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MURDER ON THE BRAZOS: THE RELIGIOUS CONTEXT OF THE POPULIST REVOLT1
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 April 2016
Abstract
In the 1880s and ‘90s, Waco, Texas, served as a trading center for the cotton districts of central Texas whose farmers gave rise to the Farmers’ Alliance and turned the region into a Populist hotbed. Waco was also known as the “City of Churches,” as it was the site of Baylor University and other efforts of evangelical churches to build up their institutions. What is less well known is that Waco and its rural environs were also hotbeds of religious heterodoxy. Waco's Iconoclast magazine became a lightning rod of conflict between the Baptists and their skeptical and liberal critics, a conflict that played out to a murderous conclusion. Historians have taken due note of the evangelical environment in which the Populist movement emerged in late nineteenth-century rural America. But in the process the notion of evangelical belief has been too often rendered static and total. The Baptist-Iconoclast conflict in Waco provides an entry point for a better understanding of the dynamic and conflicted nature of the religious context, and the influence of liberal and heterodox ideas within the communities that sustained the Populist cause.
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- Information
- The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era , Volume 15 , Issue 2 , April 2016 , pp. 197 - 219
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- Copyright © Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 2016
Footnotes
This essay has benefited from generous comments from Greg Cantrell, Darren Dochuk, Paul Harvey, and R. Laurence Moore, and from the participants at an Agrarian Studies colloquium at Yale University and a conference at the John C. Danforth Center on Religion and Politics at Washington University.
References
NOTES
2 Charles Cutter, Cutter's Guide to the City of Waco (Waco, TX: Padgitt's Park, 1894), 39.
3 For accounts of these events, see Gerald, George B., “The Passing of William Cowper Brann,” Iconoclast 8 (1898): 74–76Google Scholar; “Fuller Williamson's Statement Made in Dr. Carl Lovelace's Office, Feb. 9, 1934,” unpublished ms., Texas Collection, Baylor University (TCBU); “Last Act of the Waco Tragedy,” San Antonio, Apr. 21, 1898, clipping; and “Brann, William Cowper,” unpublished ms. in “William Cowper Brann,” vertical file, Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, University of Texas, Austin (DBCAH); Charles Carver, Brann and the Iconoclast (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1957); Waco Daily Telephone, Nov. 19, 1897, reprinted in Waco Tribune Herald, Oct. 30, 1949; Waco Tribune Herald, May 14, 2007; Gary Cleve Wilson, “Bane of the Baptists,” Texas Monthly, Jan. 1986.
4 Paul Harvey, Redeeming the South: Religious Cultures and Racial Identities among Southern Baptists 1865–1925 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1997), 151; Darren Dochuk, From Bible Belt to Sun Belt: Plain-Folk Religion, Grassroots Politics, and the Rise of Evangelical Conservatism (New York: W. W. Norton & Co., 2012), xii–iii, 28; Robert Wuthnow, Rough Country: How Texas Became America's Most Powerful Bible-Belt State (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2014); and Red State Religion: Faith and Politics in America's Heartland (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2012).
5 Bruce Palmer, “Man Over Money”: The Southern Populist Critique of American Capitalism (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1980); Steven Hahn, The Roots of Southern Populism, Yeoman Farmers and the Transformation of the Georgia Upcountry, 1850–1890 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1985); Christopher Lasch, The True and Only Heaven: Progress and Its Critics (New York: W. W. Norton & Co., 1991).
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37 Dallas Morning News, Feb. 2, 1896; Jacoby, Great Agnostic, 71; Fort Worth Gazette, Feb. 13, 1896; Daily Herald (Brownsville), February 12, 1896.
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40 Liberal Hall burned to the ground on Oct. 5, 1889, apparently as a result of the lights of a Jewish congregation using the hall for Yom Kippur, Independent Pulpit, vol. 7 (Nov. 1889), 212–13Google Scholar.
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48 Dawson, Martin Joseph, “Image-Breaker Brann Six Decades After,” Southwest Review (1958): 148–58Google Scholar; Fred Whitehead and Verle Muhrer, Freethought on the American Frontier (Buffalo: Prometheus, 1992), 155. As for the circulation numbers of the Iconoclast, it is difficult to verify Brann's claim of 100,000, although it is plausible that at times it reached that figure. James Shaw put the number at 90,000 at the time of Brann's murder. See “Biography by J. D. Shaw” in Brann the Iconoclast: A Collection of the Writings of W. C. Brann in Two Volumes (Waco, TX: Herz Brothers, 1905), 5.
49 “The Lost Triad” in The Complete Works of Brann the Iconoclast, Volume VI (New York: Brann Publishers, 1906), 288.
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51 Carver, Brann and the Iconoclast, 41–43; “Faith and Folly” in Brann, the Iconoclast: A Collection of the Writings, 36.
52 Thomas Dixon Jr., Living Problems in Religion and Social Science (New York: Dillingham, 1889), 129–43.
53 Carver, Brann and the Iconoclast, 43–44.
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55 “Encampment of Negroes,” “Negro Leader Invites Study Race Problem,” “Death Claims Dr. L. L. Campbell,” Negro Scrapbooks (DBCAH).
56 Wuthnow, Rough Country, 138.
57 Sunday School Herald (Austin), May 21, June 4, June 25, July 30, 1892.
58 Harvey, Redeeming the South, 107–35; John M. Giggie, After Redemption: Jim Crow and the Transformation of African American Religion in the Delta, 1875–1915 (New York: Oxford University, 2008), 179–83.
59 Catherine Nugent, ed., Life Work of Thomas L. Nugent (Stephenville, TX: C. Nugent, 1896), 161.
60 Southern Mercury, July 12, 188.
61 King, “Religious Dimensions,” 166–69.
62 “Notes of J. W. H. Davis,” John B. Rushing Collection (DBCAH).
63 Daily Times Herald (Dallas), Sept. 7, 1896; Dallas Morning News, Sept. 6, 1896.
64 “Mental Science” in “Notes of J. W. H. Davis,” John B. Rushing Collection (DBCAH).
65 “Populist Preachers,” Galveston Daily News, Sept. 28, 1894.
66 John B. Rayner, “Good Citizenship and the Negro,” undated ms., “Some of J. B. Rayner's Wise Sayings,” undated ms.; and “Racial Growth,” undated letter to the Dallas Morning News, John B. Rayner Papers (DBCAH).
67 Bettie Gay, “The Influence of Women in the Alliance,” Nelson A. Dunning, ed., The Farmers' Alliance History and Agricultural Digest (Washington, D.C.: Alliance, 1891), 308–12; “Woman in the Alliance,” W. L. Garvin and S. O. Daws, eds., History of the National Farmers' Alliance and Cooperative Union of America (Jacksboro, TX: J. N. Rogers & Co., 1887); Southern Mercury (Dallas), June 6, Nov. 13, 1888.
68 “Populist Preachers,” Galveston Daily News, Sept. 28, 1894; C. C. Perrin, Thorp Spring, Texas, to W. (Bustah) Biard, Biardstown, Texas, Feb. 24, 1886, Biard (James W.) Papers 1882–1913 (DBCAH).
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70 B. F. Riley, History of the Baptists of Texas (Dallas, 1906), 265; J. D. Rockefeller and F. T. Gates to B. H. Carroll, June 23, 1892. B. H. Carroll Papers (TCBU).
71 E. P. Thompson, The Making of the English Working Class (New York: Knopf, 1963), 350–400; Herbert Gutman, “Protestantism and the American Labor Movement,” Work Culture and Society in Industrializing America (New York: Knopf, 1976), 79–117.
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75 David Burns, The Life and Death of the Radical Historical Jesus (New York: Oxford University Press, 2013).
76 Joe Creech, Righteous Indignation: Religion and the Populist Revolution (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2006).
77 Creech, Righteous Indignation, 45.
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79 Thomas Dixon Jr., Dixon on Ingersoll (New York: Alden, 1892); Debs, Eugene V., “Robert Ingersoll,” American Journal of Politics (Feb. 1893): 198–203Google Scholar. Reform-minded theologians from David Swing to Henry Ward Beecher felt compelled to engage the “mistakes of Ingersoll,” J. B. McClure, ed., Mistakes of Ingersoll and His Answers Complete (Chicago: Rhodes & McClure, 1884).
80 Thompson, English Working Class, 96, 391–92.
81 Fort Worth Gazette, July 25, 1895; “Speaking of Brann,” Brann's Iconoclast, vol. 8 (1898), 81Google Scholar; “Baylor in Bad Business” in Brann the Iconoclast: A Collection of the Writings, 211–14.
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86 National Economist, Mar. 14, Aug. 3, 1889.
87 Public Religion Research Institute, “The American Values Atlas, 2014,” http://ava.publicreligion.org/#religious/2014/States/religion
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