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Frances E. Townsley

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Frances E. Townsley
Portrait photo of a middle-aged woman wearing glasses with an up-do hairstyle parted in the center.
Personal life
Born
Frances ("Fannie") Eleanor Townsley

September 13, 1850
Died1909
Alma materWheaton College
Signature
Religious life
ReligionNorthern Baptist
Profession
  • minister
  • evangelical preacher
  • lecturer
  • writer
OrdinationApril 1885
Senior posting

Frances E. Townsley (September 13, 1850 – 1909) was an American Baptist minister and evangelical preacher,[1] as well as a lecturer and a writer in prose and verse.[2] She was the second-known woman to be ordained in the Baptist faith,[3] and the first then-Northern Baptist woman minister to be thus credentialed.[4] After ordination, she endured criticism and resistance.[5]

Early life and education

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Frances ("Fannie")[2] Eleanor Townsley was born in Albany, New York, September 13, 1850.[2][a] Her father was Gad Townsley, a commission merchant, and a strong abolitionist who died during a cholera epidemic.[6] Her mother Charlotte Davis Townsley, in early widowhood, would work till midnight and took in boarders to support the family; she also wrote unpublished prose and verse.[2]

During her early years, the child lived in Shelburne Falls, Massachusetts. The public-school education she received was excellent.[6] Once, when asked where she was educated, she said: "Partly in a village academy, partly in Wheaton College, partly in the studies of individual pastors, mainly in the University of Sorrow."[2]

Townsley's "call to preach" was sudden, positive, and undoubted. She spoke her first piece when five years old, the Psalm 23. She owed much of her training as a public speaker to her mother. Among the things committed to memory during the first ten years of her life were Nathaniel Parker Willis' Sacred Poems, parts of John Milton's Paradise Lost, Robert Pollok's The Course of Time, Richard Chenevix Trench's The Miracles and Parables of Christ, Jesus' "Sermon on the Mount", as well as Hebrew poetry and prophecy, and many patriotic selections. She became a professing Christian before she was eighteen years old, after turbulent struggles, mental and spiritual.[2]

Career

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After completing her education at Wheaton College, Townsley became a teacher.[1]

She became a preacher against her previous ideas of the woman's sphere. She was licensed by the Shelburne Falls, Massachusetts, Baptist Church in 1874, after preaching for a year. After twelve years of work as an evangelist in Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, New York, Ohio, Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, South Dakota, and Nebraska, she was ordained by a council of Baptist Churches in April 1885, in Fairfield, Nebraska. She was State evangelist for the Nebraska Woman's Christian Temperance Union, serving as an editor of the organization's The Union Signal. While residing in Ashland, Nebraska, she served as pastor of the Immanuel Baptist Church.[2] Removing to Maywood, Illinois by the turn of the century, the Women's National Sabbath Alliance bestowed an award on one of Townsley's essays.[5]

From 1898 until 1902, she was in Vassar, Michigan where she served as pastor. Retiring because of poor health, she preached, taught, and led reform work until her death in 1909.[6][b]

Selected works

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  • A Pilgrim Maid: The Self-told Story of Frances E. Townsley, 1908
  • The Sabbath Training of the Child for Eternity, 190?

Notes

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  1. ^ According to Larsen (2017), Townsley was born in 1849.[1]
  2. ^ According to Larsen (2017), Townsley died c. 1913.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Larsen, Timothy (31 August 2017). "Evangelicalism's Strong History of Women in Ministry". Reformed Journal. Retrieved 5 July 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Willard, Frances Elizabeth; Livermore, Mary Ashton Rice (1893). "TOWNSLEY, Miss Frances Eleanor". A Woman of the Century: Fourteen Hundred-seventy Biographical Sketches Accompanied by Portraits of Leading American Women in All Walks of Life. Charles Wells Moulton. p. 721. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  3. ^ "A conversation about women, 160 years in the making". The Wheaton Record. 16 February 2019. Retrieved 4 July 2023.
  4. ^ Piela, Anna (2 March 2023). "Challenges for Baptist women in ministry today". The Christian Citizen. Retrieved 5 July 2023.
  5. ^ a b Malone, David (29 September 2009). ""Three Lady Students in Ministry" – Sesquicentennial Snapshot | ReCollections". wheaton.edu. Retrieved 5 July 2023.
  6. ^ a b c Durso, Pam (22 August 2006). "An Early Baptist Woman in Ministry: Frances E. Townsley". Good Faith Media. Retrieved 5 July 2023.
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