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Trials And Triumph |
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Table Of Contents |
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Book Title
Frontispiece
Title Page/ Author
Dedication
Copyright Information
Preface
Introduction
J.A. Copeland - Aged 38
"He Being Dead Yet Speaketh"
Ancestry And Childhood
Marriage And Early Years
In School At Center Point
The Country Preacher
Life At Pleasant Home
The Family Circle Broken
Delight And Tragedy
The Gospel Light
The Ministry Changes
At Home But Not Idle
Declining Health
The Billstown Reunion: Honor To Whom Honor
The Silver Cord Is Loosed
The Ultimate Triumph
Appendix: Chronology Of Important Events
Appendix: Ancestry Of J.A. Copeland
Appendix: Ancestry Of Georgia Watkins Copeland
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Original Book In .PDF - 9meg
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TRIALS AND TRIUMPHS
In the Life of
J.A. Copeland
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"He Being Dead Yet Speaketh"
Jairus A. Copeland
1881—1955 |
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Trials
And
Triumphs
In the Life of J. A. Copeland
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______________
By
Lawrence H. Roberts, Ph.D.
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Lawrence H. Roberts
1507 East University Street
Magnolia, Arkansas 71753
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Dedication
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Dedicated to
the memory of a daughter of J. A. Copeland,
the late Willie Copeland Roberts Billingsley,
the author's mother.
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Copyright 1975 by Lawrence H.
Roberts, 2008
www.TheRestorationMovement.com
Originally Printed by Gospel Light Publishing Company, Delight,
Arkansas
Online Publishing By Permission To
www.TheRestorationMovement.com From Lawrence H.
Roberts, July, 2008 |
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Preface
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This book has several purposes: (1) It depicts a way of life in a rural
area which lives in the memory of fewer and fewer people today. Perhaps
this book can make some of those memories more permanent. (2) The
Copeland family, their relatives, and friends will find in this book a
permanent record of some important family history. (3) For those who are
interested in Church history, there are some names and i:ncidents which
may
be of interest. (4) Most important, this book portrays the life of a man
who was triumphant over all of life's trials and difficulties through
his religious faith. Such a life inspires all of us to strive to attain
the "abundant life."
Fate bestowed upon me an unusual privilege: to be a member of the
"Copeland Clan." My mother was one of the daughters of J. A. Copeland.
Fate was also good to me in that the Great Depression drove my parents
back to the country where they grew up, where their parents grew up, in
Pike County, Arkansas. My boyhood days, therefore, were spent playing
along the same branches and in the same fields where my grandfather
played as a child. Some of my earliest memories are of the good times I
had visiting my cousins, the Cox family, who lived in the very house
where my grandfather lived when he was a boy.
Perhaps those early experiences caused me to be interested in family
history. Whatever the reason, some years ago I became interested in
genealogy and spent a great deal of time searching for information about
my ancestors. Later, I decided to write this biography about my
grandfather. My only regret is that I did not do it earlier—before my
mother died in 1971.
I wish to express my gratitude to the many people who helped in
gathering the information contained in this book. Especially, I thank
the sons and daughters of J. A. Copeland, my own uncles and aunts. I
know that you all understand that much more information was collected
than can be used. The many details which you provided helped me
understand the complete picture more fully. I have done the best I can
to make sure the facts are correct. Please be charitable when you find
errors; I can assure you that the' errors are not the result of neglect,
but in spite of careful attention!
Special thanks go to Bill and Neva (Chesshir) Handy for their invaluable
assistance in critiquing the manuscript. Bill's keen logic and
analytical skill, and Neva's perceptive analysis of the language and
style of writing greatly improved the finished manuscript. And, I want
to express my appreciation to my wife, Cora, for her assistance, and
especially for her patience, during the time this book was being
written.
Thanks also to Flanoy Alexander for the suggestion of the title "Trials
and Triumphs."
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Introduction |
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Many changes have taken
place in the Copeland family since this book was first published in
1975. Thanks to Scott Harp
at the website, TheRestorationMovement.com, this on-line version of
Trials and Triumphs includes some of those changes.
Of the thirteen children born to J.A. Copeland and Georgia (Watkins)
Copeland, only one is still living now, July 19, 2008.
She is Joy (Copeland) Alexander, one of the twins born October
12, 1914. Joy lives at
Delight, Arkansas.
The death dates of family members who have died since J.A. Copeland died
will be listed in the Chronology of Important Events in the back of the
book.”
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J.A. Copeland
Age 38 |
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Chapter I
"He Being Dead Yet Speaketh"
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The brevity of life is stated emphatically in the Bible: "For what is
your life? It is even a vapor, that appeareth for a little time, and
then vanisheth away." (James 4:14). The family of J. A. Copeland
remember with sweet sorrow a moment when, with his loved ones gathered
around him, he said, "It's not how long we live, but how we live
that matters." All will agree! It is the quality of life that really
counts. The voice from heaven came to the Apostle John saying, "Blessed
are the dead which die in the Lord from henceforth: yea, saith the
Spirit, that they may rest from their labors; and their works do follow
them." (Rev. 14:13). The inspired writer said of Abel, the Old Testament
character, "... he being dead yet speaketh."
J. A. Copeland lived upon the earth only seventy-four years, seven
months, and one day, a "little time" compared to the thousands of years
of recorded history. The quality of his life, however, was such that his
works do follow him; his influence lives on. He lives in the memory of
many people as one of the most Christ-like persons known to them. After
his death, many letters were received by members of his family and by
the Gospel Light, letters which expressed sympathy for the family
and admiration for the man, J. A. Copeland. The following are excerpts
from some of those letters:
. . . I have known him for thirty years, and never one time heard any
man say one disrespectful word about him or his work. His work was
always done in the greatest sincerity. His preaching and teaching was
sane, sound, and sensible. If he—or others who lived as he did-should
miss heaven, none will be saved, for he was truly a man of God. May the
family be comforted daily with the memory of his devoted life, and not
weep as others who have no hope . . . —Rue
Porter.
Although it was not my privilege to be closely associated with him in
his ministry, I have felt a very sincere appreciation for his love for
the Lord and for the Kingdom and for his solid good judgment. . . . His
influence will live not only among those who are closely associated with
him, but among a host of others who will be influenced, who will be
affected by his Christian life, Christian family, and teaching of the
gospel. —M.
Norvel Young.
Although I knew Brother Copeland less than three years, I came to love
and highly respect him "for his work's sake." His name had already
become legendary among God's people in southern Arkansas when we moved
here. . . . The full effect of his godly influence will never be
determined until we reach eternity. Yes, he is gone, but he will forever
live in the hearts of those who were blessed with his acquaintance.
—Jimmy
Allen.
Milton Peebles has been a close friend of the Copeland family for many
years. After the death of J. A. Copeland, he wrote the following, which
was published in the Gospel Light in January, 1956:
For a number of years it has been a privilege of mine to be closely
associated with the life and work of Brother J. A. Copeland. His
preaching has been primarily in the rural areas and oftentimes he has
supported his family by farming while preaching the gospel. Perhaps no
one will know until judgment the sacrifices that he and his companion
have made to go and preach. They never told it. Only judgment will
reveal the good that has been done. Hundreds attended the funeral to
mourn and to express their sympathy to the family. It was, no doubt, the
largest gathering of its kind that I ever witnessed. These, however,
were only a fractional part of the thousands whose lives he has touched
and influenced over fifty-two years laboring in the Master's vineyard.
Brother Copeland was a strong man in the faith. He had a wonderful
knowledge of the word of God and the wisdom to understand it and assist
others in understanding it. His manner was plain, but firm. He did not
make any show of his ability; yet there was never any doubt but that he
was able to meet the situation at hand. Simplicity of preaching and
living characterized his life. Even his death came to pass in this
simple manner. He went to sleep and slipped away.
Through the years it was necessary for him to take stands against error
and for the truth that were not popular at the time; however, this
quiet, but resolute spirit of his has been invaluable to the strength
and purity of the church in Arkansas. His strength and courage have made
our efforts to preach the gospel easier and opportunities greater. On
the day of the funeral the multitude that gathered at the home and the
meeting house made it somewhat difficult at times for the family in
their grief. Yet at the same time it was a tremendous source of comfort
to them to know that so many people from so many places loved him that
much. Occasionally there is a man in this life that all who know him
very well look upon him as a member of their family. Such a man was
Brother Copeland. Hundreds passed the casket that day, and I feel
assured that many grieved as if a loved one of their own had departed
this life. I did.
Brother Copeland's great work can be attributed in part to his humility,
his love of the truth and of the Lord, his knowledge of the scripture,
his wisdom and understanding, his great personality, his perseverance
and hard work, his fine countenance, his undying courage. May we ever
strive to imitate him as he endeavored to imitate the Lord Jesus! Truly
he fought a good fight, he finished his course, he kept the faith and
has gone to feast on the "splendors immortal" with the redeemed of the
ages.
Much credit of this useful and beautiful life rightfully belongs to
Sister Copeland—his
companion for more than fifty years. May the Lord bless this fine family
as they continue to preach, teach and live after the example which he
set for them! How happy I am to have had such a godly man to encourage
me! He has been a tower of strength in my life and in the church of our
Lord.
—Milton Peebles
Further evidence of the enduring influence of the life and memory of
Brother J. A. Copeland was found by this writer seventeen years after
Brother Copeland's death. Several people wrote letters when they learned
that this book was being planned. Mrs. C. A. Greer, of Vicksburg,
Mississippi, wrote, ". . . the memory of him will always be in my mind."
Mrs. Clay Colvin, of Dubach, Louisiana, wrote, ". . . he was a great
man, one of the best gospel preachers I ever heard. . . . We found
Sister Copeland just as sweet and good as he. Clay and I are eighty-two
and eighty-four years old, but we never forgot Brother Copeland's
preaching." From Massena, New York, came a letter from John W. Buster,
who wrote, ". . . He was loved and respected by all who knew him."
Why was J. A. Copeland so loved and respected? What was there about this
man that created good will everywhere he went? How was he able to avoid
making enemies, considering the firm stand he took on important issues?
How was he able to live so triumphantly in the face of so many
hardships? The answers to these questions can be found in the statement
made by the Apostle Paul in Second Corinthians 3: 18:
"But we all, with open face beholding as in a glass the glory of the
Lord, are changed into the same image from glory to glory, even as by
the Spirit of the Lord.”
The life of J. A. Copeland reflected the Spirit of Christ. Reflecting is
the inevitable result of beholding. It is a law of life that we become
like those we constantly look upon, mentally. Brother Copeland, with
"open face," that is, without veil of prejudice or unbelief, beheld the
glory of the Lord, and reflected His image, His moral glory.
This book was written to complete the "photography of God" in the life
of J. A. Copeland. The Holy Spirit "developed" Brother Copeland while he
lived. The story of that life, contained in this book, provides the
"time exposure" needed to "focus" the "image of Christ" reflected by
Brother Copeland's life. In this way, it is hoped, Christ's image may be
transferred to the sensitive film of the reader's mind, there to be
reflected again.
Brother Copeland was an humble man; he would not have approved of a book
about himself written to reflect his own glory. If, however, the story
can be told to bring honor and glory to Christ, and to inspire others to
live for Christ, it will be in harmony with the purposes for which
Brother Copeland lived. This is the author's purpose in writing this
book.
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James D. Copeland and Nancy (Womack) Copeland
About 1919 |
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Chapter II
Ancestry and Childhood |
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The westward movement of the pioneers in America followed a number of
distinct trails, or patterns. One of these patterns of movement was from
the Carolinas to Tennessee, to Southwest Arkansas, to East Texas and/or
West Texas. Of course there were many variations of this pattern, but a
study of genealogy reveals that a number of families followed this
pattern across the continent, across the years.
J. A. (Jady) Copeland's ancestors were among the families which moved
from South Carolina to middle Tennessee, to Southwest Arkansas. They
were from the cultural group generally described as the rugged, pioneer
farm folk who lived close to nature, working hard to make their living
from the soil. Strict moral and ethical standards were instilled in them
from childhood. Although a few individuals in each generation rejected
these values, most of Jady's ancestors lived, to the best of their
ability, according to the basic teachings of the Christian religion.
Understanding the kind of person Jady was requires that we consider his
background and ancestry, among other factors. We shall, therefore, go
back to his great-grandparents.
John Copeland was born in South Carolina in 1793, of Scotch-Irish
descent. On June 29, 1812, at the age of 19, he joined the South
Carolina Volunteers. He served as a private in the Company commanded by
Captain John McNeil in the Regiment commanded by Colonel Rutledge from
June 29, 1812, to October 30, 1812. He had volunteered for a six months
period of duty, but was honorably discharged early, at Hadrels Point, S.
C.
That same year, John married Sarah Massey, who was also born in South
Carolina, in 1789. They had been married about thirteen years and had
several children when they settled in Middle Tennessee, near
Fayetteville. In 1825, when the last state lands in Tennessee went on
sale for $1.25 per acre, John and Sarah Copeland homesteaded land in
Lincoln County, northeast of the county seat. In December 1850 and in
May 1855, John filed bounty land claims based upon his military service
during the War of 1812. He was awarded 80 acres in 1851 and another 80
acres in 1856. Later in his life, John Copeland owned 250 acres of land
in Moore County, which was originally a part of Lincoln County.
John and Sarah Copeland had ten children. Either three or four of them
were born in South Carolina, the others in Tennessee. Why did they leave
their home for a strange land? Why did so many people in those years
leave the Carolinas to face the uncertainties of the wilderness trail to
find places to build new homes?
The economy of South Carolina was declining during the decade from· 1820
to 1830. The new, fertile lands which were opening up in the Southwest
provided great quantities of cotton, which beat down the price of this
crop. The South had produced 160 million pounds of cotton in 1820; by
1830 the annual output had grown to 350 million pounds. The price
naturally went down. So, South Carolina saw her profits dwindle, since
she could not compete with the richness of the newly opened lands in
Alabama and Mississippi.
A major factor contributing to the increased westward movement was the
Land Law of 1820, which reduced the size of the tract of land that an
individual might buy to 80 acres, and fixed the price at $1.25 per acre.
For $100 a man could become the owner of his own farm.
By 1830, Middle Tennessee had become the most thickly populated area
west of the Allegheny Mountains and south of Kentucky. In Middle
Tennessee the hills were low, the valleys wide, and pioneer farm patches
could grow as fast as the forest could be cleared. Because of the
topography, Middle Tennessee was especially suited for the wheat boom
which came in the early 1800's. However, overproduction caused the
market to collapse, and Tennessee was never able to regain its early
lead as a wheat-growing region. Specialized farming developed in Middle
Tennessee. Later, many farmers began raising tobacco and fruit; others
turned to stock raising, dairying on the blue grass pasture lands, or to
truck farming.
What kind of country did John and Sarah find in Middle Tennessee? S. B.
Reese (* Corinth Arkansas And Its Kinfolks, Mimeograph) describes it
this way:
"It was hilly country, nearly all of it, covered with the finest poplar
timber ever grown in any place, standing thick all over the hill-sides,
from two to three feet through and as long as they grow anywhere. Also,
Chestnut and Beech trees grew up the valleys, sufficient to fatten their
hogs most every year. The land, while fresh, was rich with blue grass
growing everywhere, volunteer. Cold spring water ran out of most every
hollow. Most everybody built close to some spring. It was model stock
country in those days. No better corn or clover ever grew anywhere. It
was also fine for wheat, but up to this time the only mode of harvesting
wheat was the old reap hook, a one-hand machine shaped similar to a new
moon, which was slow and hard."
By the time John Copeland was 32 or 33 years old, they were settled in
Lincoln County, Tennessee. All told, they had ten children. The oldest
was Richard Todd Copeland, born in South Carolina, in 1815. The other
nine, not necessarily in order of age, were Sarah, George, Massey, John,
Nicholas, William, Elizabeth, Mary, and Matilda.
During the last 35 years of his life, John Copeland was a preacher for
the Primitive Baptist Church. He began preaching when he was about 37
years old, in Tennessee. Richard Todd married about that time.
Sarah died in 1857, when John was 64 years old. The next year he married
Ruth A. Watson. They had two children: Charles, born in 1859, and
Frances.
John died in Lincoln County, Tennessee, on February 24, 1865, and Ruth,
his second wife, died about 1871. John and Sarah (Massey) Copeland are
buried in a family cemetery on what is known as the old Smith place,
about ten miles from Lynchburg in Moore County about one mile from the
Oak Grove church building. The cemetery is probably located on the
Bounty Land Claim farm of John Copeland.
Richard Todd Copeland
Richard Todd Copeland, Jady's grandfather, was the oldest of ten
children born to John and Sarah (Massey) Copeland. Richard was born on
George Washington's birthday, February 22, 1815, in South Carolina. If
George Washington had not died 16 years earlier, he would have been 83
years old the day Richard was born. That same month, ten days before,
Abraham Lincoln had celebrated his sixth birthday.
At the time Richard was born, the War of 1812 was over; General Andrew
Jackson had won the battle of New Orleans a month earlier. The Star
Spangled Banner was less than a year old. James Madison was President of
the United States. At that time, there were no railroads, and no
telegraph, but Fulton's steamboat was being talked about everywhere. Eli
Whitney had invented his cotton gin twelve years before, so cotton was
fast becoming the most important crop in the South.
Richard Copeland spent his early childhood years in South Carolina; he
was approximately ten years old when his family moved westward to settle
in Lincoln County, Tennessee. About twenty-five years later Richard,
with his own family, moved west again to settle in Arkansas in 1849.
Thus, Richard's lifetime spanned three-quarters of a century and three
of the states in the Carolina-Tennessee-Arkansas-Texas migration trail
mentioned earlier.
Richard was twenty-one years old when he was enrolled on June 18, 1836,
in Lincoln County, Tennessee, by Captain Peter Tipps for a six-months
period with the Mounted Tennessee Volunteers. He served during the
Seminole Indian uprising, as a private in Captain Tipps' company of the
First Regiment, First Brigade of Volunteer Mounted Militia, commanded by
Colonel A. B. Bradford and Brigadier General R. Armstrong. His company
was ordered into the service of the United States by Governor Newton
Cannon from the first day of July, 1836, to the first day of January,
1837. Richard continued in actual service only two and one-half months;
he was furloughed home on or about the 17th day of September, 1836,
because of sickness. The following is a copy of the discharge
certificate in the Archives file on Richard T. Copeland:
TO ALL WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
Know ye, that Richard T. Copeland, the bearer hereof, was a private of
Captain Peter Tipps' Company of the First Regiment of General
Armstrong's Brigade of Mounted Tennessee Volunteers, during a late six
months' tour, in the United States service, and that, having served
faithfully, he is hereby HONORABLY discharged. .
New Orleans, 14th January 1837.
R.ARMSTRONG
Brigadier General
Tennessee Volunteers
When Richard was approximately 22 years old, in 1837, he married Sarah
McClure. She was the daughter of William McClure, who was a neighbor of
John Copeland. The McClures, too, were born in South Carolina, and were
probably among the group of migrants who came to Middle Tennessee when
John and Sarah Copeland came.
Sarah McClure was born January 1, 1817. Thus, she was about 20 years old
when she and Richard were married. They lived on a farm near their
parents. Their first child, Mary Jane, was born on October 21, 1838. Six
of their eleven children were born in Tennessee, before they moved to
Arkansas: Mary Jane, born October 21, 1838; Thomas M., born June 14,
1840; John, born December 12, 1841; Frances, born January 20, 1844;
Martha E., born April 5, 1846; and William Cullen, born February 19,
1848.
In 1849, Richard Copeland and his family joined several other families
who were moving to the southwest. Many families were leaving Middle
Tennessee to find new lands, especially in Texas. The military roads in
Arkansas had been built by the Federal government to move the Indians to
the West. The gold rush to California was on, and the route across
Arkansas was a good one for people from Georgia, Alabama, and
Mississippi. Southwest Arkansas was in the direct line between Tennessee
and Texas. The trail to Texas passed through or near the community where
the folk from Middle Tennessee settled. Old Washington, in Hempstead
County, was only twenty miles south of Corinth.
Two families, one Jones and the other Reese, left Middle Tennessee in
1845 and moved to Texas. They were not satisfied, and came back as far
as Pike County, Arkansas. They were soon settled, and wrote back to
their Tennessee relatives about Arkansas. S. B. Reese, in his Corinth
Arkansas And Its Kinfolks, writes about forty families from Middle
Tennessee who settled in "the Ridge Country around Corinth" between 1845
and 1850. He says that twenty families were related, Charles and Rebecca
(Norman) Jones and their descendants. The others, not relatives of the
Jones families, included: "Tyler Bacon, Richard Copeland, William C.
Hale, Issac Murray, Thomas McClure, John Tribble, William Hale, . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . Dixon, McFarlan, Bill Campbell, . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . Snody, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Shofner,
Charles Womack, two families of Reeses, John Bacon, two families of
Chesshirs, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Holt, and . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . Lokey."
Some of these folk came from Lincoln County, Tennessee, and some from
Bedford County, just north of Lincoln County. In those days, several
families always traveled together. If these folks did not know each
other as neighbors in Tennessee, they certainly got acquainted in the
wagon train on the long journey of approximately 500 miles.
Richard was thirty-four years old when they moved to Arkansas. Their
oldest child was ten or eleven years old at the time. After they were in
Arkansas, five more children were born: Sarah Angelina, born March 23,
1850; James David, born April 9, 1852; George W., born July 28, 1854;
Richard F., born November 19, 1856; and Andrew Jackson, born January 19,
1859.
They bought land one-half mile east of Corinth, and raised their family
there. On August 9, 1851, Richard put in his application for Bounty
Land, based upon his military service in 1836. A warrant was issued for
80 acres on May 12, 1852. He used that warrant at the United States Land
Office in Washington, Arkansas, on September 6, 1852, to locate the
land. On December 6, 1859, he obtained an adjoining 80 acres, and
another adjoining 40 acres on January 26, 1860. Tax records of 1877 show
that Richard Copeland owned one horse, eight cattle, two mules, six
sheep, and thirty hogs.
Their oldest child was married about 1852; their youngest was married in
1880, less than a week after Sarah, his mother, died. Richard was left
alone. He had lost the sight of one eye sometime earlier in his life.
Richard married Mrs. E. Gamer sometime after Sarah died.
The Children of Richard Todd and Sarah
(McClure) Copeland
Mary Jane was born October 21, 1838, in Lincoln County, Tennessee. She
married Charles Wesley (Charlie Buck) Jones, who was born in 1832. He
was left an orphan and was raised by his grandparents, Charles and
Rebecca (Norman) Jones. This old couple was considered the "trunk" of
the family tree described by S. B. Reese in Corinth And Its Kinfolks.
Mary Jane and Charlie Buck Jones settled two miles south of Corinth
and lived there about 30 years. Their 11 children were born there. Their
first child was born in October, 1853, a few days before Mary Jane was
fifteen years old, and their eleventh child was born in 1873. They had
one set of twins: George Washington and Thomas Jefferson Jones, born in
1855.
In about 1880, they sold out and moved to a farm about three miles north
of Nathan, east of Corinth. Charlie Buck died there in 1901, and Mary
Jane died in 1908; they are both buried at the Corinth Cemetery.
Thomas M. Copeland was born in Tennessee June 14, 1840. He was about
nine years old when the family moved to Pike County (Corinth) Arkansas.
He married Sarah Allen; their first child was born in 1862, during the
war. They had ten children; the youngest was born in 1882.
They moved to the Pleasant Home community in about 1880 and homesteaded
land there. Their second child, Wiley Newman (Pete) Copeland, married a
Henderson and lived in the same neighborhood with J. A. Copeland's folks
while Jady was growing up. Thomas M. Copeland died in February, 1886, at
the age of 45; he was one of many who died that winter of pneumonia.
John Copeland was born in Tennessee on December 12, 1841. He served with
the Confederate Army during the Civil War. He enrolled at Murfreesboro,
Arkansas, in 1862, and served in Company C, later in Company E, First
Arkansas Cavalry, under Colonel James F. Fagan. He was wounded slightly
in the arm. After the war, he married Margaret Pauline Jones, daughter
of Charles Brooks Jones and Jane (Chesshir) Jones. She was a
granddaughter of Charles and Rebecca Norman Jones. John and Margaret
were married in about 1866 and their first child was born in March,
1867. They had ten children, including a set of twins who both died when
they were about two years old.
In
the late summer or fall of 1875, John and Margaret, along with two of
her brothers and their families, moved to Huckaby, in Erath County,
Texas, south of Fort Worth.
Frances Copeland was born in Lincoln County, Tennessee, on January 20,
1844. Frankie, as she was called, became the second wife of William
Wiley Crawford, after his first wife (Margaret Floyd Crawford) died.
William W. Crawford and his first wife had four children: Anthony,
Charles, Mary, and David. His first wife died in February, 1863, and he
married Frankie Copeland less than a year later. William W. and Frankie
had seven children. The oldest was born in September, 1864, when Tony,
William's oldest child, was 16 years old; the youngest child was born
about 1878. They lived about two miles west of Corinth on the Centre
Point Road. S. B. Reese writes that "all these boys and girls were apt
to learn in school and had fairly good educations before they left
Corinth."
Martha E. Copeland was also born in Tennessee, on April 5, 1846. She was
next to the youngest when they made the long move from Lincoln County,
Tennessee, to Corinth, Arkansas. She married Anthony Crawford, oldest
son of William W. Crawford, whose second wife was Frankie Copeland,
Martha's sister. Tony and Martha had eight children; the oldest was born
in 1869. Tony Crawford was a blacksmith, and worked partners with R. C.
Shofner at Corinth for several years. In about 1885 he moved to a place
north of Nathan where he farmed, raised cattle, and still did some
blacksmithing, too. Martha died there in January, 1917, and Tony died in
January, 1922. They were both buried at Corinth. William Cullen Copeland
was the baby when Richard and Sarah Copeland moved from Tennessee to
Corinth with the caravan in 1849. He was born February 19, 1848. He was
already married to Mary Elizabeth Scott when he and
his
older brother, John Copeland, moved to Erath County, Texas, in 1875.
They had seven children; two, or maybe three, were born in Arkansas, the
others in Texas. Later, William moved his family farther west to
Loraine, Texas. Some of his descendants later settled near Lubbock,
Texas. The descendants of William Copeland and the descendants of John
Copeland had an annual family reunion at Lubbock, Texas, for many years,
and may still meet there each year.
Sarah Angelina Copeland, the first of Richard's children born in
Arkansas, was born March 23, 1850, at Corinth. She married Charles R.
Watson, and their first child was born in September, 1867, when Sarah
was 17 and Charles was 27 years old. They had fourteen children in 27
years; the youngest was born in August, 1894, when the mother was 44
years old.
The eighth child born to Richard T. and Sarah Copeland was James David,
the father of Jady. He was born at Corinth April 9, 1852. He married
Nancy Kansas Womack on June 2,1872, when he was 20 and she was 17 years
old. They had ten children; five of them were born after they left
Corinth to settle in the Pleasant Home community five miles northeast of
Murfreesboro—the same community where two of James David's brothers had
already settled.
James David died in 1923, at the age of 71; Nancy was 76 when she died
in 1931. More complete information is given on their family later in
this chapter, since their fifth child is the subject of this biography.
George W. Copeland was born at Corinth on July 28, 1854. He was married
in December, 1874, to Rebecca Ketura (Kitty) Jones, the daughter of
Samuel and Perlina (Chesshir) Jones, who came from Tennessee. George and
Kitty lived at Centre Point,(In the old days, Center Point was spelled
"Centre Point") where they had seven children. Their oldest, William
Austin, was born September 27, 1875. Kitty died in 1899, when she was 45
years old. George moved his family to Childress, in West Texas, about
1890. There he married again and raised a second family of six children.
He died at Childress in 1923, at the age of 69. His second wife, Lou
Harris Copeland, was born in 1882; she was 27 and one-half years younger
than George. She was still living at Childress in 1959 and corresponded
with this writer.
Richard F. Copeland was born November 26, 1856. He married Minerva E.
Campbell. They had seven children, the first born about 1875. This
family is the exception in the Copeland family as far as descendants are
concerned. Only one of the seven children has any descendants. David
married Frances Louise Dooley; they had three children. Butler married
at the age of 70, and Silvanus was never married. Of the others, three
of Richard and Minerva's children died at early ages, and one, Elize,
died at age 17. Minerva died when she was 42 years old, and Richard when
he was 59.
Richard and Minerva moved to the Pleasant Home community about 1880.
Andrew Jackson (Jack) Copeland was born January 19, 1859. He was married
to Tacy Jones on July 4, 1880. They had three children before he died at
age 24, on June 8, 1883. The only child who lived to be grown was Ethel,
who married Thomas Lee Mobley. They had six children. After Jack died,
Tacy married Walter C. Fricks, April 28, 1885. They lived at Saratoga,
where Ethel grew up and married Mr. Mobley.
The Church at Corinth
Richard T. Copeland was one of the charter members of the church at
Corinth, which was established, or organized, in 1850. Old Brother
Elijah Kelley from Antioch (Delight), about twenty-five miles to the
east of Corinth, came to preach for them and to help organize the
church. Davie D. Jones, Anthony Floyd, and Tyler Bacon, who had become
involved in the restoration of New Testament Christianity before they
left Tennessee, were the first elders of the Corinth church and held
that position until after the Civil War. About two years after the
church was organized, they built a good-sized frame church house across
the road from the cemetery. A man named John S. Robertson preached for
them for several years, before the Civil War. S. B. Reese estimated that
the church had about seventy-five members before the war.
For some time after the war the church made little progress. In about
1875, with a number of the younger men taking part, the church began to
grow. A large tabernacle was built behind the old church house across
the road from the cemetery. It was used for the big meetings that were
held each summer. For many years they had built brush arbors for their
annual meetings. The best preachers available were secured to hold their
meetings each year, usually a different man each year. Old Brother
Reese, in Corinth Arkansas And Its Kinfolks, wrote that he
thought the average membership for about fifteen or twenty years was
around four hundred, although many of the members lived "off a good ways
and didn't attend regularly." This period of time must have been from
about 1875 to 1890.
James David Copeland's Childhood and the
Civil War
When James David Copeland was born in April, 1852, the family was
settled on their place one-half mile east of Corinth. They had been
there about two and one-half years, so the farm was in pretty good
shape. Richard had by that time applied for 80 acres of Bounty Land, and
got title to it in September, after James D. was born.
James D. had seven older brothers and sisters and three younger
brothers. He was ahnost seven years old when Andrew Jackson, his
youngest brother, was born. In such a large family, which was not
unusual in those days, the children had companions, even if they lived
some distance from their nearest neighbors. There was also plenty of
work for them to do. They grew up knowing the joy of play and the
discipline of hard work. This pattern of home life had not changed when
Jady was growing up.
On May 6, 1861, when James D. was nine years old, the Arkansas
convention voted 69 to 1 to secede from the union. The secession
convention also drew up a new constitution to replace the one of 1836.
Arkansas occupied an important position early in the War because of the
importance of the Mississippi River and the struggle for Missouri and
the Western frontier. The crops throughout Arkansas were generally poor
in 1862, but those in 1863 were good. There were shortages, but the
people of Arkansas generally suffered no hardships until 1864-1865. The
people of North Arkansas suffered most from the War because of raids,
divided loyalties, and bandit activities of the "bushwhackers" and
"jayhawkers." South Arkansas did not become a real battleground until
1864.
Little Rock fell to Union forces commanded by General Frederick Steele
on September 10, 1863. After that, the people around Corinth—and in all
of South Arkansas—felt the effects of the War more directly. The
Confederate Government of Arkansas moved to Washington, in Hempstead
County, and remained there until the end of the War. Washington was
about 20 miles south of Corinth, near Hope. During that time the
population of Washington mushroomed to as many as 40,000 people.
The Washington Telegraph of Washington, Arkansas, edited by John
R. Eakin, was one of the few newspapers of the Confederate west to
continue publication throughout the War.
All three of James David's older brothers were among the 50,000
Confederate troops furnished by Arkansas. John was the only one of the
three to be wounded; he received a slight wound in the arm.
In
the spring of 1864, there was much excitement and talk about the Union
Army's expedition into south Arkansas. The Camden expedition was the
last of the major fighting in Arkansas. The Federal troops captured
Camden, about 65 miles southeast of Corinth, but lost engagements at
Poison Springs, near Chidester, and Marks' Mills. They then retreated to
Little Rock. During the final year of the War, only Southwest Arkansas
remained firmly under Confederate control. The other parts of Arkansas
were under Union control.
During the last year of the War, Arkansas suffered from critical
shortages of supplies. Coffee, tea, and sugar were not to be had; flour
and salt were very scarce. Acorns were boiled to make "coffee," salt was
scraped from the packed floors of old smokehouses, and homemade remedies
were used for medicine—made from leaves and herbs. The main foods were
cornbread and sweet potatoes.
The War finally was ended on James David's thirteenth birthday, with
Lee's surrender at Appomattox, on April 9, 1865.
Marriage and the Family of James D. Copeland
James David was 20 and Nancy was 17 when they were married on June
2,1872. Nancy was the daughter of Wade H. Womack, who was born in
Bedford County, Tennessee. Her father was wounded during the Civil War
while serving as a Confederate soldier, and died of blood poisoning.
Nancy's mother was a McFarland, another family that came from Middle
Tennessee. Her grandfather Womack was Michael Womack, the man who,
according to tradition, fired the fatal shot that killed the British
General Packenham in the Battle of New Orleans in January, 1815. He was
a millwright by occupation.
Nancy had three brothers: Thomas Michael, born in 1851; John Benjamin,
born in 1854; and David Arthur, born in 1857. Nancy was born May 17,
1855.
James David and Nancy settled on a farm near his father. Their first
five children were born at Corinth: Lou Ella (or Luella, as her name is
listed in the 1880 census) was born March 1, 1873. Harrison was born
November 13, 1874, Charlie on December 31, 1876, Felix, April 3, 1879,
and Jady, April 23, 1881.
All through the years families were leaving Corinth. John Copeland, with
several other families, moved to Erath County, Texas, as early as 1875.
Later, George Copeland moved to West Texas. Thomas and Richard F., James
David's oldest and youngest brothers, moved to a community north of
Murfreesboro before 1880. Land was still open for homesteading in that
area. A number of other Corinth families, including Nancy's brothers,
moved there. So, in the winter of 1881-82, James David and Nancy
Copeland moved, when Jady was less than one year old. They homesteaded
land which was about six miles
northeast of Murfreesboro, and about three miles west of Pike
City and two miles from the place where the Pleasant Home church house
was built later. The Pike City road passed across the south part of the
homestead.
Making a home on a homestead was a tremendous undertaking. The land was
covered with timber of all kinds—pine and hardwood. A site had to be
selected for the house. This selection involved a number of different
considerations, such as location in reference to roads—if there were any
roads-water drainage, places for barns, smokehouse, and other
"out-buildings." The location of a water supply for family and livestock
was another factor which was important to the family. A well had to be
dug if a spring of water was not nearby. The underbrush had to be
cleared away before they could even begin. The house was built of logs
from nearby timber. Trees of the proper size had to be chosen, cut and
"snaked" to the house site. They had to be trimmed, squared with an axe
or froe, and notched. If a sawmill was anywhere near, logs had to be
hauled to the mill, and cut into rough boards for the rafters, floors,
doors, windows, porches and for building furnishings.
The roof was made of oak shingles. A large oak tree with a straight
trunk was selected for shingles. From the trunk were cut blocks the
length of the shingles, approximately 20 to 24 inches. The blocks were
then split so that shingles could be split off the smaller block. The
finished shingle was approximately one-half to one inch thick, about six
or eight inches wide, and 20 to 24 inches long, depending upon the
length of the original block cut from the trunk of the oak tree.
The chimney was made by setting up four tall posts at the end of the
house. The posts were connected with "rounds" or small sticks about six
inches apart, on all four sides of the posts. "Cats" made of mud and
straw were then stacked in and around the "rounds" or crosspieces,
forming a solid wall of mud held together by straw and sticks. As the
months and years went by, the fire inside hardened the mud into a
chimney which was hard as brick. From time to time the outside had to be
patched with new "cats," depending on the type of clay or mud used.
Modern city folk find it difficult, if not impossible, to imagine what
life was like for people like James David and Nancy as they built their
home in the woods. They were not alone, however. Neighbors, many of them
relatives, were nearby, and helped them in their clearing the land and
building the house and barns. Families "swapped" work and very seldom
was any money involved in "hiring" anyone to help do any of the work
required.
In those days, sharing of work was also a social occasion. When a man
was ready to get rid of the timber he had "deadened" the year before,
they had a "logrolling." Neighbors from miles around would come,
bringing the whole family, their dogs, their horses or mules, their
tools and equipment. They also brought food, of course. The ladies would
visit as they prepared the meals. The men cut the timber, "snaked" and
rolled the logs together in huge piles to be burned.
In the early days, thousands of acres of the best timber ever grown were
burned. Lumber was not a marketable product. Every farmer had more
timber than he wanted or needed, and there was no way to change the logs
into lumber, and no way to transport it to other places.
On one occasion when James David Copeland was clearing land and burning
huge logs from virgin pine timber, a "visionary" who stopped by said,
"The time will come when a 'tree like that will be worth $5.00."
Everybody laughed. Today such a tree would probably produce a thousand
board feet of lumber, which would be worth at least $100. But that day
they laughed at the idea that a tree would ever be worth any money.
Every family had a smoke house where they kept their meat, dry beans,
dry peas, dried fruits, etc. There was no means of canning or freezing
foods to preserve them.
In developing a place, the site for an orchard was very important. They
always had a few peach trees, apple trees, and plum trees. Some families
had grape vines, too. Of course, wild grapes, or muscadines, were always
available in the woods. The fruit from the peach and apple trees was
split and dried on top of the smoke house or bam, or the lean-to
kitchen. The fruit was spread out on a sheet on top of the sheds to dry
in the sun. It took several days for it to dry. The children were
assigned the task of bringing the fruit in quickly if rain came. Dried
fruit made the best fried pies or cobbler pies ever eaten.
Jellies or preserves were also made, either from the fresh fruit or from
the dried fruit later, in the winter. But that took sugar.
After two or three years James David and Nancy had the place in good
shape. However, much of the land was very rocky and did not make the
best farm land.
In the fall of 1888 James David and Nancy decided that the older
children should have the opportunity to .attend a better school than
that available in the Pleasant Home community. Five of their seven
children were school age: Lou Ella, the oldest, was 15, and Jady was
seven.
After crops were gathered that fall, they moved to Nashville, which was
only five miles south of Corinth. They lived there for that school term
only, before moving again to the homestead place at Pleasant Home. Their
eighth child, Zeta, was born while they were at Nashville. They moved
back from Nashville in time to make a crop on the homestead place in
1889. That same year they bought 160 acres of land about one and
one-half mile south of the homestead, about one-half mile from the new
Pleasant Home church house. Some of the land on that place had been
cultivated since before the Civil War. One house on the place had been
burned down during the Civil War.
James David and the older boys first built a barn to store the crop made
on the homestead place. They then began building a small house of rough
lumber. The family moved into the new house before it was completely
finished—as soon as it could be lived in. The chimney was being built. A
hole had been dug in the yard to get clay to make the "cats" for the
chimney. They had not dug a well yet, but there was a spring of water
about 200 yards from the new house.
One day while James David was at Murfreesboro, the family was cleaning
up around the unfinished house and burning trash. About dark they
discovered that the house was on fire! The whole family frantically
rushed to the spring with buckets, pans, or any container available.
They finally formed a water-line and soon had the fire put out. After
the fire was out, one of the smaller children fell into a hole of water
on the other side of the house. The hole which had been dug in making
the chimney was filled with rainwater from a recent rain. There had been
enough water, within a few yards, to put out a dozen fires.
Later they built a new house about a half mile from the Pleasant Home
church building. The family worked on the new house for more than a
year. James David had rough lumber sawed at the mill in the same
community. He hand-planed the lumber for finishing the walls and
ceilings inside. They moved into the new house sometime between the time
Alvin was born in December, 1890, and the birth of Bessie in February,
1894. That house was to be the home of James David and Nancy until his
death in 1923.
Jady's oldest sister, Lou Ella, was married in 1895 to George Kelley.
They had one son, born in December, 1895. Lou Ella died on February 11,
1896, and the baby died April 16 that same year. This happened when Jady
was about 15 years old.
William Harrison Copeland was born at Corinth, November 13, 1874. He
married Lula Hare on June 16, 1904. They had six children: Vera, Aline,
James Fridell, William Forest, Cecil Clarence, and Harrison Paul. They
lived at Pike City, at Delight, and in later years at Texarkana. Lula
died in 1951 and Harrison died in 1966.
Charles Milton Copeland was born on the last day of December, 1876, at
Corinth. On Christmas Eve, 1896, he was married to Lillie Ann Roberts.
They had five children: Bryan, Morton Stanley, Lou Ella, Mary Alice, and
Herman.
Charlie was a school teacher for many years. He taught at Hickory
Plains, Macedonia, Antoine, Pleasant Home, Pike City, and perhaps other
places. In 1918 he moved to Little Rock and there worked for the U. S.
Postal Service until his retirement. He was an elder in the Central
church in Little Rock for many years. Lillie died August 26, 1960, at
Little Rock; less than a year later Charlie died on May 25, 1961.
Felix Errett Copeland was born April 3, 1879, at Corinth. His first
marriage was to Ludie Henderson. Homer, Felix's only son, was born
August 15, 1900, and Ludie died less than three weeks later, on
September 2, 1900. Felix's second wife, Cora Wingfield, died in 1920.
Later he married a third time, this time to Laura Shipp. Felix died in
1958.
Jairus Augustus (Jady) Copeland was born at Corinth, also, on April 23,
1881. He was married to Georgia Watkins on December 21, 1898, when he
was almost 18 years old and Georgia was almost 17. They had thirteen
children; all but one lived to be grown. The names and birthdates of
their children can be found in the Appendix, pages 189-192, in a
"Chronology of Some of the Important Events in the Life of J. A.
Copeland."
Lemuel Walters Copeland was born on September 20, 1883. In September,
1901 he was married to Mollie Brock. They had nine children: Aubrey
Basil, who died as an infant; Austin Clement; Guy Nelson; Levadell;
Ralph; Lillie Cortelle; Champ Clark; Elton Woodrow, who died in a prison
camp in World War I; and Ida Mae. "Lem," as he was called, died of
cancer December 10, 1930.
Cora Zenobia (Nobia) Copeland was born March 10, 1886. She married
Curtis Hughes and they had five children: Carrie, Doyle, Erma, Helen,
and Libbie. Nobia died at Delight in 1929 at the age of 43. Mr. Hughes
later married Alice Burnham, the widow of Archie Burnham.
Zeta Arthur Copeland was born October 11, 1888, at Nashville. He married
Cassie Chapel in 1908; they had three children: Eunice, Opal, and
Harold. Cassie and Zeta were divorced in 1936, and Zeta was married to
Coy Riddle in December, 1944. Zeta died in 1956.
Alvin Cummings Copeland was born December 9, 1890. He was married in
1911 to Lizzie Alexander. They had two sons: Hobart William and Clovis.
Alvin died September 14, 1974, some years after Lizzie died.
Bessie Mae Copeland was born February 19, 1894. In 1913 she married
Leonard Stark, and they had one daughter, Jeanette. Leonard died in
November, 1930. Bessie later married T. W. Croom; he died January 22,
1964. Bessie lives in New Mexico.
In addition to the ten children above, James David and Nancy reared one
grandson, Homer Copeland, Felix's only child. Homer's mother died when
he was two weeks old. He lived with his grandparents until he was
married to Sallie House January 29, 1920.
James David Copeland was a well-built man, with large frame, and was
relatively thin of stature. His eyes were blue, his complexion light, or
rudy, and he had dark hair in his younger years. In his mature years he
wore a moustache and chin whiskers; when he was 55 years old in 1908, he
shaved his chin whiskers. He kept his moustache, although in his later
years he kept it clipped very short. His hair became thinner and gray in
his later years.
"Uncle Jim," as the younger generation called him, was one of the
faithful leaders of the church at Pleasant Home for many years. Many of
the people who settled in the Hickory Plains and Pleasant Home
communities moved there from Corinth. These included, among others, the
families of the Copelands, the Watsons, the Hughes, the Womacks, and the
Houses. The church at Corinth was strong at that time, and a number of
young men were well-grounded in the teachings of the Bible. For several
years they worked to build interest in the church in the new community.
Each summer meetings were conducted under brush arbors. Throughout the
year they met for worship in the homes of the members.
For some time they met in an abandoned "squatters" shack near the spot
where the church house was built later. Split-log seats were placed in
the shack for the people to sit on. The ground was the floor, and hogs
had used the shack for a home in bad weather. On one occasion, while
Brother J. R. Jones was preaching, the dogs outside began chasing some
hogs. The hogs naturally ran for their shelter. In they came, followed
by the barking dogs! The people scattered. Brother Jones, who was easily
upset anyway, gave up; he did not finish his sermon, but walked outside,
murmuring that if they could not keep the hogs out of the house, he
would not preach.
Mr. Jim Watson operated a sawmill that was located a few hundred yards
from the place where the church house was built. The first church house
was built in about 1890 from rough lumber from that mill.
James D. Copeland was a natural leader. Loving the church, he was
willing to assume the responsibilities required of those who lead. A
devout man, he read and studied the Bible unceasingly, and read the
Gospel Advocate regularly. Many mornings when other members of the
family got up, they found him reading the Bible or the Gospel
Advocate by lamplight. Another common scene, in the summertime, was
Uncle Jim resting at noon on a "pallet" in the open hallway, reading his
Bible.
Singing and teaching others to sing was a source of great pleasure to
Uncle Jim. He was called on to teach singing schools in surrounding
communities, as well as at Pleasant Home. He delighted to see the
youngsters of each generation developing their ability to sing and enjoy
singing. For him, this was an extremely important part of the work of
the church. For many years, the church at Pleasant Home has been known
as a singing church. Many, many people have come to accept the truth
because of the influence of sacred music. Through the years, several
outstanding singers and song leaders have come from the Pleasant Home
community. Perhaps the best known of these is Earl Womack, who is a
nephew of Uncle Jim Copeland. He has taught singing schools far and
wide, and has had several songs published.
James David Copeland died December 27, 1923, the day Langley House was
30 years old. Ruth and Langley were living with her grandparents at the
time. Grandpa Jim had been away from home about two weeks, visiting his
youngest daughter, Bessie, and her husband, at Booneville. He had
stopped at Little Rock a few days to visit
his sons who lived
there. His return trip was by train, stopping overnight at Delight,
because the train did not go on to Pike City the same day. He spent the
night with Grady Alexander, who lived on the Strawberry road, three
miles out of Delight. The next morning he went back to Delight and
caught the train to Pike City. Since no one knew for sure when he was
coming home, no one met him at Pike City. He rode on a lumber wagon with
Quincey Roberts, arriving, very sick, in the later afternoon. No one was
at home when he got there, so he undressed and went to bed, never to get
up again.
Grandpa Jim was concerned about the church to the very end. Brother Lee
Starnes was holding a meeting at Pleasant Home during Christmas week.
Each night Grandpa Jim would ask about the meeting. Although he was
hardly conscious, he was pleased to hear that Gilbert was baptized on
Christmas Eve.
After the meeting had ended, James D. Copeland died on Thursday
afternoon, two days after Christmas Day. All of the folks were there
when he died.
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J. A. Copeland's boyhood home and family. House was built by
James D. Copeland about 1890. Back row, left to right: George
Kelley, Lemuel Copeland, James D. Copeland, Nancy Copeland,
Nobia Copeland, Harrison Copeland, Charlie Copeland, Felix
Copeland, J. A. Copeland; Front row: Bessie, Zeta, and Alvin
Copeland. |
While he was still a child, Jairus Augustus Copeland was given the
nickname "Jady." Throughout his lifetime he was known by "Jady" by his
closest friends and the members of the family.
As a youngster, Jady was quiet and reserved. He was less "rowdy" than
most children, with a naturally quiet disposition. However, he was
energetic and enjoyed fun and games such as "tag" and ball, which
required running. He was a pretty good ball player; he was good at
catching and throwing, but was not as fast on foot as some boys.
By nature, it seems, Jady was of a more calm and serious disposition. In
such a large family, there were the usual quarrels among brothers and
sisters. However, Jady avoided the conflict situations most of the time.
That is not to say that he was weak, or that he allowed his brothers or
sisters to mistreat him. His manner and disposition was such that he was
able to "get along" with them without much conflict.
At school, he was eager to learn; being a bright boy with a keen mind,
he was able to keep up in his books with boys and girls who were older
than he was. Jady enjoyed learning, and liked history, especially.
Jady always took religion seriously, even as a child. He attended
worship services regularly, even when he had spent Saturday night with
friends, and had to walk two miles alone to the church building, leaving
his friends playing.
As a boy, Jady played with and visited the Watkins brothers, who were
neighbors. In the early years, the Watkins family did not attend when
the Pleasant Home church met for worship every Sunday afternoon. On one
occasion, at least, Clara (Watkins) Delaney recalled seeing Jady leave
to go to church. They had been having great fun that morning sliding
down a steep hill on a board slide. After lunch, they returned to the
hill and were enjoying Sunday afternoon at the same hill. When the time
came, Jady left his friends and the fun, to walk by himself to the
Pleasant Home church building two miles away. He was ten or eleven years
old at that time.
Jady's attitude was demonstrated on another occasion when the young
people were having a singing at Pleasant Home. Some of the older boys
became a little too loud and boisterous. Jady reminded Harrison, who was
six years older than Jady, that they should not act that way "in the
Lord's house."
No doubt Jady was greatly influenced by his devout father. James D.
Copeland was an unusually religious man; such a father had a tremendous
influence upon the serious-minded, sensitive boy. Jady was baptized in
1895 when he was 14 years old by Brother W. N. Thompson.
Jady was, as everyone is, the product of the combined influences of his
heredity, his environment, and his own character. There are two aspects
of character—one determined by the interaction of heredity and
environment, the other related to the free will of the individual. One
aspect of "character" is the natural disposition of the person, which
determines to a great extent how one responds to his environment. Two
brothers respond differently to the same environment because of the
differences in their natural dispositions.
There is, however, another aspect of "character" which is the function
of reason and free will. One's life is determined to a great extent by
the quality of thoughts entertained, by the decisions and choices made.
This is one of the basic principles taught by Jesus. In a real sense
one's character is the accumulation of the thoughts entertained, the
choices made, and the values accepted.
Jady's character, therefore, was the result of his conscious
choice, from childhood, to live a life in harmony with God's will. |
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J. A. and Georgia (Watkins) Copeland
Wedding Picture
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Chapter
III
Marriage and Early Years
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Georgia Watkins, who became Jady's bride, was the first of her parents'
children born in Arkansas. Wilson C. and Emma (Hardie) Watkins had moved
to Corinth from Lumpkin, Georgia, in the fall of 1880. Emma's younger
brother, Harmon Hardie, and her mother had moved to Arkansas earlier. In
fact, Emma's mother died in Arkansas before she and Wilson moved to
Arkansas.
Wilson C. Watkins and Pierce Hughes, his half-brother, drove the wagons
from Georgia, but the women and children were sent on the train. After
one year at Corinth, Wilson C. and Emma Watkins homesteaded land about
four miles north of Murfreesboro. Georgia was born there January 20,
1882, the sixth of eight children. She grew up in the same community
where Jady lived and grew up.
Wilson C. Watkins was a school teacher. He helped build the first school
house at Hickory Plains and was the first teacher. He died in January,
1886, of pneumonia, at the age of 34, when Georgia was four years old.
Jady and Georgia were sweethearts all their lives. They were neighbors
and went to school together at Hickory Plains, the school Georgia's
father helped build. Georgia said she could not remember when she did
not know Jady.
Since Georgia's mother was a widow, Jady's father and other neighbors
helped the family from time to time. When the Copelands made sorghum
molasses, for example, Jady's father would share with the Watkins family
by taking them a barrel of molasses. It was quite natural, therefore,
that Jady and Georgia knew each other from early childhood.
One of Georgia's earliest memories of their friendship was an event
which happened during her second or third year in school. On a cold,
winter day at school, she and a number of other students were standing
before the fire in the huge fireplace at the end of the school room.
Jady shyly approached her and handed her a hand-made
"Valentine" with a message written inside. Clara, Georgia's younger
sister, recalled the following incident from a later time.
When Clara was about 13 and Georgia 15 years old, the two girls were
walking to a neighbor's house to borrow some quilting frames. Clara
noticed that Georgia seemed worried or preoccupied with something. They
talked, and Georgia confided in Clara. Jady was bad sick at the time,
and Georgia was concerned about him.
Jady and Georgia were married in the afternoon of Wednesday, December
21, 1898, at her mother's home. The ceremony was performed by Mr. Buck
Thomas, Justice of the Peace and a Baptist preacher. They had an unusual
audience. In addition to members of both families, all the students in
the Hickory Plains school were present. Jady's older brother, Charlie,
was the teacher. He had been married two years before on December 24,
1896. Charlie, of course, wanted to attend the wedding, so he walked
with his students, large and small, to the home where the ceremony was
to take place.
All of Jady's older brothers were there, as well as the younger ones who
were students. In later years, Georgia recalled the manner of Jady's
older brothers during the ceremony. They showed reverence for the solemn
occasion, which Georgia appreciated and kept as a fond memory. It was a
happy time, too. Georgia's mother prepared a special supper that night.
The newlyweds spent that night with Georgia's folks, and went to the
Copelands the next day. On Friday or Saturday, they went in a wagon to
Murfreesboro to visit Georgia's Aunt Laura (Hardie) Kelley.
It was a joyous Christmas season. Georgia's older sister had a baby born
on Christmas day. Jady and Georgia visited with their numerous relatives
and enjoyed the many expressions of congratulations from well-wishers.
Christmas day was on Sunday after their wedding on Wednesday.
Most of the Christmas gifts they received were items needed for setting
up housekeeping. In those days when a young couple was married, friends
and relatives shared with the newlyweds everything from goose feathers
to be used in making pillows to dried fruit put up during the previous
summer.
Although some older members of the community commented on how young Jady
and Georgia were, they received encouragement from everyone. Within a
month Georgia would be seventeen and Jady's eighteenth birthday was only
four months away. What was more important than age, however, was the
strength of character and purpose of the young couple. Both were known
as dependable and hard working youngsters, with the qualities required
for success. No one doubted that Jady and Georgia were ready to assume
the responsibilities involved in making a home.
During the early part of January, 1899, they moved their things to a
house on the Burleson place, four miles east of Murfreesboro. The place,
later known as the Stewart place, was about two miles from Pleasant
Home, in the Brocktown community, on the Delight road.
They raised their first crop there that spring and summer. During that
summer Georgia had a spell of slow fever which lasted most of the
summer. She was not able to help with the work on the farm. In fact, she
needed help with her house work. Jady's parents persuaded them to come
live with them that summer. Jady could not do the work in the field and
take care of Georgia, too, his mother insisted.
In the fall they moved into the small house on Georgia's mother's place.
Her father had built a small rent house on the homestead before he died.
Through the years that house had been a blessing to Georgia's mother;
the rent provided very little income, but they always had close
neighbors.
Georgia was glad to move closer to her mother. It was especially
important at that time, since Jady and Georgia's first child was to be
born soon. On Monday, December 18, 1899, one month before Georgia was 18
years old, a beautiful baby girl was born. They named her Ruth Kansas:
Ruth from the Bible character by that name and Kansas from Jady's
mother, Nancy Kansas Womack. She was the first child in what was to be
an extraordinary family.
During the next twenty-three years, twelve other children were born. All
were strong and healthy children who inherited better-than-average
physical and mental characteristics. For a period of three years, there
were thirteen children living at the same time. After Clayton's tragic
death in 1925, twelve of the thirteen survived for forty-six years. The
youngest child was 48 years old when Willie died of cancer in 1971.
Thus, in many ways, the family of Jady and Georgia Copeland was an
extraordinary family!
The Christmas season that year was a busy time. The young couple had
been married one year, and already had the responsibility of a new baby.
Although Ruth was not the first grandchild on either the Watkins or
Copeland side, the birth of a new baby was always a most important event
in both families. Jady and Georgia had plenty of help. The many friends
and relatives on both sides provided an abundance of free advice on how
to raise children. It was good to know that their families were near and
could be depended on if they were needed.
The new century was born exactly two weeks after the birth of Ruth. Jady
and Georgia were young and looked to the future with hope and
anticipation. Life was pretty much a local matter in those days. Of
course, they heard about the war with Spain and Teddy Roosevelt, but
travel and communication were so slow that national news reached Pike
County, Arkansas, some time after such events had happened.
Besides, the people of the Pleasant Home community were occupied with
their own work, plans, problems, and dreams. Life was determined more by
one's own plans and efforts than circumstances of state or national
events.
Jady and Georgia, therefore, were concerned with making a home, earning
a livelihood, and rearing their children. They accepted the
responsibility of helping Ruth to grow up to honor her namesake in the
Bible. From the beginning, their goal was to bring up their children "in
the nurture and admonition of the Lord." Years later Jady had Georgia
embroider on a friendship quilt the scripture: "I have no greater joy
than to hear that my children walk in truth."
Monday, January 1, 1900, was the first day of the new century and year.
On that day Jady and Georgia moved their household to Jady's father's
old homestead place, which they had decided to buy. They planned to farm
the cleared land and cut the timber from the wooded area. There was
still a considerable amount of virgin pine timber on the place.
Felix, Jady's brother, helped him that winter. They cut the logs to be
hauled to the big sawmill which had been built at Pike City a few years
earlier. During those years, many young men who farmed during the spring
and summer months made extra money during the winter by working in the
timber or at sawmills. Jady did that during several winters.
At that time Pike City was a thriving sawmill town. The virgin timber
for miles around was being cut and hauled by wagon to Pike City to be
cut into lumber. Both horses and oxen were used to haul the logs to
mill. Jady and Georgia raised only one crop on the old homestead place.
They gave up the idea of buying the place. The land was rocky and
difficult to farm, and it was some distance from the Pleasant Home
church house. After crops were gathered that fall (1900), Jady moved his
little family to Billstown, a small community about eleven miles away.
Billstown is located in the extreme southern part of Pike County, near
the Little Missouri River. It is about five miles southwest of Delight.
The rich river-bottom land near Billstown was being cleared for farming.
Mr. Daniel Watson was one of the land owners who was having land
cleared. His brother, Sloman Watson, had married Georgia's older sister,
Addie Lee. Sloman and Addie Lee were married when Georgia was only ten
years old, and had lived near the Watkins family. It was Sloman Watson
who encouraged Jady to move to Billstown to work for Sloman's brother,
Daniel Watson. Georgia's mother and her two youngest children, Clara and
Wilson, moved to Bills, also. At that time Clara was 17 and Wilson was
15 years old.
The move to Billstown was an important one because of the influence Mr.
Daniel Watson had on Jady. A small group of Christians had begun meeting
for worship at Billstown, although they had no church building. Mr.
Watson encouraged Jady and the other young men to take an active part in
the worship by .leading singing, reading from the Bible, and making
comments on the scriptures they read.
Mr. Watson noticed that Jady had some natural ability in expressing
himself in front of the group. He was already a serious student of the
Bible and had been all his life. And, as a student at the old Hickory
Plains school, Jady had been recognized as one of the more capable
speakers. Mr. Watson, therefore, recognized in Jady the potential
qualities needed for the making of a gospel preacher. Jady's first
encouragement to develop his talents to become a preacher carne from old
Brother "Dan'l" Watson.
Jady and Georgia lived at Billstown almost a year. After working all
winter clearing land, Jady decided to stay and plant a crop in the
spring. He rented some of that rich, river-bottom land from Mr. Watson
and planted.
It was a long, hot summer, especially for Georgia, who was to have
another baby before cold weather carne. As the time drew closer, both
Jady and Georgia felt anxious to be near their folks at Pleasant Horne.
As soon as the crops were "laid by" they moved back home—to a house on
the old Chesshir place, which was only one-half mile north of Jady's
parents' place.
They had just enough time to move and get settled into their new home
when, on Saturday, August 10, 1901, another baby girl was born to
Georgia and Jady. She was named Elsie Clara. Ruth, their oldest child,
was almost twenty months old. Four months earlier, while they lived at
Billstown, Jady had celebrated his twentieth birth date, and Georgia was
nineteen years old at this time.
Again, they knew the wonderful feeling of being near their folks at a
time of need. All of the brothers and sisters on both sides of the
family, as well as Jady's parents and Georgia's mother, were eager to
help out at such times.
Although Jady was only 20 years old, he was maturing rapidly. He had
always been a hard worker and serious about responsibility. Before they
moved back home from Billstown, Jady had learned of some land which was
for sale. It was one-quarter mile west of the Pleasant Home church
house, on the road which connected with the Murfreesboro road at Brock
Springs.
They decided to buy the land and build a house on it. During the winter
of 1901-1902, Jady cut logs and worked at other jobs as he could. Every
spare hour he had was spent at the "new place." Not only did he have to
build a house, but some of the land had to be cleared for farming. He
also dug a well, planted a small orchard behind the house, and built a
smokehouse.
Jady and Georgia looked forward to having their own place. It was
located about one-quarter mile from the church house, and more than a
mile from Jady's parents' place. He worked hard that winter to get the
place ready to move into by spring. Although the house was not
completely finished inside, they moved in the early spring, 1902.
However, Jady did not have enough land cleared and ready for farming, so
he farmed land on his father's place that year.
During the spring and summer of 1902 Georgia was very busy taking care
of two children and helping Jady with the garden. They continued to work
on the house and improve the place. Ruth was almost three years old when
Elsie reached her first birthday in August that year.
During that time Ab Henderson operated a sawmill at old Arp, near the
Pike City road, about a mile from James David Copeland's place. There
was a Post Office at Arp in those days. Jady worked at the sawmill at
various times, especially during the winter of 1902-1903. The mill had
been in operation since 1896 or even earlier. Georgia recalled that
Sloman Watson, her older sister's husband, had worked at the mill when
Clifton was a baby. Clifton was Sloman and Addie Lee's second oldest
child, born in February, 1896. Georgia also recalled that Jady had
worked at the mill during the winter they were married, in 1898-1899.
Jady raised a crop on his father's land again in 1903. They lived in
Charlie's house that spring and summer. It was only a quarter-mile from
the James D. Copeland place. Charlie, another of Jady's older brothers,
had bought another home place. He was a school teacher and was away
teaching at that time.
Another baby was to be born soon, and Georgia and Jady wanted to be
closer to his parents while the baby was little. Another practical
reason they lived in Charlie's house those few months was that it was
close to the land Jady was farming.
On Wednesday, April 29, 1903, another baby was born. They named her
Willie Nobia; she was named for Jady's sister, Nobia. The oldest child,
Ruth, was a few months past three years of age when Willie was born, and
Elsie was not quite two years old.
After the crops were "laid by," and when the baby was about three months
old, Jady moved his family back to their "new" place.
It may seem strange to some that Jady and Georgia moved so often.
In those days it was not
out of the ordinary, especially for a young couple. They had never been
accustomed to the many luxuries found in homes today. And, in the case
of Jady and Georgia, they were not "possessed by their possessions," as
so many people today seem to be. They did not consider it any sacrifice,
therefore, to move to another house which was only a mile away, for only
a period of five or six months.
That fall, after the crops were gathered, Jady once again looked for
work in the logging business. This time he found that a big timber
operation was in progress in the mountain country southwest of Kirby. A
railroad had been built to haul the logs out of the hills. It was so far
back in the woods that the men lived in a camp. Each family built their
own shack to live in. There was a company store, the "commissary," where
they bought supplies.
Jady made arrangements to get the lumber from the company to build a
two-room house. He moved his family to the "Pea Vine Camps," as it was
called, for the winter of 1903-1904. It was quite a thrill for the
children to see Jady coming home in the afternoon on the "Dinky" train,
after working in the woods all day.
Since he was 17 years old, Jady had worked in the timber almost every
winter. From the beginning there had been unpleasant consequences, but
he had not realized that there was any connection between his frequent
illnesses and the timber itself. During the spring and summer of 1904,
however, he became very sick. The doctor, after reviewing Jady's history
of the past five or six years, concluded that Jady was allergic to the
turpentine in the pine timber. He advised Jady that he should stay out
of the pine timber—that he should not cut logs any more.
Since 1901 at Billstown, Jady had taken an active part in the worship
services when called upon to do so. He had led in prayer, had led
singing, and helped with the communion service from time to time.
Everyone said he did an unusually good job when he was asked to read
from the scriptures and make a few comments after his reading. In those
days they had preaching once each month, usually. On the other Sundays,
when they did not have preaching, someone would read from the Bible.
Several of Jady's friends and relatives had, from time to time,
suggested that he had the ability to become a preacher. After the doctor
told Jady that he should not work in the log woods any more, such advice
was offered more frequently.
About this time the people at Billstown asked Jady to preach for them
once each month during the coming year. He agreed to try. It was at
Bills, in late summer of 1904, that Jady preached his first sermon. He
kept his monthly appointment at Bills throughout the bad winter of
1904-1905.
The first protracted meeting, as they were called in those days, that
Jady held was at Billstown in the summer of 1905. The small congregation
still had no church building. The meeting was held in the school house
on the hill where the Billstown cemetery is now. Georgia's sister,
Clara, was married to John Delaney at Billstown on August 28, 1904. Mr.
Bill Stokes, a Justice of the Peace, performed the ceremony. Their first
baby was born on May 17, 1905. In later years' Clara remembered walking
and carrying the baby to attend the meeting Jady held at Billstown in
1905.
At the time they decided to leave the "Pea Vine Camps," which was about
twelve miles from Pleasant Home, the Alfred Alexander family was living
in their .new house. So Jady moved his family to live with his parents
for a short time, until the Alexanders moved out of their house.
While they were living at the logging camps, Georgia had ordered a
sewing machine from Sears, Roebuck, and Company. It cost $12.00, but
after talking it over with Jady, they decided it would be worth it! The
machine was delivered after they had moved back, while they were at
James David Copeland's house. Georgia had never owned a sewing machine;
she was very proud of the new machine. It was so much more convenient to
do her sewing at home, instead of having to go to her mother's or to
Jady's mother's house. By this time she had three little girls to sew
for, as well as herself and Jady. Willie, the baby, was almost a year
and one-half by this time. "Store-bought" clothing was very rare in
those days.
It was good to be back home, in their own house. That fall Jady returned
to the camp and tore down his camp house. He moved the lumber home and
used it to finish the house and build a barn.
It was good to have the house sealed inside, as the winter of 1904-1905
was one of the coldest in their memory. In fact, the older people said
they had never seen such a winter. The snow and ice did not melt for
weeks! And then came the floods in the spring of 1905. For more than
half a century the older people talked about the unusual winter and
spring of 1905. Nearly everybody had a complete crop failure that year.
Another important event occurred that spring. On Thursday, March 23,
1905, another baby girl was born. Four girls, and not a boy baby yet!
Most fathers would have been somewhat disappointed. If Jady ever felt
such disappointment he never expressed it. He was only happy that both
Georgia and the baby were well. What should they name the new baby girl?
As Jady and Georgia discussed this question, Georgia suggested the name
"Vida." She had recently read a story in which the main character was
named Vida.
Because of the spring floods, the crops were late that year. Jady tried
to farm the blackland farm on the Burleson place, where he had raised a
crop the first year he and Georgia were married. The crop almost
completely failed because of the cold, wet springtime.
During the summer Jady began looking for other work, since the crop was
failing. He learned about a new kind of woods product mill at Nathan.
The mill was making staves to be used in making barrels. These staves
were cut from hardwood timber, not pine. Jady's younger brother Zeta and
Georgia's youngest brother Wilson went with Jady to find a job. All
three got jobs and Jady decided to move his family to Nathan. Zeta and
Wilson lived with them while they were there. At that time Zeta was 16
and Wilson was 19 years old. Vida was the baby and Ruth, the oldest, was
five and one-half.
Jady preached at Nathan a few times while they were there; he baptized
his first convert at Nathan. The people at that congregation encouraged
him in his efforts in preaching. Some of the members were related to
Jady. Aunt Martha Crawford was James D. Copeland's sister. They had
lived north of Nathan since about 1885. Uncle Tony Crawford was a
blacksmith and a farmer. Ruth and Elsie were old enough to remember
their visits to the Crawford farm. They have, until this day, pleasant
memories of those visits while they lived at Nathan.
In February, 1906, Jady moved his family back home, but continued to
work at Nathan a few months longer. He went home each week-end, riding a
horse the fourteen miles from Nathan to Pleasant Home.
In November, 1906, Georgia's brother Alto and his family moved back to
Arkansas from Konawa, Oklahoma (Indian Territory). They were all at
Georgia's mother's place: Alto and Emma with their two children and Jady
and Georgia and their four girls. One of the joys of being part of a big
family is the happy times when everyone gets together, like at
Thanksgiving and Christmas.
While the children played and the ladies cooked, Jady and Alto went
squirrel hunting. They talked of many things as they enjoyed being
together again. Jady and Alto were the same age and had known each other
all their lives. Alto and his family had been gone more than a year, and
everyone was glad they were back. For the time being they would stay
with Alto's mother, since they did not have a house yet.
Alto and Jady talked about finding them a place to live. Jady mentioned
that the Stephens place was for sale, but Alto was not interested. Jady
said that he would like to buy the Stephens place, but did not have the
money to make a down payment. He needed more farm land, but did not have
time to clear his land. As they talked, Alto suggested that if Jady
wanted to buy the Stephens place, that he would buy the place where Jady
was living. At first they were not serious, but the more they talked and
thought about it, the more both liked the idea. The Stephens place, also
called the old Allen place, was perfectly located, Jady thought; it was
only a quarter-mile north of his present place and just a little more
than a quarter-mile from the Pleasant Home church house.
The deal was made. Jady would buy the Stephens place and sell Alto his
place. The deed which was filed in the County Clerk's office at the
Court House at Murfreesboro on November 30, 1906, shows that Alto paid
Jady $125.00 and signed notes for $75.00 which were due on December 25,
1907, and December 25, 1908. The sixty acres and the new house were sold
for a total of $275.00.
The Stephens place had been homesteaded years ago by a man named Allen.
There was an old log house, and connected to it was a good two-room part
of the house which had been built by Mr. Stephens. Later, Jady tore away
the old log house and rebuilt a good house. Still later he added to it
again. He enjoyed doing carpentry work and through the years developed
some skill in it.
Sunday, May 26, 1907, was a very important day in the Copeland family.
After four baby girls, at last a boy baby was born! Jady preached at
Pleasant Home that Sunday; his sermon topic was "The Only Begotten Son,"
based upon the New Testament passage found in John 3: 16. Through the
years, this has been one of the family jokes, that Jady preached about
God's only begotten son on the day of the birth of his and Georgia's
first son. The new baby was named Sweeney Roy, after a preacher whose
last name was Sweeney.
After eight years of marriage and several moves from one temporary home
to another, Jady and Georgia had settled in a place which was to be home
for seventeen years. There was to be another temporary move, however, a
move that turned out to be extremely important to their future.
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J. A. Copeland family while at Center Point in 1908.
Back, left to right: J. A., Elsie, Willie, Ruth, Georgia;
Front, left to right, Vida and Sweeney.
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Chapter IV
In
School at Center Point
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The turning point in Brother Copeland's life came in 1907 when he
decided to move his family to Center Point so he could attend high
school. He was getting more and more calls to preach; the feeling of
responsibility was increasing. For several years men he respected had
encouraged him to develop the potential ability he obviously had. So, he
needed more education.
The decision was not an easy one. In those days being a preacher of the
gospel was not an easy life. In fact, such a decision meant a more
difficult way of life. It meant longer days and harder work. The task of
making a living for the family from the farm required endless effort and
long, hard hours of back-breaking work. Added to that, the hours of
study at night by kerosene lamp, and the traveling by horseback or buggy
to places near and far to preach on week-ends required more
determination and dedication than most men had.
In Brother Copeland's case, it was even harder because he already had a
large family. Also, from the beginning Brother Copeland was keenly aware
of the tremendous responsibility he was taking upon himself. Throughout
the more than a half a century which followed, he lived with the
consciousness of that awesome responsibility. In discussing this, he
would often refer to the statements made by the Apostle Paul who felt
the same burden: "If any man preach any other gospel unto you than that
ye have received, let him be accursed." (Galatians 1:9). "Besides those
things that are without, that which cometh upon me daily, the care of
all the churches." (2 Corinthians 11:28). He was fully aware that the
Bible teaches that those who are teachers and preachers run the risk of
receiving "greater condemnation." (James 3:1).
Serving the Lord had always been important to Brother Copeland, but the
move to Center Point represents a point in time when his two major goals
in life were reversed. Up to that time, he had been concerned with
making a living for his family and serving the Lord at the same time.
From that time forward, doing the Lord's work came first, providing for
the physical needs came second. Although few ever reach such a turning
point in life, Brother Copeland's decision was inevitable. As he prayed
for divine guidance, Jesus' words came to his mind again and again: "But
seek ye first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and these things
shall be added unto you." He knew that Abraham of the Old Testament did
not hesitate to go where God told him, even into a faraway and strange
land. The Copelands were moving only sixteen miles to a community not
too different from their home community.
Since childhood Brother Copeland had made decisions, not on the basis of
what was easy, but on the basis of what was right. And along with that,
when he decided to do anything it was understood that he would do the
best he could. It was necessary, therefore, for him to get more
education in order to do a better job of preaching the gospel.
Brother and Sister Copeland had five children at the time they moved to
Center Point. Some may have thought it irresponsible, but the move
represented a decision to put God and God's work first in their lives.
They really did trust God's promises that all of the physical
necessities would be provided if they placed higher priority on
spiritual values.
Such were to be his priorities in life, and as a result in the years
that followed the life of the entire family was determined by that
standard. Regardless of the trials that
life would bring, the decision to put first things first would always
lead to triumph. "Now thanks be unto God, which causeth us to triumph in
Christ ..." (2 Corinthians 2:14). "And not only so, but we glory in
tribulations also; knowing that tribulation worketh patience; and
patience, experience, and experience, hope; and hope maketh not ashamed;
because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Spirit
which is given unto us." (Romans 5:4).
Center Point had one of the best high schools in Arkansas in 1907, when
twenty-six year old Jady Copeland decided he must have more education.
The fact that it was only six miles from Corinth influenced his choice
of Center Point. Jady had relatives living in the country around
Corinth; his grandfather had settled there when he moved from Middle
Tennessee in 1849. Jady himself had been born in Corinth.
Early on a crisp October morning the family, with the help of two
neighbors, started on the sixteen mile journey. The wagons, which
belonged to Alto Watkins and Dave Beavert, had been partially loaded the
evening before. Only the beds and a few other essentials had been left
until morning. At daybreak they got up, ate breakfast, and finished
packing and loading. They placed everything on the wagons carefully,
saving enough room for the passengers. There were eight riders, counting
the baby: the two drivers, Georgia, and the four older children. Jady
rode his horse, the same horse he used as transportation to his week-end
preaching appointments.
They traveled the usual route to Murfreesboro by the Roberts place and
Brock Springs. They crossed the Little Missouri River at the "ford"
where the Muddy Fork flows into the river, and traveled on to Corinth,
then to their new home about a mile and one-half or two miles east of
Center Point. The trip took most of the day; they arrived at their new
home about mid-afternoon. As they passed the few houses scattered along
the way, children stood on the front porches to look at the movers. At
one or two houses, the people waved as they recognized Jady, who had
preached at some of the communities, especially at Corinth. They had
arranged to rent a house from the Price family, who would be their
neighbors. The Tinsley's were to be their neighbors also, to the delight
of Ruth and Elsie; the Tinsley's had children who soon became Ruth's and
Elsie's new friends and playmates.
Moving was not a new experience for Jady and Georgia. Since their
marriage almost nine years earlier, they had moved several times. Most
of the moves had been short distances, to different places in the
Pleasant Home and Hickory Plains communities. But the move to Center
Point was different; the reason for the move was to affect the future
more than any previous move.
At school Jady took his studies seriously; he had a serious purpose in
being there. He studied history, which he liked very much, English, and
also speech, which was a very· special treat. Jady had always been an
apt student; he learned easily and his memory was good. He was
especially good in history. In later years he was strong in his
preaching on the history of the church. Public speaking seemed fairly
easy for him. As a teenager, at Hickory Plains school, he had been known
as one of the most talented in "declamation" and "extemporaneous
speaking."
At Center Point his grades were the best in all subjects. He had
somewhat an advantage over most of the students, since he was 26 years
old—at least ten years older than most of the students.
At the end of the first term there, in the spring of 1908, Jady took
part in a speech contest and won second place. The only criticism the
judges could offer was that he spoke too loudly for the occasion.
Each morning Jady walked to school with· the children. Ruth was in her
third year and Elsie in the second year of school. Willie had not
started to school at that time. The Tinsley girls, Clara, Mae, and Jo,
walked with them.
While they lived at Center Point, they did not raise a crop. They had a
garden and a corn patch to raise feed for the horse, but did not raise
any cotton. Each weekend Jady preached at Corinth, or Nathan, at Center
Point, Chapel Hill, or some other community close enough to reach by
horseback. He worked at a store on Saturdays. It was a frugal existence,
but then they had never enjoyed luxurious existence.
First Wedding Ceremony
While they lived at Center Point, when Jady was 26 years old, he was
called upon to perform his first marriage ceremony. In order to perform
such a ceremony, he had to have the proper credentials. By talking to
the older men, he learned that the state required that a preacher file
at the County Clerk's office a record showing when and where a church
"ordained" him.
On Monday morning, December 23, 1907, two days
before Jady performed his first
marriage ceremony, he filed the following document at the County Clerk's
office in the Court House at Nashville:
To Whomsoever the Presents Come—Greeting:
This is to certify that J. A. Copeland has on this day been ordained a
Minister of the Gospel and is highly commended unto all the saints
everywhere.
Done by order of the church of Christ worshipping at Center Point,
Arkansas, December 22, 1907.
Elders:
sis
T. A. Floyd
sis
W. M. Gilbert
sis
J. H. Neese
Filed for record on this 23rd day of December, 1907, at 10:00 o'clock
a.m.
S. T. Anderson,
Clerk
Snow Floyd, who was Jady's third cousin, and Tom Jacques were the couple
to be married. Jady's mother and Snow's father were first cousins.
The ceremony was performed on Wednesday, on Christmas day, 1907. Elsie
and Ruth who were six and eight years old at the time remember the young
couple driving up in a buggy and stopping in front of the house. Jady
went outside, greeted them and after a very brief conversation,
conducted the ceremony with the couple sitting in the buggy. Within a
few minutes at the most, the couple "went on their way rejoicing."
In our day of elaborate, sophisticated "church" weddings, it may seem
strange that a couple was married while sitting in a buggy—without even
going into the house. However, in those days, such a ceremony was not at
all uncommon. In fact, it may have been the usual rather than the
unusual procedure.
Snow and Tom Jacques, whose nickname was "Boss," reared their family at
Center Point. Sixty-five years later, in August, 1972, their oldest son,
Calvin Jacques, was one of the many people present for the Center Point
Reunion. Jady and his family were away from the home place at Pleasant
Home approximately a year and one-half. They moved after crops were
gathered in the fall of 1907, and moved back home in time to begin the
spring planting in the spring of 1909. While they were away from their
home, a neighbor, Edgar Womack and his family, lived in their house at
Pleasant Home and kept the place up. Unfortunately, Mr. Womack's wife
died while they were living in Jady's house.
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J. A. Copeland About 1916 |
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Chapter V
The Country Preacher |
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Jady's entire life had been spent in preparation for preaching the
gospel and living the Christian life. As a child he had been, by nature
it seems, more serious about religion than most youngsters. For example,
he had always enjoyed sitting with his father and the visiting preacher
to hear them discuss the Bible and religious topics. He had worshipped
regularly and reverently all his life. Reading and studying the Bible
had always been a habit with Jady. His father received the Gospel
Advocate regularly all of Jady's life. After he married, Jady
subscribed to the Firm Foundation and received it throughout his
lifetime.
During the years Jady was growing up, his father, James David Copeland,
was one of the elders, and a conscientious leader, in the Pleasant Home
church. He insisted on "keeping the preacher" when they had a series of
meetings or week-end preaching. Jady's father enjoyed visiting with the
preachers and discussing the Bible with them. As Jady grew up, he
learned to thoroughly enjoy such conversations and discussions.
Even after he married, he and Georgia would stay at his father's home
while the preachers were visiting there. On one occasion, which Georgia
recalled and related in later years, she and Jady were staying at the
Copelands' while Brother W. N. George was holding a meeting at Pleasant
Home. Jady was working at the sawmill which was about a mile north of
the James D. Copeland home. Each afternoon, as soon as he got off from
work, Jady would rush to his father's home to be with him and the
preacher. Georgia was there, too. Later in the week, Georgia decided
they should go home. After all, the Copelands had five children at home,
and the preacher. She thought that she and Jady should be at their home.
They had no children at that time.
She decided, therefore, to meet Jady at the mill when he got off from
work and they would go home. Her father-in-law insisted that she not
walk, so he put the side-saddle on the horse and helped her mount the
horse. As she rode along the path through the woods toward the mill, she
met Jady jogging along, rushing to be with his father and the preacher.
Although Georgia persuaded Jady that they should go on to their home,
she could tell that he was terribly disappointed. Now, ten years later,
Jady had matured, and had gained experience in preaching the gospel. He
had gone back to school to increase his basic education. He felt much
more confident in his ability to do an acceptable job in his preaching.
Not long after Jady and the family moved home from Center Point, he was
invited to hold a meeting on "The Ridge," near Corinth. It turned out to
be the most successful big meeting thus far in his work of preaching the
Gospel. He was 28 years old, and he was well-prepared. His lessons were
well-chosen and were presented with great force and feeling. His
earnestness and deep spiritual conviction and purpose were communicated
to the audience night after night. Many people responded and as the
meeting progressed it became evident that a real revival was taking
place. The scheduled closing date was changed; the meeting was extended
several days. More people were converted and baptized. The word of this
meeting spread and it was talked about for many years as one of the
truly great revival meetings in that area.
As word of that meeting was passed around, Jady began receiving more and
more calls to preach. In fact, he received so many invitations for
meetings and week-end appointments that it was not possible for him to
accept all of them. Through the years, he made a practice of scheduling
his meetings and appointments on the basis of the order in which the
invitations came.
Many times he could have chosen to go other places that would have
provided greater financial rewards, but that was never considered. He
accepted invitations as they came.
In those days most country congregations had preaching only once each
month. Jady usually preached at a different place each week-end, but
often had standing appointments to be at a certain place once each
month. Preachers spoke of their "first—Sunday appointment" or
"fourth—Sunday appointment," meaning that on the first Sunday of each
month they had an appointment to preach at a certain place. The custom
was to have three services on the week-end when they had preaching. He
would leave home early enough on Saturday to arrive in the community in
time for a Saturday night service. Then there were two services on
Sunday. Jady usually stayed in the community Sunday night and returned
home on Monday.
Through the winter months, usually from October through Mayor June, he
preached by monthly appointments at congregations close enough to be
reached by buggy, horse, or train. During the summer months he farmed.
He held meetings through the summer months, but scheduled them after he
had the crops where the children, with their mother's help and
management, could finish the crops. His fall meetings usually extended
through October and sometimes into November.
Distances and transportation were always a problem. The country north of
Murfreesboro is somewhat mountainous. He had to ride a horse when going
to preach at congregations around Kirby and Glenwood. He preached at
Hopper, for example, over a period of forty-five years. In the early
days he always went on a horse. Often he went in a buggy to communities
closer to his home, and where there were better roads. If he were going
to Corinth, or Delight, for example, he either rode a horse or went in
the buggy.
However, Jady received many invitations from places which were too far
away to go on horseback or by buggy, so often he traveled by train. This
really presented problems; the nearest depot was at Murfreesboro, about
four miles away. However, because the railway line from Murfreesboro
connected with certain points only, he often had to go to Delight or
Highland to catch a train. To go to Prescott, Bluff City, or surrounding
areas, for example, he had to catch the train at Highland, which is
northeast of Nashville. It was about ten miles from Pleasant Home to
Highland.
Some of Ruth's most vivid memories of her early life are of the trips
she made with her father to catch the trains.
(One of the unique features of large families is the span of years
between the oldest and youngest children. For example, Ruth was almost
22 years old and had three children of her own when Jady Wilson, the
youngest child, was born. Each has his or her own memories of childhood
years, a generation apart..)
Ruth was still a small girl when she began going with her father to
catch the train. They usually left home early Saturday morning,
sometimes before daylight. Ruth's job was to drive the horse and buggy
back home after Jady caught the train, and then go meet him on Monday
when he returned.
On one occasion, darkness engulfed her while she was driving, alone, to
Murfreesboro. It was a cloudy Monday; the clock had stopped and they did
not know the time. Finally, Georgia reminded Ruth that she should start.
Georgia put the harness on "Ole Molly" and hitched her to the buggy. By
the time Ruth got to the Woods' place, with still three miles to go, it
was getting dark and had started raining. The child was frightened, but
she had no choice but to go on.
As she approached Murfreesboro, she suddenly realized that she did not
know how to find the depot in the dark. While she was pondering her
predicament, filled with anxiety and apprehension, someone jumped on the
back of the buggy. Her fright turned to joy when she discovered that it
was her Uncle Zeta. He had watched for her at the edge of town and met
her there. He took off his raincoat, put it on Ruth, and buttoned it
snugly under her chin.
Zeta told her that her father was waiting at Kelley's store, west of the
square. He took the reins and drove quickly to the store to find Jady.
All was well when she was with her father.
Later, when Vida was old enough to travel with her, she and Ruth were
caught in a snowstorm while returning from Murfreesboro. They had taken
Jady to catch the train on Saturday morning. As they prepared to leave
for home, Jady told them to go home by way of Mr. House's place on the
Hot Springs road. It was very cold and cloudy. Jady knew that it might
snow and that the Hot Springs road was the best way home.
Before they were a mile out of town the snow started. The farther they
went, the heavier the snow came down! It was cold and dry, so the ground
was soon covered. They could hardly see the road where they were to turn
off the main road. Near Uncle Dave Beavert's home there were some logs
beside the road. They were covered with snow and hardly visible. One log
was on the road, lying paralled with it. The buggy wheels straddled the
log and the front left wheel was lifted off the ground when the axle
reached the butt of the log. They were stuck!
The girls left the buggy and walked to the Beavert place. Vida, who was
only about six years old, was crying; they were freezing! While they
warmed themselves by the fireplace, Uncle Dave got the buggy off the log
and drove it to the house.
They were almost home when the buggy came to a sudden stop! The path was
very narrow with small trees growing on each side. The back wheel of the
buggy had passed around a small "sapling," which became wedged between
the wheel and the body, or bed, of the buggy. They were stuck again!
The girls walked home in the deep snow, half frozen. Sweeney and Gilbert
went back after "Ole Molly" and the buggy; Ruth and Vida had had all the
snow they wanted for one day! Such are the memories of the oldest child,
whose duty was taking Jady to catch the train. Ruth did that job for
several years, until the boys were old enough to take the job. Sweeney
was only nine years old when Ruth married, but he took that
responsibility.
After their return from Center Point in 1909, the Copeland family lived
at Pleasant Home for fifteen years. Those were good years, filled with
hard work and good times. They were at home in the same community where
both Jady and Georgia had grown up. All of the younger children were
born at the Stephens place. These were important years for a number of
reasons.
Jady was doing the work he knew God expected him to do. Small
congregations of the church everywhere needed men like Jady to help them
become established. His style of preaching was most effective with
audiences of country folk like himself. He always thought of himself as
a "country preacher." The Apostle Paul's words found in 1 Corinthians
2:4 describe Brother Copeland: "And my speech and my preaching was not
with enticing words of man's wisdom, but in demonstration of the Spirit
and of power."
One of Jady's cousins, Austin Copeland, who also grew up in the country,
once asked Jady about the difference in "country" preachers and "big
shot" preachers. "Why is it," Austin asked, "that 'big shot' preachers
preach only about one good sermon out of twelve, while all the country
preachers' sermons are good sermons?"
"Well," Jady answered, "I guess that us country boys have just enough
sense to talk about what we know about."
J. A. Copeland never gave up the concept of the country preacher. In
1932 he wrote the following article for the Gospel Light. It
expresses in his own words his concern for doing the Lord's work.
The Country Preacher
J. A. Copeland
There is a great need today of the country preacher. I do not mean by
this article that towns and cities should be neglected with reference to
gospel preaching, neither do I mean to convey the idea that it is wrong
for a preacher to be supported for full time in town, cities, and/or
even in rural districts, where it can be done; but there are a great
number of weak churches and mission points in the country and small
towns that are not financially able to support a man for full time. We
need a hundred preachers in Arkansas who are willing to live in the
country on a small farm, raise their vegetables, truck, fruit, chickens,
hogs, a little feed, and preach at some place in reach of them on
Sundays in the winter and spring and do evangelistic work through the
summer and fall. You may say that you see in the papers numerous calls
by preachers for work. Yes, but how many have you seen asking for the
kind of work that I have described above? It seems that the greater
number of preachers now are looking for full-time work with some
congregation at a good salary and are not even willing to go out in the
country and preach a few sermons at some mission point without extra
pay.
I am not condemning the idea of a preacher doing local work in a city or
town, but those congregations with which the local preacher labors
should use him often at some mission point or to help some weak
congregation. But it is my purpose in this article to encourage young
preachers who like country life to settle down on a little farm and
preach the gospel to a class of people that town and city preachers
seldom reach. Preachers should use business judgment as well as other
people. They can live much cheaper out on the farm by putting in their
spare time in the garden and on the farm, they can make a part of their
living.
A brother said to me sometime ago, "Brother Copeland, when you get to
where you can't preach, I don't know what we are going to do. We can't
pay what most preachers want for their work." I know that many
congregations can pay much more than they do, but that brother was
telling the truth. They are few in number and poor in this world's goods
but "rich in faith and heirs of the Kingdom."
I believe, generally speaking, the country preacher has done more good
than any other class of preachers. They have gone out into new fields,
preached the Gospel in schoolhouses, under brush arbors, in private
homes, yea, anywhere they had opportunities, and built up churches and
preached for them until they were able to stand alone.
Some of the strongest preachers we have in Arkansas live in the country.
Brother John T. Hinds, Brother Joe Blue, and many others are in that
number.
Four congregations in the country can cooperate and give a preacher a
reasonable living with what he can make at home, and the preacher can
build up these congregations by preaching monthly to them, if the
brethren will labor with him.
There are ten congregations in this (Pike) County and I think only four
of them are having regular preaching. There are ten congregations in
Howard County, and I don't think any of them have had regular preaching
all this year. Seven congregations in Hempstead County, and I think only
one is having regular preaching. Six Churches of Christ in Nevada
County, and I think only two have regular preaching. If these counties
are a fair sample of the State, we need a hundred preachers or more to
preach to the churches and mission points that are having no preaching.
If the churches would cooperate with the preachers and with each other,
this work could be accomplished. How many preachers in Arkansas will
accept work of this kind? How many churches will go to work and try to
locate a preacher somewhere near and have him to preach the gospel all
over their community?
Someone will say that the preacher will starve out preaching in that
way. I think not. I have been doing that kind of work twenty-six years
and have not starved out yet. All of these years I have lived on a farm.
I have preached for congregations and mission points on Sunday through
the winter and spring and held protracted meetings through the summer
and fall. I have not kept a memorandum of the number I have baptized or
the number of congregations I have helped to build up but I have
baptized a goodly number each year and helped to build several
congregations. I do not mention my work with any degree of boasting but
just to illustrate the work of the country preacher. I have a very large
family and none of them have been hungry but what there was something at
home for them to eat, and my wife has been successful in teaching them
the right way, to the extent that all of them but the three small ones
are members of the Church of Christ, and none of them swear, drink
whiskey, or use tobacco. I think country environments have helped some
along those lines.
Brother Copeland was a living example of the type of preacher he
described in the article above. He was truly a missionary to the country
folk of Pike County, Nevada County, Hempstead County, Howard County,
particularly, and to many other places scattered throughout Arkansas,
Mississippi, Oklahoma, Louisiana, and Texas.
Mission Work in Hempstead County
One good example of Jady's. work as a country preacher is his work at
Liberty Hill and Crank's School House in Hempstead County. These places
are located on Highway 29, south of Hope, Arkansas.
Jady had been going to Liberty Hill for some time for monthly preaching
appointments when in October, 1914, he skipped an appointment. When he
came the following month, he announced the birth of his and Georgia's
ninth and tenth children: the twins, who were born October 12, 1914.
Troy Aslin and Mrs. Aslin, who was Arrie Beard, recalled this incident.
Troy and Arrie, who were born in 1901 and 1902, took great delight in
relating their memories about Brother Copeland. They both remember him
from their childhood. They both attended church services at Liberty Hill
as children; both were baptized by Brother Copeland, and they were
married by him in 1919.
They remember him as "a wonderful, wonderful man." The young people of
the community liked Brother Copeland. Some who were not members of the
church went to hear him preach. Mr. and Mrs. Aslin said that the young
people liked Brother Copeland because he liked young people, was
interested in them, and was friendly with them. A similar comment was
made by a nephew who grew up in Pleasant Home community where Brother
Copeland lived. Guy Copeland said, "I do remember he was respected more
by the teenagers than the other older people were because he was always
sympathetic, tolerant, and understanding, and very kind to them."
Arrie (Beard) Aslin's father was Tom Beard. She remembers her father and
Brother Copeland sitting on the porch in the afternoons talking and
laughing. Brother Copeland laughed heartily and often. He was witty and
cheerful, but never sarcastic. His sense of humor was objective; that
is, he never laughed at another person's expense. In spite of hardships
and occasional tragedy, the Copeland family has always been one of the
happiest anywhere. Sallie House Copeland, who married Felix's son,
Homer, wrote: "I visited in their home a lot in my 'teen years, and
marveled at their fine family, all the children . . . seemed so happy."
In later years the church spread from Liberty Hill to the Crank School
community, primarily because of the influence Brother Copeland had
through one man Edgar Lafferty. The first gospel meeting was begun at
Crank's School House the Saturday night before the fourth Sunday of
July, 1923. Brother Lafferty had met Brother Copeland four years
earlier, at Liberty Hill. Brother Lafferty said, "I did not get
acquainted with Brother Copeland on purpose. Our association had its
beginning at a time when I really didn't want to be associated with men
like him at all." He explained that he met Brother Copeland because of
his interest in Eunice Starnes.
Brother Lafferty said that on Saturday night before Easter Sunday, 1919,
he was at a party where he met a number of young people he had not known
before. Among them was a girl, Eunice Starnes, whom Brother Lafferty
became interested in.
"The next day, I found out they were having what I called a 'Campbellite'
Sunday school at Liberty Hill." Eunice lived in front of the place and
attended regularly; so, Brother Lafferty said, "I decided it was about
time for me to start going to Sunday School."
The next afternoon he went to Liberty Hill, and on that particular
afternoon Brother Copeland had an appointment to preach. "And that's the
first time I met Brother Copeland."
So Edgar Lafferty began attending worship services at Liberty Hill.
After he and Eunice were married they attended regularly, and Brother
Copeland preached there one Sunday each month. Finally, he became a
member of the church.
A short time after he became a Christian, Brother Lafferty began
thinking about how he could get Brother Copeland into his home community
to teach the people there. He wondered how he could do it. In talking
with him, he said, "Brother Copeland, I believe the people in my country
are honest, I believe they've been just like me—misled. If you could
come to that part of the country and preach, I believe that we could
build a congregation there."
Brother Lafferty said he did not ask how much they could pay or how many
people would be there. His reply was, "Brother Lafferty, you can
get me into your community." Arrangements were made for a meeting
beginning Saturday night before the fourth Sunday in July, 1923. But
this created a problem for Brother Lafferty: Who would introduce the new
preacher in a new community on the first night of the meeting?
"I remember Brother Copeland and I were going in a wagon—a two-horse,
iron-wheeled wagon—down the highway." When he finally got up enough
courage to mention it, he said, "Brother Copeland, you expect someone to
introduce you tonight?" He saw immediately what kind of predicament
Brother Lafferty was in; Brother Lafferty had never spoken before an
audience and the thought of it frightened him. Brother Copeland said,
"Brother Lafferty, you furnish the grub, and I'll do the talking." That
lifted a load from Brother Lafferty, he said.
There were only four members of the church in that community: the two
Lafferty brothers and their wives. Large crowds attended that first
meeting at Crank's School House. Only two people obeyed the gospel
during the meeting and Brother Lafferty was discouraged. However,
Brother Copeland suggested that they should not become discouraged. So,
they made arrangements for him to return for another meeting the
following year.
During the second meeting, thirteen people were baptized, including two
of Edgar Lafferty's sisters. The group then began meeting each week at
Crank's School House for worship. For several years Brother Copeland
held meetings each year. Eventually there were about one hundred members
of the church meeting at Crank's School House.
Brother Copeland wrote in the Gospel Light, February 1, 1931,
about his work at Crank's School House:
This is the place where Brother C. R. Nichol met Elder Ben M. Bogard in
debate in the fall of 1928. Brother Nichol held up the truth in a way
that it had a telling effect, and so the work continues to grow.
I have been preaching twenty-five years. I have baptized several hundred
people and assisted in establishing a number of churches, but I think I
have never found any brethren more zealous, learn faster, or come nearer
living up to their duty than George and Edgar Lafferty according to
their opportunities. Brother Jeff Reese and also Brother John G. Reese
have held meetings there with good results, and are held in high esteem
by the brethren.
To illustrate how Brother Copeland's influence spread from that
community, Brother Lafferty mentioned some specific examples. Luther
Fambrough, who lived in West Texas, near Snyder, heard Brother Copeland
preach at Crank's School House. He made arrangements to have him hold a
meeting near Snyder, and a congregation was established there.
Edgar's brother moved to Chicot County, Arkansas, and helped build up a
congregation at Lake Village.
Brother Copeland was asked to conduct a series of meetings at Midway,
eight miles south of Crank's School House in Lafayette County. A
congregation was established there. The congregation at Crank's School
House later built a new building one quarter mile away and called it
Central.
The members of that congregation who lived in the Evening Shade
community decided to build a new building at Evening Shade. Brother
Lafferty emphasized the fact that there was no strife or division, but
that the church was growing and new congregations were being
established. He also stressed the idea that these developments were
traceable directly to the efforts and influence of J. A. Copeland.
Brother Copeland preached and held meetings throughout Hempstead County
and parts of Lafayette County, as well as Pike County, Nevada County,
Howard County, and others. If the facts were available, it could be
shown that his influence spread in each community in much the same way
it was described by Brother Edgar Lafferty in talking about Crank's
School House and Liberty Hill.
Work With the Church at Hopper
Another community that felt the influence of Brother Copeland was
Hopper, which is located about ten or twelve miles west of Glenwood, in
Montgomery County. Brother Fay Bohannon, who has known Brother Copeland
since he can remember, wrote that "the Hopper community is 'Copeland
Country.' The lasting impression which your grandfather made contributes
to the welcome sound of the Copeland name today."
The church register containing the record of Hopper's earlier years was
lost. Brother Bohannon surveyed the active members of the congregation
in 1972, and established from the information gathered that Brother
Copeland held meetings in which there were baptisms in 1924, 1925, 1928,
1929, 1930, 1932, 1934, 1943, and 1945. "I am sure," he continued,
"there were other meetings in which there were baptisms, but we had no
members attending church that were in attendance or gave us that
information. He held a short meeting over the weekend, sometime between
July 1953 and his death.... He and Sister Copeland had driven up from
Delight in a relatively new Plymouth automobile. We were pleased that he
had good transportation in his old age. In the early days he rode the
train to Caddo Gap and someone from the community would meet him there
and drive him to Hopper, which is six miles away in a westerly
direction."
It may be added that in earlier times, beyond the reach of Brother
Bohannon's memory, that Brother Copeland rode a horse from Pleasant Home
to Hopper to keep his appointments. Following are some of the specific
incidents recalled by Brother Bohannon:
"I remember the baptizing of 1929. (I confirmed the time by a person who
was baptized and is now one of the elders.) It was the largest group to
be baptized that I had ever seen. It was on the creek at the old sawdust
pile. Of course, I was young at the time and it was a Sunday afternoon,
a beautiful day, and he had so many candidates, I suppose I thought he
would never get them all baptized.
"During the early thirties when the economy was so poor, I recall my
father telling how they paid him for the meeting. As I recall they had
less than $10.00 in cash to pay him. To supplement this, they brought
him canned goods, sorghum molasses, etc. Those were rough times but my
father indicated that Brother Copeland was well pleased with what they
gave him.
"Brother Copeland probably had more influence on the church than any
other preacher that worked in the community. I say this from the point
of view in getting the membership grounded in the truth," Brother
Bohannon wrote. He also mentioned Brother John F. Reese and a Brother
Thompson who preached before Brother Bohannon's time, and concluded,
"The church at Hopper has much for which to thank these great men."
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J. A. and Georgia Copeland and the twins,
Floy and Joy About 1915 |
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Chapter VI
Life at Pleasant Home
Building a School
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The year 1914 was a very busy year for Jady. During that year he
preached once each month at Delight, a congregation about ten miles away
that had about sixty-five members at that time. The records show that
the Delight church paid him as much as $6.20 one Sunday. Usually,
however, it was $3.00 or $4.00 during that year. Also, during that year
Jady was going to Liberty Hill, south of Hope, to preach once each
month. He was engaged, as usual, in evangelistic meetings during the
summer months. There were eight children at home, ranging from fourteen
years of age to one. In October of that year the twins were born, making
ten.
Jady had long recognized the importance of
education. He was interested in improving the educational opportunities
of the young people in the Pleasant Home, Hickory Plains, and Brock
Springs communities. For many years there had been a one-room school at
Hickory Plains. It had been built in about 1882 or 1883, soon after the
settlers began homesteading
land in that section. There was a need for a new school building that
was more centrally located. The Brock Springs school house was located
about two and one-half miles south of Hickory Plains on the Murfreesboro
road. There had been talk for some time about consolidating the two
schools. Pleasant Home was between the two, closer to Hickory Plains.
As a result of reading about Mar's Hill Academy, the Bible school at
Florence, Alabama, built by T. B. Larimore, Jady dreamed of a complete
high school where students could study Bible as a regular part of the
curriculum. Hickory Plains school had the equivalent of seventh or
eighth grade only.
Jady offered to build a school building on his own land if the people
would support the combined schools and permit Bible to be taught. Many
of the people in the surrounding communities were members of the church,
and at first accepted the idea of a "subscription" school that included
Bible in the curriculum. Jady's younger brother, Alvin, had a good
education for that day and time; Jady hoped to get him to teach the high
school students. He had the reputation of being an excellent teacher.
The new building was begun in the spring and was completed in time for
the 1914 fall term. It was located about four hundred yards from the
home place, between there and the Pleasant Home church house which was
about one-quarter mile east of the home place. It was a two-room, frame
building.
Alvin was teaching at McNab school in Hempstead County. He had already
contracted to teach there during the 1914-1915 school term, but he
"begged off" to help with the new school at Pleasant Home. That year
Jady taught the younger children and Alvin taught the older ones. Alvin
stayed only one year. The next year Leonard Stark, who married Jady's
youngest sister, Bessie, taught the older students. The third year,
1916-1917, Sallie House and Charlie Copeland taught.
The school was discontinued after three years. Some of the parents of
the Hickory Plains community complained that their children had to walk
too far to Pleasant Home. However, there may have been other reasons for
the opposition; not all the families were members of the church, and
some who were may have had negative feelings toward such a noble
endeavor.
An interesting incident, which illustrates the reasonableness and good
judgment Jady had, took place during the 1916-1917 school term. Charlie
Copeland, the teacher, was concerned because some of the older boys had
been smoking at school. On the night the school board met to discuss
what should be done, some of the boys listened outside the window.
Jordan Roberts, Homer Copeland, Stanley Copeland, and Lawrence Meyers
were the students. Among the school board members were Warner House,
Dave Beavert, H. E. McKibbon, J. A. Copeland, and a Mr. Lambert. Charlie
Copeland, the teacher, was also there.
Mr. McKibbon wanted the board to pass a rule which would "prohibit any
student from smoking at school, on the way to school, or on the way home
from school." Jady realized that it would be impossible to enforce such a
rule; he suggested that they prohibit smoking "on the school ground,"
and define the area of the school ground. Across the road, for example,
would not be "on the school ground."
The next day at recess, the students were walking back from the well
where they had gone to get drinking water. Jordan Roberts and Lawrence
Meyers were smoking as they walked down the road. When the teacher told
them of the new rule against smoking, they told him they were not "on
the school ground." In addition to his good judgment, Brother Copeland
was unusually calm and patient. Mae (Roberts) Womack, who knew him all
her life, wrote: "I never saw him when he seemed disturbed or worried."
One of his daughters said, "I do not recall ever seeing him angry."
Another wrote: "He never spoke on the spur of the moment; he always
thought carefully about anything before he gave his opinion or answer."
Oleva, without knowing Vida had written the preceding statement, wrote,
"Papa was never hasty in words, answers, or decisions. If one were
asking his opinion or advice on a thing, he never gave it without first
thinking it over carefully or praying about it." Charlene (Roberts)
Henry, a granddaughter who lived with the Copelands for a time,
describes him as "calm, slow to pass judgment."
Temporary Move: 1920
Jady had been going to congregations near Prescott to preach for a
number of years. He preached at Ward's Chapel as far back as 1908.
Lillard Billingsley remembers his father meeting the train at Prescott
to pick up Brother Copeland and bringing him to their house. One
extremely cold Sunday in December, 1908, no one met him at Prescott
because they thought he would not come, since it was so cold. But he
came; he got a ride out to the Billingsley's house on a neighbor's load
of hay. Lillard remembers Brother Copeland arriving, getting off the
load of hay, nearly frozen in the bitter cold.
In 1919 a small group of Christians began meeting each Sunday at Sneed's
school house, eight miles north of Prescott. Brother Copeland preached
for them and became closely associated with the Harris family and others
in the group.
Several important events took place in 1920 in the Copeland family.
Oleva was born January 9, 1920. A few weeks later Willie was married to
Jordan Roberts, on February 5. And, the family made a temporary move
that year. Jady decided to make a crop that year on some land owned by
Mr. Harris, near Prescott. He had bought a mule, and other debts made it
necessary to make a cotton crop. Cotton was the "cash" crop at that
time, and the price was up. On the better farm land near the Little
Missouri River, and with the boys big enough to help, they hoped to make
enough to payoff the debts.
In early March Sweeney, who was almost 13 years old, went with his
father one Friday to haul some plows and tools to the Harris place.
Jady was to preach at Sneed's school house that week-end, so they
decided to move some things while he was going. They also took the
geese, with strips of wood nailed across the wagon bed to make a "cage"
for the geese.
They crossed the Little Missouri River at Bowen on Mr. May's ferry. When
they crossed the old river the water was so high that the wagon bed was
filled with water. They opened the end-gate to let the water out, and
the water rushing out of the wagon bed washed the geese out, too. The
next hour or so was spent chasing geese all over the river bottoms!
Finally, all but one goose was captured.
Sweeney and his father spent the night with Mr. Harris and worked in the
garden on Saturday. While Sweeney was plowing the garden and Jady was
cleaning off a fence-row, he heard his father speak to someone. Sweeney
turned and was startled to see, standing very close, a black man with
snow-white hair. "Uncle Kazee" was to be one of their new neighbors on
the Harris farm.
During the summer and fall of 1920; the presence of Brother Copeland and
his family led to an increased interest in the work of the church. The
members of the congregation meeting at Sneed's school house began
talking about building a place of worship. Brother Copeland preached in
a meeting held under a brush arbor on the hill at the Kay Cemetery, five
miles north of Prescott. Since several of the families lived in and
around that community, plans were made to build a church house there. In
the fall of 1920 the new building was begun. Brother Copeland was given
the honor of selecting a name for the new meeting place. He suggested
Pleasant Hill for its name, and all agreed that it was appropriate.
After more than half a year of work and worship with the people at
Pleasant Hill, the Copeland family had established some ties there which
would eventually lead to their moving to that community.
They made a good crop that year, paid off their debts, and moved back
home that fall after the crops were gathered. Some members of the family
had malaria that summer and fall; they assumed that the malaria was the
result of living near the river where there were many mosquitoes.
Back home, the family soon settled into the familiar routine of farm
living. On a typical day in winter Jady was the first one up in the
morning, to build fires before waking the others. He would always help
with breakfast; he enjoyed helping in the kitchen. And he was a hearty
eater, never complaining about the food or how it was prepared. Before
breakfast was ready Jady would make the rounds awaking all the children.
The entire family gathered at the table for a prayer of thanks before
eating breakfast. After breakfast the school-age children prepared for
school, leaving in time to walk the three quarters of a mile before time
for "books."
After the morning chores were done, Jady worked in the field or woods,
or at whatever task was to be done that day. In his prime Jady was a
strong man physically; he was five feet, ten inches tall, and usually
weighed about one hundred and eighty pounds. He enjoyed work and created
in his children a desire for work.
Jady had an unusually effective way of motivating his children. The
"how" is not easily defined, however. Vida wrote, "Papa knew how to get
us to work and not mind it so much. For instance, if we were picking
cotton he would have us racing to see who could pick a hundred bolls
first. He would make a game of it." His unique ability to motivate them
is seen in all areas of the lives of his children. Floy wrote, "1 don't
know how Papa gained the confidence, respect, and devotion of each of
his children as he did unless it was because of the life that he lived.
He lived what he taught. He set the right example before us. He was
proud of his family and showed us that he had confidence in us. He was
always willing to help us. We trusted Papa's judgment in everything. We
always wanted his opinion in all of our decisions."
At times, childish fears were instantly dispelled by a single sentence
from their father. For example, when Ordis was about six years old, he
was disturbed one day by seeing the moon in the daytime. Until then he
had assumed that the moon was visible only ,at night. He rushed to his
father, "Papa, where is the moon supposed to be right now?" To this day
Ordis remembers the relief he felt when, without interrupting what he
was doing, his father said, "Son, wherever it is, that's where it's
supposed to be."
All who knew Brother Copeland remember how he loved children. His own
children fondly recall the many ways in which he demonstrated his love
for them. Floy wrote: "I remember how he would play and romp with us.
Another early memory was the sack of candy he would bring home when he
came in from a preaching trip or just a trip to town. We would all go
out to meet him and as he greeted us he would pull the bag of peppermint
sticks from his pocket and pass it around, and then hand the bag to the
youngest. The 'little' one got to hold the bag, but there was enough
candy for all of us to have some. We sat and ate candy while we listened
to a report of Papa's trip."
Elsie said, "He delighted in doing things to please his children if it
was the best thing for them." And they all remember how he showed
interest in their school work and encouraged them by helping them with
their homework. Brother Copeland loved to help care for the babies. One
of the most pleasant memories the older children have is of their father
rocking the babies to sleep while singing again and again the six verses
and chorus of the song "Deliverance Will Come."
"I saw a way-worn trav'ler, in tattered garments clad, And struggling up
the mountain, it seem'd that he was sad; His back was laden heavy, his
strength was almost gone, Yet he shouted as he journeyed, Deliverance
Will Come!
Then palms of victory, crowns of Glory, Palms of Victory . . I shall
bear!"
The relationship Brother Copeland had with his own children included his
manner of teaching them self-discipline. He ignored their minor
violations of appropriate conduct, saying nothing until their behavior
really required correction. Then, with firmness without emotion, he
corrected them. Joy wrote: "Papa never fussed at his children nor
criticized them. He never told us but once to do or not to do a thing—he
didn't have to."
Although he was very successful, with the help of Sister Copeland, in
training his own children, he never tried to tell other people how to
raise their children. On one occasion both his wisdom and sense of humor
were demonstrated when a parent asked his advice on rearing her
children. Hazel Sullivan, Pierce Sullivan's wife, at Willisville, asked
Brother Copeland after church one day, "Brother Copeland, I know that
you and Sister Copeland have done well in rearing your own children. Can
you give me some advice on training mine?"
"No, I can't," Brother Copeland said, "but I can tell you someone who
can."
"Who?" Mrs. Sullivan asked eagerly.
"Ask someone who has never raised any children," Brother Copeland
answered with a smile.
As the typical day began with prayer, so it ended. "One of my fondest
memories in early childhood," Floy wrote, "was our family devotional.
After the supper dishes were done, we all gathered around the fireplace
and Papa read from either the Bible or a Bible story book. Then he would
lead us in prayer. This was before we started our school homework." In
good times and bad, they lived with a realization that God was always
near.
Serious Illness: 1922
The Copeland family experienced a crisis in the spring of 1922. Vida had
been visiting her friend, Hattie Harris, and the Ike Harris family at
Pleasant Hill, near Prescott. Jady preached at Sneed's school house the
week-end of February 26, 1922. Since Vida had planned to return with him
on Monday, Jady went in the wagon. Usually, he went by train from
Highland to Prescott and someone would meet him there.
During the night Sunday night, before the trip home on Monday, Vida
became sick. She was really too sick to travel Monday morning, but after
she and her father discussed it, they decided that they must start home.
Soon after breakfast Jady and Mr. Harris harnessed the horses and
hitched them to the wagon. Jady told them that they needed to get an
early start.
It was a long, long trip for Vida. She was aching all over with pain
which only the flu can cause. By the time they reached Pleasant Home,
Vida was really suffering, and had a high fever. She went to bed
immediately. At that time, Ruth and Willie were married and away from
home. Elsie was the oldest child at home; she was 20 years old and was
teaching school at the Old Hickory Plains school that winter. Oleva, the
baby, was two years old, and Grandma Watkins, Georgia's mother, was
living with the family. All together there were thirteen living in the
house at that time.
During the weeks that followed, each member of the family had the flu
except Elsie, Sweeney, Georgia, and Grandma Watkins. Although Vida was
very will, the one who became most seriously ill was Jady. In fact, he
became dangerously ill before he began to improve.
The members of the family were not all sick at the same time, and some
were not very ill, but expected to be. After a few days in bed, most of
them were well enough to resume their normal activities. Jady, however,
became more seriously ill as the days went by. After a week he was not
any better. During the second week they sent for the doctor. Dr. Roberts
came from Murfreesboro, but did not, at first, realize how weak Jady
was. The entire family had always been strong and healthy; they seldom
sent for him except when it was time for a baby to be born. But Jady
had, over a period of several years, been working at a pace which
brought him to a point of physical and mental exhaustion.
The second time Dr. Roberts came he recognized that Jady was very
nervous and was mentally exhausted as well as being seriously ill with
the flu; he had reached a crisis point. He instructed the family that
Jady must have quiet and rest. In a household of thirteen people, that
was not easy to accomplish. Lem, Jady's brother, and other neighbors had
been taking turns sitting with Jady each night. Sweeney was working in
the fields each day, breaking the land with a turning plow to prepare
for the spring planting. Elsie took the responsibility for the milking
and churning. Since Georgia was to have another baby in about four or
five months, Elsie and Grandma Watkins did much of the cooking and
housework. With Jady in bed, and two or three of the children sick at
the same time, they were kept very busy! Also, there were the visitors
who came to help care for the sick. They had to eat, too.
For more than a week things had gone from bad to worse. On Tuesday
morning, March 14, the same day that the doctor told the family that
Jady had to have quiet and rest, Jady became convinced that he would not
live. He sent for all those present to come to his bedside. In very
feeble tones he told them he would not be with them much longer, and
that he wanted to see them and say a few words. His words were spoken so
softly that Sweeney, who was standing at the foot of the bed and whose
hearing was not good, did not understand anything his father said. As he
spoke of his departure, Jady said, "I'm not afraid to face the judgment
for what I have preached. If only I have lived like I have preached to
others, I will be all right."
Never before had this family experienced such a scene. Jady was 41 years
old, and had never been seriously ill before. For the younger children,
the meaning of this event was incomprehensible. For the older ones, it
was like a sad dream. They felt that it could not be real! They could
not imagine their future without Papa.
Willie and Jordan, who had one baby, Evelyn, lived nearby on the Hot
Springs road. Ruth and Langley lived up in the mountains at the time,
where Langley worked on the "grade," helping build a railroad. When the
family realized that Jady was dangerously ill, they had sent for Ruth
and Langley to come. As soon as the messenger arrived, Ruth began
preparing to go. She had three children, Clauzelle, Copeland, and Audy,
the baby, less than a year old. They wasted no time going to the home
place. When they arrived, Mrs. Beavert met them outside and told them
that Jady was very sick and that he did not think he would live. She
warned Ruth not to cry in her father's presence. When they entered the
room Jady himself began to cry. Ruth could not hide her emotion; she
quickly left the room. When she went into the kitchen she found Grandma
Watkins there, crying also. In addition to Jady's condition, Grandma
Watkins told Ruth that she had received word that very day that Harmon,
Georgia's brother and Ruth's uncle, had been killed the day before in a
tornado in Oklahoma.
Jady's brother, Zeta, lived at Murfreesboro. Evidently Dr. Roberts had
seen Zeta when he returned from Jady's house and told Zeta what the
situation was. Shortly thereafter, Zeta arrived on the scene and "took
over," so to speak. He got the family together in a room away from Jady
and told them what the doctor had said, that Jady must have quiet and
rest or he would not live. He told the older boys to take off their
heavy shoes while in the house. He moved the striking clock out of the
room where Jady was, to the kitchen. Outside Jady's window, the geese
spent their time making their terrible noise. Zeta had the boys help him
drive the geese to a pasture back of the barn, and told the boys to see
that / they stayed there, away from the house.
Zeta told Lem and the other visitors that they could go home. When the
doctor talked with Zeta, he suggested that he give Jady a "toddy" that
night. Although alcohol was as foreign to that household as Chinese
food, Zeta managed to find the necessary ingredients to fix the "toddy."
He gave it to Jady, who was not strong enough to resist or argue about
it. Zeta gave strict orders that no one was to enter the room. He would
stay with Jady, and if he needed anything, Zeta would come out to get
it. Nobody was to come in for any reason! Everyone else went to bed.
With the quiet and the relaxing effect of the "toddy," Jady went to
sleep and slept better that night than he had in more than a week. The
next morning he was much improved. Ruth said she had never seen a person
change so much in such a short time. The next day, when he was feeling
much better, Jady remarked that he had drunk more whiskey in the "toddy"
than in all his life before that. Zeta, recognizing that Jady was
feeling well enough for his sense of humor to return, said, "Well, Jady,
the grand jury meets next week; we will see what can be done about
that."
For the next several days Zeta continued to maintain control of the
situation and Jady continued to improve. The spark of life had been
revived in Jady. The family knew he was feeling much better when he
began talking about the spring planting. He sent for Langley and told
him that he wanted him to plant his potatoes; it was time, and Jady said
that it would be a good day for planting. Sweeney had been getting the
land ready, and Jady knew he would not be able to help with the planting
for some time. Langley, of course, was happy to plant them for him.
Jady's children look back on this event as one of the crisis times in
their lives. But like many crises, it brought the family closer
together. It demonstrated to them that their father was willing to face
death, but more important, that he had the courage to live. They knew,
as they know now, that this triumph was possible only because he had,
for all those years, lived in the presence of God.

Clayton Copeland
1912—1925
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Chapter VII
The Family Circle
Broken
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Jady was 43 years old in 1924 when they left the home community, never
to live there again. The three oldest daughters, Ruth, Elsie, and
Willie, were married by that time, so there were ten children at home.
The youngest, Jady Wilson, was two years old. They had lived in and
around the Pleasant Home community all their lives, except for short
periods of time. Their stay of a year and a half at Center Point had
been the longest time they had lived away from Pleasant Home.
The community had changed a great deal since Jady and Georgia were
school children at Hickory Plains. Most of the land had been homesteaded
by 1900; the community had grown steadily. Through the years families
moved in and some moved out. During and after Wodd War I people moved
away to find work. Several of Jady's relatives had moved to Little Rock
or Texarkana. Some, including Georgia's brother, Alto, had moved to
Oklahoma.
The mood of the entire nation was changing; economic prosperity
influenced the lives of almost everyone. Conditions changed, even in
this rural community in southwest Arkansas.
The reader of today, knowing of the changing social conditions in our
nation at that period in our history, can imagine that some of those
changes were disturbing to people like Jady Copeland. A new generation
had grown up in the Pleasant Home community. The declining interest in
religion and spiritual values must have been distressing for Jady.
During the summer of 1924, Brother Copeland held a meeting at Pleasant
Hill, near Prescott, where they had lived for six months in 1920. While
there, the church was "more fully set in order, and elders and deacons
were appointed. W. P. Buchanan, H. A. Buchanan, and J. J. Delaney were
the first elders, and R. C. Harris, T. W. Morrow, and Byrd Tippett were
the first deacons." They persuaded Brother Copeland to move to their
community.
In the fall of 1924 the family moved to Pleasant Hill. The potential for
growth in the churches in that area was good. He had, of course,
developed many friendships in Nevada County through the years. And,
living closer to the railroad would be more convenient, since Jady
frequently traveled by railway to reach his preaching appointments.
Ruth and Langley had agreed to move into the house on the home place and
look after things there. They had three children at that time. A year
later, in 1925, Jady sold the place to his brother, Zeta.
Three men from Pleasant Hill, Ike Harris, Clabe Harris, and a Brother
McKinnon, went to Pleasant Home with their wagons to help move the
family. Some of the children spent the night with neighbors, since most
of the household goods were packed and ready to be loaded. Joy and Floy,
who were ten years old, spent the night with Mr. and Mrs. Beavert. The
next morning when they got back, the wagons were loaded and last-minute
preparations were being made to leave.
Georgia had prepared a picnic lunch for the family and the men who came
to help them move. It was an all-day trip, approximately twenty-two
miles from Pleasant Home to Pleasant Hill. Approximately half way to
their destination, about a mile out of Delight, they stopped for lunch.
The house they were to move into at Pleasant Hill was occupied and would
not be vacant for about two or three weeks. The Copeland family moved
into an old house on the Mauldin place temporarily. When their house on
the highway was vacated they moved into it. The house was too small, but
no addition was made until a year later.
A very tragic event was to occur while the Copelands lived at Pleasant
Hill.
Clayton's Fatal Accident
The family circle was broken for the first time by a tragic event which
occurred in the summer of 1925. Clayton, who was twelve and one-half
years old, was injured in an accident and died two days later. The
following article appeared in the Nevada County Picayune,
Thursday, July 9, 1925:
BOY FATALLY HURT BY FALL FROM FRIGHTENED PONY
Clayton Copeland, twelve year old son of Rev. and Mrs. J. A. Copeland,
Route 5, was severely injured last Sunday, when a pony he was riding
became frightened and threw him against a large gum root. He was
rendered unconscious, and brought to Prescott for treatment. He died
Tuesday night.
Clayton, although somewhat hard of hearing, was very alert and learned
quickly and easily. He was an energetic boy who worked hard and played
hard. His blue eyes sparkled as he smiled, the expression of a naturally
lovable disposition.
The family had lived in the Pleasant Hill community less than a year.
Brother Copeland was doing the preaching in a gospel meeting during the
first week of July. On Sunday, July 5, after the morning worship
service, everyone stayed for "dinner on the ground." They met for
another preaching service at 2:00 o'clock that afternoon. Many of the
members had to return to their homes to feed the livestock, milk the
cows, and take care of the usual chores before the night service.
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Latest picture of Clayton Copeland. Back row, left to right:
Clayton, Chasteen Beavert, Estelle, Olestal Beavert; Middle row:
Ordis, Joy, Clemie Beavert, Flay, Pauline Stevens; Front row:
Elaine Cox and Oleva. |
Among Clayton's closest friends were his cousin, Hubert Delaney, and the
two Smith brothers, Clovis
(Tobe) and Loyce. After the afternoon preaching service,
the four boys wanted to spend the rest of the afternoon together. The
Smiths asked Clayton and Hubert to go home with them. When Clayton asked
if he could go, his mother told him that the horses must be watered
first. The four boys walked to the Copelands' house, which was near the
church building. Hubert and Loyce waited while Clayton and Tobe rode the
horses to the usual watering place, a small stream which was down the
hill behind the church building. Clayton rode "May," a young, spirited
mare, while To be rode "Bess," the more gentle mare. They galloped down
the path, filled with excitement as they talked about their plans for
the afternoon.
Near the foot of the hill, just before they reached the branch,
Clayton's mount suddenly darted to the left to take a path which left
the main trail, a short-cut to the stream. Although Clayton was familiar
with the path, and "Ole May" had taken that path before, he was
surprised by the sudden turn, and fell from the horse. His head struck
the root of a tree, and he was knocked unconscious. He never regained
consciousness. He was taken to the home and a doctor was summoned
immediately. Dr. Chastain from Prescott came and examined him.
Throughout the night Mrs. Neal McKinnon sat with Clayton, responding to
his every groan and movement. During the night or early morning hours,
as she was attending him, Mrs. McKinnon noticed that a large knot had
formed behind Clayton's left ear. When the doctor came the next morning,
she mentioned the knot she had found on the boy's head. Dr. Chastain
examined it carefully and said immediately that Clayton must be taken to
the hospital, that an operation might have to be performed.
The unconscious boy was taken as quickly as possible to the hospital at
Prescott. His Aunt Clara Delaney and Mrs. McKinnon rode with him in the
ambulance. All day Monday and Monday night the doctor and the nurses
kept him under close observation. Dr. Chastain talked with Dr. Buchanan;
they agreed that if Clayton was not better by Tuesday morning, they
would operate. His only hope for survival, they reasoned with the
family, was to operate in order to relieve the pressure caused by the
concussion. It was a risk worth taking.
With Dr. Buchanan assisting, Dr. Chastain operated Tuesday morning. But
it was too late; there was too much damage for Clayton to recover. He
died Tuesday night, July 7, 1925, at about eight o'clock. His body was
moved to the Cornish Funeral Home in Prescott. Sweeney, by his own
choice, sat with the body at the funeral home that night. Brother Clabe
Harris of the Pleasant Hill community, Brother Lee Starnes, a preacher
and friend of the family, and David Stuart, who later became Vida's
husband, also stayed through that awful night.
Soon after the accident had happened, the three married daughters were
called by telephone. Elsie and Ruth and their families lived at Pleasant
Home; Willie and Jordan lived at Little Rock. Ruth and Langley arrived
Tuesday.
The body was moved to the home at Pleasant Hill Wednesday morning. By
that time a number of other relatives had arrived. Sweeney was awakened
by his father about 1:00 o'clock Wednesday afternoon; he had been up all
night Tuesday night. Jady told him that they had not been able to
contact anyone at Pleasant Home by telephone. The funeral was planned
for Thursday, at Pleasant Home, but none of the folks at Pleasant Home
knew about it. The grave had to be dug and other preparations made.
Sweeney had to make a trip on a horse to deliver the message.
Sweeney ate and got ready while his father saddled the mare. First,
Sweeney planned to ride "Ole Bess," the steady one. At the last minute
he changed his mind and told Jady to saddle "Ole May," the younger,
faster mare Clayton had been riding when he fell. Sweeney rode at a
steady gallop, occasionally slowing to a walk for a few minutes to allow
"Ole May" to rest. Within about two and one-half hours, he had completed
the twenty-two mile trip to Pleasant Home. He went to the home place,
unsaddled the mare and fed her, and walked down the hill to Mr.
Beavert's house. With deep emotion Sweeney told their life-long
neighbors of the tragedy. Sweeney's mission was then completed; Mr.
Beavert assumed the responsibility for preparing for the funeral the
next day.
Sweeney had not slept more than a few hours at a time since Saturday
night; he was exhausted. Wednesday he slept all night. When he got to
the church house Thursday, the grave was completed and all the
preparations were made.
The small caravan of automobiles left Pleasant Hill about mid-morning
Thursday for the funeral at Pleasant Home. Although it was several miles
farther, they went by Okolona since that road had a good bridge across
the Little Missouri River. Others joined the caravan at Delight,
including Brother Brooks Stell. Clayton's body was transported in a
panel truck provided by the funeral home. Since Ernest Jameson, the
Funeral Director, did not know the way to Pleasant Home, A. E. McGuire
rode with him to show him the way. Before they left, instructions were
given the driver that they were to stop at Elsie's house about a mile
and one-half before they would reach Pleasant Home. Elsie was in bed;
her second child, James, had been born a few days earlier. Elsie and
Dewey lived on the Burleson place, where Brother and Sister Copeland had
lived the first year of their marriage.
When the caravan reached Dewey and Elsie's house, they all stopped. The
men lifted the casket from the van and carried it into the house. The
casket was opened so Elsie and her family could see the body. Comments
were made about how natural Clayton looked, but how pale. He was wearing
a new suit his father had bought after they learned that the funeral
home did not have anything to fit a boy his age.
The funeral was conducted by Brother Lee Starnes and Brother Brooks
Stell at 2:00 o'clock Thursday afternoon, July 9, 1925. It was an
emotional experience the family never forgot. Fifty years later Ruth
remembered that the song "Will the Circle be Unbroken?" was sung. No
song could have been more appropriate.
Throughout the ordeal Jady maintained his composure except for two
occasions when he wept openly and unashamedly. One of these times was
when Zeta arrived at the home at Pleasant Hill on Wednesday and the
other was when they arrived at Pleasant Home and he was met by his
life-long friends and relatives.
Although the loss of a loved one so young and innocent was sad and
difficult for them, the Copeland family had the advantage of a
triumphant religious faith. They took com ort, therefore, in the blessed
assurance of the scriptures in the Bible: "But I would not have you
ignorant, brethren, concerning them which are asleep, that ye sorrow
not, even as others who have no hope." (l Thessalonians 4: 13). They
believed strongly in the idea expressed by Longfellow:
"Life is real, life is earnest,
And the grave is not its goal.
Dust thou art, to dust returneth,
Was not spoken of the soul."
Thus, with faith in God, they looked to the future, knowing
"There is no death! What seems so is transition;
This life of mortal breath
Is but a suburb of the life elysian,
Whose portal we call death."
— Longfellow.
The remaining circle of father, mother, and twelve children was not to
be broken again for thirty years.
The Copeland family lived at Pleasant Hill only two years and
approximately three months. During that time, the children attended
school at "Rocky College," a rural community school east of Pleasant
Hill. Homer Gentry, Miss Della Coffee, and Miss Eva Mosley were among
the teachers at Rocky College during those two school years of 1924-25
and 1925-26.
Farming had always been a part of the family's way of life. While at
Pleasant Hill, they raised the usual crops of corn and cotton. But in
addition, for the first time ever, they raised watermelons for the
market.
During the winter of 1925·1926 Jady remodeled the house at Pleasant
Hill. It was located on the road just north of the new Pleasant Hill
church house. Among his numerous skills, Brother Copeland was a good
carpenter. He had not been trained in the trade, but because of his
natural ability and interest, he had developed that skill through
experience and necessity. Throughout the years, he built or helped to
build and remodel several houses. There was, for him, a certain
satisfaction in that kind of work; he was using a God-given talent to
create something new and useful for his family. He also helped many
others from time to time, in their building.
The move to Pleasant Hill was significant for a number of reasons, but
perhaps it had more lasting effects upon Vida and Estelle than the other
members of the family. They both married men who lived in that
community; Pleasant Hill became home for them.
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The J. A. Copeland family, Christmas, 1927. Back row, left to
right: Langley House, Lavonne House, Ruth, Estelle, Nancy
(Womack) Copeland, J. A., Jady Wilson, Georgia, Emma (Hardie)
Watkins, Vida, Willie, Sweeney, Jordan Roberts; Second row:
Clauzelle House, Copeland House, Audy House, Gilbert, Dewey Cox,
Elsie, Ordis, Oleva, J. L. Roberts Jr., Charlene Roberts, Evelyn
Roberts; Front row: James Cox, Bernie Lee Cox, Lynn Cox, Joy and
Floy. |
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Chapter
VIII
Delight and Tragedy
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After two years at Pleasant Hill, the family moved again. As always, the
possible good which could be accomplished in the work of the church was
the primary factor upon which the decision was based. The church at
Delight, one of the oldest congregations of the New Testament church in
Arkansas, was having some problems at that time. Because many of the
members knew and respected Brother J. A. Copeland, the leaders in the
congregation believed that he could help to restore unity in the church.
That was the basis 'of their plea for Brother Copeland to move to
Delight.
Pleasant Hill held sad memories since Clayton's death a year and a half
before. Two other circumstances also influenced his decision to accept
the call of the Delight church. The opportunities were limited at
Pleasant Hill for the children to have the kind of friendships needed
for Christian growth. And there was a high school at Delight. So, in
spite of the hardships it might cause the family, in the long run it
would work out for the best.
The year 1927 was one of those unforgettable years. Lindberg flew to
Paris; the Supreme Court finished mopping up Teapot Dome; Babe Ruth
knocked sixty home runs; Coolidge "did not choose to run" again. People
were reading The Bridge of San Luis Rey and humming "My Blue
Heaven." The Marines landed in Nicaragua and China that year, and in the
spring of 1927 floods ravaged the Mississippi Valley from Cairo,
Illinois, to the Gulf of Mexico.
In Arkansas, the floods started in December 1926. The road and weather
conditions, in fact, delayed the Copeland family's move. The rainfall in
December broke the record in Arkansas. In Delight, almost six inches of
rain fell during a twenty-four hour period Monday and Tuesday December
20·21. Streams reached the flood stage and delayed the trains as well as
travel on the highways. The railroad bridge at Antoine, crossing the
Antoine River, and the bridge crossing Wolf Creek at Delight were
twisted out of line by the high water. The following article was
published in the Pike County Tribune on Friday, January 7, 1927:
J. A. COPELAND WILL MOVE HERE
Eld. J. A. Copeland, Christian evangelist, formerly of Pleasant Home
community but for the past few years of near Prescott, has purchased the
Mrs. J. D. Boyd farm near town and will move to the same as soon as road
and weather conditions will permit. The Tribune joins Bro. Copeland's
many friends of this community in welcoming him and his good family to
our midst.
The home and farm they bought from Mrs. Sallie E. Boyd was located one
mile west of Delight on the Murfreesboro road. The deed, filed in the
county clerk's office at Murfreesboro on January 4, 1927, indicated that
the total selling price for the eighty acres and the house was $2,000.
Eleven hundred dollars was paid at the time the deal was closed; the
remaining $900 was to be paid in three equal payments of $300 each on
November 15, 1927, November 15, 1928, and November 15, 1929.
The manner in which the move was made turned out to be a new and
exciting experience for the entire family. Jady rented a railroad boxcar
at Prescott. On Saturday, January 8, 1927, they began hauling some of
the things to the boxcar. The move was to be made on Monday, so they
hauled only those things which would not be needed over the weekend.
Ruth and Langley went to Pleasant Hill that weekend. Some of the
children, including Floy and Joy, went home with Ruth and Langley on
Sunday afternoon. On Monday morning, the rest of the household goods,
furniture, and even the livestock, were loaded on the boxcar for the
move. While the train went by way of Gurdon and Antoine, to Delight, the
family went in the car by Okolona. By the time Ruth, Langley and the
children got to Delight from Pleasant Home, the furniture was being
moved into the Boyd house where the family was to live.
At the time of the move to Delight, Sweeney was working at Little Rock.
He had left after Christmas to be in Little Rock to start work the first
of the year. Willie and Jordan lived at Little Rock, and Sweeney stayed
with them while there.
Vida was teaching at Blevins that year, so she did not move with the
family to Delight.
When the children entered school at Delight, there were some adjustments
to be made. Never before had any of them attended such a large school.
The Pike County Tribune reported, in August, 1926, that "owing to
the continued growth of the school," the school board had decided to
build another large room on the school building.
That school year, Mr. J. O. Kelly was superintendent and high school
teacher. Nuel C. Crain was principal and high school teacher, and Miss
Elise Reid taught seventh and eighth grades. In the elementary school,
Miss Andrews taught fifth and sixth grades, Miss Addie Wade taught third
and fourth grades, and Miss Nellie Stark had the primary department.
When school started, September 20, 1926, a total of 120 students
enrolled, but quite a number were still out picking cotton.
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J. A. and Georgia Copeland At Delight, about 1928
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Because of extra expenses that year, students were charged tuition for
the first two months. The amount ranged from $1.50 for first and second
grades to $3.50 each for those in high school.
In
January, 1927, when the Copeland children enrolled at Delight, Gilbert
and Estelle were in the eighth grade, Joy and Floy were in the fifth
grade, and Ordis and Oleva were in the second grade. Jady Wilson was not
old enough to be in school. Although some adjustments to the larger
school were necessary, after they got acquainted the children were very
happy at Delight. This was the first time any of the family had had a
chance to finish high school. Sweeney had attended high school at
Prescott in the fall of 1924, but dropped out at mid-term to ease the
financial strain on the family budget. Floy and Joy were to become the
first high school graduates in the Copeland family.
Several important events took place in the Copeland family during the
year 1929. It was an unstable time for everyone. The decade called "the
roaring twenties" came to an end with a crash! Financial panic gripped
the entire nation in the worst depression in its history. The situation
was almost world-wide. The years of the Coolidge administration
(1921-1928) witnessed expansion and inflation unknown in any country in
the world before that time. Inflation brought the illusion of permanent
prosperity. While financial activity continued at an unprecedented rate
during the summer of 1929, industrial activity was slowing down.
Agricultural depression, the result of falling prices for farm products
and land, cost thousands of farmers their homes through mortgage
foreclosure. Two-fifths of the farms in America were operated by
tenant-farmers.
Under the Agricultural Marketing Act, signed by President Hoover in
June, 1929, a Federal Farm Board was furnished a fund to establish
marketing cooperatives. They loaned money to farmers who pledged their
crops as security. After the depression hit, this did not work because
prices quickly fell below the loan rate.
The stock market crash, in October, 1929, is usually considered the
beginning of the "great depression." In 1932 stocks sold for about ten
percent of their 1929 value. In Arkansas, cotton that had sold for as
much as twenty cents a pound dropped to five cents. Land that had sold
for forty dollars an acre sold for five dollars an acre. Corn was
selling for twenty-five cents a bushel.
Other misfortunes came with the year 1929. The Pike County Tribune
reported a flu epidemic at Delight in January, 1929. The opening of
school after the Christmas holidays was postponed until January 7. As
members of the Copeland family discussed the seriousness of flu, their
conversations went back to March, 1922, when Jady had almost died.
The Copeland family moved to Prescott in February of that year. The
following article was published in the February 15 issue of the Pike
County Tribune:
LOCAL PASTOR MOVES TO PRESCOTT
Elder J. A. Copeland and family, who recently purchased a home in
Prescott, moved first of this week to make that their future home. Bro.
Copeland will be pastor of the Prescott Christian Church for the ensuing
year. The family's many friends here regret for them to leave this
community. But our loss will be Prescott's gain.
But things did not work out that way. The home place at Delight had been
sold to Curtis Hughes for $2,500. Because he could not get a loan on the
place for enough to pay for it, he had to let it go back. Since the
Copelands were depending on getting the money from Mr. Hughes to pay for
their place at Prescott, they had to move back to Delight. On March 18,
exactly five weeks after their move to Prescott, they moved back.
Curtis Hughes was J. A. Copeland's brother-in-law; he married Nobia
Copeland, Jady's younger sister. At the time Jady and his family
returned from Prescott, Nobia was seriously ill; she died a short time
later, in June, 1929. Because of her illness, Jady rented a house two
miles north of Delight, on the Caddo Gap road. Nathan Lamb had moved to
town and his house was vacant. Although he planned to sell the place
later, he offered to rent it to the Copeland family temporarily.
They lived there all summer and made a crop on Mr. Lamb's land. It was a
dry, hot summer, perhaps a forerunner to the worse drought to come in
1930. Some of the children remember picking peas that had dried in the
field. Among their neighbors while they lived in Mr. Lamb's house on the
Caddo Gap road were Lincoln Lamb and his family, the Phillips family and
the Thomassons.
Fate was to deal the Copeland family another tragic blow before the year
ended. The house they lived in burned on November 22, 1929. The
following article appeared in the Pike County Tribune on November
29:
"Fire originating from a defective flue last Friday morning about 9:00
o'clock destroyed the residence of Eld. and Mrs. J. A. Copeland, two
miles north of here. Eld. and Mrs. Copeland had just left home shortly
before the fire was discovered by nearby neighbors, who rushed to the
house and saved a piano and a few bed clothes. All the other household
goods, together with the family wearing apparel was burned up.
Volunteer firefighters of the town rushed to the scene
of the fire, but too late to save anything except what was in the
smokehouse.
The fire loss was estimated at about $1,500.
That fall Estelle, Floy, Joy, Ordis, Oleva, and Jady Wilson were still
at home. Ruth and her family, and Elsie and her family lived in the
Pleasant Home community. Willie and Jordan lived at Little Rock. Sweeney
was working at Hope; he moved from Prescott to Hope to become manager of
Mr. Stripling's Number Three Store in March, 1929. He and Maude Brown
were married on Wednesday, November 27, the week after the house burned.
Vida taught at Hopper, near Glenwood, during the 1928-29 school year;
she was married to David Stuart July 14, 1929. Gilbert went to work for
Mr. Stripling in the store at Prescott that year.
After Nobia Hughes died, Jady agreed to sell Curtis Hughes twenty acres
of land for him to build a house on, a few hundred yards east of the
home place. After he had moved out of the Copeland house, Jady decided
to remodel the house before the family was moved back into it. During
the fall, while they still lived in Mr. Lamb's house on the Caddo Gap
road, they worked on their house. Each day after the children went to
school, Jady and Georgia would go to work on the house. In addition to
other changes, the roof was to be replaced with one not so steep. The
Boyd house, originally built by Charlie Reid, had a very steep roof with
a number of gables. Jady wanted to change that; not only would it
improve the looks of the house, but also make it easier to repair the
roof when necessary. .
In November they worked steadily on the house, hoping to have it
finished by Thanksgiving Day. While they had the roof off and before
they got the new roof on, an unexpected early snow fell during the night
of November 21. On Friday morning, November 22, Jady, Georgia, and Jady
Wilson were working at the house, trying to sweep and shovel out the
snow that had fallen in the ceiling, before it melted.
Jady Wilson, who was in the second grade at school, was not at school
that morning because Miss Nellie's first and second graders were
alternating mornings and afternoons. That week the second graders were
going to school in the afternoons, the first graders in the mornings.
The older Copeland children were all at school. The fire was discovered
by neighbors, Mr. Hall and Mr. Phillips. Silas Hall had recently rented
the house where the Copelands were living. While waiting for the house
to become vacant, he and his family were living in a small house nearby.
When they moved to the smaller house, however, they moved their piano
into the house where the Copelands were living so it would not have to
be moved twice.
Mr. Hall and Mr. Phillips were moving the piano out of the burning house
when another neighbor, Mr. Thomasson arrived. They saved the piano and
the quilts and sheets from one bed. While these men were moving the
piano, someone called the telephone operator and told her to spread the
word. Within a few minutes a number of men from Delight had rushed to
the burning house. But it was too late!
Otsy May was in town; when she heard about the fire she hurried to the
school to tell the Copeland children. The high school students attended
a "pep rally" that morning; a football game was scheduled for that
afternoon. Suddenly, while the students were moving to their next
classes, excitement appeared. It spread as the word was passed from one
to another. "Fire!" "Where?" "The Copelands' house!" Mrs. Bell, the
English teacher, asked a boy who had his car at school to drive Floy and
Joy to their home. By the time they got to the house, it had burned
completely. The firefighters and spectators were already returning to
Delight.
The young people from school then drove back to town and started to the
other house where Brother and Sister Copeland were working. They met
their parents on the way. Sister Copeland was terribly upset; she was
crying "like someone had died." When the parents were told that the
house was completely destroyed, Jady suggested that they go to Nathan
Lamb's house. He knew that Georgia would be even more disturbed if they
went immediately to see the ruins. That their meager belongings,
accumulated through the years, were lying in smoldering ashes was a
dreadful thought.
The Lamb family demonstrated true friendship and the true spirit of
Christian brotherhood! Without hesitation they asked, they insisted,
that the Copelands stay with them until their home was completed.
Many friends and neighbors in and around Delight, and throughout the
country where the Copelands were known, demonstrated that same spirit.
Clothing, household furnishings, and money were contributed by dozens of
people. O. J. Phillips and Ralph Thomasson got in a truck and drove
about the country collecting things for the Copeland family.
Nathan Lamb, who owned a cotton gin, contributed enough cotton to make
four full-sized mattresses. Jady went to a second-hand furniture store
at Hope and bought the necessary furnishings not contributed by friends
and neighbors. He bought a new cookstove and a new sewing
machine.
People's response to the Copelands' need demonstrated generosity beyond
anyone's expectation. The intense gratitude, felt by the entire family,
was expressed publicly in the following article, published in the
Pike County Tribune on November 29, 1929:
CARD
OF THANKS
We wish, as much as is in our power, to express our sincere thanks to
the people of Delight and other communities for their kindness shown to
us since our misfortune of losing our household goods by fire. We shall
never forget the tender words of sympathy and the financial aid the
people have given. We have received articles of clothing, bed clothes,
and money, for which we are truly grateful. We especially thank those
who showed so much interest in collecting those things for us. May the
Lord's richest blessings rest upon you all is our prayer. Pray for us
that we may be worthy of such blessings.
—J.
A. Copeland and family.
Very few people know that awful feeling of despair after their house and
all they own have burned. The shock of the event made it seem unreal for
the Copelands. Having never before experienced such a situation, the
entire family found it hard to believe. The shock wore off with time, of
course, but the hardship of losing all their belongings was felt for
years. Often in the years that followed, some particular item would be
mentioned and someone would say, "That was burned with the house in
1929."
Jady had been preaching for 25 years and was 48 years old when the house
burned. Among the greatest losses, from his point of view, were the
records of his preaching appointments and meetings, and the accumulation
of his sermon outlines, notes, and reference books. He had, of course, a
great deal of knowledge, especially of the Bible, as a result of those
twenty-five years of study and experience preaching. In fact, his
children say that a favorite pastime when they were growing up was to
read a passage aloud from the New Testament to see if their father could
quote the verse before and after it. To their delight, most of the time
he could. His written records, however, and his lesson outlines were
vitally important to him. Their loss in the fire was a blow to Jady. The
anguish and heartache he felt was known to few. In later years Sister
Copeland told of a particular time when she was awakened by Jady in the
middle of the night. He was sitting on the side of the bed, in distress.
When she asked him what was wrong, he moaned, "All of my sermons and
notes and records are gone!"
But he never gave up! In the years that followed, he re-dedicated
himself to studying the Bible and writing new lesson outlines. Oleva
remembers that many nights when her father had difficulty sleeping, he
would get up and study and read. Once again the firm conviction that
"all things work together for good" led to triumph over a most difficult
time.
In the years that followed, also, Brother Copeland's talents for serving
others were to be expanded to include writing and editing.

J. A. and Georgia Copeland At Hope, 1940. |
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Chapter IX
The Gospel Light
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In 1929 Grady Alexander, at 38 years of age, was a successful
businessman and publisher of a county newspaper. He was conscientious in
everything he did, and always wanted to do the right thing. Having a
strong desire to serve the Lord to the best of his ability, he dreamed
of establishing a gospel paper which would serve the members of the
Lord's church throughout Arkansas and elsewhere.
J. A. Copeland had moved to Delight, and Brother Alexander approached
Brother Copeland with the idea. He wanted Brother Copeland to assist him
in the venture. Brother Copeland later wrote:
I did not encourage the matter, for I realized I was not an editor and I
had known several papers to fail for the lack of finances and proper
management.
About a year later, in 1930, Brother Alexander came to him with the same
plea and convinced Brother Copeland that it would work. He agreed this
time to help with the work.
Brother Copeland knew that Brother Alexander was a hard worker and a
good manager. He had confidence in Brother Alexander; he had known him
since childhood.
The decision was made to begin. The name selected for the paper was the
Gospel Light. During the summer and fall of 1930 they spent much
time planning the new paper. A great number of people became interested
in the idea. There were, of course, many who believed that such an
effort would surely fail. After all, many others had tried and failed.
Some thought it foolish to attempt such a venture during the worst
depression the nation had ever known.
But Brother Alexander had full confidence that it would succeed. In the
first issue he wrote:
In accepting the business management and publication of the Gospel
Light, which is being launched at Delight at this time not as a local
paper, but as a state-wide publication, in the interest of the Churches
of Christ throughout the state and adjoining states, we do so without
any hesitation or question as to its ultimate outcome, its progress, or
future prosperity and growth, because we have the utmost confidence in
the ability of those who have pledged their support to the paper.
With the assurance of the support and patronage of a number of the
strongest congregations, together with many of the ablest ministers in
the brotherhood pledging their cooperation and services in the
preparation of material for the paper, we have no hesitancy in placing
our printing plant and our experience as a publisher at the disposal of
the brotherhood for the publication of the Gospel Light.
A religious publication, like all publications, to continue and succeed,
must have the support, cooperation and good will of all concerned and
the Gospel Light is no exception to this rule. It will be a part of the
business policy of this paper from time to time to accept a limited
amount of legitimate advertising, and without such we do not believe
that a religious paper the size of the Gospel Light can be maintained
with a fifty cents a year subscription price alone. This part of the
paper's business policies will probably be criticized by some who are
not familiar with the rise and down-fall of the many religious
publications which have tried to run by the support of the subscriptions
alone.
Brother Copeland talked with brethren about the paper in every
congregation where he held meetings. He found many people interested,
and many promised to support the new paper.
Brother Alexander and Brother Copeland knew that in order to succeed
they must have the support of some of the larger congregations of the
church in Arkansas. Also, they must have articles written by men known
and respected in the brotherhood. In an effort to gain the support
needed and to get commitments from potential contributors, they visited
a number of congregations and preachers in central and north Arkansas.
The following article appeared in the first issue of the Gospel
Light, which was published December 1, 1930:
COOPERATION IS ASSURED
On Sunday afternoon, November 9, the editor and publisher started on a
tour of the Central and Northwest part of the state in the interest of
the Gospel Light. We first visited with Brother Glenn E. Green of Little
Rock. We reached there in time to hear him preach a fine sermon. Brother
Green has been with the Fourth and State Street Church for about four
years, and seems to be the right man for the place. The church has grown
considerably since he has been laboring with it. He will be a regular
contributor to the Gospel Light, and we are sure that his articles will
be highly appreciated by the brethren.
On Monday morning we visited Brother J. C. Dawson at Conway. He was very
busy but took time to talk with us about the Gospel Light, and assured
us of his hearty cooperation. Brother Dawson impressed us as being an
honest and zealous Christian and a good preacher. He will be a regular
writer and worker for the paper.
We next went to Morrilton, and met that splendid brother,
L. C. Sears,
Dean of the Harding Christian College. Brother Sears seems to be a very
fine man, and the boys and girls in school there are very fortunate in
being in the care of, and trained by such men as Bros.
Sears, Armstrong,
Bell and Rhodes. The school is doing a great work in training boys and
girls for usefulness.
The Harding Christian College will have a department in the Gospel
Light, which will be filled each issue from that institution. We did not
get to see Brother Armstrong as he was in Nashville, Tennessee.
We went from Morrilton to Fort Smith, arriving there about 8 p.m. Monday
and found the brethren there in a meeting with Brother J. W. Brents of
Muskogee, Oklahoma doing the preaching. Brother Brents seems to be a
fine man, and we are told that he is an excellent preacher and writer.
We were glad to secure him as a regular contributor to the Gospel Light.
We found Brother Laird and Dr. Billingsley at church and talked to them
about plans for the Gospel Light. They also assured us of their full
cooperation in helping make the publication of the paper a success. Dr.
Billingsley was the first paid-in-advance subscriber of the Gospel
Light, and Brother Brents was the first field contributor to send in an
article for the paper.
Brother Laird is president of the Arkansas Christian Home, and Dr.
Billingsley is secretary and treasurer. They are very enthusiastic men,
and are doing a great work caring for, educating and teaching those
children the Bible. It is a pleasure to meet and associate with such
men.
We went to Van Buren Monday night, and left there early Tuesday morning
and stopped off at Morrilton, hoping to see Brothers Armstrong, Johnson,
and others but the former had not returned from Nashville, Tennessee. We
spent a few hours with Brother R. H. Johnson and his good wife, and
enjoyed a good dinner in their home. They know how to make a preacher
feel welcome.
Our time was limited and we did not visit the college in session, so we
did not see Brothers Bell and Rhodes. We returned to Little Rock in the
afternoon where the editor visited for the last time in this world my
brother-in-law, Leonard Stark. And as we think of this visit our eyes
are dimmed with tears, for a great and good man was he. About seventeen
years have rolled around since he and the editor's sister married, and
we have found him to be a faithful and sacrificing Christian.
We look forward to that visit with him on the other side, where no sad
separations come.
We returned home Wednesday assured that the brethren were anxious to see
the first number of the Gospel Light. It is the unanimous opinion of all
that we need a good paper in Arkansas, and they convinced us that they
are going to help make the Gospel Light a blessing to man wherever it
goes.
At the beginning, the paper was four pages, published twice each month.
Each page had three columns of print, thirteen or fourteen inches high;
the format was similar to that of a newspaper. The subscription price
was fifty cents per year.
In an article appearing on the editorial page of the first issue,
Brother Copeland explained the purposes and policies of the Gospel
Light. The entire article is reproduced below:
SALUTATORY
(By J. A. Copeland)
I believe we should be ready to give a reason for every undertaking of
life. The Apostle Peter said: "But sanctify the Lord God in your hearts
and be ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh you, a
reason for the hope that is in you with meekness and fear." (1 Pet.
3:15).
Our reason for coming before the brotherhood with the Gospel Light is
that we believe that it will help to advance the cause of Christ in
Arkansas and elsewhere. We believe that the preachers and brethren in
general ought to know more about each other, and the work the Churches
of Christ are doing in Arkansas. Besides this, in a good Gospel paper
many are taught the truths of the Bible that would not learn them
otherwise. It enlarges our field of usefulness by giving an opportunity
to preach the Gospel with pen as well as with tongue.
We are aware of the fact that many religious papers have started that
did not last long, but we believe that with the conditions we have this
paper can be financed without being a great burden on anyone person.
Brother Grady Alexander, who is publisher and business manager of the
Gospel Light, is an experienced newspaper man and publisher, and has
succeeded in his work. He owns his home, office and a splendid printing
plant, with which he has been printing a weekly paper for a number of
years. He does not expect to discontinue his newspaper, but with very
little added expense he can publish the Gospel Light.
We also understand the financial condition of the country at this time,
but the paper is small and will be published only twice each month,
which will enable us to put the subscription price at only fifty cents a
year until the financial depression is over. At this low price many will
take the Gospel Light who cannot take the larger and more expensive
papers. We are in no sense casting any reflection upon the larger and
well established papers, and are in no way endeavoring to take or fill
their place, but rather supplement them in reaching parts of the
"Harvest Field" where they cannot and do not reach now. Those papers are
doing untold good, and our prayer is that the brethren will continue to
read and support them. We do not come with envy in our hearts toward any
paper, but desire that all of them, which are loyal to the Word of the
Lord may prosper and do much to advance primitive Christianity.
I have been selected as office editor of the Gospel Light. And I realize
that there are other brethren in the state who are much better qualified
than I am to fill the place, but it is necessary that the editor live
where the paper is published, and I suppose that is why that
responsibility has fallen upon me.
The policy of the Gospel Light will be to hold up to the world the
Gospel of Christ in its purity and simplicity, and to encourage the
brethren into greater fields of usefulness. We do not intend to fill its
columns with long articles, speculating on unlearned and non-essential
questions, but with Bible truths that pertain to our eternal welfare.
We shall strive to be loyal to God's Word, and to steer as free as
possible from external hobbies and digressions.
We believe that we have a corps of contributors or associate editors who
are competent, faithful, and have the love for the truth in their
hearts, and we shall feel free to call upon them for counsel when
needed.
We want the preachers of Arkansas and elsewhere to write for the paper
whether their names are listed as regular contributors or not. We
especially ask all preachers and elders of congregations to report your
meetings and congregational development, and secure subscribers for the
Gospel Light wherever you go. This will be worth a great deal in getting
the paper before the people, and will cause others to become interested
in this great work.
We realize our imperfections, but with the help of God and the brethren
we believe that we can make the paper a success. Brethren, pray for us,
that we may be able to discern between right and wrong; between truth
and error.
The readers of the Gospel Light were impressed immediately with
the quality of the new paper. Many were especially concerned as to what
its editorial policy would be. Brother Copeland wrote the following
editorial in the January 15, 1931, issue on
the
subject of "Loyalty."
LOYALTY
Many brethren are wondering whether or not the Gospel Light will be
"loyal." In the issue of January the first, Brother
W. F. Lemmons says: "It is impossible to
operate a publication of this character and always keep it one hundred
percent sound." I am sure Brother Lemmons is correct in that statement,
but it is our desire and aim to keep the Gospel Light as sound and as
loyal to Christ, as it is possible for us to do.
In the issue of December the fifteenth, Brother T. W. Croom has this to
say: "There is one thing I am glad to see in the first issue. 'It is an
expressed determination to steer clear of hobbies.' I fear, however,
that there might be such a thing as making a hobby out of this very
thing." I certainly appreciate that statement from Brother Croom.
Some brethren cry "hobbies" and a good part of their time they are
riding hobbies. Some are ready to cry "digression" and often disgress
themselves. Some lay stress on being "loyal" while they are far from
being loyal.
With the people there are many standards of loyalty. Some mistake zeal
for loyalty, but one can be as zealous in errors as they can in the
truth. (Romans 10:1-3). Some brethren seem to think if they condemn
instrumental music in the worship and church societies they are loyal.
Others think they must oppose literature and classes in order to be
loyal while some have other standards of loyalty.
Webster defines the word loyal thus: Faithful, as to the lawful
government or to be a friend; true.
From this we see if we are loyal to Christ we will not only oppose
innovation and things unauthorized by Christ, but we must be faithful to
Him and His government.
I am fully convinced that instrumental music in the worship is not
scriptural. Yet one might condemn the instrument in the church and be
far from being loyal. We must learn to sing, and to sing with the spirit
and the understanding in order to be loyal. Some brethren will condemn
the instrument in the strongest terms but will not pay a dollar to have
the church trained to sing. They are as far from loyal as those who use
the instrument.
I have never tried to justify missionary societies. I am sure that the
Church of Christ is all the missionary society that we need.
Paul said the Church is the pillar and the ground of the truth (1
Timothy 3:15) and again: "Unto Him be glory in the church by Christ
Jesus throughout all ages world without end." (Ephesians 3:21).
Since the Church is the pillar and ground of the truth, and since we
should give God the glory through the Church then it seems to me, for
man to devise a society to do that work, is to assume to improve upon
the Lord's plan which is impossible for him to do. Yet one might condemn
missionary societies, and not be loyal, as loyalty means faithfulness,
no one can be loyal without spending some of his time and means for the
cause of Christ.
I feel sure in saying there is no scripture to condemn the use of
uninspired literature to assist us in the study of the Bible. Literature
embraces everything that is written. If we find a word in the Bible that
we do not know its meaning we turn to a dictionary to find it. A
dictionary is literature. If we want to know the history of a country
that we read about in the Bible, we pick up a history. That is
literature. Many object to the use of literature in the Bible study that
never put forth much effort to learn the Bible or to teach it to others.
Brethren, let's strive to be more consistent and more loyal.
The best way to get rid of the instrument in the church is to sing it
out. That is to prepare ourselves and our children for the song service
so that we won't need the instrument.
Let's do missionary work through the church until the missionary
societies will not be necessary.
When we all become loyal to the extent that we discharge our duty in
worshiping God, and in advancing His cause, just as members of the one
body, and giving God the glory in the church of Christ Jesus,
innovations and man-made plans will fade away with those who really love
and serve the Lord.
This philosophy was restated by Brother Alexander in the April 15, 1932,
issue. He explained that it is the policy of the Gospel Light not
to print articles which promote "hobbies."
From the beginning the Gospel Light was an effective and
successful publication. The hard work and sound management capability of
Brother Alexander, with the wisdom he and Brother Copeland used in
selecting articles for the paper, assured its success. They had, from
the beginning, contributors who were able men with experience in
teaching and preaching the gospel.
Brother Copeland wrote articles for the Gospel Light from time to
time, in addition to helping as editor. Many of his articles were in
response to requests for information on specific topics. He also
answered readers' questions on the interpretation of particular
scriptures.
One Hundredth Anniversary of the Church at Delight

The Delight Church building as it was in 1955. (Picture made in
1933.) |
The September 15, 1932, issue of the Gospel Light contained an
article which began: "The Delight congregation of the Church of Christ,
which was organized in 1833, is making plans for its 100th anniversary."
This announced, almost a year in advance, an event which was significant
to the whole community. Brother Copeland was in charge of the meeting,
but several other preachers took part in it. Many visitors from
communities throughout southwest Arkansas attended the meeting. The
church at Delight was formally organized under the .leadership of Elijah
Kelley by the passing of the following resolution dated the first Sunday
in April, 1833:
"Wolf Creek, Pike County, Arkansas. First Lord's Day in April, 1833. We
believe that the Old and New Testaments is the only rule of faith and
practice and for the government of the Church of Christ."
Seventy-five names are recorded in the church book as "charter members."
Clovis Copeland, nephew of J. A. Copeland, wrote an article which was
published in the Arkansas Gazette on April 3, 1938, which
presents some of the details of the history of this early church. Some
believe this church to be the oldest congregation of the New Testament
church in Arkansas. His article was based upon information found in old
church records which were at that time in the hands of the daughter of
Elijah Kelley, Mrs. Johnston Lamb.
At Brother Copeland's request, there was a change in the editorial
duties in March, 1934. Circumstances indicated that such was the wise
course of action. Brother Copeland's work load had increased, and he was
not getting any younger. The following appeared on the editorial page of
the March 1, 1934, issue:
A CHANGE IN THE EDITORIAL STAFF
By J. A. Copeland
Up to the last two issues of the Gospel Light, I was recognized as
Editor of that paper, and Brother Grady Alexander was Publisher. If you
will look at the heading now you will see that it says,
Grady Alexander, Office Editor and
Publisher, and J. A. Copeland, Associate Editor and Field
Representative. This change was made by my request.
Brother Alexander is sole owner of the paper. But before we started it
he asked me to act as Editor of the paper, and this I consented to do.
At that time I had been preaching about twenty-five years and had met
more of the brethren, and visited many more congregations than Brother
Alexander had. But he had been in the newspaper business a number of
years, besides he owned a splendid printing plant with which he prints
the Gospel Light. I have had so much to do during this time I have had
very little time to spend in the office, but when any matter came for
publication that was questionable Brother Alexander would call me in and
we would go over the copy together and decide whether it should be
printed or not. We have never had the least disagreement, and we are not
expecting any. Brother Alexander is the logical editor of the paper, and
I believe in giving "honor to whom honor is due."
Beside this, I live a mile from the office and my mail comes out to my
home, and quite a bit of my time I am away from home; so if mail for the
Gospel Light comes to me sometimes it is several days before it gets to
the office. Please send all subscriptions, all articles, etc., for
publication and all correspondence for the paper directly to "THE
GOSPEL LIGHT," Delight, Arkansas. You will get better and quicker service by so
doing.
I have not severed my connection with the paper, but hope to be able to
do more for it in the future than I have ever done in the past.
I here ask everyone who is interested in the progress of the Gospel
Light to try to get more subscribers, and work up a greater interest for
the paper among the brethren. I know money is scarce, but I can't think
of anything that you can get for fifty cents that will be worth more to
you than the Gospel Light will.
I know the paper is too small, but the more friends of the paper do for
it, the sooner we can enlarge it. The paper will be four years old
December the first. Let's roll up the subscription list so that we will
be able to enlarge it by that time.
The Gospel Light became a weekly publication in January, 1937.
Until that time it had been published twice each month. Brother Copeland
had an article on the front page of the January 7, 1937, issue appealing
to the readers to support the paper and to try to get others to
subscribe to it. In the article he mentioned that he had "been taking
the Firm Foundation continuously for about thirty years," that it
was money well spent, and that he was just as anxious to get it as ever.
In December, 1938, a special edition of the Gospel Light was
published. The purpose was evangelistic—to teach the plan of salvation
through the pages of the paper. In addition to the regular subscriptions
sent, almost 63,000 copies of the special edition were mailed to every
rural route box-holder in the state of Arkansas.
Another purpose of this special effort was to familiarize more people
with the Gospel Light and to encourage more people to become
interested in its work.
The next major change in the Gospel Light came when Brother
Alexander died in March, 1939. Naturally, there was concern as to
whether publication of the paper could be continued. To answer that
question, Brother Copeland wrote the following, which was published in
the March 16, 1939, issue of the Gospel Light, after Brother
Alexander passed away.
"BROTHER GRADY ALEXANDER HAS LEFT US"
By J. A. Copeland
It is with sad hearts that we send out this issue of the Gospel Light.
Last Friday night Brother Alexander quit the walks of men, and left with
us the duties and responsibilities of publishing the Gospel Light.
In due time much will be said by myself and others about this good man,
but for the present we turn our attention to the work of this paper
which was so dear to him. When we began the publication of the Gospel
Light more than eight years ago, many brethren thought it would be run a
year or two at a sacrifice of the publisher, and then be discontinued.
But by the great zeal, sacrifice, and good management of Brother
Alexander, and by the help of the brethren and our Heavenly Father, the
paper has lived and gained in favor with the brotherhood and we trust
with God.
As the news of Brother Alexander's death was sent out over telephone and
radio, the question was in the minds of many, will the Gospel Light be
discontinued? Let me answer, No, No.
He leaves behind two sons who are bright young men, with more than
ordinary ability and a devoted wife who determine to carry out the
program of the paper just as he planned.
A few months after he began the paper, Brother Alexander had a bad spell
of sickness. He called me to his bedside and told me if he should fail
to get well, he wanted the paper to go on. He said he had enough paper
bought to print it for several months.
Flanoy Alexander, the older son, will be
publisher and business manager. He is a young man, being 25 years of
age, and is a boy of rare ability. He is familiar with the plans his
father made for the growth of the Gospel Light and is going to carry
them out, if it is the Lord's will.
Yes, the paper will be enlarged in a few weeks just as Brother Alexander
had planned. Now, brethren, did you love Brother Alexander? If so, push
the work of the Gospel Light. His greatest ambition was to see it grow,
and accomplish good. Do you love the Lord? Tell the world about Him
through this paper. Get subscribers, get renewals, report your work,
write short and pointed articles for the paper, prepare your manuscripts
well. Someone may say, I am afraid to work for the paper, it may fail.
No, it will not fail. With such men as James L. Neal, E. M. Borden,
E. R. Harper, Roy Lanier, George B. Curtis, D.
H. Perkins, J. T. Gabbert, V. E. Howard, C.
L. Embrey, R. L. Colley, besides a host of others; and especially a
number of young preachers who are interested in the Gospel Light,
standing by it, and all this coupled with Flanoy and Burnham Alexander's
business ability, and the splendid machinery and equipment with which to
work, no, the Gospel Light cannot fail. Brethren, don't disappoint us,
but begin to work for the paper now.
Beginning with the April 6, 1939, issue, the Gospel Light was an
eight-page paper. The page size was reduced to nine inches by twelve
inches. This change had been planned by Brother Alexander before he
died. The following article, written by Brother Copeland in the April 6,
1939, issue, describes the relationship which had existed between
Brother Alexander and Brother Copeland.
MY FELLOW WORKER
(By J. A. Copeland)
Grady Alexander was born January 11, 1891, and died March 10, 1939. He
was married to Mary Burnham, May 9, 1912. To this union were born two
sons, Flanoy and Burnham, besides three babies who died in infancy.
He was baptized by C. W. Stevenson at the age of fifteen, and grew more
devoted to the Lord as the years passed by.
His father and mother died when he was but a boy, and he had the battles
of life to fight alone. Brother Alexander worked on the farm for a while
and when comparatively a young man he began to publish a county
newspaper. He continued to work on the farm occasionally as long as he
lived. He also became a good business man, and became successful in the
newspaper business. He also became active in county and state affairs,
and served his county in the State Legislature. In all of these things
he was conscientious, and always wanted to do the right thing, whether
it was popular or not. After he and I became associated together in the
Gospel Light, he had strong solicitations from a number of influential
people in his district, to run for State Senator. He asked me for advice
with reference to the matter. I told him that I would not advise him,
but I was afraid it might injure the influence of the Gospel Light.
He didn't think so, so I told him to not let my judgment hinder him in
what he thought was best. He announced in the papers, but soon learned
that the most influential men working for him expected him to try to
pass certain measures that he believed to be wrong. He at once drew out
of the race, because his conscience would not let him work for measures
that he believed to be wrong.
Some ten years ago Brother Alexander came to me and wanted me to assist
him in establishing and running a gospel paper. I did not encourage the
matter, for I realized I was not an editor and I had known several
papers to fail for the lack of finances and proper management.
About a year later he came to me again, with the same plea, and
convinced me that he could finance it. This time I agreed to do what I
could to assist him. More than eight years have rolled around and that
through one of the worst depressions that our country has seen, and the
Gospel Light still lives and grows and has a greater influence as the
years go by.
In these eight years of our work together there has not been the least
bit of variance between us. When he would receive an article for
publication in which he had doubts, he would either call me over the
telephone, or wait until I came to the office, and our judgment was so
near the same that it did not take much discussion for us to decide
whether to print the article or not.
Brother Alexander was a good writer, but he seldom wrote for the paper.
When I would ask him why he did not write more, he would say there is
plenty of good material in the office from other brethren, and he had no
desire to make himself conspicuous. He was a splendid Bible teacher. He
had been teacher of the adult young people's class, both Sunday morning,
and at night, for several years. It will be hard to fill his place in
that work.
He was a successful newspaper man. He started out without money, and
with but little experience. He has published a county newspaper for a
number of years, and has done his work well.
Grady Alexander was human, and had faults" but he could freely confess
them. And I read in God's Holy Book, "If we confess our sins, he is
faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and cleanse us from all
unrighteousness." (1 Jno. 1:9).
I knew him when he was a small child. I knew him after his father died
when he and his mother were struggling with three smaller children, to
drive the wolf from the door. I knew him after his mother died, as an
orphan boy, fighting the battles of life alone. I knew him when that
pure neighbor girl, Mary Burnham, became his partner in life, to share
his joys and sorrows. I have known him through the years as he developed
into maturity and usefulness. But at last I must say, Farewell, Fellow
Worker, until we meet on the other shore.
At the time
of Brother Alexander's death, Brother Copeland was living at Hope,
Arkansas, working with the Fifth and Grady Streets congregation. Brother
Alexander's sons, Flanoy and Burnham, took over the job of publishing
the Gospel Light. They had worked with their father in the
printing plant since they were boys and were, therefore,. thoroughly
familiar with the business. Flanoy was 25 and Burnham was 20 years old
at that time.
Because of their age and the responsibility of the job, they asked
Brother Copeland to be the editor of the paper again. He agreed to
accept, and until August, 1944, his name was listed as editor. In actual
practice, however, he did very little of the work as editor, but rather
served as advisor occasionally.
The following statement written by Brother Copeland was published in the
Gospel Light on August 3, 1944:
"A MINOR CHANGE IN THE GOSPEL LIGHT"
J. A. Copeland
By my request brother Alexander has agreed to drop my name as editor of
the Gospel Light. This is not because there has been any ill feelings
between us, for there has never been anything but perfect cooperation
with us. Neither does it mean that I will do less for the Gospel Light
than I have done in the past. I hope to do more for the paper next year
than I have ever done. I think it will not be out of order to tell the
readers why I have been connected with the paper, and why my name should
now be dropped as editor.
When brother Grady Alexander started the Gospel Light, he had not been
preaching long, and was not acquainted with the brethren in a general
way as well as I. He was already at that time a successful newspaper
man, and had a splendid outfit with which to print a gospel paper. He
asked me if I would be editor, until he became better known among the
brethren, and assist in making decisions on any matter that might be
questionable. In two or three years I asked him to drop my name as
editor and place his there, as he really was the editor, and I was only
in name. After some persuasion on my part, he did so and I was placed as
an Associate Editor, and we worked in perfect harmony until the day of
his death.
When brother Alexander died his son, Flanoy, who has run the paper since
that time, was rather young for such a responsible place. He insisted
that my name be placed as editor again, and help in any way I could,
except working in the office, as I was not needed there. In a short time
we could see that he could do the work and do it well.
I have never owned the paper, nor any of the office equipment, but have
done what little I have done, hoping that much good would be done
through the paper. They have not let me sacrifice anything in a
financial way, but have always given me commissions on subscriptions
taken, and on books I have sold.
So by my request we are dropping my name as editor again. In the first
place I 'am not editor, and if there be any honor in it I believe in
giving "honor to whom honor is due." If it takes sacrifices to run a
paper (and it does), then I fear I have not done enough.
Another reason I have made this request. I am away from home a good part
of the time, and may move away soon. I now live a mile from the office.
It is sometimes several days before I return home to give correspondence
attention, while the party writing may be awaiting an answer. Brethren,
please send anything intended for the paper to The Gospel Light,
Delight, Arkansas, if you want it to receive prompt attention.
I want to express my appreciation for what so many good brothers and
sisters have done for the paper. May God bless all of you, and let us
try to make the paper better each year.
Brother James L. Neal has been a very faithful worker for the paper,
almost from the beginning. He has done much to enlarge its circulation,
and has also furnished much valuable and scriptural material for its
pages. God bless such workers.
Another faithful worker for the Gospel Light is brother George B.
Curtis. I want him to know while I live, and while he lives, that we
believe the paper has been made better by his many timely and scriptural
articles. We are not able to reward such men for their labors here, but
God is able to reward them in the hereafter. To the many others who have
been so faithful, we are also grateful.
Let us strive to make the Gospel Light better as the years go by.—J. A.
Copeland.
Flanoy Alexander had the following comments following the article given
above:
I am sure the above statement and explanation by brother Copeland needs
no comment from me. However, I believe it is in order that I make a
short statement relative to both the past and the future work of the
Gospel Light.
As stated by brother Copeland, the idea of publishing a Gospel paper
called "The Gospel Light," was conceived in the mind of my father, Grady
Alexander, many months before the appearance of the first issue in
December, 1930. I know the motive that prompted its inception. I know
his intention was to give the common people a religious journal that is
truly 'Christian.' A journal that will teach people how to become
Christians and inspire them to continue to live the Christian life.
Knowing the life of, and being associated with brother Copeland as he
was, I think it only natural that he should want him to be associated
with the paper in its beginning. The friendship that existed between
brother Copeland and my father was indeed close. This association and
true friendship continued until the death of my father.
Since my father passed away brother Copeland has been to me both a
father and a brother. I love and admire him for what he is and for his
work's sake. He has counseled with, and advised me many times. This is
indeed appreciated and I thank him for it.
Aside from the fact that he is a great and Godly man, brother Copeland
and his wife have reared a large family, with every one of their twelve
children devoted to their parents and to God. Three boys are ministers
of the Gospel. One of his daughters, I think, is a choice creation of
God. She has been an inspiration to me in many ways, and I thank God for
women of her kind—she's my wife.
Several times brother Copeland has suggested to me that my name be
placed as editor of the Gospel Light. While I by no means feel equal to
the task, I realize the responsibilities connected with the editing of a
religious journal. I do know, by reason of my being editor of a secular
newspaper for several years, that it is impossible to please all the
people all the time.
I have always been guided by the thing that I believe to be right, which
many times has proven to be a financial disadvantage. Knowing these
things, I fully realize the responsibility that has been thrown on the
shoulders of brother Copeland as editor of the Gospel Light, and that
without financial remuneration, except for what small commissions we
have been able to extend on subscriptions he has taken and books and
other items he has sold for the office. Brother Copeland is, and has
been spending all his time in the ministry of the Gospel by word of
mouth. It is my intention to relieve him of any burden that I possibly
can.
So, at his request his name has been placed with our associate editors.
We will continue to counsel with him and seek his opinion in many
things. However, all criticisms, complaints, etc. that you have to offer
regarding what is, or what is not published in the Gospel Light will
please be directed to the Gospel Light office and I will be personally
responsible. Of course, any word of commendation which you would like to
offer to any of our associate editors, or other writers, may be directed
to them at their home address.
So, as brother Copeland suggests, let us press on to make the Gospel
Light a medium through which much good is done.
—Flanoy
Alexander.
Another change was made in April, 1939. Since
the establishment of the Gospel Light, Brother Copeland had
written answers to most of the questions which were sent to the paper.
That took time, and Brother Copeland found that after Brother Grady
Alexander was no longer there to help with the questions, that it was
more than he could do.
The action taken by Brother Copeland illustrates the careful good
judgment he used in making decisions. Not only did he talk with Flanoy
Alexander but he also talked with other brethren to get their thoughts.
He then wrote to George B. Curtis of Morrilton and asked him if he would
be willing to take charge of the Questions and Answers Department, and
he agreed to do so.
Through the years, a number of very capable contributors wrote for the
Gospel Light. In the first issue of December 1, 1930, the
following were listed as associate editors: Glenn E. Green, Little Rock;
J. C. Dawson, Conway; L. C. Sears, Morrilton; J. W. Brents, Muskogee,
Oklahoma; R. H. Johnson, Morrilton; Brooks Stell, Delight; James E.
Laird, Ft. Smith; and J. N. Armstrong,
Morrilton.
Many fine articles and reports have been sent by many, many preachers,
elders, and members of the church. The major articles, however, have
come from those designated from time to time as "associate editors" or
"contributing editors." Some of the men who have served in that capacity
over the years are: George B. Curtis, James L. Neal,
E. R. Harper,
Gilbert Copeland, Ted W. McElroy, John W. Wilson, F. A. Hartsell, Vaughn
D. Shofner, and Gussie Lambert.
Brother Copeland wrote many articles for the Gospel Light during
the twenty-five years from its establishment until his death. Many of
his articles were written upon request, and covered a wide range of
topics. Many came to him, also, for personal advice and counseling. He
had an unusual sense of awareness of others' feelings and needs.
Sensitive and perceptive, he demonstrated empathic understanding of
other people's problems. He really listened to others and was able to
communicate with them. He was relaxed in his relations with others,
having no need for impressing them with his own virtues. He was,
therefore, able to communicate a feeling of true tolerance, compassion,
and understanding. These qualities were combined with unusually sound
judgment. People turned to him quite naturally when they needed help of
any kind because they trusted him; they knew he would be concerned and
knew he would be able to help them.
Often Brother Copeland's articles in the Gospel Light were
presented in a series of articles, when the subject could not be covered
adequately in one article. He was an . excellent writer, considering the
limited formal education he had. His style was unpretentious,
straight-forward, and contained a kind of logic which was most
convincing. He stressed his points by quoting scriptures which were
directly applicable to the thought presented. Never wasting words, he
wrote what he meant in a simple and forceful manner.
He, and the Gospel Light, remained faithful to the
original policy of not presenting materials to promote any "hobbies" or
special interests. The only criterion was and remains, "What does the
Bible teach?"
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Chapter X
The Ministry Changes
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After more than thirty years of preaching the gospel in the manner
described in his essay, "The Country Preacher," (page 73), Brother
Copeland accepted a call to work with the church at Hope, Arkansas. For
the first time, he agreed to work with one congregation, full-time,
except for his meetings during the summer and fall months. The move was
reported in the September 15, 1938, issue of the Gospel Light as
follows:
Brother Copeland Moved
Brother J. A. Copeland who has been working at the Delight church for
the past 11 years, moved with his family to Hope this week. Brother
Copeland will have charge of the work at Hope after about another month
when his summer's meetings have closed.
Brother Copeland came to Delight 11 years ago, when the church of Christ
here consisted of a mere handful of elderly people, and scarcely any
young people in the congregation. We have witnessed a steady increase in
both membership and attendance during this time, and the church feels
grateful for his labors, and regrets very much to lose him from our
midst.
Brother Copeland will continue to have the same connection with the
Gospel Light in the future as in the past. Those desiring to have him
answer questions through the Gospel Light will please send their
questions direct to him at Hope.

J. A. and Georgia Copeland At Delight, about 1938 |
Although the Copeland family had moved several times in the past, the
move to Hope brought about greater changes than previous moves. They had
never lived in town before; farm life had been the only way of life they
had known. Brother Copeland had never done "local" work before, working
with and preaching for one congregation. It was to be quite different
from the work he had done before.
Accepting change is hard for most people; it is more difficult for some
than for others. Brother Copeland was able to accept change more easily
than most people, for a very simple reason. In this case, as always, he
viewed the change not in terms of personal gain, but with a strong
conviction that it was in harmony with the Lord's will for him. However,
he was concerned that his brethren understand his decision to change his
field of service. That concern was expressed in the following article
which he wrote for the September 29, 1938, issue of the Gospel Light:
"Should A Preacher Choose His Work?"
By J. A. Copeland
Many of the brethren have learned by this time that I have moved to
Hope, Arkansas, to work with the church here. Does a preacher have a
right to choose his field of labor, if he will keep in his heart a
desire to do all the good he can? Other classes in the church feel free
to choose where they shall live and what they shall do, but many of them
don't seem to think that a preacher should have that liberty.
Of course a preacher should not be prompted by a selfish motive in
making his decisions, but if his desire is to do good, and to advance
the kingdom of Christ, does he have a right to consult his judgment as
to where and how he works.
Many times brethren will censure a preacher when he changes his plan of
work. That is, if he has been doing evangelistic work and decides to do
local work for a while; or if he had been preaching for 4 or 5
congregations, and decided to locate with, and preach for one
congregation. Who has the right to decide these things if the preacher
does not?
I have been at Delight 11 years. I have preached for the church there
monthly and twice a month all this time, except through the summer and
fall when I was away in meetings. During this time I have assisted them
in five or six protracted meetings. While, I have nothing personally
against the church at Delight, I love the place, I love the membership;
and so far as I know they have nothing personally against my family nor
me, and they have not asked me to give up the work there. But, I think
the change does good sometimes, and I hope it will do good there. The
church there has been very good to us for which we are truly thankful,
and if we live and it is the Lord's will, we expect to live at Delight
again. May the Lord abundantly bless the church there is our prayer.
I am at this writing in a meeting near McAlester, Oklahoma. If it is the
Lord's will, I shall begin full time work with the church at Hope the
first Lord's day in October. As to how much good I can accomplish there,
I do not know. I shall strive to do what I can. If you pass our way,
stop and worship with us. In writing, please address me 615 West Fifth
Street, Hope, Arkansas.
Brother Copeland was 57 years old when they moved to Hope. By this time
the many years of hard work on the farm and the burden of
responsibilities had begun to show in his physical stature. As a young
man he stood tall and strong; in later years his shoulders seemed
slightly stooped with the weight of cares and responsibilities. He
inherited, also, a condition which is sometimes called "shaking palsy."
It appears most often between the ages of fifty and seventy, and more
men than women have it. In Brother Copeland's case, it began when he was
in his forty's and became worse as he grew older. It was marked by a
tremor of the hands, particularly, making writing most difficult for
him. In later years he used a typewriter for all his correspondence.
Only three of the children were still at home when they moved to Hope.
Ordis and Oleva had finished high school at Delight in May, 1937. Jady
Wilson entered the eleventh grade in high school at Hope in the fall of
1938. He finished high school at Hope in the spring of 1940.
After his summer meetings were finished, Brother Copeland began his work
with the church at Hope on the first Sunday in October, 1938. The family
had moved about two weeks earlier. They lived in a house which was next
door to the church building, on Fifth Street. The preacher's residence
had been left to the church by a Sister Atkins, who had been very
liberal in her support of the church and its work.
The church at Hope was fairly strong at that
time. Gilbert Copeland had been working with the church there for four
years. At the time Brother Copeland was there, the congregation had approximately 100 to 125
members. They were liberal in their support of the preacher, for those
days. The church provided the preacher a house, rent-free, and paid
Brother Copeland $25.00. each week.
Although Brother Copeland had been preaching many years and had spent
countless hours studying, he still studied diligently in preparation for
each sermon or class he taught. Each week he planned and studied lessons
for an adult Bible class Sunday morning, two sermons for each Sunday,
and the Bible class for Wednesday night.
Nine years had passed since the burning of the house, which destroyed
all of his notes and sermon outlines. During those years he had studied
hard and had built up his library of reference books and his collection
of notes and sermon outlines. His many years of regular study of the
Bible made it easier for him to prepare lessons and sermons than it had
been in his early years.
During his first year at Hope, Brother Copeland used his talent for
carpentry to build new classrooms adjoining the church building. He did,
of course, have some help, but he did most of the work himself.
Each summer, as usual, he held evangelistic meetings for churches
throughout south Arkansas, in Oklahoma, and in Mississippi. The church
at Hope had agreed to allow him time for meetings, many of which had
been scheduled some years ahead.
Much of Brother Copeland's time was spent in visiting among the members
of the church, especially when anyone was sick or bereaved. He seemed to
have a special talent for comforting and working with those who were
sick. His sensitive nature and true concern for the welfare of others
helped to comfort and encourage hundreds of people throughout the years
of his ministry.
While at Hope, he performed numerous marriage ceremonies, in part
because the Court House was only a few blocks from where he lived. He
received calls from far and wide to conduct funerals. Because of his
work, he was known by members of the church in many congregations.

Standing, left to right: Addie Lee (Watkins) Watson, John
Delaney, Clara (Watkins) Delaney, Georgia (Watkins)
Copeland, Seated:
S. W. Watson, Emma (Hardie)
J.A. Copeland |
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Chapter XI
At Home But
Not Idle
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After almost
four years at Hope, Brother and Sister Copeland moved back to Delight.
His stay at Hope, from the fall of 1938 to June, 1942, was the longest
period in his ministry when Brother Copeland worked with one
congregation full-time. His background, his interests, and his style of
preaching were best suited for evangelistic meetings and working with
country churches. After they had moved back to Delight, he wrote the
following report which was published in the Gospel Light in
November, 1942.
AT HOME AGAIN BUT NOT IDLE
J. A. Copeland
After being away
from my home at Delight a majority of the time for four years, I am at
home again. I spent a little more than three and a half years at Hope,
Arkansas, working with the church there full time, except through the
summers when I was engaged in meetings. I enjoyed the work with the
church at Hope, and I trust some good was done. All things considered, I
believe the church there is in a better condition than ever before.
Brother Taylor Davis is with them now, and I believe he is a good man
for the place. My heart's desire and prayer to God is, that the church
there may grow and prosper, and I believe it will.
I moved home in
June, but I have been away in meetings a good part of the time, so I
have not been at home a great deal yet. I expect to be at home more for
a while, but I shall not be idle. For about thirty-three years, I
preached for country churches, and churches in small towns through the
winter and spring, and held meetings in the summer and fall. I still
like that kind of work. I preach to more people that way than I do when
I am preaching for one congregation.

The Home Place at Delight
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Delight really
was home for the Copelands. And they were glad to be back home. Except
for two short periods of time, they were to live at Delight until
Brother Copeland's death in 1955. During the summer and fall months,
Brother Copeland spent a great deal of time away from home in meetings.
In the later years, Sister Copeland often went with him for meetings.
Another
temporary move, to Arp, Texas, was made in 1944. Arp is a small town in
east Texas, about eighteen miles southeast of Tyler. Brother Ed
Honeycutt, who had lived at Billstown and Delight, had moved to Arp some
years earlier. Brother Copeland was invited to hold a meeting at Arp
during the last week in May and the first week in June, 1944. The church
there was small in numbers, but Brother Copeland saw an opportunity for
doing good. He was persuaded, therefore, to work with the Arp
congregation full-time, beginning in October of that year.
In the October
26, 1944, issue of the Gospel Light, Brother Copeland reported:
By the time this
reaches the reader, I will be located at Arp, Texas, if it is the Lord's
will. I will work for the Gospel Light as I have in the past, and in a
few weeks I think I will have time to write more for the paper than I
have in the past. Please address me at Arp, Texas.
Brother Copeland
and Jady Wilson, his youngest son, worked together in a meeting at Arp
during June, 1945. Jady Wilson preached at the morning services, while
Brother Copeland led singing. At the night services, Brother Copeland
preached and Jady Wilson led singing. Twelve were baptized, three of
whom were heads of families and dependable men. Others who were members
of the church confessed wrongs. The meeting ended the last Sunday in
June. The meeting also brought to a close the full-time work Brother
Copeland did for that congregation. Jady Wilson later worked with the
church in Arp.
In an article
published in the Gospel Light July 19, 1945, Brother Copeland
commended the members of the church at Arp as he announced that he was
moving back home. He encouraged the readers to help the church at Arp to
find a preacher. All of the members wanted him to stay, he reported,
then added:
"But we have a
number of children in southwest Arkansas and as we are in our sixties
now, and as there is more work in the Lord's vineyard nearer our home
than we can do, we decided it best for us to get back near home." At the
end of his report he said, "If it is the Lord's will, we will locate at
Prescott, Arkansas, in October. Until then, address me at Delight."
After his summer
and fall meetings, Brother Copeland began work with the church at
Prescott about the middle of October. However, they did not move to
Prescott until the first of December. In a report he wrote for the
Gospel Light for January 10, 1946, Brother Copeland said, "This may
be my home for two or three years. Address me: 502 West Elm Street,
Prescott, Arkansas."
Except for the
time spent in meetings, he worked full-time for the Prescott
congregation until June, 1947. They moved back to the home place in
February, 1947. The following report was written by Brother Copeland and
published in the February 6, 1947, issue of the Gospel Light:
I am back at my
home at Delight. We never know the future but we feel that it is
possible that this will be our earthly dwelling place as long as we need
a home here. My wife and I both love to be at home, and I can get plenty
of work in reach of here.
I will continue
my work at Prescott until June, then I will be in meetings until fall.
After that I will take work with congregations in reach of Delight. I
hope to be able to write more for the Gospel Light. I am sixty-five
years of age and have good health. And whether I am permitted to stay
here one year, ten years or twenty years, I hope to be mentally and
physically fit to put in my time in the Lord's service.
When Brother
Copeland wrote that "it is probable that this will be our earthly
dwelling place as long as we need a home here," he expressed the
attitude found in his oft-spoken phrase, "if it is the Lord's will."
And, it was the Lord's will that Delight be his earthly home until the
end.
50th Wedding Anniversary
One highlight in
the later years of Brother and Sister Copeland was the celebration of
their 50th wedding anniversary on Christmas Day, 1948. Some of the
brothers and sisters talked about planning a special day for Mama and
Papa almost a year ahead of the time.

The J. A. Copeland Family-Fiftieth Wedding Anniversary, December
25, 1948. Back row, left to right: Jady Wilson, Ordis, Sweeney,
Gilbert; Middle row: Vida, Oleva, Floy, Joy, Willie, Estelle;
Front row: Ruth, J. A. Copeland, Georgia, Elsie.
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Sweeney wrote to
the others who were not present when it was first discussed. He
encouraged everyone to make plans to be at the home place at Delight for
Christmas Day. Since Christmas Day fell on Saturday in 1948, they
decided to celebrate the event on that day instead of December 21, which
was their anniversary date.
It was decided
that they would buy a refrigerator for Brother and Sister Copeland.
Since they needed the refrigerator, they decided to give it to them
early. Brother and Sister Copeland had never owned an electric
refrigerator. Several of the brothers and sisters were at Delight in the
early summer, 1948, when the refrigerator was delivered. At Christmas,
Brother and Sister Copeland were each to receive a new watch in addition
to the other gifts each family would bring. The grandchildren
contributed to the fund to buy the watches.
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J. A. and Georgia Copeland 50th Wedding Anniversary, Dec.
25,1948.
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Plans were made
to invite the Copelands' many, many friends and neighbors, and relatives
to open house in the afternoon of Christmas Day. The daughters-in-law
were to serve the guests. A special cake was ordered; Estelle, who lived
at Malvern, assumed responsibility for bringing the cake. It was three
tiers high, about twelve inches tall. Jady and Dorothy, who lived at
Arp, were to bring yellow roses from Tyler, the "City of Roses."
As usual,
everyone brought food for Christmas dinner. However, since it was a
special occasion, two maids were employed to help prepare and serve the
food. Thus the ladies were free to take part in the making of pictures
which occupied much of the time immediately before dinner.
Since guests
would be arriving soon after dinner, the devotional was held before they
ate. After a few songs and prayer, Brother Copeland talked to the group
for a few minutes. It was at this time that he made the statement: "It's
not how long we live but how we live that matters." As Flanoy
Alexander so aptly expressed it in the Gospel Light, "When those
words were spoken,
all present knew there were two hearts beating in
unison, for this thought has been portrayed in the family lives of this
couple for these many years."
Friends and
relatives from many places came that afternoon to pay tribute to this
wonderful couple. Some of the visitors had known both Brother and Sister
Copeland since childhood. Although many did not sign the guest book,
names of guests from Little Rock, Prescott, Pleasant Home, Camden,
Pleasant Hill, Magnolia, Antoine, Nashville, and other communities were
recorded. To commemorate the anniversary, Mrs. B. H. Gleason, of Waldo,
Arkansas, made a booklet of original pen-and-ink drawings with an
original poem depicting the fifty years of Brother and Sister Copeland's
life together.
The event was
reported in the January 20, 1949, issue of the Gospel Light in a
full-page article, with pictures. The events of the day were described,
a brief history of Brother Copeland's work was given, and the names and
addresses of the twelve children.
The Corinth Homecoming of 1950
Another
highlight of Brother Copeland's later years was the 100th anniversary of
the Corinth church, which was observed Saturday and Sunday, September 30
and October 1, 1950. Sixty-nine years earlier he had been born in that
community, and he had preached there off and on for about forty-five
years. The occasion brought together hundreds of friends and "kinfolks"
from at least a dozen states.

The Corinth Church Building as it was in 1950. |
Several days
before the main event, nearby Nashville, Arkansas, became the
headquarters for many families who gathered to visit with relatives and
friends. Every hotel and motel in the vicinity was filled to capacity
and all the "spare beds" in many homes were taken. Early Saturday
morning cars loaded with people began to arrive at Corinth. The day was
given to visiting, renewing of acquaintances, and the making of short
talks. During the day a brief history of the Corinth church was given.
Many also told of having attended the "old Nazareth University," which
once stood near the site of the church building.
The most
significant work of the Corinth church is the fact that its influence in
the past has been either directly or indirectly responsible for the
establishment and growth of so many other congregations. Someone had
taken the time to list some seventy-five or eighty congregations whose
leaders descended from those who were a part of the Corinth
congregation.
On Sunday
morning, there was more solemnity to the occasion. In addition to the
fellowship with friends and loved ones of yesteryears, most of those
present came to worship the Lord. The worship service began at ten
o'clock with the singing of songs which had been familiar to Corinth
worshippers for 100 years. The opening prayer was lead by D. S. Ligon,
an aged minister of the gospel. J. A. Copeland, who acted as master of
ceremonies, gave a short talk on the founding of the Corinth church and
something of its early leaders. His talk was followed by a thirty-minute
sermon by Vaughn Shofner of Lubbock, Texas, on "The Growth of the
Kingdom." Brother Shofner was followed by Don Morris, President of
Abilene Christian College, Abilene, Texas. Brother Morris told how his
travels in connection with the college had brought him in contact with
so many who had been influenced by "old Corinth." He stated that almost
everywhere he went he found people who were descendants of Corinth
people, or had known of the church there through some acquaintance.
Several members of the College Board of Directors had been former
Corinthians, he said, and some of the teachers in the college also
traced their ancestry to Corinth.
Following the
sermons the communion service was observed by several hundred people who
filled the building and the large tent adjoining it.
After a lunch
hour of eating and visiting with friends, the afternoon was given to
talks by visitors. The talks were scheduled for five minutes each, but
some contended that what they had to say could not be told in five
minutes.
The 1950 homecoming at Corinth was truly a once-in-a-lifetime event!
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Chapter XII
Declining Health
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Brother Copeland was in fairly good health until his seventy-first year.
At Christmas-time, 1951, he had a severe cold which gradually became
worse, with a painful cough. On Christmas day he complained of pains in
his chest. In the weeks that followed, he saw a doctor at Murfreesboro
and Doctor Buchanan at Prescott. Penicillin was prescribed, among other
forms of medication. As the days and weeks passed, Brother Copeland's
condition improved somewhat, but he did not fully recover from the
effects of the illness and the medication.
The winter months dragged on, and Brother Copeland was not able to
resume his usual work schedule. He had to cancel his preaching
appointments on several occasions, because he was not able to go.

The Copeland Brothers, May, 1955.
Left to right, youngest to oldest: Alvin, Zeta, J. A., Felix,
Charlie, and Harrison. |
Ordis lived at Coy, near England, Arkansas, at that time. He was
preaching for the congregation at Coy. In March, 1952, Brother and
Sister Copeland went home with Ordis and family to stay a while. While
they were there, Ordis took Brother Copeland to a doctor in Little Rock.
After a thorough examination, the doctor diagnosed his condition as
virus pneumonia and prescribed an anti-biotic drug which was new at the
time. Within a short time Brother Copeland's condition improved
considerably. The lingering cough and other symptoms associated with the
pneumonia cleared up almost completely. However, Brother Copeland
continued to mention pains in his chest.
After about six weeks with Ordis and his family at Coy, Brother and
Sister Copeland decided to spend some time with Gilbert and his family
at Wichita Falls, Texas. Gilbert was preaching for the Floral Heights
congregation in Wichita Falls at that time. That decision was influenced
greatly by Jady's brother, Felix, who lived near Little Rock. He
believed, and convinced Jady, that the dry climate at Wichita Falls
would be good ·for his health. In April of that year, Brother Copeland
celebrated his seventy-first birthday at Gilbert's house.
They had been there only a short time when Brother Copeland had a light
heart attack. The doctor agreed to allow him to stay at Gilbert's house
instead of going to the hospital.
During his stay there, while recuperating, Oleva, who lived at Cleburne,
Texas, at that time, went to spend some time with the Copelands at
Wichita Falls. She remembers having some serious talks with her father
during those days. They talked about life, and death, and the importance
of living in harmony with God's laws in order to be ready for the
inevitable time.
Brother Copeland's condition was gradually improving after the heart
attack, when Gilbert left for a meeting in Springfield, Missouri. The
meeting had been scheduled for some time, and was to begin on May
9,1952. After he left, and Oleva went back home, both Brother and Sister
Copeland became homesick for their home in Arkansas. They had been away
from home most of the time for about two months. It was springtime; they
wanted to be home. It was time to plant the garden and many other things
needed their attention.
Finally, Otsy called Joy and told her how homesick Brother and Sister
Copeland were. They decided to take them home. It was agreed that Otsy
and Milton would take Brother and Sister Copeland as far as Durant,
Oklahoma, and Joy and Flanoy would meet them there to take them on to
Delight. This plan was carried out, in early May, 1952. Brother Copeland
was still not well. They were happy to be home, but were disappointed
that Brother Copeland's condition did not improve very much. It had been
a long winter of sickness for him, and he was unable to regain his
strength. His physical condition by this time was causing discouragement
and depression. He began to be truly concerned about his inability to
recover his' strength as he had after previous illnesses.
During the second week-end in May, Sweeney and some of the sisters were
at Delight. They talked about Brother Copeland's condition and what
should be done. They decided that he should enter the hospital at
Prescott, under Doctor Hesterly's care. Doctor Hesterly, who was already
his doctor, agreed to admit Brother Copeland to the hospital for tests
and observation. He entered the hospital on Thursday, May 15, still
complaining with chest pains. At that time it was thought that the pains
were the result of his long siege of the v:irus pneumonia and his heart
attack. His concern for his condition increased. At times he could not
relax and could not sleep. He suffered from the pains in the chest to
the extent that it was hard for him to breathe. At times he experienced
sensations of smothering; he could not get enough air into his lungs.
The doctor examined him carefully several times and told members of the
family that the smothering spells were due to his nerves, that there
were no physical causes for such difficulty in breathing. He emphasized,
however, that the results were the same; the suffering was real and the
difficulty in breathing just as painful as it would be if caused by
physical conditions.
After a week in the hospital Brother Copeland was not any better. One
night he suffered a smothering spell so severe that he feared that he
would not live until morning. He asked the nurse to call Sister Copeland
who was at Vida's house there in Prescott.
Although he had gained very little, after about two weeks the decision
was made to take him home. Since his recovery was being hindered by his
nerves, the family decided that he would be better off at home. He
needed rest and quiet. At home they were able to provide the quiet
atmosphere which was not possible at the hospital. Friends and relatives
were informed that visits would be kept to a minimum. For some time only
a few people were allowed to visit and talk with Brother Copeland, and
their visits were of short duration.
Gradually his condition became better. He regained some strength, but
was never as strong as before the pneumonia began about Christmas-time
of 1951. He was sick almost continuously for about six months. Brother
Copeland was never again in good health after the siege described here.
He was not able to preach during the summer of 1952; all of his
scheduled meetings were cancelled. Later, however, he did resume his
week-end preaching appointments, and held a few meetings.
Sometime during the following summer, in 1953, Brother Copeland suffered
what the doctor called a "light stroke." Although an unusual experience,
it caused him very little physical pain and lasted a very short time. He
had been in the garden with Sister Copeland as she gathered some
vegetables. After they were back in the house, he passed out—was
completely unconscious for a few minutes. When he revived, he had
amnesia for almost thirty minutes and could not remember anything. He
could not even recall any of the children's names.
Sister Copeland was upset and immediately called Joy. She and Otsy, who
was at Joy's while Gilbert was in a meeting, came as quickly as
possible. Flanoy came a few minutes later. The doctor was called as soon
as it happened, but by the time he got there, Brother Copeland was
feeling well and had regained his memory.
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Chapter XIII
The Billstown Reunion: Honor to Whom Honor |
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On August 22, 1954, people from far and near gathered at Billstown, near
Delight, Arkansas, to honor and pay tribute to J. A. Copeland. He had
begun his efforts to preach the gospel at that place fifty years
earlier, in the fall of 1904. Plans and preparation had begun several
months before. A number of people helped with the planning. As far as
anyone is able to recall now, the idea originated with Carl Mick, a
young man who was preaching for the Delight and Antoine congregations at
that time. Carl wrote: "... it was one of the few suggestions I ever
made that was immediately accepted as the obvious thing to do."
Brother Copeland preached at the morning worship service. His topic was
"Christ in the Home." He explained that some years ago Brother W. T.
Champion had suggested that he write a tract on the subject of rearing
children in a Christian home. Brother Copeland published a series of
articles on the subject in the Gospel Light. And he had preached
on the subject in many congregations.
Those present who had not heard Brother Copeland preach for several
years enjoyed hearing the sound of his voice once again, and appreciated
the earnestness with which he presented the sermon. However, the changes
in Brother Copeland and his preaching, compared to years past, were
forced upon their attention. The tremor in his hands was more
noticeable, and at one point he mentioned that his eyesight was no
longer what it once was. His memory was not as good as it was in earlier
years—several times during his sermon he had difficulty recalling the
location of certain scriptures. And he read many passages instead of
quoting them from memory as he did in the past. At times, he hesitated,
mentally struggling to call to mind a particular word.
Everybody had brought food; at noon they had an old-fashioned
"dinner-on-the-ground." Many more people arrived for lunch, and many
others after lunch, to hear the speakers and singing which made up the
afternoon program. Carl Mick acted as Master of Ceremonies. In his
introductory remarks he explained that the purpose of the reunion was to
honor Brother Copeland in memory of his fifty years of service as a
minister of the gospel. He suggested that it was indeed appropriate to
honor Brother Copeland for two things in particular: his works and his
life. In speaking of his life, Brother Mick said,
"Brother Copeland has practiced among us the things he has taught us
from God's word."
He then referred to the qualifications of bishops stated in 1 Timothy,
chapter three. In teaching on the qualifications of elders, he said he
"always brings in Brother Copeland as an example of one who is blameless—one whose reputation is blameless." Also, he said that wherever you go
everyone speaks well of Brother Copeland. He has a "good report," not
only among the members of the church, but also "of them which are
without." (1 Timothy 3:7).
". . . though they may not agree with the truth he preaches, yet they
highly respect and honor him for his life," Brother Mick said.
Before introducing the first speaker, Brother Mick mentioned two other
characteristics for which he praised Brother Copeland: his interest in
and encouragement of young preachers, and that he had remained "young in
spirit."
Brother Jeff Reese was introduced as the first speaker. He began by
saying that he had known Brother Copeland about fifty-five years and had
been a fellow preacher for forty-seven of Brother Copeland's fifty years.
"There's not a better man on the earth, to my knowing, or a better
gospel preacher," Brother Reese said. He went on to say that some may be
greater orators, and some may have more education, but". . . I don't
believe there's a man walking upon God's footstool that's got a purer
life—any better record than he."
Brother Reese used, as a basis of his remarks about Brother Copeland, a
series of scriptures from the New Testament. In each case he read the
scriptures, which are, in fact, commands to be obeyed. He then commented
on the life of Brother Copeland as a living demonstration of one who
lived according to the requirements of that scripture. Among the
scriptures he used to depict the life of Brother Copeland were the
following:
Matthew
25:21—". Well done, thou good and faithful servant, . . ."
1 Timothy
5:22—". Keep thyself pure."
2 Thessalonians
5:21—"Prove all things; hold fast that which is good."
Romans
12:21—"Be not overcome of evil, but overcome evil with good."
Philippians
2:14—"Do all things without murmurings and disputings."
1 Corinthians 10:31—
"... whatsoever ye do, do all to the glory of God."
Hebrews
13:1—"Let brotherly love continue."
In his unique manner and phrases, Brother Reese explained how these
scriptures describe the life of Brother Copeland.
After Brother Reese's speech, there was an intermission during which
there was singing. One very special song was sung by a quartet made up
of Earl Womack, Libby Lamb, Lewis Lamb, and Carl Mick. The song was
special because Brother Copeland had written the words and Earl Womack
the music. The song was published by Stamps Quartet Music Company, Inc.,
in "Homeland Guide," in 1954. In the poem, "We Shall Rise," Brother
Copeland expressed the hope of the resurrection, which shall be the
ultimate victory.
The next speaker was Brother Edgar Lafferty who had known Brother
Copeland since 1919. He described the work Brother Copeland had done in
the communities of Liberty Hill, Crank's School House, and Midway. These
communities are south of Hope in Hempstead County and north Lafayette
County. He discussed his own association with Brother Copeland, and the
everexpanding influence of the preaching and life of Brother Copeland
among the people of those communities. Some of the things Brother
Lafferty presented are mentioned in Chapter V.
Erith Dixon, who spoke next, discussed the work that Brother Copeland
did as an evangelist in widely scattered areas. Through the years he
held meetings in Texas, Oklahoma, Mississippi, and Louisiana.
Following Brother Dixon, Milton Peebles talked about the Copeland
family. He had been a friend of the family since he and Gilbert had
become friends at Harding College in 1931 and 1932. Brother Peebles had
preached at Cove, Arkansas, that morning, and had left
Cove after they had "dinner on the ground." He began by saying that he
brought greetings to Brother Copeland, Sister Copeland, and the family
from the people at Cove: from the Kelleys, the Bentons, the Ilshires,
the Smedleys, and a number of others.

Song written by J. A. Copeland and Earl Womack,
sung at Billstown Reunion, August, 1954. (Used by permission.) |
In his speech Peebles referred to and read from some notes which Brother
Charlie Cannon of Saratoga had written about Brother Copeland. As far
back as 1911 Brother Copeland was preaching at Saratoga once each month.
Brother Cannon had said that even as a young man Brother Copeland was as
steady and careful in his manner of life as a Christian could be. He
truly spoke where the Bible speaks and was silent where the Bible is
silent. In those days, Brother Cannon wrote, it was not unusual for a
sermon to last an hour or even longer. But he never heard of any of
Brother Copeland's listeners getting tired or complaining.
Brother Peebles told several interesting incidents about the family. He
said that during the winter of 1931-32 he and Gilbert were in class at
Harding College in which families with an only child were being
discussed. He whispered to someone to mention to the class that Gilbert
Copeland was an only child. That student reported it to the class,
believing Milton was sincere. Gilbert sat tall in his chair and said,
"Yes, I'm an only child; there were five before me and seven after me!"
The class roared with laughter.
A brief history of the family was given, and a description of the life
style of the family. He commented upon the endless sacrifices made by
Sister Copeland while Brother Copeland was away preaching.
Brother Peebles said,
I know of no one in these fifty years that's done more for the cause of
Christ in Arkansas than Brother Jady Copeland. Only judgment and
eternity will reveal the sacrifices they have made and the good Brother
Copeland and Sister Copeland have done.
He has had to take some stands, even among brethren, which were not
popular. But he loved the truth. He took those stands for the cause and
for the truth, in upholding the cause and the truth.
The reasons for Brother Copeland's success, Brother Peebles said, are:
his great love of the Lord and love for the truth; his brilliant mind;
his godly life; his good wife and fine family; the help and
encouragement of good brethren; his knowledge of the scripture and his
wisdom in teaching it; his hard work and many sacrifices; his great
personality; his editorship of the Gospel Light; his fine
countenance; his powerful voice, and his wonderful choice of words.
He went on to say,
These have been fifty great years for him, and for us who knew him and
love him and his family. I want to say to him and his family—Thank
you! for what you have done for us, and for the cause of Christ. And we
want you to thank God, and take courage, and look forward to many years
of great service here yet in the Master's Vineyard, and finally to a
sweet by and by of eternal bliss and reward.
Brother Carl Mick, the Master of Ceremonies, then expressed appreciation
to all for being there and to the speakers who were on the program. He
asked if anyone else would like to say anything before he asked Brother
Copeland to make any comments he wanted to make.
Brother Elbert Riley from Antoine made some impromptu remarks on behalf
of his family and the church at Antoine.
Brother Copeland then rose to respond to the other speakers' comments.
He said that when plans for this meeting were first started that he
discouraged it.
I was afraid these brethren may do what they have done, say too much in
my favor, and really try to honor me ... that someone might think I was
wanting some of this honor.
In his characteristic humility, he went on to say,
Now I appreciate every word of kindness that you have said about me, but
I don't feel worthy of all that commendation. But I shall try to be
humble, try to know myself, and one thing sure—I don't think I'll be
exalted; if I could have lived up to what they have said, after all I'd
only done my duty and have no right to be exalted.
But a few things have helped me greatly in the few good things that I
have done, which when I look back, look like very few at times and my
efforts have been feeble. I've had a lot of good friends and neighbors
all over this country. I've lived in this country the greater part of my
life. After they began to talk this meeting, people who were not members
of the church would send me word commending the idea, and seemed to be
glad of it. Such as that, of course, encouraged me.
Then, so many neighbors who have always been ready to help me, and a
great brotherhood, the church of our Lord all over this country, I feel
sure, have done more for me than I was worthy of. I have felt that way
all the time.
I'm going to illustrate with one simple illustration, and then I'm going
to close.
He then told the story of a rather bright boy who went to school. He
graduated with the highest honors awarded by that school. During the
graduation ceremony, when his award was given, he surprised everyone by
refusing it. Instead, he went down to the first row in the audience, got
his mother by the hand, and led her upon the stage. The young man said,
"Mother made the sacrifices necessary and inspired me to go to school.
If there is a medal, pin it on her—she deserves it."
With voice cracking with emotion, Brother Copeland said,
Besides this great brotherhood who has helped me so much, my friends and
neighbors, no one has been worth as much to me as my companion [at this
point he walked over to Sister Copeland and took her hand] who has stood
by me all these years. And if you have any compliments (any medals), I'm
going to say, Pin them on her; she deserves them. Staying at home,
rearing that family, and caring for them, using wise judgment in
handling them and bringing them up so that every one of them has the
greatest confidence in her. Therefore I say she deserves the medal, pin
it on her.
This was an emotional climax which caught everyone by surprise.
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Chapter
XIV
The Silver Cord is Loosed |
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On Sunday, November 13, 1955, Brother Copeland filled his regular
monthly appointment at Pleasant Hill. His subject was "The Mission of
the Church." As the people were shaking hands and talking after the
assembly was dismissed, Brother Lillard Billingsley, who had heard
Brother Copeland preach many times in the past forty-seven years, said
to him, "Well, Brother Copeland, you have delivered another sermon."
"In my feeble way," he answered with a grin. "If it is the Lord's will,
I'll be with you all again the second Sunday in December." That was the
last time he preached at Pleasant Hill.
The following Sunday, November 20, he filled his monthly appointment at
Falcon, which is located twenty-six miles south of Prescott in Nevada
County, on Highway 53. That afternoon he drove the forty-six miles back
to Delight. When he arrived at home, Sister Copeland was over at Ruth's
house, so he drove over there. He found, to his delight, that Ruth had
company. Brother and Sister Jeff Wood and Brother and Sister H. E.
McKibbon, who had been friends of the Copelands for more than fifty
years, were there. They discussed the times long past when they all
lived at Pleasant Home. Specific incidents were recalled and mentioned
when Brother Copeland was in his prime physically and at the height of
his ability as a preacher.
While they were visiting, Sister Copeland asked, "Papa, what did you
preach on this morning?" He replied that he had preached on "The
Eldership." This, of course, led to comments by those present concerning
the importance of that subject. The McKibbons and Woods soon left;
Brother and Sister Copeland then went to their home. That night Ruth and
Brother and Sister Copeland attended the worship service at Delight
where they heard Brother Dillard Sarrett preach.

J. A. Copeland, Wallace Alexander, Jady Wilson Copeland
(Picture made day of Brother Copeland's death). |
It was Thanksgiving week and they were looking forward to seeing the
children and grandchildren. For several years all of the children had
made a special effort to be at home either on Thanksgiving Day or
Christmas Day, or both, if possible. On Wednesday afternoon Willie's
youngest daughter, Margie, and her sixteen-month-old son came. Margie's
husband, Jim Moran, was in the Air Force and Margie wanted to spend
Thanksgiving with her grandparents and the rest of the family. Brother
Copeland enjoyed their being there; he loved children, and laughed as he
watched Vic learning to walk. He remarked that it seemed that "every
step was an accident." Nineteen years later Vic was married on Brother
and Sister Copeland's wedding anniversary. Ruth, who lived just across
the pasture, came over that day to talk about the plans for Thanksgiving
Day. She was lonely; Langley had died in May, and Ruth was still
mourning his death. Wendell, her youngest son, was the only one left at
home with her.
Ruth always got up early. At 5:00 o'clock Thursday morning she was up,
preparing for Thanksgiving dinner. The telephone rang; it was Sister
Copeland. She wanted Ruth to come over right away because Brother
Copeland was very sick. He had slept very little that night, but he did
not awaken Sister Copeland. She had suffered so much lately with
arthritis he did not want to disturb her while she was sleeping so well.
After waking Wendell and instructing him to take her pies out of the
oven at a certain time, Ruth hurried over to see about her father. After
she got there, they called Dr. Floyd from Murfreesboro. He came,
examined Brother Copeland, and questioned them about his symptoms. The
doctor left some medicine, spoke words of encouragement and reassurance,
and left. Jady Wilson arrived shortly after the doctor left. He had been
in a meeting at Huntsville, Alabama, and had driven all night to be at
home on Thanksgiving Day. Ruth was still there when he arrived about
6:30 a.m., just at daybreak. She fixed his breakfast before going back
to her house to complete her work. The sun was just coming up as Ruth
walked across the pasture to her house.
The family had planned to meet at Joy and Flanoy's house in Delight for
Thanksgiving Day dinner. Ordinarily they met at the home place, but
since Sister Copeland had been bothered more than usual lately with her
arthritis, they had decided to meet at Joy's house. Six of the twelve
children, with some members of their families, were together at Delight
on that Thanksgiving Day. Ruth and Joy lived at Delight; Vida lived only
twenty miles away at Prescott; Estelle and her family lived at Malvern
at the time; Floy lived at Magnolia, which was approximately sixty-five
miles from Delight. Jady Wilson was the only one present who lived any
great distance from the home place. He lived at Center, Texas, but had
been in a meeting in Alabama.
The out-of-town families began arriving at about 10 a.m. Vida drove
alone from Prescott after dropping David off to go squirrel hunting in
the river bottoms. Estelle and her family arrived at the home place at
about the same time Vida arrived.
All were concerned about Brother Copeland. His appearance indicated that
he was not well at all. They discussed what they should do; he insisted
that he felt well enough to go to Joy's house with the others. In fact,
he drove the car himself. They all went to Joy and Flanoy's house about
11 o'clock. Floy, Guy, and their children arrived at Joy's house a few
minutes later.
All were happy to be together, although from time to time someone
mentioned others who were not able to be there. In the kitchen where the
ladies were preparing dinner, they talked in subdued tones about Papa's
condition. Several who had not seen him for some weeks or months
commented on his appearance. All agreed that they had never seen him
when he appeared to be in such a poor physical condition.
In spite of this concern, the members of the family who were present
were truly thankful to be together again. As usual, the spirit of
Thanksgiving was something real—not
just a formality and excuse for having a big dinner together. In the
prayer before dinner, Brother Copeland expressed the deep feelings
everyone had; as he prayed so earnestly in thanking God for the good
life, each one present, once again, felt the effect of Brother
Copeland's ability to bring them closer to their Heavenly Father.
Immediately after the prayer was finished, the noise level rose again.
As the serving of plates began, everyone talked at the same time it
seemed. Some moved into the living room after their plates were filled,
since there was not enough room for all at the table. The house was
filled with the happy sounds of a family re-united for Thanksgiving
dinner.

The Alexander Home where J. A. Copeland died. |
The noise and confusion subsided gradually as children finished eating
and hurried outside to play. The women soon began washing dishes, and
some of the men settled in the living room to relax and to discuss the
football game that was to be on television that afternoon. In 1955 in
that part of Arkansas, television was new. The Alexander family was one
of the few who had a television set.
Sister Copeland, Mrs. Mary Alexander, and Ruth were sitting with the men
in the living room while the others were still in the kitchen, finishing
the dishes. Brother Copeland, sitting on the couch, became drowsy,
nodded, then lay down on the couch and dozed a few minutes. He sat up
again, and after about fifteen minutes, Sister Copeland suggested that
he go ahead and lie down on the couch. She could see that he was still
sleepy.
"No," he said, "someone else may want to sit here, too." About that time
Joy came through the room.
"Joy," Sister Copeland said, "Make Papa lie down on the couch." Joy
playfully put her arms around his neck and pulled him over. He then
lifted his feet upon the couch and stretched out.
Joy started back to the kitchen; by the time she reached the dining
room, Mrs. Alexander noticed Brother Copeland was gasping for breath.
"Papa! What's wrong!," Sister Copeland exclaimed as she rushed to him.
Jady Wilson, who had been watching television in the same room, got to
him at the same time. They raised him up and took off his coat in an
effort to revive him. He breathed heavily a few times, but did not
speak. And then the final breath rushed past his lips, and that was all.
The silver cord of life was loosed; the house of flesh released the
spirit of this man of God. The body slumped, and those who loved him
knew that he was gone.

J. A. Copeland's desk as he left it. (Picture taken the day he
died. ) |
As his spirit passed beyond, each felt the presence of the Lord. They
knew, of course, that he could never die. He had a job to do while in
the flesh; he came and did his work, and then he laid aside the flesh.
He did not need it any more. The faith that he had taught them helped
them now to understand that death is not an enemy to be feared. It is,
instead, a friend who, when a life of work is done, breaks the chain
that binds the human ship to earth, that it may sail on smoother seas.
They all knew that for Brother Copeland, as for the Apostle Paul, "...
to die is gain;" "... to be with Christ, which is far better." He would
have reminded them that they should "sorrow not, even as others which
have no hope." The poet has written:
"It is not well to weep because of death.
Tears flow from hearts of flesh; the spirit never
weeps.
It is but selfishness that makes one wish
To call again to earth departed souls."
A few minutes later, the body was moved to the bed in the front bedroom.
In the hours that followed, grief reigned in the hearts of the members
of the Copeland family. Flanoy assumed the responsibility of calling the
three brothers and three sisters not present: Elsie at Dyess; Willie in
Meridian, Mississippi; Sweeney in Tyler, Texas; Gilbert in Wichita
Falls, Texas; Ordis in Elk City, Oklahoma; and Oleva, whose family was
visiting Gilbert and his family that day. As he called them, one by one,
the same shock struck their hearts as they were forced to the
realization that Papa had departed.
Each of the brothers and sisters had to let the members of their own
families know the sad news. Eighteen of the forty grandchildren were
married. There were thirty great-grandchildren at that time. At the time
of his death, Brother and Sister Copeland had eighty-two living
descendants.
Elsie, the oldest of those not present, was enjoying Thanksgiving at
home with all of her children and grandchildren. Their joyous time ended
with Flanoy's phone call. Elsie and several members of her family drove
to Delight the next day. She was the last of the twelve to arrive.
Willie, in Meridian, Mississippi, was alone when the news came to her.
She, Charlene, J. L., Jr., and Johny drove from Meridian on Friday. Her
other two children, Evelyn and Lawrence, lived in Canyon, Texas. They,
too, drove to Delight on Friday. Margie was already at Delight.
Sweeney and Maude lived at Tyler, Texas. Their son, Jimmy, was in the
Air Force at Amarillo Air Force Base, Texas, and did not get to go to
the funeral. Jady Wilson, who was at Delight, lived at Center, Texas, at
that time. He asked Sweeney to go by and get Dorothy and the children
who were visiting friends at Longview. Sweeney, Maude, and Mrs. Brown,
Maude's mother who was with them, drove to Longview, picked up Jady
Wilson's family, and drove to Delight Thursday night. After stopping by
Blevins to leave Mrs. Brown, they arrived at Delight at 11 p.m.
Ordis and his family, who lived at Elk City, Oklahoma, had visitors from
Arkansas when they received news of the death. On Friday their friends
came with them back to their home in Arkansas. Ordis arrived at Delight
between 5:30 and 6:00 o'clock p.m. Friday.
Oleva and her family were visiting Gilbert and his family in Wichita
Falls that Thanksiving Day. After they received the message, Gilbert
called Milton, their son who was in Abilene Christian College, before
Oleva and John left to make the long trip back to Cleburne, Texas, where
they lived. It was dark before they reached their home. They called Mary
Frances Dye, Estelle's daughter who was in nurse's training in Dallas.
Arrangements were made for her to ride with them Friday morning. Oleva
and family left Cleburne about 6:00 o'clock Friday morning, stopped to
pick up Mary Frances in Dallas and drove to Delight. They arrived about
11 a.m.
By 6:00 p.m. Friday all of the twelve children had arrived, along with
most of the grandchildren. During the day Saturday, relatives and
friends from far and near came. It was a mild day, not too cold; the
weather was good. By 1:00 Saturday afternoon a great number of people
had gathered; the big house was crowded and many stood in the front
yard, talking in quiet voices. The embarrassment of mixed emotions
showed on many faces, as friends and relatives greeted one another. They
were happy to see each other, but sad because of the occasion which
brought them together. Some had not seen each other for several years.
All of Brother Copeland's living brothers and sisters came for the
funeral except Zeta. Only six of the forty grandchildren were not there.
Many of Sister Copeland's relatives were there, and many, many relatives
of relatives on both sides.
The funeral was held in the church building at Delight where Brother
Copeland had preached so many times. The motorcade left the house at
2:00 p.m. There were so many people at the funeral that less than half
of them were able to get into the building. Flanoy had put up loud
speakers outside the building for the sake of those who could not get
inside.
The pall bearers, all of whom were grandsons of Brother Copeland, sat
behind a wall of flowers on the south side of the pulpit. The pall
bearers were Bernie Lee, James, and Lynn Cox; J. L., Jr., Lawrence, and
Johny Roberts; Milton Copeland; Wallace Alexander; and Wendell House.
The singers, including Earl Womack, Walter Mansfield, Lewis Lamb, Ross
Womack, Robert Newcomb, Parla Beavert, Evelyn Teel, Libby Lamb, and
others, sat behind a wall of flowers on the north side of the pulpit.
There were other singers from Delight, Pleasant Home, and other places.
The following songs were sung during the funeral service: "Hold to God's
Unchanging Hand," "Sweet Hour of Prayer," "As the Life of a Flower," and
"Asleep in Jesus."

Pleasant Home Cemetery where the body of J. A. Copeland was
buried. |
Brother Dillard Sarrett, the preacher at Delight at the time, read the
first Psalm and the twenty-third Psalm, and said a few words. Brother
Edgar O. Lafferty read the obituary and talked a few minutes. He was so
overcome with emotion that he almost fainted, so his remarks were cut
short. Brother Lafferty said that Brother Copeland had been his ideal;
he expressed his love and admiration for him, and said he could not weep
for Brother Copeland, but with his family who remained. The third
speaker was Milton Peebles. He. told of his respect for Brother Copeland
as a second father, and of Gilbert's influence upon himself. He repeated
some of the things he had said at Billstown in the summer of 1954, at
the meeting held as a memorial to Brother Copeland's fifty years of
preaching the gospel.
At the conclusion of the service, the people were permitted to pass by
the opened casket to view for the last time the body of their departed
friend and loved one. The procession, including those people who were
outside the building, took a total of thirty minutes to pass by the
casket.
The body was then taken to the cemetery at Pleasant Home to be buried.
The movement of the great numbers of people and the tremendous number of
flower arrangements required much time. By the time the family returned
to Delight, it was dark.
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Chapter XV
The Ultimate
Triumph
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The worth of a life is ordinarily expressed in terms of the degree of
success attained. What constitutes success, however, depends upon the
standard by which it is measured. The common notion is that happiness
and success flow from the possession of wealth, the absence of sorrow,
the gratification of desires, and the possession of power, prestige, and
influence. This is the standard set by the world.
True success, however, is not necessarily associated with, or the result
of, material wealth or worldly power and influence. A completely
different standard was taught by Jesus:
"And He said unto them, Take heed, and beware of covetousness: for a
man's life consisteth not in the abundance of the things which he
possesseth." (Luke 12: 15).
"Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon earth, where moth and rust
doth corrupt, and where thieves break through and steal: but lay up for
yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust doth
corrupt, and where thieves do not break through nor steal: for where
your treasure is, there will your heart be also." (Matthew 6:19-21).
"For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose
his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?"
(Matthew 16:26).
"He that findeth his life shall lose it; and he that loseth his life for
my sake shall find it." (Matthew 10:39).
J. A. Copeland was a failure—according to the world's standards of
success. But he attained and enjoyed spiritual prosperity which is the
outcome of pure character and a correct sense of values. He chose to
live by God's standards as taught by Jesus. Success according to the
world's standards would have meant failure for him. Triumph in Christ
was more important to him.
Some of the key values included in God's standard are expressed in what
we call the Beatitudes which were given by Jesus in the Sermon on the
Mount. Seven of the statements of Jesus are here applied to Brother
Copeland's life to illustrate his spiritual prosperity, and thus the
degree of true success he achieved in life.
"Blessed are the poor in spirit: for theirs is the kingdom of
heaven."
(Matthew 5:3).
Although he had a healthy sense of self-respect, Brother Copeland
recognized his dependence upon the grace of God. He did not, therefore,
display a feeling of self-sufficiency. The man of the world is proud of
his independence and self-reliance. Brother Copeland's attitude was the
opposite of this. He did not "think of himself more highly than he ought
to think." (Romans 12:3). The reader will recall that Brother Copeland
demonstrated this sincere humility at the Billstown reunion in August,
1954. In his closing remarks he said, "Now I appreciate every word of
kindness that you have said about me, but I don't feel worthy of all
that commendation." And then, he climaxed the afternoon by saying, as he
took Sister Copeland's hand, "And if you have any compliments, any
medals, I'm going to say, 'Pin them on her; she deserves them'."
He was, indeed, an humble man, one who was truly "poor in spirit."
"Blessed are they that mourn: for they shall be comforted."
(Matthew 5:4).
Sorrow is not blessed, but rather the comfort which God provides to the
sorrowing. Where there is no grief, there can be no comfort. It has been
said that the man who knows no sorrow is incomplete; one side of his
nature has not been developed.
The special kind of sorrow of which Jesus spoke is sorrow over spiritual
failure, sin, or spiritual poverty. The boasting Pharisee did not mourn
or beat his breast like the penitent publican; neither did he enjoy the
experience of justification. The prodigal son, in true contrition,
acknowledged his sin: "Father, I have sinned." Job said in his
self-abasement, "Wherefore I abhor myself and repent in dust and ashes."
This mourning is not incompatible with rejoicing. Another of the
ingredients of the happy life of Brother Copeland was his enjoyment of
the comfort which God imparts to the contrite heart.
"Blessed are the meek: for they shall inherit the earth."
(Matthew 5:5).
Meekness is not weakness. Essentially it is that attitude of mind which
does not insist on its own rights, and is ready always to waive its
privileges in the interest of others. One of the characteristics of love
as described by the Apostle Paul in 1 Corinthians 13 is that it "seeketh
not its own," or as one translation reads, "it does not insist on its
own rights."
Meekness is the gentleness of strength in reserve;
therefore, with the inner strength which provides a sense of security,
aggressive behavior is not needed. Brother /' Copeland's life was
characterized by a willingness to yield to others when principle was not
at stake. He did not insist on having his own way; rather, he was always
ready to give up his own plans to embrace God's plans.
"Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after
righteousness: for they shall be filled."
(Matthew 5:6).
Jesus used the strongest physical needs of hunger and thirst to
illustrate the passionate desire for righteousness and likeness to
Christ which commands the life of one who fully responds to God. When
happiness itself is the object of pursuit, it generally proves to be an
elusive mirage. Jesus taught that when one makes righteousness—a right
relationship with God—the goal of life, blessedness, or happiness, is
obtained as well. This, too, describes the life which Brother Copeland
lived.
The four characteristics given above indicate the ideal attitude toward
God and His kingdom. The three following refer to one's relationship
with his fellow men. The person who is spiritually prosperous
demonstrates a disposition of "strength with weakness at its mercy,
purity in contact with defiling company," and "love which sees others at
variance."
"Blessed are the merciful: for they shall obtain mercy."
(Matthew 5:7).
This is a self-acting law of the moral world. The man who shows mercy
receives mercy. Like meekness, mercy is a distinctively Christian
virtue, little known among non-Christian people. Mercy is shown to those
who have no claim to it. When those who have a claim to mercy receive
it, we call it justice.
Brother Copeland was a man of compassionate spirit, always ready to make
allowances for those who had failed. He did not judge harshly; mercy
knows no retaliation.
"Blessed are the pure in heart: for they shall see God."
(Matthew 5:8).
Seeing God is reserved for those of pure heart. Jesus used an inclusive
term employed in its widest meaning purity of thought, imagination,
motive, and act. He referred to moral holiness, inner purity, especially
to one who is without guile.
Brother Copeland knew God; he enjoyed intimate fellowship with Him. With
Christ in the heart as the indwelling fountain of purity, he maintained
a clean heart. This made it possible for him to anticipate the day when
he would see Christ face to face.
"Blessed are the peacemakers: for they shall be called the
children of God."
(Matthew 5:9).
Notice that Jesus did not refer to peaceable men—those
who are peace-keepers. Instead He referred to those who make peace in a
situation where the peace has been broken. Making peace is much more
difficult than maintaining peace. Because Brother Copeland lived in the
presence of God, quarrels and discord seemed to die away in his
presence. He had the reputation of a peacemaker, and was called upon
many, many times to help settle difficulties among brethren in the
church, as well as problems within families.
By living in harmony with God's standards, Brother Copeland demonstrated
the ideal character described by Jesus, our Lord. He truly reflected the
Spirit of Christ in his individual life. Many who knew him look to
Brother Copeland as a model of what the true Christian ought to be. As
one strives to be conformed to the image of Christ, it is encouraging to
look to the example set by a man like Brother Copeland. One can be
brought closer to that goal by following his example. The prayer of each
should be that ". . . we all, with open face beholding as in a glass the
glory of the Lord, are changed into the same image from glory to glory,
even as by the Spirit of the Lord." (2 Corinthians 3:18).
Thus, J. A. Copeland lived and died, like the "way-worn traveler" he
sang about so many, many times while rocking the babies to sleep:
"I heard the song of triumph,
they sang upon that shore,
Saying, Jesus has redeemed us, to suffer nevermore.
Then casting his eyes backward, on the race which he had run,
He shouted loud, HOSANNA! DELIVERANCE HAS COME!"
Back to Top
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Appendix: Chronology Of Some Of The Important
Events In The Life Of J.A. Copeland
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1881
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April 23:
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J. A. Copeland was born at Corinth, Howard County. Arkansas
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1882
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January 20:
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Georgia Watkins was born near Murfreesboro, Arkansas (Hickory
Plains)
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1883
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James D. Copeland homesteaded land in the Hickory Plains
community
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1888
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James D. Copeland family lived one year at Nashville
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1895
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J. A. was baptized at Pleasant Home by Brother W. N. Thompson
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1898
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December 21:
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J. A. was married to Georgia Watkins
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1899
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December 18:
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Ruth Kansas Copeland, the first child of J. A. and Georgia
Copeland, was born
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1901
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August 10:
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Elsie Clara, second daughter, was born
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1903
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April 29:
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Willie Nobia, third daughter, was born
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1904
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J. A. preached his first sermon at Billstown, (near Delight,
Arkansas)
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1905
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March 23:
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Vida, fourth daughter, was born
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J. A. conducted his first meetings, one at Kirby and one at
Billstown
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1906
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J. A. conducted a meeting at Corinth Bought the Stephens place
at Pleasant Home
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1907
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May 26:
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Sweeney Roy, first son and fifth child, born
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Fall:
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Moved to Center Point for J. A. to attend School
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1909
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Spring:
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Moved back home from Center Point
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August 17:
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Felix Gilbert, second son, was born
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1911
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June 24:
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Myrtle Estelle, fifth daughter, seventh child, was born
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1912
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December 13:
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Thomas Clayton, eighth child. was born
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1913
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Summer:
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Ruth was baptized by Brother Isaac Lambert
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1914
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Summer:
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J. A. built new school house at Pleasant Home
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1914
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Summer:
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Elsie was baptized by Brother Skaggs
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October 12:
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Joy Fae and Floy Mae, ninth and tenth children, were born
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1916
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Summer:
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Willie was baptized
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November 26:
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Ruth was married to Langley House
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1918
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July 3:
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Ordis Dale, eleventh child, was born
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Summer:
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Vida was baptized by Brother Isaac Lambert
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1919
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Sweeney had typhoid fever
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1920
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January 9:
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Lucy Oleva, twelfth child, was born
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February 5:
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Willie was married to Jordan Roberts
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Spring:
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Family moved to the Harris place near Prescott to make a crop
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1921
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Elsie attended school at Texarkana while staying with her Aunt
Bessie
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1922
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March:
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J. A. had a very serious illness
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August 28:
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Jady Wilson, thirteenth child, was born
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1923
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February 21:
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Elsie was married to Dewey Cox
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December 24:
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Gilbert was baptized by his father (Lee Starnes held the meeting
at Pleasant Home)
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December 27:
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James D. Copeland died at home
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1924
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Summer:
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Estelle was baptized by her father
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Summer:
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Sweeney was baptized by Brother Wainright
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Fall:
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The family moved to Pleasant Hill, near Prescott
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1925
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July 5:
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Clayton was injured when he fell from a horse
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July 7:
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Clayton died
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1927
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January:
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The family moved to Delight
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1928
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March:
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Joy and Floy were baptized by their father
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1929
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Feb.-March:
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The family lived at Prescott for a short time
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July 19:
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Vida was married to David Stuart
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November 22:
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The Copeland's house burned
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November 27:
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Sweeney was married to Maude Brown
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1930
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December:
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The Gospel Light was first publi | | | |