News

Nannie Helen Burroughs

May 2, 1883. Nannie Helen Burroughs, editor and National Baptist Convention leader was born in Orange, VA.  She was president of the National Training School for Women and Girls which opened in 1909 in Washington, DC. ABHS has a vertical file and  several books with information about Burroughs.

Ellen Cushing, Educator and Missionary

April 30, 1915:  Ellen Cushing died in Providence, RI.  Cushing was first an educator who assisted freed slaves in entering post-way society.  Later she went as a missionary to Burma with her husband, Josiah, where they collaborated on an English-Shan dictionary.  In the late 1890s, she started the Baptist Training Institute in Philadelphia to train single women missionaries.  The BTI later became Ellen Cushing College.

 

Anti-Slavery Convention Opens Hidden Controversy

April 29, 1840:  the American Baptist Anti-Slavery Convention held its first session in New York.  Until then, the Baptists had maintained a strained peace by carefully avoiding discussion of the topic of slavery. But in 1840, an American Baptist Anti-Slavery Convention brought the issue into the open.  The Baptist Foreign Mission Board denied a request by the Alabama Convention that slave owners be eligible to become missionaries. Finally, a Baptist Free Mission Society was formed and refused Southern money. The southern members withdrew and formed the Southern Baptist Convention.  The split was completed in 1845.

Connecticut Region Celebrates Anniversaries

April 29, Connecticut Region will celebrate these church anniversaries:

Central Christian Church, Danbury, 200 years, Rev. Stephen Tickner;

South Woodstock Baptist Church, Woodstock, 225 years, Mr. Robert Beckwith;

Cornerstone Baptist Church, Danielson, 225 years, Rev. Erica Wimber Avena;

First Baptist Church, Wallingford, 200 years, Rev. Dr. Douglas Valentine;

Mt. Olive Baptist Church, Hartford, 100 years, Rev. Dion J. Watkins.

 

Baptists in Germany

April 22, 1834: Johann Oncken was one of the first Baptists in Germany to be baptized. Hamburg. Born in Germany, but raised in Scotland and England, Oncken embraced believer’s baptism by immersion after much study and consultation.  The Continental Society appointed him as a missionary to Germany where his ministry, although plagued by civil and religious persecution, prospered beyond his wildest expectations. In 1834, Barnas Sears, an American Baptist visiting on the continent baptized Oncken and his wife, along with five other believers, in the Elbe River. The following day they were organized into a Baptist church with Oncken as their pastor.   It is estimated that Oncken was responsible for distributing over two million Bibles and untold millions of gospel tracts in Europe. His motto was “Every Baptist a missionary.”

 

Founder of Gordon College: A.J. Gordon

April 19, 1836.  A. J. Gordon was born in Hew Hampton, N.H. For over 30 years he pastored two churches in Boston.  A respected evangelist, he founded Gordon College with his wife, Maria (first called Boston Missionary Training School).  He was involved in the American Baptist Missionary Union and founder of the prophecy magazine The Watchword.  The American Baptist Quarterly recently published an issue devoted to him “Adoniram Judson Gordon: American Baptist Pastor and Evangelical Leader.”

Illegal Religious Meetings in MA

April 17, 1666: Thomas Goold and his associates were fined by a Massachusetts court for holding illegal religious meetings.  There have been many posts on our page about the conflicts between the Baptists in Boston and the Massachusetts officials.  Laws did not allow for the freedom to start new churches, or to not baptize infants.  Church attendance was compulsory.  Baptists have had a long history of fighting for the separation of Church and State.  ABHS has the record of this long fight, including writings of early Baptists and resolutions of official bodies.

African Baptist Church Formed in Boston

April 14, 1773:  Thomas Paul, a free black from New Hampshire was born.  He was self-taught, and in 1805 was ordained at Nottingham West, New Hampshire.  Reverend Paul formed the African Baptist Church in Boston (later known as the Joy Street Baptist Church) and served as pastor for more than 20 years.  He also helped establish the Abyssinian Baptist Church in New York.  He was greatly respected wherever he was known.   ABHS has an extensive collection of annual minutes of Black associations and state conventions dating from 1835 – 1965.

Adoniram Judson, Passing of an Icon

April 12, 1850.  Adoniram Judson, the first Baptist missionary from the United States, died at sea on a voyage to the Isle of France.  He was 62 years old and had been a missionary in Burma for 37 years.  ABHS has the original manuscript letters he sent to Baptists in the United States.  The mission to Burma was the catalyst that organized people to form mission societies to raise money for mission work.  ABHS also has the official records of various foreign missionary societies.

 

500 Baptized in Zurich

April 9, 1525: In the fourth month of Anabaptist history, 500 Anabaptists were baptized in Zurich, Switzerland.  Hulrich Zwingli and a group of reform-minded men were questioning infant baptisms and other practices of the Catholic Church as early as 1522, The Zurich Council ruled, in 1525, that all who continued to refuse to baptize their infants should be expelled from Zurich. In an act of defiance, in January 1525, a group of reformers took a believers baptism and thus began the Anabaptists (re-baptizers).  ABHS has many pamphlets and other writings dating from the early 1500 for and against Anabaptists.

Harvard President forced to Resign Over Baptism

April 7, 1657: Henry Dunster, the first president of Harvard, rejected infant baptism after studying the issue thoroughly.  He began preaching against it from the pulpit in Cambridge, and was forced to resign his presidency in 1657.  He was brought to court because he didn’t baptize his child.  His preaching and witness was the center of the influence that brought about the First Baptist Church of Massachusetts Bay.

A Light Extinguished

April 4, 1969:  Martin Luther King, Jr. minister and civil rights leader was assassinated in Memphis, TN.  ABHS has a record of his attendance at Crozer Theological Seminary, from which he graduated in 1951 and where he was elected president of the student body.  ABHS also has many books and magazine articles about his life and ministry, books by him and a tape of a sermon he preached.

Woman’s Foreign Mission Society

April 3, 1871 The Woman’s American Baptist Foreign Mission Society was organized in Boston.  Two hundred women came together to form the society which sent women as missionaries to women in foreign lands.  The WABFMS joined with the Woman’s American Baptist Foreign Missionary Society of the West (Chicago), to form the Woman’s American Baptist Foreign Mission Society.  ABHS is the official repository for the records and magazines of WABFMS.

Forced to Attend Church in 1667

April 2, 1667.  Three Baptists were fined for ‘absence from the Ordinances of publicke worship’ in Cambridge, MA.    ABHS has original church records for Broadway Baptist church in Cambridge for the years 1862-1967.  ABHS also has several books published in 1667 and 1668 that deal with the necessity for people to attend church and hear sermons.  There is also one, by Sir Charles Wolseley promoting the idea that force should not be used to attend church.

Philadelphia Association Begins Education Work

March 31, 1836.  Philadelphia Baptist Association granted a charter to Haddington Theological and Literary Institution.  Haddington was the only school belonging to the Baptist denomination in Pennsylvania and is the first established by the oldest association in the United States.  It was originally located about 4 miles west of Philadelphia, but in 1838 it was moved to Germantown and renamed the Germantown Collegiate Institution.  In another few years it went out of business.  But, the Association’s interest in education resulted in the rise of Sunday schools and other educational institutions.

Baptist Minister Exchanged for Spies

March 30, 1974, Rev. G. P. Vins was arrested and, in January, 1975, he was sentenced to five years in concentration camps followed by five more years of exile in Siberia.  His ‘crime’ was to be desirous of and fight for the principle of religious liberty.  He refused to have the local churches and their pastors controlled by the (Russian) government.  He was arrested in 1966, and again in 1970, and after serving his sentences, he went underground to carry on his ministry covertly.  In 1980 Vins was one of five dissidents exchanged by the United States, for two Russian spies.