Thirty Years in the Itinerancy eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 315 pages of information about Thirty Years in the Itinerancy.

Thirty Years in the Itinerancy eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 315 pages of information about Thirty Years in the Itinerancy.

At a subsequent visit he was accompanied by his Presiding Elder, Rev. James R. Goodrich.  The services were again held in the residence of Mr. Stanley, and at this meeting, which was held in the fall of 1841, the first class was formed.  The members were:  Ira Aikin, Mrs. Aikin, his mother, Rachel Aikin, his sister, Mrs. Chester Ford, Miss Ann Brooks, and Mrs. Electa Wright.  Brother Aikin was the first Leader, but soon after Brother William W. Wright and his wife becoming members, the Leadership passed over to Brother Wright.  Before other provision was made, the meetings were held at the residences of Mr. Stanley, Mrs. Electa Wright and William W. Wright, but subsequently they passed to the school house and ultimately to the Court House.

In 1842, Rev. John P. Gallup was appointed to the Winnebago Lake Mission.  His plan of labor gave to Oshkosh every fourth Sabbath, and the intervening time was filled by Rev. Clark Dickinson, a highly esteemed Local Preacher, and others.  A revival occurred this year that brought into the Church the larger portion of the people living in Oshkosh and vicinity.

Rev. Harvey S. Bronson was the Pastor in 1843, and was succeeded the following year by Rev. Joseph H. Hurlbut.  The first Church edifice was erected under the Pastorate of Rev. Robert Everdell in 1851.  Being the Presiding Elder of the District at that time, the writer performed the dedicatory service.  The building was enlarged in 1856 and again in 1861.  Under the Pastorate of Rev. Wm. P. Stowe there were large accessions, and he found it necessary to enlarge again, when in 1870 the writer was called to preach the re-opening sermon.

The mother charge at this writing ranks among the leading stations of the Conference, and rejoices in the companionship of two promising daughters.  The first is located on the South Side, where a lot was purchased and the contract for a building let, under the Pastorate of Rev. J.M.  Walker, in 1868.  The charge was organized the following year, and under the successive Pastorates of Revs.  C.W.  Brewer and Joseph Anderson, the Church was completed and the station assigned an honorable place in the Conference.  The other, located in the Western part of the city, was erected into a separate charge at the last Conference session, a Chapel having been previously built.

CHAPTER XIII.

Fond du Lac District Continued.—­Green Bay.—­First Settlement.—­Rev. John Clark.—­First Sermon.—­First Class.—­Col.  Ryan.—­First Methodist.—­First Church Enterprise.—­Good Society.—­Heretical Bonnet.—­Various Changes.—­Rev. R.P.  Lawton—­Church Disaster—­Purifying the Temple—­Rev. S.W.  Ford.—­Oneida Indian Mission.—­Oneidas.—­Missionaries.—­Quarterly Meeting.—­Council.—­“Chief Jake.”—­Interpreter.—­Rev. Henry Requa.—­His Dying Message.

Green Bay, the next point visited, is the oldest town within the bounds of the Wisconsin Conference.  Its site was explored by Jean Nicollet in 1639, but its settlement did not begin for more than a century thereafter.  In 1785 it contained seven families, and in 1816 there were one hundred and fifty inhabitants located in the village and its vicinity.  The population now began to increase more rapidly, and in 1819 there were sixty dwellings and five hundred inhabitants.

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Thirty Years in the Itinerancy from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.