Life of Joseph
Addison Clark
by F.D. Srygley

J.A. CLARK was born in
Shawneetown, Ill., November 6, 1815. When he was an infant, his parents
moved to the Falls, on the Ohio River, where Louisville, Ky., now stands,
which was then little else than a rural village. From the Falls they moved
to Hopkinsville, Ky., and from there to Columbia, Tenn., while he was yet
in his childhood. In 1824 his father took him to Nashville, Tenn., on the
historic occasion of the national ovation in honor of Lafayette during the
visit of that celebrated patriot and philanthropist to the United States
after the War of the Revolution.' On this trip young Clark saw a steamboat
for the first time. It was a small craft on which Lafayette came up the
Cumberland River to Nashville. Such a vessel would now be considered
little else than a toy boat, but it was then a marvel to hundreds of
people, and the first steamboat many persons in the great crowd had ever
seen. One year later his father died, leaving him, a younger brother, two
sisters (one of whom was an infant), and a widowed mother to make their
way in the world. Soon after the father died, the mother moved, with her
four children, to Selma, Ala., where he learned to. be a, printer.' In
IS32 they moved to Columbus, Miss., and in .1834 the mother and three of
her children returned to Kentucky. In 1837 he followed them, and accepted
a position as principal of an academy at Mount Pleasant, near Liberty,
Ky., which, as a post office, then went by the name of Keene, Jessamine
County. The academy was in the same enclosure with the Baptist church.
Edmund Waller, father of John L. Waller, of Bible revision notoriety,
preached for the Baptist Church at that place while be was in charge of
the academy. While there his younger brother died, and, in 1839, he moved
to Texas with his mother and two sisters. They went by water from
Louisville, and disembarked at Matagorda, at the mouth of the Colorado
River. Three weeks after they landed the mother died, leaving him in a
strange and almost uninhabited country, with two orphan sisters to provide
for. Soon afterwards the older sister married, and he moved with the
younger sister to Austin, Texas. He was living in Austin when the Congress
of the Republic of Texas held its first session in that city in the fall
and winter of 1839. In connection with John Henry Brown, afterwards -Major
Brown, he prepared a "Topographical Description of Texas;" but
when the manuscript was ready for the printer, obstacles which would be
considered insurmountable by an author now had to be overcome before, the
book could be put on the market. Arrangements were made to have the
printing done in Austin, but no satisfactory facilities for binding the
books could be, found in the capital of the new republic. His energy was
equal to the emergency, however, and he took his part of the books to New
Orleans to have them bound. On his return, be landed at Lynnville, on
Lavaca Bay, and learned that Comanche Indians had just been there and
burned the town. The people all escaped in boats on the bay, except two
women, who were made prisoners by the hostile Indians. He could get no
conveyance from that place to Austin; but as he was not a man to be,
discouraged or defeated in a purpose by a trifle, he left his books and
walked over two hundred miles through an Indian country to Austin. He made
the trip without accident or injury, but he never beard of his books
again. Indians were troublesome citizens around Austin in those days. They
killed two men while he lived there the same night at different places
within a mile of the city – one north and the other east of town. In
1841 he moved from Austin with his sister to Nacogdoches County, where he
again engaged in teaching school for a time, and, later on, in surveying.
That section of country had been settled in an early day by Spaniards, a
few of whom still lived there when he settled in the county. There is now
a Spanish building in the town of Nacogdoches which was erected more than
two hundred years ago. There, were, several large old Spanish grants of
land in that county, and he was employed as a surveyor to divide some of
them into smaller tracts. While engaged in this work, he formed the
acquaintance of a Christian girl by the name of Hettie De Spain.
Acquaintance soon ripened into love, and they were married in 1842. The
purity of her life and simplicity of her faith in Christ soon made an
impression on him, and in less than a year he confessed his faith in the
Lord Jesus and was baptized into Christ. A short time before he was
baptized, he moved to Titus County, where he began to preach the gospel in
less than a year after he became a Christian. The country was thinly
populated and churches were few and far between. Where he lived, there was
a large congregation of undenominational Christians; but there were
already two. preachers there, and he felt that he was more, needed and
could do more good in other places.
Accordingly, he traveled as a
preacher over the country on horseback long distances, crossing ugly
streams and exposing himself to many dangers. In those early days nearly
all meetinghouses and schoolhouses were " free for all orthodox
preachers to preach in; " but, as he opposed all, denominations, all
denominations opposed him and held that lie was not orthodox. This made it
difficult for him to find houses to preach in, and much, if not most, of
his preaching was done in private houses. When he found a place to preach,
he usually remained and continued the meeting till he, established a
congregation of Christians. Later on he would revisit such congregations
to see, how they were getting on and to give them any scriptural
instruction and admonition they needed. While engaged in this work, he
went into Harrison. County. There were many meetinghouses and schoolhouses
in the county, but he could find no house he would be allowed to preach
in. Finally a wealthy planter who belonged to no church said to him:
" You don't seem able to find a, house
to preach in."
" No, sir; it seems that, I
cannot."
"There is a house on my
place that was built for a schoolhouse; but when I bought the place and
built near it, I appropriated it to my own use. If it were not for the use
I have made of it, I would ask you to preach in it. The floor is yet in
it, and I could clean it up so there would be no offensive appearance; but
I have used it for such purposes that I cannot ask you to preach in
it."
" What have you been using it for?
" I have been using it
for a stable, but I could clear it of all appearances of a, stable."
" Well, Mr. Edwards, my
Savior was born in a stable, and I am not, ashamed to preach in one."
After this colloquy the house
was fixed up, an appointment was made for preaching, and everything in and
about the house was so cleaned away that, no, one who did not know what
use it had been put to would ever have suspected it. He had a very
successful meeting, and baptized the wife and young son of Mr. Edwards, in
whose house, the meeting was held. Mr. Edwards himself was deeply moved by
the preaching and confessed that he believed the. doctrine, but declined
to become a Christian because he had lived a wicked life so long,
frequently using profane language and sometimes drinking to excess, he
feared he could not break off his evil habits and live a consistent
Christian life. The preacher talked to him privately in a kind and gentle
way, encouraging him to commit himself to God and make the effort, relying
upon divine help for success He took the admonition gratefully and wept
freely, but he could not he persuaded to give himself to God. He remained
a firm friend of the preacher as long as they knew each other. Later on he
moved to the town of Rusk, in Cherokee County, and for a time practiced
law; but after a few years he abandoned the law as a profession and again
went out to preach the gospel from a sense of duty and at, the
solicitation of members of three churches in the bounds of his
acquaintance. They did not ask him to preach at those churches, but urged
him to go wherever preaching was most needed and would do most, good. He
went, and those churches contributed liberally to his support. He traveled
over many parts of Texas, held many successful meetings, baptized hundreds
of people, and established a number of congregations. He often traveled
long distances and labored for weeks where there were no preachers or
churches, and but, few Christians. There are congregations still
flourishing in various parts of Texas which he established half a century
ago. In 1873 he moved to Thorp Spring and established Add-Ran College for
males and females. He superintended and managed the institution till the
enrollment of pupils ran up to about five hundred, when he turned it over
to his two oldest sons, A. Clark and R. Clark, in a flourishing condition.
The college was subsequently converted into a university and moved to
Waco, but he remained at Thorp Spring, where he still lives a life of
retirement and spends his time in preaching and writing for religious
papers. – F. D. SRYGLEY.
From Biographies And Sermons
by F.D. Srygley
Published by F.D. Srygley, c.1898, pages 79-85