On
August 31, 1915, a black American Christadelphian
fell asleep in the Lord. He was William T. Nelson of the Brooklyn,
NY, ecclesia. Bro. C.C. Walker, then editor of The Christadelphian
magazine, published the following: “his death was attributable
largely to his indefatigable labour in the gospel on behalf of his
people, by whom many have been brought into the Saving Name, not only
in Brooklyn, but in Virginia, and in other nearby cities. He devoted
most of his time in furthering the truth’s cause among the coloured
race, establishing ecclesias, and preaching the Word wherever he could
get a hearing. He left behind him an irreproachable record of Christlikeness
in character and deportment of a very exemplary character”.
Brother Walker commented that “New Testament Christianity
compels us to ignore” distinctions of race and colour.
Then he added this fascinating personal reminiscence: “we
were ourselves baptized by a coloured brother, now deceased, whom
we remember with much the same affection as we suppose Jeremiah could
entertain for Ebed-Melech”.
Brother C.C. Walker was from Ballarat
in Australia, and he was baptized in Melbourne. How did it come about
that the second editor of The Christadelphian magazine was
baptized by “a coloured brother”? Who was he?
For 200 years, West Indians have
been leaving their poor, crowded islands to seek a livelihood, or
just survival, in distant lands. The “coloured brother”
who baptized Charles Curwen Walker on September 10, 1881, was one
such West Indian migrant.
The
Gordon family in the West Indies
Henry T. Gordon was born in 1834 in Roseau, the capital of the Caribbean
island of Dominica. This is a rugged, volcanic West Indian island
nation which would fit thirty-three times into Lake Erie. The island
used to export Rose’s Lime Juice all over the world, but now
specializes in nature tourism, including spectacular whale watching.
During the Thatcher years in Britain, Dominica was led politically
by Dame Eugenia Charles, known worldwide as “the iron lady
of the Caribbean.”
Henry T. Gordon’s father
was also Henry T. Gordon, and so was one of his sons, as we shall
see shortly. The Gordon family in Dominica has been prominent and
renowned for more than two hundred years. The surname originates from
a distant Scots ancestor John Gordon, 16th Earl of Sutherland. But
by the early nineteenth century, the cohabiting of Scotsmen with Africans
in the Caribbean had resulted in a range of colours in the Gordon
family from light brown to black. There are today many Gordons of
great distinction in Dominica and throughout the world.
The
glint of gold and the true riches
One day in 1852, Henry T. Gordon Jr. boarded an island schooner in
Roseau and sailed away to seek his fortune, never to return. In his
eyes was the glint of gold.
In the ten years after 1848, an
estimated quarter of a million men sailed away from Britain, Europe
and the eastern USA in search of gold. There were Bible Believers
(to be called Christadelphians later) in the gold rush, and ecclesias
were established in several gold-mining towns in Australia and South
Africa. Among those in Australia were Beechworth, Bendigo, Ballarat,
and Daylesford in the state of Victoria. Many other treasure seekers
found the true riches and became Christadelphians after arriving at
the diggings. Among these were Henry Gordon and Charles Curwen Walker.
Henry Gordon aimed for Bendigo,
arriving early in 1853. The town was then in the throes of a wild
gold rush. The Central Deborah Mine, which produced gold for a hundred
years, can still be visited as a tourist attraction today. Bro. Robert
Roberts penned a vivid and quite amusing description of his scary
underground tour of the mine in October, 1895, 42 years after Henry
Gordon tried his luck in the city.
In 1856, Henry married 18-year
old Elizabeth Scott of South Australia. After their marriage, they
lived in Bendigo and were there until 1881, when they moved to Melbourne.
They had thirteen children, five boys and eight girls, some of whom
later became Christadelphians.
There were a number of Christadelphians
in Bendigo at that time. Bendigo was originally known as Sandhurst,
and the ecclesia there was the Sandhurst ecclesia, sometimes called
the Kangaroo Flat ecclesia, and for a time the Golden Square ecclesia.
Henry Gordon came in touch with one or more of the Christadelphian
brethren in Bendigo, and on December 16, 1877, both Henry and Elizabeth
were baptised at Kangaroo Flat by Bro. Buchanan, then the leading
elder of the ecclesia. Henry was 45 and Elizabeth 42. At this stage,
eleven of their children had been born. Two more, Julia and Alice,
were born after they were baptised. From the outset, Henry was active
in ecclesial life. He often corresponded with Bro. Robert Roberts,
submitting news from the Sandhurst ecclesia.
“The
seed sprouts and grows”
“This is what the kingdom of God is like. A man scatters
seed on the ground. Night and day, whether he sleeps or gets up, the
seed sprouts and grows, though he does not know how.” Half
a world away, Charles Sutcliffe was a young married man living in
Haworth, a dour mill town in the north of England, already made famous
as the home of the literary Bronte sisters. One day in 1880, he went
to buy coal, and was given a copy of A Declaration by an unknown sister
from the Keighley ecclesia, a short train ride away. Charles studied
other Christadelphian books, and then decided to find the Keighley
ecclesia’s meeting place. On his very first visit he requested
baptism, was interviewed and immersed on the same day in August 1880.
A few months later, early in 1881,
a 25-year old British-born Australian from Ballarat, one of the gold
mining centres in Australia, visited the home of Bro. Charles Sutcliffe.
The visitor was a Methodist, as his host had been previously. He was
also wealthy. He was not a gold-digger, nor did he work underground,
but was a professional. He is described as “a surveyor in
the gold fields.” What he was doing in the remote Yorkshire
moors is something of a puzzle, but this brief visit eventually led
to two quite momentous events: his baptism into Christ, and his marriage.
Charles Walker studied his Bible
thoroughly on the long ocean voyage home to Australia. Landing in
Melbourne, he sought out the Christadelphians there before travelling
home to Ballarat. There were upwards of 60 brethren and sisters in
Melbourne. There was an ecclesia in the city centre, and a handful
of smaller disaffected assemblies in the suburbs. Although Henry Gordon
and most of his family had moved from Golden Square to the Windsor
ecclesia only a short time before Charles Walker landed, this black
West Indian brother had already become the natural leader of the ever-quarrelling
Melbourne Christadelphians. He was, by all accounts, a very powerful
lecturing brother. Some of his lecture topics have survived, and it
is clear that he preferred straightforward, positive Bible topics
rather than popular confrontational ones. He was quite a stickler
for decency and order, but disliked and avoided controversy. Charles
told Henry that he wished to be immersed, and that a future wife would
soon be sailing from England to join him. Early in September, 1881,
Charles made a visit to Melbourne. On September 10, “Charles
Curwen Walker was immersed into the saving name of Jesus Christ. The
baptism was conducted by our black West Indian brother, Henry Gordon,
and took place in Bro. Gordon’s home in Windsor.”
All the ecclesias in the gold
mining towns experienced rapid changes in membership, both up and
down. A few months before Henry and Elizabeth’s move to Melbourne,
Henry T. Gordon III, aged 17, described as “formerly Wesleyan,”
was baptised at the Kangaroo Flat ecclesia. At the end of 1881,
after the elder Gordons and some others had left, there were only
four members in Bendigo, including young Henry III who was still a
teenager. During 1882, there were five baptisms and an addition by
transfer. According to the ecclesial record, “Bro. Gordon”
stated that he was “re-organizing the [Golden Square]
meeting on the basis of rules.” As we know that the elder
Henry was living and meeting in Windsor, a suburb of Melbourne, throughout
1882, this Bro.Gordon has to be 19-year old Henry III, which is quite
remarkable.
On June 19, 1882, 16-year old
Elizabeth Scott Gordon was baptised in Melbourne by Bro. Gamble. In
August 1882 sisters Ellen and Edith Sutcliffe of Haworth arrived in
Melbourne, and very soon afterwards Charles and Edith were married.
He was 27, she was 33. Charles moved from the family home in Ballarat,
and the newly-weds set up home in the upscale Melbourne suburb of
Prahran. Sadly, or wisely, depending on your point of view, within
two years Bro. Charles and ten other brethren and sisters had withdrawn
from Windsor ecclesia, which had previously come out from the Melbourne
ecclesia. They formed the Balaclava ecclesia, meeting on the basis
that “only those who are willing to accept the wholesome
words of Jesus and conform their minds thereto are welcome, and no
others.” He set up a Christadelphian book centre in Melbourne,
and sent an order for literature to Birmingham along with a draft
in payment which in modern terms would amount to £3,360. It
was the largest single order the Chnristadelphian Office in Birmingham
had ever received up to that time.
Bro. Henry Gordon contracted cancer
of the stomach only five years after moving to Melbourne. He died
at his home, “Clematis,” Victoria Street, Windsor,
on August 11, 1888, aged 54. The cause of death is described as a
tumour in the stomach for two years, and just a week before he died,
he began to haemorrhage. He was buried at St. Kilda Cemetery on August
12, 1888, by Bro. Gamble of Ballarat (at Henry’s request).
“Full
of zeal for the truth”
Henry was held in high regard by the Melbourne brethren and sisters.
Soon after his death, the following report about him appeared in The
Christadelphian magazine:
One of our oldest brethren, both
in years and in the truth [this is an odd comment as he had been baptised
only eleven years] has fallen asleep, viz., our brother Gordon, sen.,
aged 55, who on the 11th of this month succumbed to cancer. Death
was more a friend than a foe to him, freeing him from pain and trouble,
and has given him unbroken rest and peace, until the appearing of
our Lord and Master Jesus Christ, whose coming our late brother so
greatly longed for and prayed for while he yet lived. He was ever
full of the fire and zeal for the truth, which was his great source
of comfort and hope to the end.
The next generation, Henry Gordon
III, also became well known in Melbourne ecclesial circles, and was
invited as a speaker on more than one occasion to other ecclesias.
He moved to Adelaide, and in 1897, married Sis. Marion Oliver of Melbourne.
They lived in Adelaide at first, but in March, 1898, moved back to
Melbourne. From comments in his Diary, it is evident that during his
residence in Melbourne, Bro. Robert Roberts greatly respected young
Bro. Gordon’s judgement on ecclesial matters in Australia. During
that residence, Bro. Roberts visited the Walker home in Ballarat,
and spoke at length with Bro. Charles’ sister, but it seems
she never followed her brother into our faith. By that time, Bro.
C.C. Walker was living in England and editing The Christadelphian
magazine.
Another
connection with The Christadelphian
Bro. Charles A. Ladson of the Beechworth ecclesia, Australia, met
Bro. Robert Roberts’ daughter Jane when she was living in Melbourne
in 1897. In 1904, he migrated to Birmingham, England, where he married
Jane and became Assistant Editor of The Christadelphian magazine.
The stepmother of Bro. Ladson’s sister-in-law, Sis. Gertrude
Ladson was Sis. Jane Gordon, one of Bro. Henry Gordon’s daughters
and the sister of Bro. Henry Gordon III. Jane must have inherited
her father’s dark skin, for the family has assumed she was Australian
aboriginal. But we now know that her dark skin was because her father
was a black West Indian. In 1899, Sis. Fanny Ladson, also of Beechworth,
the sister of Bro. C.A. Ladson, moved to Melbourne and became nursemaid
in the household of “Bro. Gordon,” presumably Henry Gordon
III. While in service with the Gordon family, she met and married
the great-uncle of our present Bro. Tim Galbraith of Hyderabad, India.
Bro. C.C. Walker was right: “New
Testament Christianity compels us to ignore” race and colour.
With us there is no Greek or Jew, barbarian, Scythian, British, Australian,
or West Indian; “Christ is all, and in all” (Col.
3:11).
Ian Hyndman (Beechworth, Australia)
and Alan Eyre (Kingston, Jamaica, West Indies)