1 July
1856 A.D. William Melancthon
Glasgow—Presbyterian Historian & Biographer
Archivist.
“July 1: William Melanchton Glasgow.” This Day in Presbyterian History. 1 Jul 2014. http://www.thisday.pcahistory.org/2014/07/july-1-first-meeting-of-the-westminster-assembly-1643/.
Accessed 1 July 2014.
July 1: William Melancthon Glasgow
A Great Historian & Biographer
When
searching out pre-twentieth century Presbyterian biographies, there are three
big names—three primary sources which cannot be overlooked. The unsurpassed
efforts of William Buell Sprague would have to be mentioned first. Indeed, Sprague
did not limit himself to Presbyterians, but gathered biographical entries
covering all the major Protestant denominations and even included Unitarians in
his nine volume set, Annals of the American Pulpit. (As a young man, Sprague
came under the influence of a Unitarian teacher, but turned to orthodox
Trinitarianism while attending Princeton Seminary).
Another
resource is that of Alfred Nevin‘s Encyclopedia of the Presbyterian Church in
the U.S.A., including the Northern and Southern Assemblies. This massive single
volume was published in 1884 and tops out at 1229 pages. Where Sprague had
solicited entries from pastors across the nation and acknowledges their
contributions in each case, Nevin’s work gives the appearance of being his work
alone, though it seems doubtful that a work of that extent could have been
accomplished by just one man.
The
third major resource brings us to another great biographer and the focus of our
post today. William Melancthon Glasgow was born in Northwood, Logan county,
Ohio, on July 1, 1856. If you will remember, this was the original location of
Geneva College, and so not surprisingly this was where William received his
college education, graduating there in 1880. After a few years of employment in
Boston, he then prepared for the ministry at the Allegheny Theological Seminary
(now known as the Reformed Presbyterian Theological Seminary).
Glasgow’s
first published work, Catalogue of the Alumni of Geneva College, appeared in
the same year that he began his Seminary studies (1882). Another work, History
of Geneva College followed quickly (1883), and his third book, The Provincial
Churches, was published around the time he graduated in 1884. Clearly he was
already evidencing his life’s interest in history and biography. I know of no
other seminary student who has ever equalled his record of three volumes
published while still in seminary.
Glasgow
was licensed to preach by the (Reformed Presbyterian) Presbytery of Pittsburgh
on April 9, 1884 and later ordained by the Philadelphia Presbytery (also RP) on
November 26, 1885. He was installed as the pastor of the RP church in
Baltimore, Maryland, and served that church until the early summer of 1889. His
second pastorate was in Kansas City, Missouri, 1889-1893 and from that post he
next answered a call to serve the RP church in Beaver Falls, Pennysylvania. In
1899, he transferred his credentials into the United Presbyterian Church of
North America, in order to take a call to serve the UPCNA church in Wellsville,
Ohio, from 1899 until his death in 1909, at the age of 51.
Rev.
Glasgow authored two major works which are of inestimable value. The first of
these, History of the Reformed Presbyterian Church in America, was published in
1888. That volume was republished in 2007 by Reformation Heritage Books.
Glasgow’s other major biographical work was his Cyclopedic Manual of the United
Presbyterian Church in North America, published in 1903. This work has never
been republished, but is available in digital format. Where the former work
offered more extensive biographies and histories of R.P. congregations, the
latter U.P. work adopts a shorter notation style, similar in format to what is
found today in the PCA Yearbook and the OPC Ministerial Register.
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