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CHAPTER
X.
Close of South Side
Mission.—Swimming Creeks.—Crossing Prairies.—Visiting Everybody.—Changing
Rooms.—Meetings at New London, Paris, Lick Creek, Hannibal.—Change of
Location to the Mississippi River.—One Year and Four Months, Four Hundred
Additions.
The Doctor's mission on the South Side closed here, and we made our way
home, after an absence of six months, and a travel of over 1,000 miles in
our buggy.
The winter of 1851 was very severe on us. The Doctor held
meetings in several country churches. In order to get to his appointments,
he used to have to swim creeks with our horses, with the water up to the
buggy seat. I would get up on the seat and sit on the satchel, while the
Doctor put his feet on the dash-board. We crossed many a stream in that
way, though they were not always quite so high. Sometimes we would travel
all day across a broad prairie, every step the horses took breaking
through half an inch of ice. Once, in the middle of one, the tire of one
of the hind wheels broke. The Doctor took the halters off his horses and
strapped it on, and I had to watch the wheel for five or six miles, while
the cold north wind was blowing a blizzard across the plain. Sometimes
after church at night we would have to ride three or four miles to stay
all night with some good brother, whom we were afraid we should slight if
we did not visit him. They were all as kind and good to us as it was
possible for them to be.
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Many of the roads were only fit for horseback travel at that season of the
year. Often there were gullies in the middle of the road as well as on
each side.
For two months we went everywhere we were invited, until one
very cold night we went home with a dear old friend of the Doctor's. After
a ride of three miles we arrived at the house. The improvements were all
new-a story and a half log house.
In order to reach our room we had to climb a ladder. By the
time we went to bed it was snowing, and I noticed the snow found its way
into our room. I examined, and found there was no chinking under the roof
where it rested on the logs, and that we were in for a snow-storm of our
own. I piled our clothes under the bed, gave the Doctor my pillow to put
over his head, and tucked mine under the clothes. When we waked in the
morning there was three inches of snow on the bed and over the floor.
The Doctor rolled off the top cover and shook the snow off on
to the floor, and with it brushed a space where he could stand and dress.
He handed me my clothes, and I dressed sitting in the bed. My fingers were
so cold I actually could not feel the pins I was sticking in my clothes.
On our way to church the next morning I told my husband we
must change our programme. "I can never stand this kind of work. We must
get some place to stay at night, and keep it. I am willing to visit in the
day, but to sleep in a good, warm room one night, and a stone cold one the
next, is too severe on me; and it is as bad on you as on me."
After that time we made it a rule to occupy the same quarters
every night during a meeting, and visit all we
[book page] 56
could during the clay. I have known several of our preachers to lose their
health, and some of them their lives, by accepting the urgent invitations
of loving and good brethren.
To all who read this, I say, If you can not entertain your
minister comfortably, do not invite him to stay with you, but frankly tell
him so, and he will thank you from the bottom of his heart.
During the fall and winter he held meetings also at New
London, Paris, Lick Creek, Santa Fe and Palmyra. He writes from Palmyra,
Oct. 28, 1851:
"I have been traveling for ten months as State Evangelist, in
Missouri and Illinois. I have preached 430 sermons, and immersed 365
persons, and had many added by letter and otherwise."
At Paris he had the able assistance of Bro. Alfred Wilson,
who was as modest as he was good. Early in the beginning of 1852 he
drifted back to Hannibal, and held another meeting. Dr. T. D. Morton
writes (Millennial Harbinger)
"Dr. Hopson held a two weeks' meeting here, at which
twenty-five were added to the church and a fine impression made on the
community."
About this time he agreed to preach for the church at New
London once a month, having in view a change of location to the
Mississippi River. This was Feb. 13, 1852.
The March following we went to St. Louis to visit his mother,
on his way to attend the Bible Revision Convention, at Memphis.
On his return from that trip he held a meeting in New London,
of which Bro. T. M. Allen writes
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"On Tuesday evening last, Bro. H. closed a very pleasant meeting, with
seven additions. They are a warm-hearted, large and flourishing
congregation, and have just completed a nice, commodious brick church.
They are blessed with the ministerial labors of Bro. Hopson once a month."
During all the years of the Doctor's preaching in New London,
our home was with the hospitable Bro. Hayes. Our room was always ready for
us once a month, and we could drop in at any time, day or night, and find
a hearty welcome.
His next meeting was at Thrasher's Chapel, halfway between
Hannibal and Palmyra. Dr. Morton was with him. It closed early in May,
with seventeen confessions and baptisms. This closed his evangelistic
labors of a year and four months, during which time he had 400 additions.
[book page] 58
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