9
January 1808 A.D. The
Rev. Dr. Henry Augustus Boardman of Tenth Presbyterian, Philadelphia was born.
The story is told by Barry
Waugh.
9 January Henry A. Boardman, 1808-1880
Henry
Augustus was born to John and Clarinda (Starbuck) Boardman in the city of Troy
on the Hudson River in New York, January 9, 1808. John was a merchant in Troy
who had partnered with another man to form Hillhouse and Boardman. The business
was successful and the Boardmans prospered, which would prove beneficial when
John Boardman died when Henry was only five years old and his business income
left a modest fortune for his mother. Though Clarinda Boardman had been raised
a Quaker she had joined the Presbyterian Church when she married John. At the
time of her death her pastor commented in the local newspaper that her
character was full of Christian graces and her religious belief was strongly
Calvinistic. Several years after Henry left home, his mother died in March
1846.
As
young Henry obtained his early education in local academies, he would see the
construction of the Erie Canal and possibly celebrate its completion in 1825
before he left for his college studies at Yale. He was a diligent and bright
college student graduating the class of 1829 as valedictorian. He immediately
began the study of law, but in the spring of 1830, he professed his faith in
Christ and united with the Second Presbyterian Church in Troy. Within a year,
he entered Princeton Seminary to prepare for the work of pastoral ministry.
Henry
Boardman was licensed by the Presbytery of New York on April 17, 1833, and was
then ordained and installed by the Third Presbytery of Philadelphia (New
School), November 8, 1833, in Tenth Presbyterian Church, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania. Following the Old School’s ejection of the New School in 1837,
Tenth Church was listed in the Old School General Assembly Minutes for 1838 as
a member of its Philadelphia Presbytery. One of Rev. Boardman’s early
challenges was changing Tenth Church’s confessional allegiance from that of the
New School to that of the Old. Tenth Church was not only Henry Boardman’s first
call, it was his only call; he continued to pastor the congregation until
presbytery, at the congregation’s request, changed his status from pastor to
pastor emeritus, May 5, 1876.
Henry
Augustus Boardman died at his residence on Spruce Street in Philadelphia, June
15, 1880. The disease that caused his death was diagnosed as “gastritis.” Dr.
Boardman had been in Atlantic City, for a short visit and while there he
complained of some illness, but it was not thought the problem was serious.
However, once he returned to Philadelphia his condition steadily declined and
he passed away calmly the next morning. Dr. Boardman was buried in Laurel Hill
Cemetery, Philadelphia. Eliza had preceded him into the Lord’s presence on
August 19, 1874. Eliza and Henry had three sons and two daughters.
The
story of Henry Boardman’s marriage is a bit curious. He was raised in Troy, New
York, attended college in Connecticut, studied for the ministry in New Jersey,
and would go on to pastor a church in Philadelphia for the remainder of his life.
However, somehow he managed to marry Miss Eliza Beach Jones, who was the
daughter of attorney Paul Townsend and Mary Lamboll (Beach) Jones, of
Charleston, South Carolina. How did the Northeastern man manage to marry a
South Carolina woman? Two years after Henry Boardman entered Princeton, Miss
Eliza’s brother, Samuel Beach Jones, began his theological studies at the
seminary. Whether Samuel orchestrated the meeting of Boardman with his sister,
she met him while visiting Samuel in Princeton, or the romance was kindled in
some other way is not clear, but Eliza Jones won the heart of Henry Boardman.
As with many of the seminary students and alumni, Henry and Eliza were married
by Archibald Alexander. Another Charleston connection for Boardman was his classmate
Thomas Smyth, who would go on to serve the Second Presbyterian Church of
Charleston, and, like Boardman, would serve only one pastoral call of many
years, 1834-1873.
Henry
Boardman and Charles Hodge were great friends. When Dr. Hodge died in l878, the
addresses of Dr. Boardman, William Paxton, and Charles A. Aiken were published
in Discourses Commemorative of the Life and Work of Charles Hodge, D.D.,
LL.D. Dr. and Eliza Boardman had shown their love and respect for Dr. Hodge
by naming one of their sons, Charles Hodge Boardman, who was born May 28, 1838.
C. H. Boardman matured to study medicine at the University of Pennsylvania and
moved to St. Paul, Minnesota, where he was a member of the State Board of
Medical Examiners, President of the City Board of Water Commissioners, Medical
Director of the Northern Pacific Railroad, and Professor of Medical
Jurisprudence in the University of Minnesota. Charles Hodge must have been
touched not only by the Boardmans naming their son after him, but also because
the son was a medical doctor like his own beloved brother, Hugh Lenox Hodge.
Dr.
Boardman’s more than four decades of pastoral ministry saw many changes. In the
greater PCUSA, he went through the split of the denomination in 1837, the
Spring Resolutions that divided the Presbyterians along the Mason-Dixon Line in
1861, and the reunion of the Old and New Schools into a single PCUSA in 1869
(less the PCUS congregations). In 1854, he was moderator of the Old School
General Assembly. With respect to Princeton Seminary, he was elected in 1835 as
a director of the seminary and he continued as one until his death. In 1853, he
was elected by the General Assembly to be Professor of Pastoral Theology in
Princeton Seminary, but he declined the position to continue his ministry at
Tenth Church. Possibly the most rewarding aspect of Dr. Boardman’s lengthy
ministry would have been baptizing children, leading them to profess their
faith in Christ and become communing members, see them grow in the faith, and
then unite them in Christian marriage. What is more, he could have seen these
important steps in Christian growth not only in the children, but also in their
children, and their children’s children. Dr. Boardman’s forty-three years of
pastoral service is the longest call served of all the ministers at Tenth
Presbyterian Church.
_____________________________________
An
assortment of standard Presbyterian reference books of the nineteenth century
have been used in composing this biography
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