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Samuel White Small
(July 3, 1851 –
November 21,
1931)
Journalist,
Methodist evangelist,
and
Prohibitionist Founded
the
Oklahoma City
Oklahoman
 (pictured at
age thirty-seven in
1888)
 headstone at Arlington
National
Cemetery
Sam Small was born on a plantation
near
Knoxville,
Tennessee, the son of
Alexander B. Small, a
newspaper editor and
president of an
express
company. Small
later
said of his
childhood
that he
was
“well
born…given
by
kindly
parents all
the
true and
religious
culture
that
a boy
could have in
a loving
home.” At
thirteen
Small
enlisted
in the
reserves
of the
Confederate Army
during
the last
months
of the
war. During the
Spanish-American
War,
he
served as
Captain
(Chaplain)
of the
3rd
United States
Volunteer
Engineers and
subsequently as
Chaplain-in-Chief
of the
Naval and
Military
Order of the
Spanish-American
War.
He
graduated from
high school in New
Orleans and
then
attended
Emory
& Henry
College,
graduating
in 1871. He
immediately began a
career in
journalism
even
while
toying with
becoming a
lawyer. In
1873, he
married Annie
Isabelle
Arnold,
and they
had a
daughter
and two
sons.
The influence of
his
father
secured Small
a
position
as
secretary
to
former
President Andrew
Johnson. In 1878,
President
James Garfield
appointed Small
secretary to
the
United
States
commissioner
general of
the
Paris
Exposition of
1878. Despite his other
interests, Small
retained an “obsession
for
politics,” and near
the end of his life
he boasted of
having
“clasped hands
with
every
president
from
James
Buchanan to
Herbert
Hoover.”
Small
contributed to
the
Atlanta
Constitution
a
series of
dialect
sketches under
the
persona
of an
old
black man,
“Old Si,”
stories that
gained him
a national
reputation.
Unfortunately,
Small had by
this time
descended into
alcoholism, and when
he
was
unable to continue,
editor Evan Howell asked
Joel Chandler Harris
to
try his
hand at
similar material.
In
September
1885,
while
working as a
court
stenographer
and freelance
reporter,
Small
covered a revival
meeting of evangelist
Sam
Jones in
Cartersville,
Georgia.
There Small
was
so “overwhelmed by
conviction of sin” that
on
arriving back
in
Atlanta,
he
immediately
started drinking.
Nevertheless, four days
after visiting
Cartersville,
Small
“pleaded with
Christ that
he would let
me
cling to
his
cross, lay down
all
my burdens and sins
there, and be rescued
and
saved by his
compassion.” Small’s
family
at first feared
he
was
slipping into
madness.
Small
soon began
testifying
to his
deliverance from
alcohol,
and Sam
Jones
now
came
to
hear him
preach
in Atlanta.
“Small’s
fame and newspaper
connections
ensured that
his
conversion
would
garner
publicity,”
and Jones
invited Small to
be his
associate.
Although
Small’s
collaboration with
Jones
lasted only a few
years,
in part
because
of
heavy debts
Small
had
contracted while he
was
drinking, Small
interspersed his
re-entrance
into
journalism with
preaching,
lecturing,
and
writing two books
that
advocated
prohibition:
Pleas
for
Prohibition
(1889) and The
White
Angel of the
World
(1891).
In
1889, Small
even
considered
becoming an
Episcopal
priest.
Oklahoma
City then had
two daily
papers,
the morning
Press-Gazette and
the afternoon Times-Journal.
Small
thought
Oklahoma
City
needed a better paper.
Small
founded the
Oklahoma
City
Oklahoman
(1889).
The first issue
of
the
Daily
Oklahoman
was
published in Oklahoma
City,
Oklahoma Territory
(O.T.), on January 14,
1894.
Although he
had
limited
funds, he
sought
to
operate his
daily
paper
like one in
a big city,
utilizing
Associated
Press
news
and market
reports
by
telegraph and
territorial weather
forecasts
from the
weather bureau
in
Washington, D.C. To
gather news Small
staffed offices
in
the
territorial
towns of
Guthrie,
Perry,
Norman,
Ardmore,
Yukon, El
Reno,
and
Newkirk. He
formed a
stock company
to raise
money, but he
soon lost
control and
returned to
Georgia.and
the
Norfolk (VA)
Pilot (1894). Small
also began
an
English
language
paper in
Havana.
Small
unsuccessfully
attempted to
found
a
Methodist
college in
Ogden,
Utah
before
eventually
finding his
way
back to
the
editorial
staff of
the
Atlanta
Constitution
in
1901. Small also lectured
on
behalf of the
Anti-Saloon
League.
In a
florid
address to
the
Anti-Saloon League's
1917 convention in
Washington,
DC,
Small
told the
cheering
crowd
that if
the
United
States
enacted prohibition,
"then you
and I
may
proudly expect to
see
this America of
ours,
victorious and
Christianized,
become not only the
savior but
the
model and
the
monitor of
the
reconstructed
civilization of
the
world in the
future."
Small also kept his hand
in politics. In 1892
he
ran for Congress as a
prohibition-supporting
Populist.
In
1927,
Bob Jones, Sr.
asked Small to write a creed
for the proposed
Bob
Jones College. The creed
written quickly
on the
back of an
envelope has
been memorized and recited daily
by generations of Bob
Jones University
students.
By 1930, Small was the
oldest active editor in
the South
and still
wrote three
columns of
editorials a
day.
Nevertheless, Small
had
been
injured in a
fall
during
the
Republican
National
Convention of
1928, and
he
died
in
Atlanta,
Georgia on
November
21, 1931. He
was buried in
Arlington
National
Cemetery with full military
honors.
SMALL, SAMUEL W CAPT CHAPLAIN 3RD U S VOL ENGR
VETERAN
SERVICE DATES:
Unknown
DATE OF
DEATH:
11/21/1931
DATE OF
INTERMENT:
11/25/1931
BURIED
AT:
SECTION
SOUTH
SITE
4177-A
ARLINGTON
NATIONAL
CEMETERY
 |
Title: From the bar-room to pulpit:
lecture delivered by Samuel W. Small at
Stokes Hall, Monday
evening, May 14th,
1888 Creator(s): Small,
Samuel
W. (Samuel White), 1851-1931,
Author Sutton, George C.,
Author Date: 18880514 Description: A
prohibition lecture delivered at
Stokes
Hall, Durham by
Atlanta evangelist
Samuel Small. Small recollects his
encounters with
Sam P. Jones and his
personal conversion
from
drunkard to
prohibitionist. Source: From
the
bar-room to pulpit: lecture
delivered by
Samuel W. Small at
Stokes Hall, Monday
evening, May 14th, 1888. Durham, N.C. :
D.W. Whitaker, job
printer,
1888 Source: http://digitaldurham.duke.edu/hueism.php?x=printedwork&id=233 you
can read all
pages. | Sources
Used: The
Chronicles
of
Oklahoma,
Who's Who of America,
New York Times,
Airlington National
Cemetery
bio,
Wakepedia, Daily
Oklahoman
archives.
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