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CHAPTER XXXIII
Bro. Gruhbs'
Letter.—House Full of Boarders.—Aunt Mima.—Bought a Home.—Last Payment on
Missouri Debt.—Preachers' Wives.—Dr. Hopson a Good Financier.—His Desire
for Rest.—His Resignation.—Press Notice.
I will here insert a
letter from Bro.
I. B. Grubbs, as it refers particularly to his work in
Louisville:
"LEXINGTON, Ky.,
Jan. 3, 18S7.
"Dear Sister
Hopson:—Herewith I enclose my
estimate of the character of Bro. Hopson. You will read it as the sincere
outpourings of my heart. Please read it
to him. I want him to know the estimation in which he has ever been held
by me.
DR. Wintrop H.
Hopson.
"It was in 1860 that
I first saw that noble man of God. He was standing in the pulpit in old
Hancock St. Church, in Louisville, in the midst of a most interesting
protracted meeting.
"It was not long
after his Cincinnati meeting, in which that great city was profoundly
agitated by his might as a preacher. My interest in him, therefore, was
intensified as I beheld for the first time his manly form and felt the
power of his enchaining eloquence. Those who knew and heard Dr. Hopson in
the days of his undiminished strength and full splendor of his
ministerial gifts, can never forget his leonine appearance, his imposing
presence, his personal magnetism, and his wonderful power in the pulpit
over the immense audiences that gathered to hear his discourses. On
arising before them his very attitude and manner inspired all with the
conviction that a rich feast of soul was in store for them—and in this
expectation they were not disappointed. Very few men have been blessed
with such a felicitous combination of personal graces and advantages and
intellectual endowments as Winthrop H. Hopson. The majesty of a splendid
physique never fails to augment and emphasize the power of mind.
[book page] 189
"If I am asked what I
regard as the special feature in which the ministerial excellence of Dr.
Hopson was manifested, my answer would be, in his
matchless power of expression, the varying charms and well
sustained force of his diction, combined with the wonderful
clearness with which he stated his positions and set forth his reasons
to support them.
"No one ever
complained of vagueness or indistinctness of meaning in any sermon
of Dr. Hopson's. His hearers might be borne along upon the
resistless tide of his eloquence, but they failed not to receive
edification from the simplicity of treatment and lucid method of
presentation in the discussion of his theme.
"His was
pre-eminently the power of the true orator; whose function it is both
to convince and to persuade. Such was Dr. Hopson before the
insidious influence of disease invaded his system, and by its
stealthy progress undermined his physical strength and mental
condition.
"But as greatly as I appreciated the personal and
intellectual gifts with which
Dr. Hopson was endowed, there was that in him which called forth my
admiration in a yet higher degree. I speak now of his large heartedness,
his breadth of soul, the unsurpassed generosity and unselfishness of his
disposition. With a keen appreciation of the merits of others, he made
reference to their just deserts without stint of expression.
"Friendship was no
mere word upon his lips or mere sentiment in his heart. When he could
confer a favor, he would do so with all his heart, even at the expense of
self-sacrifice or great inconvenience. This testimony to his moral
excellency is not grounded on superficial acquaintance, but on closeness
of association in personal friendship and ministerial work. During a
part of the period of his protracted ministry in Louisville, serving the
large and influential Christian congregation at the corner of Fourth and
Walnut streets, it was my good fortune to labor for another congregation
in that city, and thus to be brought into intimate relations with this
good and gifted man. It was a constant source of pleasure to me to
enjoy his society, his good counsel and cooperation in the advocacy and
defense of the great cause which lay very near to our hearts. I thus
learned to know and appreciate the moral worth as well as the intellectual
power of Dr. Hopson, and to love on account of the goodness most clearly
discerned by those who stood in the closest connection with him.
[book page] 190
"As might be
supposed, a man of the description just given would prove true in his
devotion to the Christian religion. Of this we speak last, for this,
indeed, was the most admirable trait of Dr. Hopson's character. Unswerving
in conviction as to the truth which he advocated and loved with all his
great soul, he was uncompromising in its maintenance and preservation in
all its integrity, simplicity and purity.
"The faith of his own
heart in the perfect adaptation of the religion of the New Testament to
the wants and condition of the present generation, he forcibly urged with
a heroic daring and a loftiness of spirit that evinced the profound
seriousness by which he was inspired; and this earnest faith pertained
not merely to what are called the elements of the gospel, but to the
all-sufficiency of New Testament Christianity as a whole, in all its
practical bearings and results.
"May the cause of
Christ find in every age such true and earnest advocates as Winthrop H.
Hopson.
"I. B. GRUBBS."
The love Bro. Grubbs
bore Dr. Hopson met with a hearty response, and their communion and
fellowship was perfect. They rested in each other's companionship and
love, each a mutual support to the other.
Before the close of
the first year in Louisville, Mr. Cave had been prevailed upon by the
brethren in Lexington to enter the Bible College to prepare himself for
the ministry. This step met the Doctor's hearty approval. He has never
regretted the encouragement he gave him. No father could be prouder of a
son, and he has proved himself a "workman that needeth not to be ashamed."
After Mr. Cave and
family removed to Lexington, I proposed to the Doctor that as we had such
heavy rent to pay, we should take some boarders, which would enable us to
save a large portion of his salary towards paying his debts. He consented
reluctantly, as he was always indisposed to have a house full of
strangers. We
[book page] 191
were very fortunate
in securing delightful boarders, all members of the
Christian Church—Sister Pittman and her daughter Anna,
Brother and Sister F. Spears, and old Sister Anderson,
who was a Miss Lewis, of Virginia, and an own niece of Gen. Washington. We
did not love her so much for
the last mentioned fact as for her pure and noble
Christian life. These, with father and mother Fife, the
Doctor and myself, made up a very happy family. I should have added Aunt
Mima, our faithful and devoted
Christian servant, who left all and followed us from Richmond, and who
still links her fortunes with ours. Everybody that ever visited our house
will remember her, and her cheerful attention to guests.
Early in 1872 he
decided to buy a home, on which he could pay what he was expending in rent
and a little more each year, until he should own it. He bought a
comfortable house on Seventh street, and we moved into it, taking all our
family except Sister Anderson, who went to her son's to live. The house
and repairs cost Dr. Hopson $3,000. January, 1873, he made the last
payment on his Missouri debts. By the time he had paid the debt of $8,000,
the whole expenditure, including the accumulated compound interest during
his imprisonment and stay South, when he was unable to pay anything,
amounted to $22,000. Preachers are generally considered poor financiers. I
do not believe it. Very few that I have known ever had anything to
financier on. Most of our preachers have just about salary enough to keep
body and soul together, properly clothed, and take care of their usually
rapidly increasing progeny, and it takes splendid financiering to do it in
many instances.
One great trouble
about preachers is their lack of
[book page] 192
judgment in marrying.
They frequently secure wives who are neither dressmakers, tailors,
milliners, shoemakers, nor
washerwomen. A preacher's wife should be all these, besides being "wise
as serpents and harmless as doves." I do not believe there is another
position in the world a woman is called upon to fill that takes the same
amount of patience, prudence and discretion as that of a preacher's wife,
and, so far as my knowledge extends, I think our preachers have excellent
wives.
With Dr. Hopson's
liberality in church matters, his generosity to the poor, and his kindness
to those depending on him for support, he was the best financier I have
ever met. All this while he was carrying an insurance of $10,000—$5,000
for the benefit of his creditors and $5,000 for his family, at an expense
of about $300 a year for both. The Piedmont and Arlington, of Virginia,
failed while he was so ill ten years ago, and he lost the $1,600 he had
paid in premiums.
He was very happy
when the last dollar of that Missouri debt was paid, and he felt he was a
freeman. The labor and anxiety of the preceding years began to tell upon
his iron constitution. During much of his pastorate in Louisville he was
associate editor of the Apostolic Times, which originated with Brethren
Wilkes, Graham,
Lard,
McGarvey and himself. His connection with the
paper
was never of any financial benefit to him, and if the co-editors made any
money out of it I never heard of it.
During our last year
in Louisville the Doctor used often to say to me, "Ella, I must rest; I
am so tired of this hurry and bustle." At length he made up his mind to
resign the charge of the church and evangelize—take
[book page] 193
up our old Bohemian
life. I copy the following from the Courier-Journal of March 1, 1874:
"On Sunday last Dr W.
H. Hopson, pastor of the Fourth and Walnut Sts. Christian Church of this
city, tendered his resignation, to take effect the last Lord's day in
May.
"This announcement
gave much surprise to his congregation, but very few being informed of
his intention, and many regrets have been expressed for his taking such a
step. Dr. Hopson has been connected with this church six years, and
within that time has done much for the increase and edification of his
congregation, and has at all times, by reason of his eminence as a divine
and his eloquence as a preacher, commanded one of the largest audiences in
the city.
"He is known to be,
as he deserves to be, one of the foremost men in his denomination. Pointed
and powerful as a thinker, clear and demonstrative as a speaker, he enjoys
a reputation widespread and enviable. He leaves his congregation in this
city in the height of his popularity, as a matter of his own choosing,
preferring for the present to go into the 'general field,' where he can
enjoy more rest and accomplish, he thinks, as much good.
"We are glad to
learn, however, that Louisville will be his home for the most part, so
that his friends may still hope to enjoy occasionally his influence and
teaching."
It was with great
reluctance he took this step, but he felt he could no
longer bear the strain the care of such a large church entailed upon the
minister.
We broke up
housekeeping at once, and mother and father went to Lexington to stay
with Mr. Cave until we were once more
settled.
We bade a sorrowful
farewell to the beloved friends in Louisville (we
alone knew how dear they were to us), and began our journey towards the
setting sun.
We spent the summer
traveling through Missouri, visiting many of the churches for which the
Doctor had held meetings long
years before. He enjoyed meeting
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with his old friends
so much, his tour was a perpetual feast to him.
We visited many of our old school-girls, who were delighted
to see us again. They were all anxious for us to build up a school, where
they could send their children to us. He told them he was not able to run
any more risks.
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