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The Christian Observer - 9400 Fairview Avenue - Manassas,
VA 20110 (703) 335-2844 The History of the Christian Observer
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The
Christian ObserverBApproaching 200 Years of Faithfulness The
Christian Observer represents America's oldest Presbyterian publishing
tradition, dating from 1813. Under the leadership of founder Amasa Converse
and his family the Christian Observer absorbed more than fourteen other
periodicals. Their names echo the titles of Presbyterian history: The
Religious Remernbrancer, The Family Visitor, Religious Telegraph and Observer,
The Protestant and Herald, and The Cincinnati Standard. Episcopalians
and Methodists also had publications named Christian Observer. However, the
present publication has a direct connection only to the Presbyterian
publication in Louisville, Kentucky. Through the intervention of a Christian
foundation the title was secured a decade ago and conveyed to the Christian
Observer, Inc. Even
the Converse family itself, which was identified with the Christian Observer
across four generations, varied when counting the issues and tracing the
roots. All
agree, however, that the patriarch of the family was Amasa Converse who was
born at Lyme, New Hampshire on August 21, 1795. An
ardent evangelist and church planter, Converse attended Phillips Academy at
Andover and then Dartmouth before entering Princeton. In New Jersey he came
under the influence of Dr. Archibald Alexander and developed the distinctive
theological presuppositions which would guide the Christian Observer for the
next 150 years. Dr.
Alexander and his associate Charles Hodge promoted Southern cultural interests
and actively engaged in a range of publishing projects, recruiting promising
young men to join them. According to the official history of the Christian
Observer, Converse "was advised by Dr. Archibald Alexander, founder of
the seminary, to seek a milder climate, since 'you have learning enough to be
engaged in your vocation.' So Dr. Converse went on horseback first to North
Carolina and then to Nottoway County, Virginia." The
religious situation in Richmond where Converse settled forms a fascinating
tale too large for treatment here. In
1827, Converse took charge of the Visitor and Telegraph, turning it into the
Southern Religious Telegraph in 1839 and merging it with the Philadelphia
Observer (the continuation itself of the Religious Remembrancer). Presbyterian
use of the name Christian Observer began in 1840. Converse
was enormously popular with Presbyterian laymen like T.J. Jackson as well as
with theological giants like Virginia's Rev. William White and William Holt
Rice. Theological distinctions of the period may be confusing to contemporary
readers but they were enormously important in their day. The principal parties
were the Old School and the New School. Four synods in the North had blurred
their distinctive Presbyterianism through cooperative programs with the
Congregationalists. Since the Congregationalists were suffering a severe
decline from their Puritan days, the association appeared to compromise New
School theology. Key men in the Princeton‑Richmond axis engineered the
expulsion of the compromised synods. As
notorious for his sense of justice as for his theological orthodoxy, Converse
ruined his position in Richmond by condemning the entire operation as an
imposition on the church and a matter entirely outside the constitution of the
Presbyterian Church. Other prominent leaders followed his direction and
provided a constituency for the New School in the South. Several key
congregations of the Presbyterian Church in America trace their origins to
this tradition. To
unify Northern and Southern factions and to promote the strictly confessional
party in the New School, Converse moved to Philadelphia. However, the New
School could not hold together as a common ground for both the extreme right
and left wings of the church. When the New School shattered well before the
War, Converse championed the United Synod of the South. Interestingly, during
the war, Converse helped Old School leaders publicly confess the excesses of
their party and helped the United Synod agree to merge back into the main body
on adopting the original Old School constitution. Through Converse's efforts,
the decidedly liberal wing of the United Synod in Western Tennessee and South
Carolina was never able to exert the liberalism which matured in the North. When
Lincoln assumed power, he drew up a list of publications to suppress and key
civilians to imprison. Under the colour of national security, he effected a
police state with varying success. As part of this plan, Secretary of War
Stanton ordered the Christian Observer closed, its assets confiscated, and
Converse jailed. The
war measures had stiff opposition in strongly Christian areas like
Philadelphia. The United States District Attorney rejected the order as
unjustifiable and a violation of freedom of the press. Converse closed his
doors, pocketed his key, and opened for business back in Richmond three weeks
later. A
son, Francis Bartlett Converse, joined Amasa at the Christian Observer as a
child. Once when fire destroyed the office, Bartlett, who had handled the
address list since learning to write, sat down and immediately wrote out 3,000
names and addresses from memory! During
the War, the Christian Observer was distributed in the army. Popular legend
claims that on occasion 100,000 copies circulated in the army at one time. The
revivals which swept the army and kept the South from becoming another
Ulster can be traced in substantial measure to the Christian Observer. At
the close of the war, the Christian Observer moved to Louisville, Kentucky.
The present publication is still chartered in Kentucky. During
the administration of Dr. Bartlett Converse, Rev. James Converse, Rev. Thomas
Converse, and Rev. Francis Beattie worked with him as editors. Harry
Pollard Converse is the third patriarchal figure in the early Christian
Observer. Born in 1876, he attended Princeton and joined his father on
graduation. In 1907, upon his father's death, Harry Pollard became managing
editor and held the post for fifty-three years. Other
branches of the family gained recognition for the invention of locomotives,
steam engines, shoes, and many other mechanical devices. Taking his turn, Harry
Pollard invented modern typesetting equipment and employed the latest methods to
streamline operations and eliminate duplications. During
this period the Christian Observer became the most widely‑read
Presbyterian periodical and kept its conservative direction. Other Presbyterian
publications drifted into what is now The Presbyterian Outlook. The latter is
identified with the Presbyterian Church (USA) while the Christian Observer
continues its tradition of serving a wider constituency. Associated
with the publication during this period were Dr. David Sweets and Dr. William
Thomas McElroy. In
1960, Miss Marys Converse became managing editor upon the death of her father.
At this time, Dr. Samuel A. Cartledge of Columbia Seminary, Dr. Joseph M. Gettys,
and Dr. Walter Lingle of Davidson College served editorial terms. The beloved
Henry Wade DuBose of the Assembly's Training School also served as a
contributing editor for more than forty years. These
things characterized the Christian Observer throughout its history. The editors
refused to permit challenges to the historic confession or to exclude from the
family those who claimed to be Presbyterian. Each issue was designed to
strengthen the Christian home and build the family. Ahead of its time, the
Christian Observer gave special attention to women in the church. The Christian
Observer functioned as a clearing house for all Presbyterian news. In all things
Christ was preeminent. The
ministerial advisors and editors of the present Christian Observer promise to
maintain this tradition. Whether one sees this as the legal heir of the
Christian Observer or simply the most recent in a line of 16 faithful
publications, the result is the same. Men and women from across the spectrum
have come together to promote the Christian family and build the Presbyterian
Church to the glory of God. Christian
Observer, September 2002 |