Cibvavy af GangtiM. ^//.TlTz, <^,./, y ,, v ^^,-n'. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. _ HISTORY OF THE iw per $0 Qmaxtm, FORMERLY THE NORTHERN BAPTIST ASSOCIATION OF ILLINOIS, VOMITS ORIGIN IN- 1835,, TO THE ANNIVERSARY IN 1858 WITH AN INTRODUCTION CONTAINtNG A BRIEF ACCOUNT OF THE SM- TLEMENT OF NORTHERN ILLINOIS, AND THE CHAR- ACTER OF THE IMMIGRANTS. I ALSO COPIOUS STATISTICAL TABLES, AND AN APPENDIX. BY JEREMY F. TOLMAN. AURORA : BANGS & KNICKERBOCKER, f*, '> Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1859, by JEREMY F. TOLMAtf, •In the Clerk's Office for the Northern District of Illinois. X-fi **r 2 \ . PREFACE. £** Fully to know the real integrity and sterling worth of a man, it is nec- essary to inquire into his early history ; to ascertain the nature of his first training ; the opportunities he has enjoyed, and the influences with which he has been surrounded ; and as these are found to be favorable or adverse to the character he has established, and the achievements he has performed, so we estimate his actual excellence. It is equally proper and equally necessary to a correct judgment, to ob- tain a knowledge of the surroundings of a church or other religious body. For there is a vast difference in the opportunity to increase and to do good, between the church that has, like the church at Philadelphia, " set before it an open door, that no man can shut"; and the one that ''dwells even where Satan's seat is," as did the church at Pergamos. Hence, if the field was white for the harvest, if all things were conducive to the preaching of the gospel, and the establshment and growth of churches, when this Associ- ation was formed, we should look upon its character and the result of its labors in a far different light from what we should, if we knew the diffi- culties to be overcome were many and great, and that circumstances were much at variance with such an enterprise. The Introduction is prepared with special reference to imparting the re- quisite information. It treats upon the settlement and state of the coun. try and topics affecting the condition and prospects of the churches in Northern Illinois, comprising (according to the present division) sixteen of the most northern counties. The writer has spared no reasonable pains to render this little nmnual as correct and acceptable as possible. He is not so vain as to imagine it faultless, either in matter or manner ; but having done what he could, he submits it to the candor of a generous public. The Author. 4 CERTIFICATE. CERTIFICATE OF COMMITTEE. The undersigned, a Committee appointed by the Fox River Baptist As- sociation to examine and report upon the expediency of publishing the following history, hereby express our unanimous opinion that if suitable arrangements can.be made for meeting the expense it should be so pub- lished. We regard it as an important section of our denominational his- tory in this State, and prepared with accuracy, care and skill. We should be glad, as we have no doubt all our churches would be, to see it in print. L. D. Boox, J. A. Smith, James McClellax. Chicago, May 31st, 1859. HISTORY OF FOX RIVER BAPTIST ASSOCIATION. INTRODUCTION. History and Historians — Divine Goodness — View of the Country — Its Settlement — Rapid Growth and Improve- ment — Time of Settlement — War — Character of Immi- grants — Difficulties about Claims — Anecdotes — Sectari- anism — National and Local Prejudices and Worldli- ness, hindrances to literary and religious Improvements. The past, with all its momentous changes, has ever been re- garded as important, and richly deserving of record. Long before letters were invented, legendary tales and tradition were employed to perpetuate a knowledge of important events, and transmit the same to succeeding generations. Hieroglyphics were afterwards used for the same purpose. But all these forms of memorial have long since given place to the pen and the type, among civilized nations. The introduction of modern alphabets, made writing less difficult, and thus increased the number of historians, and multiplied their works. The invention of the art of print- ing afforded facilities for publishing books before unknown. The thirst for knowledge produced by the Press and the Reformation, and the growing taste for history created by the latter, brought out a host of historians, rendered their works voluminous and scattered them broad-cast over the world. Among the eminent authors of civil history, the names of Rollin and Gibbon justly deserve a place. But deeply in- teresting and important as the subjects are, of which such historans treat, there is yet another theme— another class of 6 INTRODUCTION historical facts, relating to the church of Christ, of far great- er consequence and much more worthy the pen of the his- torian. Of the authors who have figured conspicuously in church history, may be reckoned Mosheim and ISTeander. But we have more illustrious names, more reliable authority, and far better specimens of history, both sacred and secular, furnished in the Bible, than in all other books besides. To say nothing of other portions of the Scriptures, we have here the Chronicles and the Acts of the Apos- tles. The former disclose the providence of God in direct- ing and controlling the affairs of State. The latter manifest the riches of his grace in the triumphs of the Cross. Both are exceedingly interesting to all who delight in a knowlege of the past. But to the devout the latter ever has new and peculiar charms. Although Northern Illinois has contributed largely to enrich the pages of history, her resources are not yet exhausted. It is, therefore, hoped that the present humble effort to select and preserve some gleanings and reminiscen- ces of early days will not be deemed wholly unimportant, nor prove to be entirely destitute of interest. In tracing the history of this section of country for the last quarter of a century, we are struck with the many un- mistakable tokens of the Divine care and goodness towards it. Exceedingly great temporal prosperity has attended every branch of industry. The dilligent hand has made rich. All have received a most munificent reward for their labor. Spiritual blessings have also been shed upon its inhabitants, to an extent that calls loudly for gratitude and praise to Him who is the giver of every good and perfect gift. To an early settler here, it could not fail to be specially gratifying to note down the astonishing changes and rapid improvements which have taken place around him. Fancy yourself standing upon yonder swell of prairie twenty-five years ago, taking a survey of the country. It is June. Your senses are regaled with the beauty of the landscape, the singing of birds, the fragrance of the air, wafting grateful odors from myriads of flowers of every imaginable variety of size, shape and hue, blushing in the sun-beam, and opening their petals to drink in his vivifying rays. While gazing enraptured, you descry in the distance introduction. 7 a something moving slowly over the rich prairie, through ■ the luxuriant herbage, and among the gorgeous flowers. As the object nears you, it proves to be a wagon drawn by a single team, containing a family and their earthly all. They are moving to the " Far West" in quest of a home. At length they stop and on the margin of a grove, rear their . lone cabin, amid the chattering of birds — the bounding of deer — the hissing of serpents — and the barking of wolves. For all the native inhabitants of these wilds look upon the intruders with a jealous eye, and each in his own way forbids any encroachment upon his fondly cherished home, and his long undisputed domain. Look again and you see another, another, and yet another. From the same point of observation, look again, in mid-summer, in autumn, and in winter. And lo, fields are enclosed, waving with grain, and ripening for the former and the latter harvest ! A school house is erected of rough logs ! How admirable the finish ! But what is it ? Not Gothic, nor Corinthian, but Fronterian Order. The cracks chinked and daubed with mud. The roof " cobbed off," a slab door on wooden hinges, and " puncheon" floor, the windows few and small, of glass or oiled paper, as circumstances allowed. The fixtures, all in perfect harmony with the building, so that an exquisite symmetry pervades the whole. This edifice "pays the double debt" of school room and house of worship. A school is opened ; a church gathered ; the word preached and the ordinances of the Gospel celebrated. Look again after the lapse of five and twenty years ; and what do you see? The waste has become a truitful field, adorned with ornamental trees and shrubbery, waving in delightful beauty about commodious, and even elegant dwellings. Where was then a cabin is now a village or a city. In short you behold " a land flowing with milk and honey ; abounding in spacious churches, academies, school houses, and other seminaries of learning. A land of industry and wealth, checkered with railroads, and having a gigantic canal. A land teeming with life and annually sending oft surplus funds with hundreds, not to say thousands, of its sons, to people newer regions beyond. A land whose resources and improvements are so wonderful as to stagger belief and surpass the power of description. § INTRODUCTION. The settlement of the country was scarcely commenced till the close of the Black Hawk war, August 1832. At that time there were small settlements at Chicago, Dixon, Otta- wa Joliet, and a few other places, where are now nine or ten populous cities, one ot them containing above 100,000 inhabitants. Besides which, the skirts of the woodlands bordering upon the waters of the OTlain, DuPage, Fox, Rock and their tributaries, were here and there dotted with the white man's cabin. Galena was the first considerable settlement made in Northern Illinois. The immigrants were from Kentucky and the Southern States. They began to work the Lead mines in 1821. Some of the miners came from Southern portions of the State. Such usually spent the winter sea- son at home, in preference to enduring the rigors of a North- ern climate. On the opening of spring they returned to the mines at the time when suckers run ; so that they might be said to ascend the Mississippi in company with the finny tribe. This circumstance gave rise to their being called Suckers, which soon became the cant name of the inhabi- tants of Illinois. In 1826 the village was laid out. In 1827 the county of which it is the capital was organized. It is thus described by a resident, in 1829, "Galena is the seat of justice of Jo Daviess county, and principal depot of mines. Contains about 550 houses and 800 inhabitants. The mail arrives weekly in stages from St. Louis and pri- vate hacks run from Galena to every part of the mining dis- trict." The county was named in honor of Gen. Joseph H. Daviess of Kentucky, who was killed in the battle of Tip- pecanoe in 1811. It comprised the present counties of Jo Daviess, Stephenson, Can-oil, and parts of Winnebago, Ogle, Whiteside and Rock Island. Galena was probably the only place in all Northern Illi- nois, that, in the beginning of 1832, was worthy the name of village, except in the Western use of the term. About this time villages were quickly made. A piece of govern- ment land was claimed— a, public square and a score of vil- lage lots staked out — a cabin erected — a name given, and it was a village indeed ! one of great promise — centrally lo- cated — equi-distant from such and such a (would be) im- mense emporium — directly on the great thoroughfare be« INTRODUCTION. tween those cities. But these day-dreams, marvelous as they appear, have already been realized to an extent so great, and in a manner so exact, as almost to entitle them to the name of prophecies. To these general results there were exceptions. For the wild speculations of '35 and '36 stuck many a stake for a village that never grew into one. The monetary crisis of '37 left not a few to rot down in solitude. Of all the wild schemes projected for a village, there were probably none, that would compare in boldness of con- ception with the one undertaken by a Mr. Thurston. This gentleman laid out a village upon the summit of " Buffalo Rock," LaSalle Co. The lots were sold at public auction ; and some of the choicest were struck off at $350 each. To express the peculiar excellence and eligibility of one's claim, there was a proverb so common among the early set- tlers as to be in the mouth of every one. " Timber and Prairie joining ; right in the heart of the settlement.'- This was ordinarily iterated with complacency quite becoming ; and occasionally with great exultation, when as yet there was scarce another cabin within sight. Chicago was occupied as a military post at an early pe- riod. " On the surrender of Gen. Hull, at Detroit, in 1812, the garrison in the fort at Chicago resolved to abandon it. Shortly after they had left the fort they were attacked by the Indians. They defended themselves with bravery, and finally surrendered to a greatly superior force, with the promise that their lives should be spared. But, after deliv- ering up their arms, several of the men were barbarously murdered. An Indian approached Mrs. Heald, who was of the party, with a tomahawk raised for her destruction ; but she disarmed his ferocity, and insured his protection by looking him fully in the face and lemarking with a smile, * surely you will not kill a squaw.' This appeal to the mag- nanimity of an Indian warrior evinced great presence of mind, and knowledge of the Indian character." From other, and reliable accounts of this sanguinary scene, we learn that Mrs. Heald was wounded during the engagement.* But this does not, in the least, conflict with * Fniverssal Gazetteer, ml. 1, p. 617. 2* 1 INTRODUCTION. the foregoing statement. For there is nothing more com- mon in savage warfare, than the inhuman massacre of the wounded, who unfortunately fall into their hands. Full proof of the truthfulness of this fact was given at the time, in the cold-blooded butchery of the wounded captives which ensued. The Indians after plundering the fort destroyed it August 16th, 1812. It was rebuilt in 1816. In 182b' the town of Chicago contained eight or ten houses and fifty or sixty in- habitants. In 1830 it was laid out into lots. In 1831 it be- came the seat of justice for Cook Co. There were four ar- rivals, two brigs and two schooners during that year. After the Black Hawk Avar and near the close of 1832, it contain- ed five small stores and 250 inhabitants. Since that time the growth of Chicago has been unparalleled. In 1835 there were two hundred and sixty-seven arrivals of brigs, ships and schooners, and nine steamboats, bringing 5,015 tons of merchandise, and 9,400 barrels of salt. The value of merchandise imported was $2,500,000." It was then a snug, stirring village ; but now a populous city ot more than 100,000 inhabitants. The augmentation of its business and wealth, has more than kept pace with the as- tonishingly rapid increase of its population. The counties of Cook and LaSalle were created and or- ganized at the same time. It was then customary, in organ- izing a new county, to attach to it a portion of territory lying outside of its organic limits. By this means the three counties — Jo Daviess, Cook and LaSalle, exercised jurisdic- tion over the greatest portion of Northern Illinois, from 1831 to 1836, at which time other counties began to be formed from them. The war of 1832 brought military forces and explorers from various places, who on their return home gave a glow- ing account of the goodly land. By this means the country was much better and more extensively known. The treaty with the Indians, and the tranquility which ensued, were favorable to its rapid settlement. A rush of immigrants to to this land of overpowering enchantment, was made in 1833, when the choicest of the timber, and large tracts of INTRODUCTION. 11 prairie were claimed. Many of the first claimants took large portions of land, and afterwards sold parcels of their claims to new settlers. "VVc will noAV give a rapid glance at the character of the immigrants, and the special circumstances surrounding them; so that a few of the many difficulties which attended the propagation of religion, the formation of churches and their subsequent prosperity may be seen. The early settlements consisted of frontier rangers, shrewd speculators, broken merchants, disappointed politicians, young doctors, unpracticed and broken down lawyers, and second rate ministers; also a few of the better sort in each of the professions, together with enterprising farmers and mechanics. What if some of the professional men were un- polished, and what if they now and then marred the King's English? Taken as a whole, they were admirably adapted to their condition and work — just the men for the times. The settlers, except at Galena, were principally from New York, New England, Ohio, Indiana and Pennsylvania. New York probably sent the largest delegation, Xew Eng- land next, and each succeeding State fewer in the order in which they are mentioned. Nearly every State in the Union was also represented, as well as many of the countries of Europe. All had come to seek their fortunes. The re- straints which former society had thrown around them, were no longer felt. Each individual was a law unto himself. All were under a like necessity of forming a new character in this "Far off Land." For whatever a man's character had been, it availed him nothing here in a community of entire strangers. Letters of commendation, emanating from whatever source, were of little worth. Each succeeding immigrant was measured with a prairie reed and his worth estimated accordingly. To the new admeasurement he was obliged to submit, for there was no appeal. Circumstances were every way calculated to develope the real character of all. And it is a painful fact, that in not a few instances there appeared to be but little regard for any- thing but to secure a large claim, become rich, and in all things have the pre-eminence. No land was in market, nor even surveyed, except along the line of the contemplated canal. Hence disturbances 12 INTE0DUCTI0X. about claims, and especially about their boundaries, were of frequent occurrence. These contentions were always very annoying. Occasionally they assumed a fearful form, when club and mob-law was resorted to and applied with great severity, and all the glories of " Squatter Sovereignty" stood revealed ! In process of time, a standing " Commit- tee ox Claims," was elected in many of the precincts. This was a judicious measure, and much good resulted from it. The Hoosierf and the Buckeye(| came with their loose no- tions of liberty, cherishing inveterate prejudice against Yan- kees^. The Yorker was conscious of his superiority since he came from the u Empire State." The New Englander had his " Boston Notions." The clear headed Scotchman knew how they did up things in the " Ould Countrie." And the Englishman was not wholly free from a tinge of aristoc- t This name is given to the inhabitants of Indiana. The following anec- dote is related, to account for its origin. "Many families settled on unsur- veyed land in the western part of the State. When the surveyors came near a cabin, it was usual for them to cry out, in a drawling tone, " Who's here?" This was sometimes mistook for " Hoosier." It was quite natural to retort upon such an one: "You're a Hoosier." Thus the name was given to the squatters first, then to all the inhabitants of the State.'' 1 The name given to the inhabitants of Ohio, from the buckeye, a tree, which grows there in great abundance. X There has been much speculation about the origin of this popular name for the inhabitants of New England. Heekewelder supposes it to be "A cor- rupt pronunciation of the word English, by the native Indians of America, or more probably the French word Anglais." One of the earliest histories of the Indian wars in New England has the following anecdote, " There was a hostile tribe of Indians by the name of the 'Yankoo tribe." After suffering much from their depredations, the Colony of Massachusetts wholly exterminated them. The event (by genu- ine Yankee ingenuity,) was made the occasion of giving to the conquerors the name of the tribe they had destroyed. By anglicizing the word it be- came Yankee, and was soon extended to all the inhabitants of New England, Allowing this narrative to be true, it must have been one of the petty tribes, which was destroyed. For this name was not given to any of the principal tribes; "all of whom were subdivided into numerous small ones, each hav- ing its own sachem, who was in a great degree independent of the others. Thus, the Pokanokets were divided into nine tribes, each having its own chief, but all subject to one Grand Sachem." There have been scores of these petty tribes, whose names have never been recorded in any durable form, and are now utterly lost. Hence the mere silence of other historians about the Yankoo tribe is not sufl'cientto invalidate the foregoing chronicle. INTRODUCTION, 13 racy. These several peculiarities were strongly marked and strikingly developed, especially on all religious subjects. For each religionist standing as the representative of his denomination, was exceedingly zealous to build up his own sect, and to do it precisely after the pattern he brought with him. Sectarianism was now rampant, and like a powerful under current carried every thing in a contrary direction. The difficulties which it threw in the way of a faithful and suc- cessful discharge of ministerial duties were incredible to all who did not actually encounter them. They were more nu- merous than the plagues, of Egypt. And so formidable, that, like the great mountain before Zerubbabel, it required Divine power to remove them. This was, now and then, mercifully vouchsafed, and a blessed revival of religion en- sued ; but as soon as the gracious work subsided, the Hydra reappeared to set things to rights, and with a zeal and sanc- tity peculiar to himself entered upon the important duty of dividing the spoil, which was ever done with characteristic magnanimity and impartiality. Some few professors had designedly thrown off the re- straints of religion, and left it behind, with -the intention of returning for it when they were well settled, and had amased a handsome property — sufficient for the maintenance of so expensive a guest. Alas, Alas ! Had such persons ever read the following passage ? " Godliness is profitable to all things, having promise of the life that now is, and of that which is to come." Others, having very different and far better intentions, either lost their religion in their peril- ous passage to this land of promise, or else were so deeply engulphed in worldliness soon after their arrival, as almost to extinguish the light that was in them. Nor were exam- ples wanting, which were calculated to impress the minds of the observing with the idea, that individuals, not to say whole neighborhoods, imagined the}^ had moved West of the Sabbath. There were also formidable barriers to literary and relig- ious improvement arising from local prejudice. Each settler, with few exceptions, had in his own opinion, by far the best site for a village or city. And such was the pre vailing en- thusiasm, as to induce nearly every one to believe his own 14 INTRODUCTION. cabin was the nucleus, around which a xlense population would shortly cluster. Hence in the early settlements there were nearly as many sites offered for school houses and church edifices as there were claims. And however fanci- ful, or even ludicrous it may seem to us now, it was no un- common thing to he shown the site for a church which the generous donor had reserved, Yvdiile as yet he had not even the color of title to the land ; but where, in imagination, he saw a stately edifice in progress of erection. Therefore but few were willing to contribute toward erecting a public building, except upon his own favorite spot. Moreover it was quite apparent that some persons were so entirely under the blinding influence of prejudice, as to refrain from relig- ious meetings, when they were held at a place not of their own choosing, especially if it were one, which they appre- hended, might thereby become more popular as a site for the erection of a church edifice, than the one they had se- lected. O man, how fallen ! ! To overcome these prejudices, national, local, and secta- rian ; to mould and cement into a friendly social compact such a heterogeneous mass, brought together with such ra- pidity, and under circumstances so peculiar; to check the tide of worldiiness which pervaded the entire community, threatening the destruction of everything good ; to gain the ear, and especially to win the heart to Christ, and thus prepare materials tor God's spiritual building, required no little skill, and no small amount of labor. Although the task was arduous, if the ministry and the churches had labored with all fidelity to the Master — if their zeal and self-sacri- fice, had been commensurate to the greatness and impor- tance of the work in which they were engaged ; would not the result have been more signal and glorious ? And would not both laborers and churches have thereby loeen greatly multiplied and strengthened ? Nevertheless has not enough been done, by the blessing of God, to cheer the present laborers, and encourage them vigorously to pursue the work of faith and labor of love, till complete success shall crown their efforts, the topmost stone belaid, and this whole valley ioin in one simultaneous and triumphant shout — "Glory to the Lamb ?" CHAPTER FIRST. Preliminary remarks — Organization of the Association — Quarterly Meetings — Its Anniversaries till 1846, when measures were adopted for its division. Among the Baptist ministers who may be reckoned as pio- neers in this part of the State, were Elders Freeman, Hub- bard, Tolman, and Ambrose. All of whom except Brother Hubbard, were under appointment by the American Bap- tist Home Mission Society. Elder A. B. Freeman, was the first Baptist pastor in Northern Illinois, and probably the first Baptist preacher. He settled at Chicago in October 1833. He baptized the first person ever baptized on the Western shore of Lake Michigan, in April 1834. The church at O'Plain (now Hadley.) was gathered by him, and he assisted in its organization October 5th, 1833. The fol- lowing week he organized one in Chicago. He preached at the recognition of the church atDuPage in August 1834. In December of the sama year he preached at the recogni- tion of the church at Long-Grove, (Bristol) and baptized Brother (now Elder) David Matlock, the first, no doubt, to whom that sacred and significant rite was administered in Fox River ; but where many a happy convert has sinc e boon buried with Jesus Christ by baptism into death. After a brief illness Elder Freeman died the same month, greatly lamented. 1G eistohy of Id 1S34 Elder A. B. Hubbard settled at DuPage, Elder J. F. Tolman at Long Grove, and Elder J. E. Ambrose at Plamfield ; at each of which places Baptist churches were soon after formed. Each occupied a field where there had never before been Baptist preaching. Between the death of Elder Freeman, December 1834, and the formation of the Association, September 1835— Elder I. T. Hinton had succeeded Brother Freeman in the pastorate of the church at Chicago. Elder J. G. Porter had become pastor of the church at O'Plain, (Hadley) Elder J. Beaver had immigrated to Long Grove, and the writer had left the latter place to obtain medical aid in New York, and did not return to his field of labor till the following spring. The Northern, noic Fox River Association, was organized by a convention held at DuPage, Cook Co., September loth, 1835, from newly formed churches in the Northern part of Illinois ; and intended also to embrace temporarily the Xcrth-western part of Indiana and Wisconsin Ter- ritory. The introductory sermon was preached by Elder AY. Southwood of Michigan City, from Titus 2 : 13, 14. Br. Southwood was chosen Moderator and Brother B. H. Clift, of Chicago, Clerk. Brother I. T. Hinton, Corresponding Secretary. The churches that united in forming the Association were t\\o,four following: 1. O'Plain, (now Hadley) J. G. Porter pastor ; organized October 5th, 1S33, with twelve members; two were added by baptism, and twenty-five by letter — three dismissed — one died— one excluded. Present number thirty-four. tfox river association. 17 The messengers from this church were, Elder Jonathan G. Porter, Abraham Snapp, and Cyrus Cross. 2. Chicago, I. T. Hinton, pastor ; organized October 12th, 3 833, with fifteen members ; five added by baptism and thirty four by letter — dismissed ten — died three — excluded one, leaving the number at that time forty. Messengers, Elder I. T. Hinton, J. T. Temple, S. Lathrop, and B. H. Clift. 3. 1st. DuPage, A. B. Hubbard, pastor; organized Aug. 26th, 1834, with six members; eight added by baptism — twenty by letter, making thirty- four. Messengers, Elder A. B. Hubbard, Abel E. Carpenter, Alfred Churchill, Hiram Warren, and A. M. Lull. 4. Plainfield, J. E. Ambrose, pastor ; organized on the principle of total abstinence, October 16th, 1834 with five members— four added by baptism — five by letter ; dismissed one — excluded one — present number twelve. Total member- ship of the four churches one hundred and twenty. These churches were all in Cook county, Illinois. The objects of the Association were missionary, within its own limits, and throughout the world. The means, 1st. Itinerants, in connection with the American Baptist Home Mission Society. 2d. Sabbath Schools. 3d. Distribution of the Scriptures, 4th. Books, Tracts and Periodicals, 5th. Education. 6th. Foreign Missions. The name given to the Body was " The Northern Baptist Association of Illinois, Indiana, and Wisconsin Territory. To manage the afiairs of the Association, an Executive 18 IIISTOKY 01' Board of nine was chosen; three forming a quorum. It was the duty of the Board to meet quarterly. Such meet- ings were called quarterly meetings of the Association ; and such they were. For, by the constitution, the pastors of the churches were members of the Association, ex-officio. Any ordained minister, in fellowship residing within its bounds and contributing to its funds was also a member ; and the messengers of the churches remained members through the year. These meetings were open to all such persons, and they were entitled to advise and vote at the same. After the adoption of a Constitution, the Convention being considered as dissolved, Brother Southwood then took the chair as Moderator of the Association. It was resolved thnt the delegates now elected by the churches to represent them at this Association be considered their representatives for the year ensuing, and that the officers now chosen by the Association be the officers of the same for the same period. Resolutions were passed recommending to the churches the regular maintenance of public worship, the formation of Sabbath schools, and quarterly collections of money for missions and other benevolent objects. The following resolution was also passed to provide a home for persons excluded from Baptist churches, as they sometimes were, for the crime of being members of a temp- erance or missionary society. " Hesolved, That this Association recommend to the churches, that in case any member shall have been excluded by any Baptist church, for attaching himself to any temper- ance, missionary, or other society for promoting the king- dom of Christ, after ascertaining the fact by proper corres- FOX RIVER ASSOCIATION. 1& pondence with the church, such member be, on application, received, whether the church excluding him consent to it or not." The quarterly meetings w ere spent in devotional exercises, in receiving new churches into the Association, in the trans- action of missionary business, in the free discussion of top- ics deemed important, in the pastors giving an account of their respective fields of labor, and in devising means to sup- ply destitute places with preaching. The Board reported their proceedings to the annual meetings for approval and their report was published in the Minutes. The first quarterly meeting was held at O'Plain, (now Hadley) in December 1835. The second was held at Plainfield in March 1836. At this meeting the delegates from Long Grove, (Bristol Church) presented a Resolution, disapproving of " free or mixed communion," on the ground of its being unscriptural. The design of it was to snip that doctrine in the bud, and thereby prevent farther dissemination of it by Elder Hinton, who advocated that practice. The Resolution was opposed by Elder Hinton. He had adopted the peculiar views of Robert Hall on the subject of communion. He was an Englishman, possessing a well endow r ed and cultivated mind, was an acceptable preacher and successful pastor. After discussing the resolution, it was lost. The Moderator, Elder Hubbard, gave the casting vote against its adoption ; not, however, because he was favorable to free communion, but merely from motives of policy. Thus began a contention about communion, which issued in the withdrawal of Elder J. Beaver and several of his family connections, from both the church and the Association. They united together in forming a church at Little Rock, about ten miles distant 20 HISTOEY OF from the one they left. The new church never received a formal fellowship from other churches ; nor did it ever join an Association. It was supplied with the ministry of Bro, Beaver. Several persons were added to it by baptism. It has become extinct. Elder Beaver and some other of the members returned to the Bristol church. For the sake of connecting what we have to say on this subject, dates are anticipated. At a quarterly meeting at Big Woods, (Batavia) in June 1837, after some debate on free communion, advocated by Brother Hinton, it was dis- tinctly stated to him, that although there would be no direct interference with his pastoral relation with the church at Chicago ; yet he himself could not remain a member of the Association, unless he entirely desisted from advocating such practice at the meetings of the body. Finding the brethren firm, and determined to maintain their position, he yielded, and gave assurance of silence on the subject at Associational meetings in the future. The writer never after heard him even allude to the subject in public and but once in private. 1836. The first annual meeting was held at Chicago, September 21st and 22d. Introductory sermon by Professor Whitman, from 1 Cor. 15, 53. Brother I. Wilson Moderator and Elder A. B. Hubbard, Clerk. Seven new churches were received during the year, five of which joined at the quarterly meetings : Long Grove, (Bristol) organized November 15th, 1834, with six members — twenty-three added by letter. Total twenty-nine. Little Woods, afterwards Charleston, but now St. Charles, VOX RIVER ASSOCIATION. 21 organized October 16th, 1835, with ten members — twelve added by letter. Total, when added to the Association, twenty-two. Vermillionville, organized 1835 with fifteen members — ■ two baptized — and two dismissed* Total fifteen. Jacksorts Grove, organized 1835 with five five members — one baptized. Total six. Big Woods, now Batavia, organized June 16th 1836, with thirteen members — one died. Total twelve. Belvidere, organized July 31st, 1836, with thirteen mem* bers. 2d. DuPage, Warrenville, organized 1836 with twenty- two members. Four additional ministers— Elder's D. W. Elmore, St. Charles — J. S. King and S. S. Whitman, Belvidere, and T, Powell Vermillionville, had joined the Association. The Executive Board entered upon their work, and pros- ecuted it with the zeal and fidelity, becoming the import- ance of the interests committed to their charge. Their first annual report is too lengthy for insertion here. But an im- portant object they always had in view — one ever cherished with the most lively interest by the entire body 3 cannot be better presented, than it is in the following quotation from it. " Your Board have been most anxious to secure the aid of a faithful minister to itinerate among the numerous set- tlements where members of our denomination are scattered abroad, that they may at least be occasionally fed with the bread of life, and may, as soon as circumstances justify, be formed into churches ; but they regret to state that although the Home Missionary Society has, with a liberality for which 22 HISTORY OF we would be grateful, expressed a willingness to concur with your Association in sustaining such itinerant, that no minister has yet been found ready to undertake this most important work. The Board have reason to hope, however, that by the opening of next spring, a minister from the East, peculiarly suited, may be induced to undertake the mission, and would urge upon the churches the most liberal efforts to sustain him." " Under these circumstances, your Board have felt it their duty to urge, as earnestly as possible, the stated pas- tors of your body to take each of them a share in this ardu- ous, but most important sphere of exertion ; and they are happy to state that to some extent they have succeeded." The Board did not obtain the minister they had in view. And it is worthy of special notice, that notwithstanding the most strenuous efforts were made, year after year, to obtain an itinerant minister, yet the object was never rea- lized to any considerable extent. At a quarterly meeting the following June, Elder R. B. Ashley, recently from the State of New York, accepted an appointment to itinerate such portion of the time as could be spared from other engagements at one dollar per day. His labors were very acceptable wherever he went. They were specially blessed to the enlargement of the 2nd Du Page, now Warrenville church ; and to the gathering of the church at Joliet. At each of these places he baptized several persons. " The report on the state of the churches" closes thus : " This epitome of the state, and progress of the cause of Christ within our limits, may well excite the devout excla- mation, ' What hath God wrought ?' Twelve months ago, 1'0X iiiVEli ASSOCIATION now Kaneville, with fifteen members, five of whom had been baptized. The names of four new pastors appear in the minutes — C. B. Smith, Chicago; J. Scofield, Bristol; A. J. Joslyn, Warrenville ; S. Poley, Blackberry. Brother Smith left the Presbyterians, and was ordained at Chicago in 1842. Brother Joslyn was ordained at War- renville, October, 1842. Twenty-two churches, ten minis- ters, three hundred and fifty-four baptisms, and one thousand three hundred and fourteen members. The name of the Second DuPage church was changed to Warrenville. McHenry church was ordered to be dropped from the minutes. This year is rendered memorable for two reasons ; the very unusual severity of the winter, with sleighing which lasted from November to April, with but a few days inter- ruption ; and especially by the powerful revivals of religion enjoyed in most of the churches belonging to the body. In no one year in the whole history of this Association, until 1858, have there been so large accessions to the churches by baptism as there were during this year. There were only ten ministers to twenty-two churches ; but their labors were so divided among them as to furnish seventeen of the churches with stated preaching ; all of which received additions by baptism. The other five were unsupplied with preaching and unblessed with revivals. Thus was verified that passage of scripture : " Faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the word of God." FOX RIVER ASSOCIATION, 35 "The Prudential Committee reported the following reso- lutions, which were adopted." " Resolved, That in view of the afflictive dispensation of Divine Providence in removing from us our dear Brother Charles Harding to his reward above, the cause of Christ has lost a faithful and efficient minister, and we are admon^ ished to be always ready and waiting." "Resolved, That the condition of our Brethren in Ben- mark, fined and imprisoned and bereft of their religious rights by their Pedo-baptist persecutors, appeals loudly and earnestly to our sympathies, for our prayers and our funds to assist them in resisting the encroachments on their just rights ; and in establishing religious toleration to all the in- habitants of that land." " Upon the presentation of the last resolution, Brother Boone, was called upon to give such information as he was in possession of in relation to the condition of our brethren in Denmark, which he did ; and was followed in an able and interesting manner, by Brother Tolman, upon the same sub- ject, after which the resolution was adopted, and Brother Tolman called upon to lead in prayer to the great Head of the Church, in behalf of our afflicted and persecuted breth- ren. At the close of the prayer, Brother Joslyn said, that inasmuch as he believed in prayer and alms going together, he moved that a collection be taken up for the relief of the brethren in Denmark, which was carried ; a collection amounting to $13.06 was taken up." " On motion of Brother Boone, it was " Resolved, That the churches within the bounds of this Association, be requested to take up collections for the wid- ow of our deceased Brother, Charles Harding ; and forward the same to the next meeting of the North-Western Con- vention." The total thus collected and paid over was $36.15. 36 HISTORY OP " JResolved, That a Committee be appointed to devise some plan relative to sustaining the widows of deceased ministers. The resolution was carried into effect. The committee reported a plan for raising, " A fund to be sacredly devoted to the relief of superanu- ated Baptist ministers ; and widows and orphans of deceased Baptist ministers." The plan was adopted by the Associa- tion. It, however, had so little practical effect in raising funds, that in 1845, the body substituted a collection for the former method of raising money ; and ordered it to be taken annually immediately after the introductory sermon. But no alterations have been made relative to the objects for which the funds are to be appropriated. Yet, as this is now uniformly called the " Widows' and Orphans' Fund," it is not improbable that many of our brethren do not know that it was equally designed tor the relief of superannuated min- isters. 1844. The ninth anniversary meeting of the Association was held with the first Baptist Church, Chicago, June 5th and 6th. Opening sermon by Elder A. W. Button, from I Tim. 1 : 11. Elder Tolman, Moderator; L. D. Boone, Clerk. Seven new churches were added to the Association at this session, viz : Long Grove, (Pavilion). This church was organized on the 5th of the preceding May, with forty-four members ; dis- missed from Bristol church for that purpose. But before joining the Association, ten were added by letter and twelve by baptism, making sixty-six members ; J. F. Tolman, minister. FOX RIVER ASSOCIATION. 37 Newark, was organized March 16th, 1844 — thirteen mem- bers. The alterations of membership between this time and June 5th were, added by baptism four, by letter seven, one death. Total number of members twenty-three, gathered by Brother M. Edwards, licentiate. He was ordained at Newark soon after the church was organized. Tabernacle, at Chicago. It was constituted in August 1843, of sixty-two members dismissed from the First Bap- tist Church, for that purpose. After their organization they received forty-two by letter, by baptism fourteen ; dismissed eight, excluded one, died one. Number when received into the Association, 108. East Prairie, gathered by Elder E. H. Clift ; fourteen members. Aurora, twenty-three members ; Elder J. Blake, minister, who preaches to the church half of the time. JVaperville — This church was constituted through the in- strumentality of Brother Morgan Edwards, in June, 1843, with six members. Under the pastoral care of Elder R. B. Ashley, their number increased to twenty- nine, before unit- ing with the Association ; eight of whom he baptized. Lochport, was constituted in March 1844, of twenty-one members ; four were added by baptism and nine by letter, one died, making the number twenty-three. Elder Solo- mon Knapp, pastor. Six new pastors were joyfully received this year. Elder E. H. Hamlin, Chicago ; M. L. Wisner, St. Charles ; P. Freeman, Dundee ; J. Blake, Fairfield ; K Warriner, Paw Paw Grove, and M. Edwards, Newark. The minutes report twenty -nine churches, sixteen minis- ters, 107 baptisms (when corrected) and 1,542 members. 38 HISTORY OF The Prudential Committee reported the following resolu- tion, which was adopted. " Resolved, That we recommend the appointment of a Committee of three, whose duty it shall be to take measures for procuring a depository of the A. B. Pub. and S. S. So- ciety, within the bounds of Northern Illinois Association, and that books to the amount of $200, shall be procured, and that Brother Boone, Hoard and Hays, be such com- mittee." " On motion of Brother Hoard it was, " Resolved, That the place of the Depository be Chicago, and that the Committee appoint a Depositary." "Upon a proposition of Brother J. McClellan, Jr., to in- troduce a resolution (upon the subject of slavery) not report- ed by the Prudential Committee, a constitutional question arose, yiz : "Whether a member could present business for the action of the Association, which had not been presented to the Prudential Committee, which elicited considerable discussion. After which the Moderator decided the resolu- tion to be in order. Brother Boone, in order to settle the question forever, appealed from the decision of the Chair. Whereupon, the house sustained the decision unanimously. The resolution was then presented, discussed, and the fol- lowing substitute, presented by Brother Joslyn finally adopted :" " Whereas, the question, ■ Ought slaveholders to be em- ployed as Missionaries T is now deeply agitating the A. B. H. M. Society, to which we through the 1ST. W. Convention are auxiliary, therefore " Resolved, That we entirely disapprove of the employ- ment of slaveholding Missionaries, as repugnant to the spirit of the age, of Missions, and of the Gospel." In their corresponding letter they say, " God has blessed us with his presence. An unusual degree of harmony and FOX RIVER ASSOCIATION. 39 brotherly love has marked the deliberations of our session. The interest of the meeting was increased by the accession of so many new churches, which had sprung up within our borders ; and by the presence of an unusually large number of visiting brethren, several of whom were from New York and New Hampshire." 1845. The tenth anniversary was held at Elgin, June 4th and 5th. Elder E. H. Hamlin of Chicago, delivered the introduc- tory sermon from 1 Tim. 3 : 15. Brother J. McClellan, Jr., Moderator, and Elder S. Carr, Clerk. Three new churches, were added to the Association at this session — Babcock's Grove, consisting of twenty-seven members ; Union Grove, eleven ; Albion, fifteen. Eight new Pastors appear on the minutes of this year — I. Dudley, in charge of churches at St. Charles and Bata- via ; P. Taylor, Warrenville ; M. Brittian, Lake Zurich ; O. Adams, Crystal Lake ; A. S. Bramin, Union Ridge; R, R. Whittier, Montelona and Blackberry ; W. Dickens, Bloom- ingdale ; I. Marvin, Albion. The Committee appointed last year to visit the delinquent churches, reported that the 1st DuPage church was dis- solved ; whereupon the name was stricken from the minutes. The Prudential Committee reported that the church at McHenry was unconstitutionally dropped in 1843; and that her delegates were now present, bearing a letter to the Asso- ciation ; whereupon, the delegates were received and the church re-entered upon the minutes. The minutes report thirty-two churches, twenty-five or- dained ministers, three licentiates, 149 baptisms, 1,795 mem- bers. Several of the ministers were not settled Pastors, and 40 HISTORY OF remained in the Association but a short time. Some of the Pastors also left during the year ; so that only eleven ol the twenty-five ministers were present at the next anniversary. The state of religion in the churches, as expressed in their letter to the Association, is thus summed up : " All the churches represented in the Association except three have stated preaching, some portion of the time ; and most of them every Lord's day. They all contribute ac- cording to their means, to meet the necessary expenses and sustain worship in the house of God, and are generally favorable to the benevolent objects of the day. * * * Though the past year has not been a season of distinguished and powerful revivals, yet some mercy drops have fallen on most of the churches, and at Elgin, Long Grove and Bristol they have had quite a refreshing from the presence of the Lord." A resolution was passed recommending the " Western Christian," and adopting it as the future organ of the Asso- ciation. Also a preamble and resolutions setting forth the wretched condition of the colored population of the Slave States. A resolution was adopted, approving the decision of the Am. Bap. Board of Foreign Missions, and of the Baptist Home Missionary Society, in refusing to appoint slavehol- ders as Missionaries, and recommending to the churches composing this body, to sustain said Boards, in their present embarrassed condition, by their fervent prayers and liberal contributions. Whereupon contributions were taken, for Foreign Missions, $29.55 ; and for Domestic, $10.33. The action of the North-Western Convention, relating to a union with the Illinois State Convention, created through- FOX RIVER ASSOCIATION". 41 out the Association an intense solicitude for the welfare of Domestic Missions in Northern Illinois ; whereupon " A Committee was appointed on the relation of this Association to that body." The Committee reported, and the report was adopted as follows : " Your Committee respectfully report, " That we learn from the minutes of the North-Western Baptist Convention, that at their last session (at Belvidere, October, 1844,) they appointed a Committee to confer with a Committee of the Illinois State Convention, upon the sub- ject of a union between the two bodies, instructing them to report to the auxiliaries composing these two organizations, the terms on which such union is contemplated. The Com- mittees met at Canton,. November 21, 1844 ; formed a State Association ; appointed an agent, and established a paper, (The Western Star, edited by A. Bailey, Jacksonville^) in which they publish their proceedings. Your Committee deem such a union undesirable, as the great length of the State, together with the limited means of our best brethren, render it difficult, if not entirely impracticable, for us to co- operate with- efficiency." " We therefore recommend that this Association instruct its delegates to the North-Western Baptist Convention to oppose the contemplated union," Dates are anticipated for the sake of giving a connected account of this matter. The North-Western Baptist Con- vention, at its last session, adjourned to meet at Tremont, Tazewell county, October 18th, 1845, for the express purpose of consummating a union of the two bodies ; provided the negotiations were satisfactory for which Committees had been appointed. At that meeting, " The Baptist General 6* 42 H1ST0JKY OF Association of Illinois," was permanently organized by a' cordial and entire union of the two " Conventions." A resolution was passed by the North-Western Conven- tion, declaring that body to be virtually dissolved. And the acting Board of the Illinois Baptist State Convention, in confiding their trust to the newly organized body, used the following language : "In resigning our trust to other hands, we would observe,? that we regard the field in which the General Association is called to labor as vastly important. We must be allowed to congratulate all sections of our Zion in Illinois, on the happy union that has taken place between the two Conven- tions that have existed in this State for the past six years." "The two Conventions," were not contemporaries six years, as will appear from the following facts. The North-Western Baptist Convention was provisionally organized at Chicago, January 6th, 1841. The organization was made permanent at an adjourned meeting the following October. This was called the " Second Meeting," Two sessions were held in 1842 ; and the one in 1843 is styled "The Fifth Annual Meeting," and the session in 1844 "The Sixth Annual Meeting," It was indeed the sixth meeting of the Convention ; but only the fourth Anniver- sary. The extra meetings doubtless occasioned the error in reckoning. Hence it is apparent that " The two Con- ventions had existed " together only four instead of six years. The Northern (now Fox River) Association was dissatis- fied with the foregoing arrangement, and did not readily acquiesce in it, as appears from the measures adopted at the next meeting after the union of the two Conventions, At> that meeting the POX RIVER ASSOCIATION. 43 "Prudential Committee presented the following report, which was adopted : " JResolved, That we recommend to the Association the appointment of an Executive Board on Home Missions, to consist of twenty-four members, five of whom shall consti- tute a quorum, which shall be located at Chicago. That this Association elect two thirds of said Board, and request the Rock River Association to elect the remainder; and that we appoint a delegation to attend the General Association of this State, and unite with them, provided they will recog- nize the above arrangement." The foregoing resolution was presented to the General Association at its next anniversaiy, held at Peoria the fol- lowing October, (1844.) The provisions of the resolution were not complied with, and both the Northern (now Fox River) and the Rock River Associations, united with the General Association unconditionally ; and have ever since co-operated with that body. We will now return to the session in 1845, and consider the division of the Northern Association. The Prudential Committee in their report upon business " Suggest that it is expedient to appoint a Committee of three, to take into consideration the propriety of a mutual division of this Association, and report at the next annual meeting." But after some consultation it was, " Voted to refer the subject of dividing the Association, as presented by the Prudential Committee, to the individual churches, to report in their letters at our next session." The proposition to divide the Association elicited very little discussion. The ostensible, and indeed, the only rea- son assigned in favor of the measure, was the great extent of territory occupied by the Association, the average dimen- sions being about eighty by sixty miles. A few brethren 44 HISTORY OF suggested apprehensions of inability to constitute two respec- table and efficient bodies ; to which only one individual replied. The speaker expressed his firm conviction, that nothing was to be feared from a division of the Association, that it would be productive of good — would bring gifts into action now lying dormant ; be the means of more vigorous and enlarged efforts to promote the cause of Christ ; and that the time was not far distant when each body would raise more money, and perform more missionary labor, than was then done by the whole Association ; illustrating and confirming his opinion by reference to several similar divis- ions" with like results. But whatever might have been the ostensible reason, the real cause of the suggestion to divide, and the subsequent division of the Association, though not once expressed, was doubtless perfectly well understood by every one present. It existed in the great diversity and contrariety of opinions concerning slavery and the frequent debates which ensued. 1846. The eleventh annual meeting was held at Bristol, June 4th and 5th. Introductory sermon by Elder A. J. Joslyn, from Deut. 1 : 28. By request of the Association, this ser- mon was published in the Western Christian. Elder I. Dudley, of St. Charles, was chosen Moderator, and R. W. Pa Delford, of Elgin, Clerk. One new church was admitted into the Association at this session — Little Fort, (Waukegan.) It was organized in April with twelve members — three had been baptized, and two were added by letter. Total, seventeen. P. Freeman, minister. Elder S. Knapp, of the Committee to visit delinquent FOX RIVER ASSOCIATION. 43 churches,' " reported that the church at Joliet had become extinct, and recommended that the name be stricken from our minutes." Accordingly it was done. Thirty-two churches, seventeen ordained ministers, three licentiates, twenty-eight baptisms, sixty-three exclusions, one hundred and eighty-seven additions by letters, and the entire membership one thousand eight hundred and thirty- seven, are reported in the minutes. Seven of the ministers were new pastors — B. H. Webster, Bristol ; M. Sanford, 1st Chicago; J. K Tolman, Plainfield, who was ordained the following August; J. Foster, Fairfield; S. G. Hunt, Somonauk and Little Rock, now Sandwich ; W. H. Rice, Tabernacle, Chicago, and P. Freeman, Little Fort. In view of the declension of religion throughout nearly the entire Association, the following resolution was passed ; " Resolved, That in view of the fact, that we have so few reports of conversions and baptisms, and so large a number of exclusions from our churches, we are called upon for the exercise of deep humiliation before God, and to re- newed faithfulness and devotedness in our Master's cause, and to increased efforts for the salvation of the souls of our dying fellow men." The Prudential Committee presented the following reso-. lutions, relating to the division of the Association, which were adopted : " 1st. Resolved, That the Association be divided, and that the division line commence at the east end of Wash- ington street, Chicago, running west to the western boun= dary of the Association. " 2d. Resolved, That the body north of the line be called the Northern Illinois! Association, and that the one south, be called the Fox River Association, and that the latter retain the present organization" 40 HISTORY OF Hence, it is clear that the old Northern Association was neither dissolved nor disorganized by the division of the body; and that the Fox River Baptist Association is indeed but another name for the veritable old Northern Associa- tion, organized in 1835. CHAPTER SECOND. Jfritiision of the Association— ^-Anniversaries from 184=1 to 1858, inclusive — /Statistical Tables — Recapitulatory and closing remarks. 1847. The twelfth annual meeting of the Association was held at Plainfield, June 2d and 3d. Opening sermon by Brother' N. Warriner, from 1 Cor. 1 : 23, 24. I. Dudley, Moderator, and E. Hulbertj Clerk* Fourteen churches, twelve ministers, nine of whom were settled pastors \ ten baptized, nine hundred and twenty-one members. Ttbo fresh pastors ; A. Gross, Naperville, and S. P. Ives, Plainfield. This session consummated the division of the Old North- ern Association, at which time it took the name of THE FOX RIVER ASSOCIATION, according to a resolution passed at the preceding anniver^ sary. The Northern division of the body had previously held a meeting at Dundee} and assumed the name of THE CHICAGO ASSOCIATION. The Churches, Ministers, and Membership which remained in " the present (or old) organization" were as follows : — = Aurora, D. T. Graves, forty-two members ; Batavia,I. Dud^ ley, fifty-five ; Blackberry, — - — — - - — , forty ; Bristol, S» S* 48 HISTORY Of Walker, (supply,) eighty-two ; Chicago, A. Edson, (supply,) one hundred and eighty-two j Lockport, S. Knapp, twenty- two ; Long Grove, (Pavilion,) J. F. Tolman, ninety-eight ; Naperville, A. Gross, thirty-six; Newark, M. Edwards, forty-one; O'Plain, (Hadley,) • , fifty -two; Paw Paw, N. Warriner, fifty-nine ; Plainfield, S. P. Ives, ninety- two ; Somonauk, (Sandwich,) S. G. Hunt, twenty; Warren- ville, , one hundred. The declension, of which mention has already been made, continued throughout all the churches. It was a day of gloom and thick darkness. 1848. • The thirteenth annual session was held with the 1st Bap- tist Church, Chicago, June, 7th and 8th, at which time the church was holding a protracted meeting, assisted by Bro< J. Knapp. Though this meeting contributed much to the pleasantness and interest of the session, yet it shortened the time for transacting business, in consequence of which it was very imperfectly done. Introductory sermon by Brother Miner, Agent of the B. M. Union, from Isa. 49 : 6. Brother J, F. Tolman, Mode- rator, and Brother L. D. Boone> Clerk. Two churches, Somonauk, (Sandwich,) and Paw Paw, were dismissed for the purpose of uniting with other chur- ches, to form the Ottawa Association. One new church was received-— Oswego, ten members ; also three new Pas- tors — Brother S. S. Walker, Long Grove, (Pavilion); A. Ed- son, Aurora ; and Z. Brooks, who had just been ordained pastor of Bristol Church. The minutes report fifteen churches, ten ministers, thirty* lour baptized, and nine hundred and seventy members. Of FOX RIVER ASSOCIATION. 4P those baptized, the church at Paw Paw had received sixteen, and Naperville church eight. The following resolution was passed : " Resolved, That we recommend to the members of the churches, composing this Association, to become members of the Fox River Bible Society, which was formed at Long Grove, (Pavilion,) November last, auxiliary to the A. and F. B. Society, and that the constitution of said Society be recommended for their adoption." A collection was then taken for the parent Society, and a considerable amount was subscribed for the Auxiliary So* ciety. 1849. The fourteenth anniversary was held at Long Grove, (Pavilion) June 6th and 7th. Brother E. Tucker, of Chicago, preached the opening sermon from I Tim. 1 : 11. After which he was elected Moderator, and Brother A. Edson, Clerk. The church at Joliet, which became extinct, and was dropped in 1846, had been re-organized and was received into the Association at this session ; fourteen churches, ten ministers, six of whom commend their labors in this body during the preceding year, viz : E. Tucker, Chicago ; H. Hovey, Warrenville and Batavia ; F. W. Ingmyer, Joliet and Lockport ; C. D. Marvin, Kaneville ; S. Tucker, Napei> ville ; and N. Card, Newark. One hundred and fifty-three baptized, and nine hundred and fifty-nine members, The session was refreshing— a season of joy, of gladness, and of devout thanksgiving. The dark portentous cloud, that for nearly three years, had hung over the churches, was now broken and dissipated. The sun of righteousness again shone forth with genial rays ; and the spirit's power wm 50 HISTORY OF realized in reviving drooping hopes and bringing sinners to repentance. Eight of the churches had enjoyed seasons of revival ; and large accessions were made to some of them by baptism. The church in Hadley was doubled in member- ship, having received forty-one by baptism and seven by letter. At the close of the session, June 7th, the Fox River Bible Society had its anniversary. The Constitution was so amended as to have the annual meeting on the first Tuesday of January, instead of following immediately at the close of the Association. The Society appears to have been in a prosperous condition at the time. But shortly after it be- came entire separated from the Association, it began to lan- guish, and in a few years became extinct. 1850. The fifteenth annual meeting was held atXaperville, June oth and 6th. Introductory sermon by Brother Luther Stone, of Chicago, from Mat. 10 : 30. Brother S. Tucker of Xaperville, Moderator, and Brother L. Stone, Clerk. JBig lloch church was received with twenty members. Two new pastors; E. Scofield, Jr., Pavilion, and TV". Wil- liams, Big Rock. Filteen churches, eleven pastors, five ministers not in charge, one hundred baptized, one thousand and eight members. The 1st Church Chicago, Kaneville and Batavia, had been blessed with revivals, and some mercy drops had fallen on a few other churches. The following resolution was passed in memory of Judge Thomas, of Chicago. wv Mes&foed, That in the death of Brother Jesse B. Thomas,, who was summoned home in the full strength of manhood, and almost in the morning of useful christian life, Ave have bee*; bereft of one around whom our affections clumr with FOX RIVER ASSOCIATION. 51 esteem and delight, and who was endeared to us by the ties which unite christian hearts in fellowship — that in this mys- terious dispensation, the cause of Christ has suffered a deep loss, which none but the Great Head of the Church can sup- ply — that we deeply sympathize with his afflicted family, and with the church of which he was a member." Brother Thomas was an example of piety and christian consistency. He was a Circuit Judge ; and was one of the few who never violated the law of the Sabbath by traveling on his circuit on that day ; but on the contrary, he habitu- ally spent it in devout attendance on divine service. 1851. The Association held its sixteenth anniversary at Batavia, June 4th and 5th. Opening sermon by Brother S. P. Ives, of Plainfield, from Mat, 16 : 24. Brother S. Tucker, Naper- ville, Moderator, and Brother L. D. Boone, Chicago, Clerk. The church at Aurora " had dissolved." The names of five new pastors appear on the minutes : J. B. Dibell, Had- ley ; I. D. Newell, Batavia ; S. F. Holt, Warrenville ; J. Young, Pavilion ; J. Higby, Newark. Fourteen churches, sixteen ministers, twelve of whom were pastors ; one hund- red and two baptized ; one thousand and ninety-six members. The churches in Kaneville, Plainfield, "Warrenville, and 1st church Chicago, had enjoyed revivals, and some mercy drops had fallen on a few of the other churches in the body. 1852. The seventeenth annual meeting of the Association was held at Newark, June 2d and 3d. Brother S. Tucker preached the introductory sermon from Philip. 1: 21, He also served as Moderator, and Brother S. P. Ives, Clerk. The church at Downer's Grove was received, thirty-four 52 HISTORY OF members ; Brother S, F. Holt, pastor. The church at Au- rora, having been reorganized, was received at this session with twenty-one members, I. D. Newell, pastor. There were sixteen churches, twelve ministers, eight of whom were pastors, two licentiates, one hundred and sixty-nine baptized, one thousand two hundred and twenty-two mem- bers, Eleven of the churches received accessions by bap- tism. The 1st church Chicago, and Oswego church en- joyed powerful revivals. The former had the labors of Bro. J. Knapp, in a protracted effort, and the latter the labors of Brother A. Estee, in a similar meeting. The death of Dr. Ives is thus chronicled. Resolved, That in the death of Dr. I. S. Ives of Oswego, a member with us of the last Association, whose lively in- terest in all our benevolent societies, endeared him greatly to all our hearts, the Zion of God has lost a true friend, and that we offer our sincere condolence to the church and the bereaved friends. 1853. The eighteenth anniversary was held at Aurora, June 1st and 2d. Opening sermon by Brother J. Higby, of Newark, from Heb. 9 : latter clause of the 22 d verse. Brother R. B. Ashley of Plainfield, Moderator, and Deacon D. Haigh, Clerk. Seventeen churches, eleven ministers, of whom nine were pastors ; one licentiate ; one hundred and forty-one baptized ; one thousand four hundred and twenty members. The name of one church was stricken out, viz : Joliet ; and two churches were received at this session, Somonauk, Sandwich. This church was dismissed to the Ottawa As- sociation in 1848, and now returned to this body because the construction of a railroad through the village rendered it more convenient to attend the anniversaries in this, than FOX RIVER ASSOCIATION". 53 in the Ottawa Association. Joliet is the name of the other church which was admitted, concerning the admission of which I find the following resolution : " Besolved, That the name of the old " Joliet Church," be struck from the minutes of this Association." " That the application of the new Joliet Church for admis- sion be received as the " First Baptist Church in Joliet," This is the third time that a Joliet Church has been receiv- ed into the Association. Three new pastors ; Brother J. F. Child, who was ordain- ed the preceding February, and had charge of two churches, Lockport and Joliet. Brother W. M. Haigh, Pavilion, where he was ordained the following November ; and Bro. J. C. Burroughs, 1st Church, Chicago. From the time this Association united with the General Association in 1846, until this year, there appears to have been less interest manifested in Home and Domestic Mis- sions than formerly. Nor is it very surprising that it was so, since the union was more a matter of necessity, than of choice, as stated under date of 1845. At the present session a becoming zeal tor Home Missions was manifested ; the subject seems to have been viewed in a new light, at least with a much deeper and more lively in- terest, than it had been for several years. And it is truly gratifying to be able to add that there is no abatement, but rather an increase of zeal and liberality in the promotion of this good cause. A plan was adopted to add $200 to what had already been contributed to aid the General Association in prosecuting this work in which it was engaged, as may be seen from the following resolution : " Resolved, That while we pre deeply grateful for the -54 HISTORY OF aid h eretofore furnished to the churches of this State, by the A. B. H. Missionary Society, and must for years to come depend on that Society to aid us in fostering the feeble churches extended over our wide extended State ; we yet feel that it is high time for Illinois to do something for itself, independent of foreign aid ; and that for this purpose the General Association is designed and adopted, and ought to be put in possession of means for prosecuting this work ; that therefore this Association endeavor to secure 8200 for the Treasury of the General Association, between this and its annual meeting next October ; and that the Pastors be requested to present the subject to their several charges ; and to raise from each, its proportion of the amount." Whereas, Brother Stone had failed to issue his weekly sheet for a considerable length of time ; therefore the sub- ject was brought up, and the following resolutions passed: " JResolved, That the Association ask Brother Stone to propose the lowest terms on which he will dispose of the " Watchman of the Prairies," and that a committee be ap- pointed to examine such proposition, and to negotiate the purchase of the paper, by some person who will furnish the denomination with a good-paper at an early day." " JResolved, That Elder J. C. Burroughs, and brethren O. Wilson, Dr. Anderson, A. D. Tittsworth, and Dr. L. D. Boone, be constituted a committee, to cany into effect the provisions of the above resolution." The committee report- ed at the next session as follows : " The Committee to negotiate with Elder L. Stone at last Association, reported that they had completed the purchase of the paper from Rev. L. Stone, and had transfered the same to Revs. L. Church and J. A. Smith," whereby they became proprietors and editors of the paper, which they issue under the name of the " Christian Times." When the foregoing report was made, (1854,) the Association passed resolutions highly commendatory of the " Christian Times," and of Brother Stone, the late proprietor and edi- FOX BITER ASSOCIATION. o£f tor of the " Watchman of the Prairies" for " furnishing the denomination with a medium of communication, for more than five years, when the difficulties in the way to such an enterprise were great and the encouragements few" — diffi- culties that crushed the " North-Western Baptist" in less than three, aud occasioned the setting of the " Western Star" in two years. 1854. The nineteenth annual meeting was held at Oswego, June 7th and 8th. Brother Raymond of Chicago, preached the introductory sermon from Mat. 27: 19. Brother S. Tucker, Moderator, and Deacon I). Haigh, Clerk. One new church ; Momense, twenty-eight members. It was organized in December, 1852, with sixteen members. Five new pastors are reported : W. Morse, Plainfield ; J. M. Cochran, Batavia; A. D. Freeman, Warrenville and Downer's Grove; C. Button, Aurora; and B. Hicks, Big Rock. Eighteen churches, twenty-five ministers, of whom only twelve were pastors ; four licentiates ; fifty-six baptized: one thousand five hundred and sixteen members. "Rev. Elisha Tucker, D. D., departed this life on the 29th of December, 1853, at the residence of his son in Cumber- land, Md." His death was very respectfully noticed by the Association, as appears from the following appropriate reso- lutions, which were taken separately and adopted, viz : Resolved, 1st. That in view of the death of our venerated and beloved brother, Rev. Elisha Tucker, whose decease has again been brought to our minds by the reading of the letter from the Chicago church, of which he was a member, we feel called upon to record our sense of the loss which tins Association has sustained in removing one whose coun- sels always led to harmony, whose voice inspired to duty, 06 HISTORY OF and whose examples as a faithful and devoted minister of Jesus is worthy of all imitation. Resolved, That in this afflictive Providence, one of the brightest lights of the church has been extinguished; a light which shed its radiance far and wide, leading many from the darkness of sin and death, to the glories of life eternal; a light which though extinct on earth, has been relit to shine forever in the paradise of God. Resolved, That we deeply sympathize with the bereaved family in the loss they have sustained, a loss which hearts thus smitten can alone feel, but which no mere words can adequately express. The following resolutions were adopted in relation to Do- mestic Missions: Resolved, That a Committee be appointed, consisting of Brethren J. C. Burroughs, J. D. Cole, and R. C. Anderson, to mature the views of this body, on the importance of a thorough entrance of the denomination in the State upon a system of Domestic Missions; which Committee afterwards reported as follows, and report adopted, viz: Your Committee are of the opinion that the time has fully come when the Baptists, as a body of Christians in Illinois will be recreant to their duty to delay longer an earnest commencement of a system of efficient Domestic Missions. Fields, ripe and ready for our successful occupancy, are opening all over the State, and to delay longer is to lose the opportunities which God is now placing before us ; and it is the deliberate judgment of your Committee that the prop- er body in which the strength of our brotherhood in the State, should be concentrated in this enterprize, is the Gen- eral Association. Therefore the Committee present the following Resolutions for the adoption of the Association : Resolved, That it is the deliberate opinion of this Asso- ciation, that the present condition of our State as to its religious wants, in the Providence of God, imperatively FOX RIVER ASSOCIATION. 57 demands that a system of Domestic Missions be immedi- ately originated by the Baptists of Illinois. Resolved, That it is the judgment of this body that our General Association is the appropriate organization to con- duct this enterprize, and that full arrangements should be perfected without further delay at its session the coming autumn for a vigorous commencement and prosecution of Domestic Missions by that body. Resolved, That ^his Association pledges to the General Association, its co-operation in this enterprise. Resolved, That a Committee be now appointed by the body to draw out a plan of Domestic Missionary operations, and submit the same to our Delegation to the General As- sociation for their approval ; which, if they give, then said delegation are hereby instructed to present it to that body for then* consideration. Resolved, That the following brethren be appointed a Committee to carry out the business contained in the last resolution, viz : Elders J. C. Burroughs, J. D. Cole y S. Tuck- er, J. A. Smith, and Deacon Hoard. At the meeting of the General Association the following autumn, Elder J. Clark of Rockford was appointed General Agent and Superintendent of Missions for Illinois. He entered upon his agency, prosecuted it with great vigor and success. From that time Domestic Missions have prospered under the fostering care of that body. It is with pleasure that we are able to add that this Association generously sus- tains the General Association ; and is thus redeeming its pledge to co-operate with it in this enterprise, 1855. The twentieth annual meeting was held at Loekport, Juno 6th and 7th, Opening sermon by Brother J. C. Burroughs of Chicago, from Isa. 53 : 11. Brother S. Tucker, Modera- tor, and Deacon D, Haigh, Clerk # 5S HISTOIiY OF Two new churches were received at this session — 3/orris* gathered by Brother Freeman, a Missionary of the General Association. It was organized in October 1854, with ten members. It had increased to nineteen members when it was received. Twelve Mile Grove, (Willingford,) organized October 2d, 1854, with nine members. Seven fresh pastors— C. H. Smith, Plainfield ; W. D, Clark, Joliet and Lockport ; J. F. Lathrop, Kaneville ; O. E. Clark, Newark ; C. Garrison, Downer's Grove ; W, Storrs, Momense ; W. G. Johnson, Morris. Brethren C. H. Smith and 0. E. Clark were ordained to the work of the Gospel ministry during this year. Twenty churches; twenty-six ministers, of whom fifteen were pastors ; one hundred and twenty-eight baptized, and a total membership of one thousand five hundred and forty- eight. 1856. The twenty-first annual meeting was held at Kaneville, June 5th and 6th. The introductory sermon by Brother C, Button of Aurora, from Phil. 1: 21. Brother J. C. Bur- roughs, Moderator, and Brother J. C. Smith, Clerk ; both of Chicago. Three new churches were received — Little Kock, Kendall Co., ten members ; Norman, Grundy Co., twenty-six mem- bers, of whom nine had been added by baptism ; and Ger- man church, Somonauk, DeKalb Co., eleven members, six of whom had been added by baptism. Six new pastors: W. G. Howard, 1st Chicago; N, Al- vorcl, Sandwich; E. Gale, Pavilion; N. F. Ravlin, Newark ^ D. S. Starr, Big Rock ; C. A. West, Somonauk, German, Eighty-two baptized ; one thousand five hundred and thirty- FOX RIVER ASSOCIATION. !>ti three members; twenty -three churches; fourteen pastors, and eight ministers without charge. After extending the usual invitation to visiting brethren to take a seat with the body ; " Rev. Mr. Close, pastor of the Methodist Church in Kaneville, was invited to sit with the Association and participate in its deliberations." " It having been announced to the Association, that the Fox River Congregational Union have signified a desire to open a correspondence with us, and have appointed a dele- gate to represent them at this meeting, it was voted that we respond to their overture, and that Rev. Charles H. Smith be our delegate at their next meeting." A collection and subscription were taken to raise $150 for Brother West, (German,) to be applied to that purpose by the Board of the General Association. 1857. The twenty-second Anniversary was held at Sandwich, DeKalb Co., June 3d and 4th. Opening sermon by Brother C. Garrison, from John 15, second clause of the 5th verse. Brother S. A. Estee of Aurora, Moderator, and Deacon D. Haigh of Specie Grove, Cleik. Two new churches were added — Edina Place, Chicago, organized October 30th 1856, with nineteen members, chiefly from the 1st Church; sixteen baptized ; fifty -five ad- ded by letter ; one excluded ; one died ; making the number ninety when received into the Association. R. Boyd, Pastor. JSomonauk, at Somonauk Depot, DeKalb Co., organized February 25th ; B. Hicks, pastor ; eighteen members when organized, and the same number when admitted into the Association. 60 HISTORY OF Seven fresh Pastors were joyfully greeted at this session: Elders R. Boyd, Edina Place, Chicago; H. Westcott, War- renville ; H. B. Foskett, Joliet ; W. M. Bassett, Sandwich ; J. Sell, Momence ; A. C. Manley, Norman ; and E. P. Bar- ker, Naperville. Aggregate, twenty-five churches ; twenty-nine ministers, of whom twenty-one were pastors; one hundred and nine- teen baptized, and one thousand seven hundred and fifty- four members, 1858, The twenty-thhd anniversary was held at Plainfield, June 2d and 3d; a village of about 1,200 inhabitants, Will Co. Opening sermon by Pastor Boyd, Edina Place Church, Chicago, from Mat, 1 : 21. Pastor Raymond of the Union Church, Aurora, Moderator ; Deacon D. Haigh, Specie Grove, Clerk. Twenty churches ; twenty-one pastors ; four hundred and' twenty-three baptized. Total membership in all the twenty-eight churches, two thousand three hundred and thirty-three ; eleven ministers without charge, and one licentiate. Three new churches were added to the body at this ses- sion : Evanston, organized April 28th, 1858, with six mem- bers, Brother J. C. Burroughs, minister. Union, Aurora, organized June 2d 1857, with twenty-seven members, dis- missed from the Aurora Church for that purpose. Altera- tions : added by baptism forty -nine, by letter thirty, by ex- perience seven ; dismissed two ; died one ; making one hun- dred and nine when admitted. L. Raymond, pastor. Lis- bon, organized January 28th of the present year, with twenty- nine members, most of whom were dismissed from Newark church for that purpose ; eight had been added by letter ; FOX RIVER ASSOCIATION. *>!■ one by experience; one died; making a total of thirty-seven members when received into the Association. K F. Ifcav- lin, pastor. Five fresh pastors : E. Savage, Joliet ; E. W. Benton, Norman ; L. Raymond, Union, Aurora ; R. A. Clapp, Os- wego, where he had been recently ordained; and W. M, Haigh, Bristol. The attendance was fair, considering the extreme badness of the roads, which, by the falling of copious showers of rain for several weeks immediately preceding the session, were rendered worse than they had been at any of the anni- versaries of the body since 1844, at which time they were nearly impassable. The tidings brought by the letters and messengers from nearly all of the churches, were of the most cheering char- acter. Nineteen of them reported accessions by baptism. Four were not reported, so that only two of the twenty- four letters which were read failed to give intelligence of baptisms ; the aggregate of which exceeded the accessions reported at any former session. A larger number, however, in proportion to the population, was added to the churches by baptism in 1843, when 354 were baptized; Rev. J. C. Burroughs, of Chicago, presented the following resolution of thanksgiving, which was unanimously adopted : Resolved, That while convened in our annual session, where we have often met to mourn over spiritual desolations, it would be deep ingratitude in us not to remember, and here to Hit up before God our sacrifice of thanksgiving to God, for that precious out-pouring of his Spirit, with which the churches of this Association, in common with the Church of our land generally, have been visited during the past winter ; and while the commercial interests of our country are prostrated, and the clouds which overspread the heav- 62 HISTORY OF ens and are drenching our country with floods and cutting off the hopes of the husbandman, are but the symbol of the cloud of gloom which in temporal things overhangs us, we will still rejoice and be deeply grateful for that great bles- sing which is better than when the corn and the wine are increased. Hesolved, That in view of the intimate connection be- tween the blessed revivals of the last winter and the prayers of God's people, we will take new heart to pray, and will observe as in other years, the first Monday in January, a day memorable in many of our churches for the manifesta- tions of God's special presence, as a day of fasting and prayer for the reviving and converting influences of the Spirit of God. And may the coming year be in converting grace as this, and still more abundantly. FOX RIVER ASSOCIATION. 63 TABLE I. The following table shows the names of the ministers who have been settled Pastors in the Association ; the names of the churches of which they were pastors ; the time of their becoming such ; the number of years they labored with the churches, while said churches remained members of this body ; also the time of their removal, (of such as have re- moved,) or exclusion, or death, as far as we have been able to learn these facts : c3 r6 i rtJ THE FORMER &\ NAMES OF § t -d s > ; "3 PRESENT NAME! pastoks . as o o o s OF CHURCHES. o o3 © CJ o X ! . QQP^l ft H P OTlain, ... J, E. Ambrose, 1834 ! now J. G. Porter, 1835 2 1837: Hadley. A. W. Button, 1839 2 |1841 S. Knapp, 1841 3 1844 S. Knapp 3 1849 1 1850 J. B. Dibell, 1851 1st Chicago,. , . A. B. Freeman, 1833 1 1834 J. F. Hinton, 1835 7 1842 C. B. Smith, 1842 1 1843 E. H. Hamlin, 1844 2 1846 M. Sanford, 1846 1 1847 Dec. 2 9 E. Tucker, 1849 3 J J. C. Burroughs 1853 3 1856 I 1853 W. G. Howard, 1856 1st DuPage,. . . A. B. Hubbard, 1834 5 1^39 L. B. King, 1839 1 1840 Plainfield,.. , ,, . J. E. Ambrose, 1834 4 1838 R. B. Ashley, 1838 4 1842 S. Knapp, 1843 1 1844 |R. B. Ashley, 1844 2 1846 U.-N. Tolman, 1846 1 1847 S. P. Ives, 1847 6 1853 IR. B. Ashlev, 1853 1 1854 U HISTORY. OF c3 TS f$ THE FORMER & NAMES OF I s > ^d PRESENT NAME PASTORS. o> o £ m O "a T3 . © OF CHURCHES. 0} c3 02 P-l P3 s Plainfield W. Morse, 1854 1 1855 C. H. Smith, 1855 1 1856 A. D. Freeman, 1856 Long Grove . . . J. F. Tolman, 1834 9 1843 now J. Scofield, 1843 3 1846 Bristol. B. H. Webster, 1846 1 1847 Z. Brooks, 1848 2 1850 J. Young, 1852 4 1856 W. M. Haigh, 1858 Little Woods, . . D. W. Elmore, 1836 2 1838 then J. E. Ambrose, 1838 2 1840 Charleston, Jas. T. Wheeler 1841 1 1842 now D. W. Elmore, 1842 1 1843 St. Charles. M. L. Wisner, I. Dudley, 1844 1845 1 1 1845 Vermillinville,. . Thos. Powell, 1836 1 Big Woods,. . . Elder King, now J. E. Ambrose, 1838 1 1839 Batavia. D. T. Graves, 1839 4 1843i R. R. Whittier, 1843 M. L. Wisner, 1844 1 1845 I. Dudley, 1845 3 1848 M. L. Wisner, 1848 1 1849 H. Hovey, 1850 1 1851 I. D. Newell, 1851 1 1852! J. M. Cochran, 1854 Jackson's Grove Belvidere, 1836 si S. Whitman,' 1836 4 1839 \ 1841; ( Sep. 1 1851 2d DuPage, now D. T. Graves, A. B. Hubbard, 1838 1839 1 2 Warrenville, J. Wheeler, A. J. Joslyn, 1841 2 1843 ' 1843 1 1844| P. Taylor, 1845 2 1847 H. Hovey, 1849 2 1851 F. S. Holt, 1851 2 1853 FOX RIVER ASSOCIATION. 65 r& rp THE FORMER & NAMES OF T3 U CD CD PRESENT NAME PASTORS. CU O O a "o *6 OF CHURCHES. Fairfield, IJ. Blake, North East |A. W. Button Paw Paw Grove C. Hardin, N. Warriner, Bloomingdale,. . J. Wheeler, W. Dickens, A. S. Brayuian, N. Warriner, S. G. Hunt, Union Ridge, . . Upper Sonion- auk, then Somonauk and|J. Higbey, Little Rock,then J. Young, Somonauk, jj. Higbey, now IN. Alvord, Sandwich. |W. M. Bassett, Montelona |R. R. Whittier, Blackberry |S. Poley, R. R, Whittier, C. D. Marvin, Z. Brooks, J. F. Lathrop, R. B. Ashley, A. Gross, S. Tucker, E. P. Barker, W. H. Rice, J. F. Tolman, S. S. Walker, E. Scofield, Jr. J. Young, W. 11 Haigh, E. G?le, M. Edwards, J. F Tolman, M. Edwards, N. Card, now Kaneville. Naperville Tabernacle, Chi. Long Grove, . . . now Pavilion. Newark 1844 1841 1841 1843 1841 1845 1845 1843 1846 1852 1853 1855 1856 1857 1845 1843 1845 1849 1850 1855 1844 1847 1849 1857 1846 1844 1848 1849 1851 1853 1856 1844 1845 1846J 1860| 1845 1844 1842 1846 1851 1853 1854 1856 1857 1844 1846 1850 1846 1849 1856 1858 1848 1851 1853 1856 1843 1853 1849 1 11845 1846 1849 1851 FOX E1VER ASSOCIATION". 67 c3 T3 13 THE FORMER & NAMES OF II CO PRESENT NAME PASTORS. a> o > •** O J3 H3 OF CHURCHES. CD CS ccPh P Newark, J. Higbey, 1851 4 1855 0. E. Clark, 1855 1 1856 N. F. Ravlin, 1856 2 1858 East Prairie, . . . W. N. Button, 1845 1 Aurora, J. Blake, 1844 1845 1 3 1845 1848 D. T. Graves, A. Edson, 3 848 2 1850 I. D. Newell, 1851 2 1853 C. Button, 1854 Lockport, S. Knapp, 1844 5 1849 F. W. Ingmyer, 1849 2 1851 S. Knapp, 1851 1 1852 J. F. Child, 1853 2 1855 W. D. Clark, 1855 2 1857 Babcocks Grove 1845 1845 1845 Union Grove, . . Albion Little Fort, Waukegan, P. Freeman, 1846 Washington,. . . 1849 3 1852 Oswego A. Edson, S. P. Ives, 1852 1 1853 A. Edson, 1853 3 1856 D. S. Starr, 1856 1 1857 R. A. Clapp, 1858 Big Rock, W. Williams, 1850 2 1852 B. Hicks, 1854 1 1855 D. S. Starr, 1856 2 1858 Downer's Grove F. S. Holt, 1851 2 1853 A. D. Freeman, 1854 1 1855 C. Garrison, 1855 3 1858 E. P. Barker, 1858 Momence, |W. Storrs, 1855 1 1856 P. Cell, 1857 12 Mile Grove,. J. B. Dibell, 1855 1 1856 68 HISTORY Of THE FORMER & PRESENT NAME OF CHURCHES. NAMES OF PASTORS. c3 r— ' T3 nd NAMES 5 5 'Z ST 13 OF THE 5 O ■ t t x> g 5 CHURCHES. C a Z - K ^ 3 T3 tS > £ o a; . -6 S i * P % ~. t3 SB "1 c p. ,5 ~? i $ o £ $ c "z. < -O K <3 o 2 O K Q 2 ft Pa^v Paw Grove, 1841 17,1841 14 7 46 90 12 11 3 t Bloomingdale, 1841 1841 2* 5 19 28 8 2 1 t Union Ridge, 1842 14 4 3 5 2 1 Sandwich, 1843 7 1843 " 15; 86 180 45 7 10 118 t Montelona, 1842 13 1843 24 3 14 50 6 2 Kaneville, 1U 1*43 15 15 73 160 52 36 2 6 79 Xaperville, 1843 6 1844 29 14 74 162 49 31 23 17 48 t Tabernacle, Chicago. 1843 62 1844108 2 22 108 28 i2 3 Pavilion, 1844 44 1844 66 14 85 193 99 32 27 79 Newark, 1844 13 1844 23 14104 193 76 13 20 8 89 i East Prairie, 1844 14 2 1 6 Aurora, 1844 23 6 38 9 4 4 Aurora, 1851 18 1852 2: 6 177 355 140 44 21 9 159 Lockporr, 1844 21 1844 33 14 30 84 29 7 8 10 51 t Babcock's Grove, 1845 27 1 3 Union Grove, 1S45 11 1 3 t Albion, 1845 15 1 t Waukegan, 1846 12 1846 17 3 5 Washington, 1*46 18 o I 7 2 2 Oswego, 1848 10 1848 10 10 42 84 38 14 7 2 33 Big Rock, 1850 10 1850 20 8 26 44 5 4 2 2 41 Downer's Grove, 1851 1852, 34 6 24 50 13 3 3 2 63 Momence, 1852 16 1854 28 4 18 47 9 3 1 5 57 Twelve Mile Grove, 1854 9 1855 10 3 4 19 8 1 2 18 Morris, 1854 10 1855 19 3 6 65 17 1 3 54 Little Rock, 10 1856 10 2 4 10 3 1 IS Norman, 13 1856 20 2| 33 52 1 1 63 German, 1855 5 1856 11 3 11 15 3 2 15 Edina Place, Chicago, 1856 19 1857 90 1 63 161 18 1 1 160 Somonauk, 1857 1857 18 1 '2 10 1 5 22 Evanston, 1858 6 1858 6 o 1 6 Union, Aurora, 1857 27 i85e 109 0| 49 86 9 1 109 Lisbon, 1858 29 1858 37 ol 9 1 1 37 From the above table it appears that Fifty-four Churches have belonged to this Association, of which Aurora has been dissolved and organized once, and Joliet church twice : both are now members of the body, and in a prosperous condition. FOX RIVER ASSOCIATION. Vl Two Churches have become extinct — 1st DuPage and Jackson's Grove. Four Churches have been dropped — Prophet's Town, Fair- field, "Washington, and Union Grove. Nothing more of their history is known to the writer. Four Churches have been dismissed to other Associations; Vermillionville, Rochester, Belvidere and Paw Paw. Sixteen Churches formed the Chicago Association, which was duly organized at Dundee, May 1847. The names of these churches are marked thus f in the table. Twenty-eight Churches now belong to Fox River Asso- ciation. The table also shows that 2,433 have been added to the churches by baptism, and 5,707 from all sources ; that the whole time the churches have existed, from their origin till June 1858, amounts to 426 years. The sum of the pastoral labor they have enjoyed during that time (as appears from table I.) amounts to about 240 years ; just as if one church had been organized 426 years, and had had a pastor only 240 years of that time, which is less than seven months per annum. If on the contrary, we reckon the time in which there was no pastoral labor performed, it will amount to an aggregate of 186 years, or more than five twelfths of the time. This great destitution has not been equalized among the church- es ; for while large ones'have been well supplied, small and feeble churches have been left to languish for the want Of pastoral labor. Note. — It appears from the Minutes of the Association, that the changes of membership reported by the churches from year to year, frequently disagree with former reports, and with the total number of members also. These discrep- ,*2 HISTORY OF aiicies, in so far as they relate to churches now belonging to this body, are inserted in the column headed "dropped.' A cypher in that column denotes the reckoning to be cor- rect ; i. e., that the several alterations agree with the sum total or present number of members. The church at Auro- ra reported 44 dropped, and is therefore correct. The 1st Church Chicago has lost 115, of which only 52 are published, " dropped" in the minutes. Little Rock has gained one ; the other churches have lost the number indicated by the figures set opposite their names in said column, i. e. their present number is so much too small to agree with the pub- lished alterations, making a loss in the whole Association of 223 members. • 'Although some of the discrej^encies may be owing to typographical errors, yet it is to be feared that the greatest number of them have arisen from carelessness in keeping a ltfit of names, and in making up reports to the Association ; for the returns of some of the churches frequently conflict with preceding ones. 9XXo- RECAPITULATORY AND CLOSING REMARKS. Our description of the country arid its inhabitants is en- ded. The record of events in the history of this body is finished. The sketch comprehends the whole period from the time Brother Freeman stood alone, the only messenger of truth in our denomination in all Northern Illinois, to the present time. The first Baptist church he organized con- sisted of twelve members only. This little one has become FOX KIVER ASSOCIATION. 73 h thousand. Or as may be said in allusion to Ezekiel's vis- ion of waters issuing out from under the threshold of the house ; it has become a river broad and deep ; a river that could not be passed over. In the introduction we glanced hastily over a much larger territory, than has ever been occupied by the Fox River Association, though the Convention that formed it intended it provisionally to embrace not Northern Illinois only, but the Wisconsin Territory and a part of Indiana. But as new churches were constituted in places remote from the centre of the body, other Associations were organized. Hence no church in Indiana, and only one in Wisconsin ever united with it. Three churches in this State far from the centre of the body were members of it ; but their connection with it svas of so short duration that neither of them is included within the following estimate of its limits. The Association has comprehended the following counties and parts of counties — Cook, Lake, McHenry, Boone, Du Page, Will, and Kendall, also a part of DeKalb, Grundy, and Kankakee. ' At the present time the Fox River and Chicago Associations, and a few of the churches connected with the Rock River Association, are within the bounds of the Old Northern Association as thus described. After examining and collating a large number of statis- tical tables, the writer sets down, the population of the lore- going territory at 18,000 when the Association was organ- ized, (September 1835,) and 230,000 in 1858. There were 120 Associated Baptijsts in 1835, and 4,756 in 1858, within these counties. Hence the proportion in 1835 was one Bap- tist to every 150 of the entire population, and in 1858 the proportion was one to fifty. This shows a very encouraging 74 HISTORY OF gain of Baptists upon the entire population during the last twenty-three years. The majority of this increase has, how- ever, been by letter, so that the number baptized has but little more than kept pace with the rapid increase of popu- lation. Hence the Baptists must become more efficient, else the world will not soon, if ever, be subdued to Christ through their instrumentality, provided this is a fair specimen of their aggressive movements. LOCATION AND PRESENT EXTENT OF FOX RIV- ER ASSOCIATION. The Old " Northern Association" was divided by a line, beginning at the east end of Washington street, Chicago, thence running due west to the western extremity of the body. The Fox River Association lies south of this line, and includes about one half of the above described area, and probably about the same proportion of the population. The churches composing it are in the south part of the counties of Cook, DuPage and Kane ; the southeast part of DeKalb ; the north part of Grundy and Kankakee, includ- ing the counties of Kendall and Will. THE CONTRAST BETWEEN SEPTEMBER 1835, AND JUNE 1858. At the first session of this Association, September 1835, it consisted of only four churches. At the session in June 1868, twenty-eight churches were connected with it. Thex the churches contained 120 members. Now the membership is 2,333. Thex four pastors belonged to the body. FOX RIVER ASSOCIATION. 75 Now it has twenty-one Pastors, eleven ministers without charge, and one licentiate. Then thirteen messengers including Pastors represented the churches ; Now eighty-one messengers, including Pastors, appear on the minutes of this year. Then no visiting brethren, in the ministry were present ; Now four were present. When roads are good and weath- er favorabk the number of visiting brethren is much larger. Then the meeting was held in a small lone school-house. Now in a spacious church edifice in a stirring village. Then the mode of traveling was mostly in double lumber wagons ; Now in neat comfortable carriages and by Railroad. Then the streams were unbridged, sloughs nearly impassa- ble, and the messengers of the churches not unfrequent- ly greatly fatigued and in a muddy plight ; Now streams are bridged, roads greatly improved, and the messengers and people come together under comfortable circumstances. Then an exorbitant price was paid for lodging on the bar- room floor of a log tavern ; Now hotels are numerous, accommodations good and prices fair. Then churches gave their pastors a salaiy, from $50 to $100 per annum ; Now their salaries are from four to six hundred dollars in small villages and rural districts, and much larger in cities. t HISTORY OF Thex some secular employment was necessarily connected. with the pastorate to eke out a scanty salary, unless aided by some Missionary Board ; Now rarely, except as a matter of choice, not of necessity.. Then there were no church edifices ; Now there are twenty in this Association alone, varying in cost from $2,000 to $25,000 each. PROGRESS OF BAPTIST PRINCIPLES. The Sangamon was the most northern Baptist Association in the State till this was organized. In 1858 there were nine Associations north of the Sangamon, containing a membership of 13,882; Five of which — The Fox River, Rock River, Chicago, Ottawa, and Union Associations are included within a smaller territory than was at first embraced by this Association. They contain 108 churches, about 100 ministers, and 8,089 members; having received more than 8,'OfK) by baptism. CONCLUSION. In the light of this historical sketch, we look back to the summer of 1833, when the population was exceedingly sparse, and when there was only here and there a solitary Baptist to be found — no Baptist church and but ewe Baptist minister in all Northern Illinois. In a short time after Bro. Freeman arrived a church was organized at O'Plain, (Had- ley,) with twelve members, and the following week another was organized at Chicago with fifteen members. In 1834 three more ministers arrived, and three new churches were gathered and duly organized. But the bright and encour- aging prospects were suddenly beclouded by the death of VOX RIVER ASSOCIATION. 77 Bfo. Freeman, who at the close of the year, after having as- sisted at the organization of Five churches in this new and inviting field, was, after a very brief illness, called to his re- ward above. In 1835 one of the ministers left the field for a time, and three others arrived. This brings into the formation of the Association by a Convention of four pastors and nine mes^ Rengers, representing four newly organized churches, con- taining a membership of 120. He, whose kingdom ruleth over all, and who hath determined the bounds of their habi- tation, brought these disciples together from various and distant parts of the world. They met in a lone school- house, in structure and finish but little surpassing the one describe;! in the " Introduction" to this history. Their num- ber was small. Nor were they the messengers of large and influential churches, apparently able to sustain them in this new eliterprize. The difficulties in their pathway were nu- merous and great. Their place of meeting was lowly; but their object lofty. Nothing less than the subjugation of the world to Christ; or as they expressed it: " To aid in the promotion of the spread of the Gospel, and the establish- ment of the Kingdom of Christ within its own borders and throughout the world." A gigantic enterprise to be under- taken by such a handful of disciples. But going at the bid- ding of the Master, and laboring in his name, few as they were, a gjorious harvest has been gathered, partly by them- selves, and more by their successors. Thus verifying the saying — "one soweth and another reapeth." Twenty churches containing more than 1,000 members, with ten or twelve pastors, have gone from the body into other Associations; but it now consists of twenty-eight 78 HISTORY OF churches, containing 2,333 members, having twenty-one pas- tors, one licentiate, and about a dozen other ministers. Wonderful are the improvements everywhere to be met with throughout the country. To say nothing of canals, railroads, and the springing up of villages and cities, as by magic ; we see this wilderness blossoming as the rose, preju- dices giving way, society compacted, learning promoted, churches formed, Sabbath schools established, converts mul- tiplied, numerous church edifices erected, convenient in size and neat in structure ; the ministry greatly strengthened in number, learning and influence ; so that if vital piety does but advance in equal ratio, victory must soon turn on the side of Zion. Whenever the pioneer looks back over this most interest- ing field and calls to mind former days ; he involuntarily exclaims: " What hath God wrought?" while with the tear of penitence, that he has done so little for the Master, is mingled the tear of joy, that the Master has done so much for us. APPENDIX. 1859. A sketch of the anniversary of this year is added as an appendix to what was previously prepared for the press, to save the reconstruction of the tables and the rewriting of much other matter. On the first and second days of June, the Twenty-fourth anniversary of the body was held at Bristol — a small village on the northern bank of Fox River, Kendall Co. The scene was pleasing to all ; but doubly delightful and deeply affecting to the few who were there at the session of 1846, when the Association was divided. The village ; the condition and prospects of the church ; the neat, new and- commodious church edifice, filled with attentive and devout worshipers, were objects of great interest, and stood in such sticking contrast with what was to be seen and enjoyed, when the body last met there, (1846,) as to call forth the exclamation, " "What hath God wrought !" The weather was fine — the attendance large— the religious services unusually sweet and edifying. Harmony and brotherly love characterized the session in an eminent de- gree. It was in very deed a holy convocation, graced by the presence of the Master, and thus rendered joyous and profitable to all. The opening sermon was preached by Pastor W. D, 80 FOX RIVER ASSOCIATION. Clark of Morris, from Eph. 2 : 12, latter clause. Pastor C. Button of Aurora, Moderator, and Pastor R. A. Clapp of Sandwich, Clerk. One new church was received — Piano, organized June Tlh, 1858, with sixteen members. D. N. Kinnie, Pastor. The church at Little Pock, having disbanded by mutual consent, was dropped. Twenty-eight churches, twenty-six ministers, and one hundred and fourteen baptized. The letter from the Somonauk German Church contained an interesting and affecting account of themselves ; and of the labors, protracted illness and death of their worthy and beloved Pastor, Rev. Charles "West. The following resolution was made in reference to the late Rev. C. A. West : Whereas, The great head of the Church has been pleased in His all-wise Providence, to remove our dear Bro. West, pastor oi the Somonauk German Baptist Church, from his labors on earth to the rest and bliss of Heaven. Therefore, Resolved, That we hereby tender to his afflicted family, and the dear brethren of the church to which he ministered, our sincere sympathies, and pray that God in His rich grace mav abundantlv sustain them. TIMES AND PLACES OF ANNIVERSARIES. 1835, September 15, Association organized, DuPage, Cook Co. Page 16 1836, Sept. 21st, 22d, First anniversary, 1837, October, Second 1838, Oct. 3d, 4th, Third 1839, Oct, 4th, 5th, Fourth 1840, Oct. 7th, 8th, Fifth 1841, June 2d, 3d, Sixth 1842, June 1st, 2d, 3d, Seventh 1843, June 7th, 8th, Eighth 1844, June 5th, 6th, Ninth 1845, June 4th, 5th. Tenth 1846, tJune, 3d. 4th, Eleventh 1847, June 2d, 3d Twelfth 1848, June 7th, 8th, Thirteenth 1849, June 6th, 7th, Fourteenth 1850, June 5th, 6th, Fifteenth 1851, June 4th, 5th, Sixteenth 1852, Juno 2d, 3d, Seventeenth 1853, June 1st, 2d, Eighteenth 1854, June 7th, 8th, Nineteenth 1855, June 6th, 7th. Twentieth 1856, tJune 4th, 5th. Twenty-first 1857, June 3d, 4th, Twenty-second " 1858, June 2d, 3d, Twenty-third " 1859, June 1st, 2d, Twenty-fourth « t The time of holding the session in .1643, and above table. Chicago, 20 Plainfield, 23 Warreuville, 23 Elgin, 25 Bristol, 27 Plainfield, 28 Warreuville, 29 Batavia, 33 Chicago, 36 Elgin, 39 Bristol, 44 Plainfield, 47 Chicago, 48 Long Grove, 49 Naperviiie, 50 Batavia, 51 Newark, 51 Aurora, 52 Oswego, 55 Lock port. 57 Kaneville, 58" Sandwich, 59 Plainfield, 60 Bristol, Appendix. 1856, is corrected in the ERRATA. 4th page— For " L. D. Boon" read L. D. Boone. 15th page — 14th line, for "sama" read same. 18th page— 15th line, for "thnt" read that. 19th page — 18th line, for "snip'' read nip. 24th page — 2d line, for "Charlerton" read Charleston. 25th page— 22d line, for "J. W. Elmore" read D. W. Elmore. 33rd page — 11th line, for "Sylla" readScylla. 40th page— 5th line, for ''letter" read letters. 49th page— 21st line, for "commend'' read commenced. 49th page — last line, for "spirit's" read Spirit's. 50th page — 13th line, for "entire" read entirely. 60th page— 15th line, for "Twenty churches" read Twenty-eight churches. 63rd page — 8th line in list of Pastors, for "J. F. Hinton" read I. T. Hinton. A. few other errors exist which need no explanation.