey Barber (1869-1967), Allen Middleton Saphore (1882-1951) and Louie F Zinc (1857-1943). Bohnet is driving.
The tentative program as listed in the St Paul Enterprise had Toole, Bohnet and Barker as speakers along
with J F Rutherford and W E Van Amburgh. The program had talks during the
daytime and showed the Photodrama in the evenings.
Toole and Zinc were from Canada. Bohnet and Barber both
served as Society directors at one point. Saphore and Zinc both later ceased
fellowship with the IBSA. Some dates taken from Who’s Who.
For a detailed history of J A Bohnet, see:
https://jeromehistory.blogspot.com/2022/04/john-adam-bohnet.html
In 1914 what came to be known as The Great War and later World War 1 started. Also, according to the Bible Students, the epoch known as the “Gentile Times” came to their end. This was a message promoted for nearly 40 years. Charles Taze Russell’s first known writing on the subject of the chronology appeared in George Storrs’ Bible Examiner magazine in October 1876.
When 1914 ushered in the war, much publicity was given
to the Bible Students’ views. A well-known example was the article in the New York World for August 30, 1914:
However, with the Bible speaking clearly about end
times and world distress, along with the unprecedented scale of conflict that
unfolded in 1914, it was not surprising that others outside the Bible Student
community made a connection. This article reviews just a handful of alternative
views the public could choose from.
Typical of the genre was the work of H C Morrison who
wrote The World War in Prophecy,
published in 1917.
Heny Clay Morrison
(1857-1942) carried the title Reverend and was a DD. Although from a Methodist
background, he was editor of the Pentecostal
Herald, and his book was published by the Penticostal Publishing Company.
Writing in 1917,
Morrison believed a dispensation was ending and saw “the signs of the times” in
current events, He states on page 94 that “the times of the Gentiles are almost
ended.” A literal Millennium will follow with (page 93) “the inauguration of
the Kingdom of God on earth.” But apart from blaming Germany and the Kaiser for
nearly all current woes he is rather short on detail and there are few
scriptural references. However, I would imagine this position would characterize
many books published in America and Britain at this time.
Several writers would
access the prophecy of “seven times” and calculate them as totalling 2520
years. One example was that of Jessie M Collis. Her small book The Great War as Foretold in the Bible
was published in London in 1915.
In it she quotes from a
book published the previous year: The War
and Prophecy by W.S. Collis M.A. (probably a relative). This states “that
‘the Times of the Gentiles’ have run their course, and that the full period of
2520 years vassalage…to the world powers expires this year (1914).” Great
things are expected for 1933 regarding the literal establishment of the Kingdom
of Judah in Jerusalem.
The 2520 year time
period also features in a book by George Harold Lancaster (1882-1950). Lancaster
was a Church of England clergyman, whose work has subsequently been referenced
in works on Anglo-Israelism (the belief that the ten lost tribes can be traced
down to Britain and perhaps America). He published Prophecy, the War, and the Near East (fourth edition in 1918).
Lancaster spends some
time discussing the Gentile Times and the 2520 year period, but has a variety
of possible starting dates. For example, on page 171 he makes vague prediction
for 1923 and 1934 yet ahead.
Returning to the belief
that the Gentile Times ended in 1914, we have the book World War and Bible Prophecy (1918) written by Harry F. Howard (1873-1948).
Howard was born in New
Haven, Connecticut. He was a building contractor who spent his career
constructing roads. But his obituary in the Portsmouth
Herald for 27 October 1948 mentions that he also wrote “numerous works on
religion and Bible prophecy.” The cover of World
War and Bible Prophecy explained what he believed God had revealed on both
the course of the war and its aftermath.
According to Howard the
World War fulfilled prophecy and 1914 marked the end of the Gentile Times. In
support of this, he quoted from various sources which included A E Hatch’s Handbook of Prophecy (1913) and issues
of The World’s Crisis from 1915 (both
publications of the Advent Christian Church), and also material from newspapers
like the Boston Globe and the Christian Herald.
Of perhaps greater
interest, his supporting references included Charles Taze Russell. From page 5
of his book:
Several other books on
prophecy and the Great War were also to mention CTR directly or indirectly. One
of these was by Marr Murray. In 1915 he published Bible Prophecies and the Plain Man, with Special Reference to the
Present War.
Murray was quite a
prolific author at the time. Other works included The Christians’s War Book, The Russian Advance, and Drink and the
War from the Patriotic Point of View. In this era, someone of this name
translated books into English from Russian, and was also a prolific short story
writer. Whether this is the same person it has not been possible to establish.
His book on prophecy discusses
the seven times computation of 2520 years
(see pages 19-20) and, depending on where you start the calculations,
gives various possible concluding dates for the Times of the Gentiles, the last
being 1923.
And then he mentions
the work of Pastor Russell, unfavorably. In listing apostasy in the last days,
top of his list is Watch Tower theology – from page 31 – “Millennial Dawnism,
which denies the deity of Christ.”
According to Murray,
God is on the Allies side in the conflict, and he presents a whole chapter on
whether the Kaiser is the foretold Antichrist.
His reasoning includes
the following (transcript from page 302):
“The Kaiser also possesses the number of the Beast.
He was born on January 27th, `859. On January 27th, 1914
he was just 660 months old and 6 months later the war broke out. From the date
of his birth to the opening of the great war in which he has flung down his
challenge to fate was within a few days of 666 months. Moreover, in the words
“Der Kaiser Wilhelm II” there are eighteen letter or 6 + 6 + 6.”
Having set this all up,
he then decides that the real Antichrist is still to come, because the real
Antichrist is a military genius, and on current performance, the Kaiser isn’t…
Another writer to
mention CTR in a negative light is Theodore Graebner.
Dr. Theodore Conrad Graebner
(1876-1950) was a prominent Lutheran minister (Rev. and DD) and author. He was
a professor of theology and editor of papers like the Lutheran Herald and Lutheran
Witness for over 40 years. His father, grandfather, four siblings and one son,
all became Lutheran clergy.
In 1918 he published Prophecy and the War.
Unlike our other
examples, the whole point of Graebner’s book was to attack those who believed
the war had prophetic significance. Graebner emphatically did not. He attacked
the concept of the Gentile Times ending in 1914, and he attacked calculations
like the “seven times” and “a day for a year.” He also reserved his special ire
what he called “the soul destroying heresy of Pastor Russell.” According to
Graebner its believers were destined for hell.
For our final example,
we return to one who did believe in
prophecy being fulfilled, but who had an interesting slant on this. And yet
another one who felt the need to single out Pastor Russell for dishonorable
mention, this time in personally fulfilling Bible prophecy.
Deitrich William Langelett (1871-1965) was born in Illinois, USA, but his parents came from Hanover. His book The World-War in the Light of Prophecy (by the Rev. D W Langelett but copyrighted by Pastor Langelett), was first published in German, but translated and published in English in America in early 1915.
His special take on the
Great War is expressed on the title page.
It is interesting that
Langelett felt the need to take a swipe at Watch Tower theology in some detail.
Starting on page 83 Langelett’s explanation of Revelation 16 v.13 is that
unclean spirits come out of the mouth of the dragon – which is the Devil – and out
of the mouth of the beast – which is England – and finally out of the mouth of
the false prophet – which is Charles Taze Russell. The unclean spirits include
hostile attacks made by Russell “against every holy institution of Church and
State.” Most of the space is then taken up with Langelett’s detailed explanation
of the Gog of Magog prophecy of Ezekiel. According to the title page the
villain Gog has to be England, and he further explains that Magog is India. In
his version of replacement theology the land of Israel that Gog unsucessfully
comes up against is none other than Germany and Austria.
It was an interesting
viewpoint, especially as expressed in America. One wonders how Langelett fared
when America entered the war in 1917 on the side of the Allies. After the war
he no longer called himself either Reverend or Pastor. By the 1930 census he is
a tallyman in a lumber yard, by 1940 a farm laborer, and by 1950 he is listed
as unable to work, although he was 79 at the time. He never married, appears to
have had no family, and received a Lutheran funeral when he died in his mid-90s
in 1965.
So summing up, these are just a selection of books that came out while the Great War was raging. Anyone reading their Bible about signs and then observing world events would at least have to consider making a connection. And the work of Pastor Russell in heralding the end of the Gentile Times in 1914 would be well-known at that time. The spread of the Bible Student message through mass meetings, the Photodrama of Creation and the printed page made sure of that. It provoked a negative reaction from several writers, but even that may have sent some readers in search of Watch Tower publications to check for themselves.