Robert Collyer
Robert Collyer (December 8, 1823 – November 30, 1912) was an American Unitarian clergyman.
Biography
[edit]Collyer was born in Keighley, Yorkshire, England, on December 8, 1823; the family moved to Blubberhouses within a month of his birth. At the age of eight he was compelled to leave school and support himself by work in a linen factory. He was naturally studious, however, and supplemented his scant schooling by night study. At fourteen he was apprenticed to a blacksmith, Jacky Birch—who had taught the trade to Samuel Collyer, Robert's father, in Blubberhouses–and for several years worked at this trade at Ilkley. In 1849 he became a local Methodist minister. In the same year, his wife Harriet died on 1 February, and his infant daughter Jane on 4 February.[1]
In the following year emigrated to the United States, where he obtained employment as a hammer maker at Shoemakersville, Pennsylvania. Here he soon began to preach on Sundays while still employed in the factory on weekdays. His earnest, rugged, simple style of oratory made him extremely popular, and at once secured for him a wide reputation. His advocacy of anti-slavery principles, then frowned upon by the Methodist authorities, aroused opposition, and eventually resulted in his trial for heresy and the revocation of his licence. He continued, however, as an independent preacher and lecturer, and in 1859, having joined the Unitarian Church, became a missionary of that church in Chicago, Illinois working as the first minister-at-large of the First Unitarian Church of Chicago.[2] In 1860 he organized and became pastor of the Unity Church, the second Unitarian church in Chicago. Under his guidance the church grew to be one of the strongest of that denomination in the West, and Collyer himself came to be looked upon as one of the foremost pulpit orators in the country. During the American Civil War, he was active in the work of the Sanitary Commission. In 1870 he served as president of the Chicago-Colorado Colony which founded the city of Longmont, Colorado.
In 1879, he left Chicago and became pastor of the Church of the Messiah (now renamed the Community Church) in New York City. Later he brought his old friend, the popular writer and hymnodist, Minot Judson Savage, to assist him in his ministry. In 1883, when he visited Birmingham in England, he engaged Marie Bethell Beauclerc to report and edit his sermons and prayers which were published during the same year.
Collyer was invited to be a featured speaker at the 14th Annual Convention of the American Woman Suffrage Association (AWSA). There, on the evening of October 10, 1883, he spoke of his wife and his thoughts on the women's rights movement. His speech was summarized in the AWSA's Woman's Journal:
After his honeymoon, he said, he discovered that his wife had a will and a way of her own. When she insisted upon having her way he would quote to her what Paul said about the subjection of women to their husbands, and on one occasion she replied, "O bother Paul! what did he know about it?" At length his wife would so persist in having her way that he would say, "My dear, we will try the matter and see how it works," which she wanted done and he did not. The men are now thinking about the woman question, said Mr. Collyer, and by and by, in every State, and county, and town the men would say, "My dear, we will try woman suffrage," and it will be said that the greatest and best and sweetest of movements in our country was that which gave her the right of suffrage. [Applause.][3]
In 1903 Collyer became pastor emeritus.[4] In 1907 a bronze portrait bust of Collyer by Frances Darlington was presented to Ilkley public library, in his former home town, when he visited England and was invited to open the library.[5] He died in New York on November 30, 1912.[4]
Publications
[edit]He published:
- Nature and Life (1867)
- A Man in Earnest: Life of A. H. Conant (1868)
- The Life That Now Is (1871)
- The Simple Truth (1877)
- Talks to Young Men: With Asides to Young Women (1888)
- Things New and Old (1893)
- Father Taylor (1906)
- Ilkley: Ancient and Modern (with Joseph Horsfall Turner, 1885)
- How and What to Read (Texas Chautauqua Assembly)
Notes
[edit]- public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Collyer, Robert". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 6 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 694–695. This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
- "The Life and Letters of Robert Collyer"
References
[edit]- ^ Collyer, Rev. Robert; Turner, J. Horsefall (1885). Ilkley: Ancient and Modern. Leeds: Wm. Walker & Sons. p. 241. Retrieved October 24, 2021.
- ^ "Our Roots". First Unitarian Church of Chicago. Retrieved October 24, 2021.
- ^ "Annual Convention". Woman's Journal. 14 (42): 331. October 20, 1883. Retrieved March 14, 2018.
- ^ a b "Dr. Robert Collyer Dead; Following Illness of Month". Chicago Tribune. New York. December 1, 1912. p. 1. Retrieved June 18, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Ilkley Free Library, opened by Dr Collyer". Leeds Mercury. British Newspaper Archive. October 3, 1907. p. 5 col.2. Retrieved May 29, 2024.
External links
[edit]- Media related to Robert Collyer at Wikimedia Commons
- Works by or about Robert Collyer at the Internet Archive
- Works by Robert Collyer at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
- "From forge to pulpit: the life story of Dr Collyer". Bradford Weekly Telegraph. British Newspaper Archive. September 27, 1907. p. 7 col.4. Retrieved May 29, 2024. A more detailed account of Collyer's life and works.