Lorenzo Dow

Lorenzo Dow (October 16, 1777  February 2, 1834) was an eccentric itinerant American evangelist, said to have preached to more people than any other preacher of his era. He became an important figure and a popular writer. His autobiography at one time was the second best-selling book in the United States, exceeded only by the Bible.

Early life

Born at Coventry, Connecticut, to Humphrey Dow and Tabitha Parker Dow, Dow was a sickly child and was much troubled in his youth by "religious speculations," but ultimately joined the Methodist faith. In 1796 he made an unsuccessful application for admission into the Connecticut conference; but two years later he was received, and in 1798—despite the objections of his family—was appointed to be a circuit preacher, on a probationary basis, to the Cambridge circuit in New York. During the year he was transferred to Pittsfield, Massachusetts, and afterward to Essex, Vermont, but remained there only a brief time.[1]

Missionary travels

Lorenzo Dow preaching, engraving by Lossing-Barrett, 1856

Dow made three visits to Ireland and England, in 1799, 1805 and 1818, and by his eccentric manners and attractive eloquence drew after him immense crowds.[2] He took what he believed to be a divine call and crossed the Atlantic Ocean to preach as a missionary to the Catholics of Ireland, and thereafter was never connected officially with the ministry of the Methodist Church, though he remained essentially a Methodist in doctrine. He introduced camp meetings into England, and the controversy about them resulted in the organization of the Primitive Methodist Society.[3]

In 1802 he preached in the Albany region of New York, against atheism, deism, Calvinism and Universalism. He passed the years 1803 and 1804 in what was then the Mississippi Territory (present day states of Mississippi and Alabama), delivering the first Protestant sermon within the bounds of those future states. Just south of Mansfield, Georgia, on State Route 11, is a large rock on which is a plaque, placed by the Daughters of the American Revolution. It states that on that rock, in 1803, Dow preached the first "Gospel sermon" in Jasper County. In 1807 he extended his labors into Louisiana Territory.[4]

Dow's enthusiasm sustained him through the incessant labors of more than 30 years, during which he preached in almost all parts of the United States. His later efforts were directed chiefly against the Jesuits; indeed he was in general a vigorous opponent of Roman Catholicism.

Everywhere, in America and Britain, he attracted great crowds to hear and see him, and he was often persecuted as well as admired. Because the churches were closed to him, Lorenzo Dow preached in town halls, farmers' barns, and even in open fields. He would preach anyplace where he could assemble a crowd. He preached to Methodists, Baptists, Quakers, Catholics, and atheists alike. He liked to appear unexpectedly at public events, announcing in a loud voice that exactly one year from today, Lorenzo Dow would preach on this spot. He never disappointed his audiences; he always appeared exactly 365 days later at the appointed place, usually met by huge crowds.

Dow's public speaking mannerisms were like nothing ever seen before among the typically conservative church goers of the time. He shouted, he screamed, he cried, he begged, he flattered, he insulted, he challenged people and their beliefs. He told stories and made jokes. It is recorded that Lorenzo Dow often preached before open-air assemblies of 10,000 people or more and held the audiences spellbound.

Traveling preacher

Peggy Dow, aged 35

Dow's fame spread, and so did his travels. He traveled on foot and occasionally on horseback (when someone would donate a horse) sometimes accompanied by his wife, Peggy Dow throughout what was then the United States. His journeys took him to Canada, England and Ireland, and once to the West Indies. He was usually well-received although there were exceptions. A fierce abolitionist, Dow's sermons were often unpopular in the southern United States, and he frequently was threatened with personal violence. He sometimes was forcibly ejected from towns, pelted with stones, eggs, and rotten vegetables as it happened in Jacksonborough, Georgia around 1820.[5] That never stopped him; he simply walked to the next town and gave the same sermon again.

Lorenzo Dow was personally unkempt. He did not practice personal hygiene and his long hair and beard were described as "never having met a comb." He usually owned one set of clothes: those that were on his back. When those clothes became so badly worn and full of holes that they were no longer capable of covering him, some person in the audience usually would donate a replacement. The donated clothes often were not the correct size for his skinny body. When he traveled, he carried no luggage other than a box of Bibles to be given away. Throughout most of his life, what little money he ever collected was either given away to the poor or used to purchase Bibles. In his later years, he did accumulate a bit of money from the sales of his autobiography and religious writings. His singularities of manner and of dress excited prejudices against him, and counteracted the effect of his eloquence. Nevertheless, he is said to have preached to more persons than any man of his time.[6]

He died in Georgetown, in 1834 after illness being cared about by his friend George Haller, and had asked before passing away to use his old greatcoat as his winding sheet. He was placed to rest at Holmead's Burying Ground.[7] A headstone with an epitaph that he personally selected was placed on his grave:

A Christian is the highest style of man;

He is a slave to no sect, takes no private road,

But looks through nature up to nature's God.[8]

In 1887, when old Holmead's cemetery was about to be abolished, William Wilson Corcoran donated money and Dow was disinterred and moved to Oak Hill Cemetery, near Georgetown.[9]

Remembrance

His influence and popularity during his life led to many children of the early 19th century, especially on the American frontier, to be named after him.[10] In the 1818 Washington almanac, there is a humorous anecdote about Lorenzo Dow saving a woman's infidelity by pretending to raise the devil (the woman's paramour, who was hiding in a barrel, which Dow set on fire).[11] His autobiography became a bestseller and the 1850 U.S. Census counts Lorenzo as one of the most popular first names in America.[12]

Family

His wife, Peggy Dow (1780–1820), was almost as eccentric as her husband.[13] She published her journal, entitled Vicissitudes in the Wilderness (1833).[14]

Selected works

  • Polemical Works (1814)
  • The Stranger in Charleston, or the Trial and Confession of Lorenzo Dow (1822)
  • A Short Account of a Long Travel; with Beauties of Wesley (1823)
  • History of a Cosmopolite; or the Four Volumes of the Rev. Lorenzo Dow's Journal, concentrated in One, containing his Experience and Travels from Childhood to 1814 (1814; many later editions); this volume also contains "All the Polemical Works of Lorenzo." The edition of 1854 was entitled The Dealings of God, Man, and the Devil as exemplified in the Life, Experience and Travels of Lorenzo Dow.,[15][16][17]

Notes

  1. Price, Richard Nye. Lorenzo and Peggy Dow. Holston Methodism: From Its Origin to the Present Time, Volume 2. Publishing House of the M.E. Church, South, Smith & Lamar, 1912, pp. 39–73.
  2. Benjamin Griffith Brawley. Lorenzo Dow, The Journal of Negro History, Volume 1, no. 3 (July 1916), 265-275.
  3. Farndale, W.E. The Secret of Mow Cop: A New appraisal of the Origins of Primitive Methodism. Epworth Press, London. 1950. Page 28: "Lorenzo Dow ... in 1807 ... preached at Hariseahead, Burslem, and Tunstall (Aug 16, 1818), where he met Hugh Bourne [one of the founders of the English Priimitive Methodists]".
  4. Henry Sheets. Lorenzo and Peggy Dow: A Sketch of the Celebrated Lorenzo Dow and his Wife, Peggy, The Dispatch, January 18, 1905.
  5. , Touring the Backroads of North and South Georgia
  6.  Wilson, J. G.; Fiske, J., eds. (1888). "DOW, Lorenzo". Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. 2. New York: D. Appleton. p. 218.
  7. Ridgely, Helen West (1908). Historic Graves of Maryland and the District of Columbia, With the Appearing on the Tombstones in Most of the Counties of the State and in Washington and Georgetown. New York: Grafton Press.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  8. The New England Magazine, Volume 26, p. 416.
  9. Chapin, Elizabeth Moore (1887). American Court Gossip; or, Life at the National Capitol. Marshalltown, Ia.: Chapin & Hartwell Bros.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  10. "Clermont County" Historical Collections of Ohio: An Encyclopedia of the State. Volume 1. Columbus: H. Howe & Son, 1889, pp. 412–413, 418. Page 418 contains an engraving of an 1821 portrait of Dow, and a drawing of Dow preaching in New Haven, Connecticut in 1832.
  11. The Washington Almanac for the year of our Lord 1818 ..." Sharp, J. (1817). The Washington almanac, for the year of our Lord 1818. Baltimore [Md.]: Cushing & Jewett.
  12. Micklethwait, John, and Adrian Wooldridge. God Is Back: How the Global Revival of Faith Is Changing the World. New York: Penguin Press, 2009, p. 69-70.
  13. Gilbert, Jesse S. Lorenzo and Peggy Dow, Methodist Magazine and Review, Volume 59.
  14. Dow, Peggy. Vicissitudes in the Wilderness: Exemplified in the Journal of Peggy Dow. Norwich, Conn: Printed by W. Faulkner, 1833.
  15. History of a Cosmopolite, 1814 1st edn.
  16. History of a Cosmopolite, 1848 5th edn.
  17. History of a Cosmopolite, 1858 edn.

References

Further reading

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