The 2010-2011 School year is about to begin...
New tile on the floor of Chatlos
Labels: 2010, Academics, Alice Chatlos, Chatlos-Davis, Gazebo, Gordon Davis, Patterson Hall, Sunset Knoll
The history of Davis College (formerly Practical Bible Training School and Practical Bible College) is very rich. This blog will have stories and articles about the history of the school founded by John A. Davis. The history continues to be written and articles related to that aspect will also be included. Alumni may submit stories of their time here using the form. And feel free to post comments to articles on the blog. Please feel free to subscribe. Be sure to look at the archives too.
Labels: 2010, Academics, Alice Chatlos, Chatlos-Davis, Gazebo, Gordon Davis, Patterson Hall, Sunset Knoll
Labels: 2009, Graduation, Sunset Knoll
Labels: 1934, John A. Davis, Sunset Knoll
Labels: 1934, Friendship Cottage, John A. Davis, March 17, Pastor Carl Wheeler, Sunset Knoll, Susquehanna
Labels: 1934, 2008, Andrew's Good News Christmas party, Broadway Cafe, John A. Davis, Lowe Hall, Robb Gym, Sunset Knoll
Labels: 2008, Broadway Cafe, Fall, Preview Day, Sunset Knoll
Labels: Chatlos-Davis, Etta Carr Davis, John A. Davis, Robb Gym, Sunset Knoll
I went down to John A. Davis' house today in memorial of his passing that happened at 7:45 PM on Saturday, March 17, 1934. These are a few of the shots I took today around his house and at his grave. The sunset was also beautiful as it was going down in the west this evening. I almost wonder what the sunset was like 74 years ago a few hours before Dr. Davis saw the Son rise when He took him home.
Labels: 1934, Friendship Cottage, John A. Davis, March 17, Sunset Knoll, Susquehanna
Labels: 2008, Sunset Knoll, winter
As I continue to work on some items about Dr. Barackman and Miss Mary Baker I would like to post these memories of PBTS.
Labels: 1965, Clements Hall, George Miller III, Kenneth Robb, League Building, M.C. Patterson, Pastor George Miller II, Patterson Hall, post office, Robert Miller, Sunset Knoll
The final part of the 10 part series. If you missed any of the series they are all posted on this blog. All the links are under this introduction and also they are posted on the side bar. Send me an email or fill out the form on the side and tell me what you thought of this series. I know I enjoyed learning about John A. Davis through typing it up. Enjoy the last part.
It was two days before Easter. That morning the rising bell rang at five thirty. By six o’clock the student body of the School was on Sunset Knoll, gathered around the grave of their departed president.
The newly-made grave was covered with evergreen, and in the green bed a beautiful lily had been placed.
The early morning worshippers then went to “Friendship Cottage,” the home of
This may have been the forerunner of many Sunrise Services at the grave of
“He, being dead yet speaketh.”
Thou noble man! God’s man!
Who didst not turn to right nor left
But ever followed on
To know the Lord;
Thy work is done; rest on
Gently enfolded in God’s arms of love
For thee to live was
And death thy gain!
Rest fearlessly; rest heart!
Thy Lord for thee didst conquer death;
And
In men.
Labels: 1934, Dr. Marmion Lowe, Easter, God will take care of you, Gordon Davis, John R. Clements, M.C. Patterson, Sunset Knoll
The days after the death of Dr. Davis were sad days. On Wednesday, March 21, 1934 the funeral of Dr. Davis occurred in King Hall with the Rev. Ernest Crabill giving the main sermon for the funeral. The casket was then taken to the Knoll and the burial occurred.
The gray heavens were softly weeping. Nature appeared bowed in sympathetic sorrow.
The vast crowd of people within King Hall were profoundly affected. There were beautiful flowers everywhere at the front of the large auditorium.
That three thousand people crowded into King Hall was in itself a wonderful testimony. Two hundred of the Alumni of the School came from many fields of service. Other hundreds who could not come, sent tenderest messages of sympathy, and expressed as fully as words could how deeply they appreciated the life of the man to whom every student who ever stepped upon the Campus owed so much.
Those who participated in the service were: Rev. Ralph W. Carr, John Fulton, Rev. W.S. Crandall, D.D., Evangelist E. G. Crabill, John R. Clements, Rev.
Rev.
This illustration was recognized by all present as most descriptive of the last few years of
Reverends Carr and Mills sang beautifully “No Night There.” Following this
“Sunset and evening star
And one clear call for me;
And may there be no moaning of the bar,
When I put out to sea.
But such a tide as moving seems asleep,
Too full for sound or foam,
When that which drew from out the boundless deep
Turns again home.
Twilight and evening bell,
And after that the dark!
And may there be no sadness of farewell
When I embark;
For tho’ from out our bourne of Time and Place
The flood may bear me far,
I hope to see my Pilot face to face
When I have crossed the bar.”
The
“It is most fitting that I stand here today at this bier to say some last words ere the body of this GREAT SOUL is carried to its resting place to wait the last trump at the coming of our blessed
“Many years ago, this man with whom I found a kindred spirit, talked with me of a day such as this, that would come to each of us, and we entered into a covenant, with each other, to minister at that service in the name of our common Lord.
“I find it has fallen to my lot to perform this service to the best of my God-given ability.
“It was 33 years ago this spring, that I first met this man, at a Gospel service in the Binghamton Railroad Young Men’s Christian Association under whose auspices I had been recently converted.
“He captivated me with his loyalty to God’s Word, and his unbounded enthusiasm, exhibiting a real passion for the souls of lost men.
“We became friends at once, and immediately he began to plan to assist me in my burning ambition to become useful in the service for
“It was he, who laid the plan for me to enter evangelistic work; and my wife and I became members of his party the following fall; a work that I have followed these years. And no one ever rejoiced any more than he over any success I may have had.
“I knew the last time I talked with him that his work was finished; that the body in which he lived was incapacitated to stand the strain longer in the terrific pace which this great soul had been driving it. But I never will be able to tell just how I felt when the telegram came announcing his death. I felt I was in an earthquake. I took hold of myself, but I still trembled inside. I felt that there was a prince and a great man fallen. I never knew I loved him so much.
“I took my Bible and turned to his favorite text which I had heard him quote so many times. Isaiah 50:7, ‘For the Lord God will help me, therefore shall I not be confounded: therefore have I set my face like a flint, and I Know that I shallnot be ashamed.’
“I thought, how characteristic of this man. He had set his face like a flint, and never wavered. Nothing could turn him from this course. He had a purpose in life. He sought to find the will of God for his life, and when once it was clear, he utterly refused to look back or turn aside.
“If he was knocked down he got up and went on. If he was knocked down again, he refused to quit. There was no such word as ‘defeat’ in his vocabulary. If there were stumbling stones in his way, he transformed them into stepping stones and thanked the Lord for them. If the mountain was high, he summoned more strength. If the job was hard, he took off his coat.
“He undertook great things for God yet nothing was too small for him. It was God’s work. It must be done. He summoned every willing soul he met to assist him in the great work which God had called him. If they quit he still went on.
“He felt God had a place for every redeemed soul and urged all to work hard at his job, knowing that the night was speedily coming when no man can work.
He was the most opposed man I have ever met. He was opposed by friend and foe. His own parents objected to his entering the ministry. His employer in the Boston Store attempted to dissuade him from his conscious call of God. Fowler knew he was a good salesman. He sold more goods in the store, at the post where he was placed, than anyone before or since.
“He was a great leader. He saw a great Light in the Valley. He knew it was of God. He had a real
“He drank deep of the wells of Salvation. He absorbed readily from all great saints of God. He coveted the spirit of devotion and usefulness of men like Moody, Whittle, and others.
“He aimed high, he would learn from anyone. He had only one purpose, namely, to spread God’s Truth and do all the good he could for every needy soul. He was the most unselfish and kindhearted man I have ever known. He thought the least of his own comforts, spending and being spent continually for others. He never seemed to think about eating and when he did eat, he seemed unconscious of what he was eating.
“He was always in a hurry—jealous of wasted time, yet cheerful. He liked play and a clean joke. He was frequently saying, ‘While I live, I will be alive; I would sooner wear out than rust out.’—This he literally did. He might have lived to be old, but he cared not for a long life, but for a useful life. How he is to be admired. No day was long enough for him to work for the Lord. He worked on into the night after others were asleep.
“If others were nonplused, not knowing what to do, he came out from a night spent with God, with a plan that he was sure came from Heaven, and summoned everyone in haste to help him carry it out. He thought it was time to rest when his work was finished. He is resting now—Blessed Dead.
“Everything he touched lived—he was a natural Evangelist, he enthused people. Their spirits revived in his presence. He made people want to do something for God and for souls.
“One religious editor said, ‘A great man gone.’ He has left a monument of his untiring zeal, the
“He will not know, nor will others, the extent until the Judgment seat of
“How he loved this place that God had entrusted to him and how he loved these students. Did he ever turn one away? No! He coveted every one for God and tried his best to impart all God had given him to them to help them multiply their usefulness. God can use me, why not you?
“He made people believe they had some worth and could be used in God’s service. His last request to me and his last conscious thoughts were John 10:27, ‘My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me.’
“
“No man can fill his shoes. He has carried burdens enough for ten ordinary men. There was only one
It is hard to say ‘Good-bye.’ Every friend of mine that goes, makes me almost sorry that I cannot go.
“Over the river faces I see,
Fair as the morning looking for me.
Free from their sorrows, grief and despair,
Waiting and watching, patiently there.
Looking this way, yes, looking this way
Loved ones are waiting, looking this way.”
“Under an apple tree 40 years ago
“
Everyone who walked out walked out of King Hall that day, walked out a different person. No one could be in such a service and remain the same. The life of
Two very impressive features of the funeral were the carrying of the casket down a path to the grave on the hillside, through all long row of students formed on either side of the path, many of them with floral displays in their arms; and the other, the many students passing by the grave after the casket had been partly lowered into it, each one as they passed dropping a rose upon the casket of their benefactor and friend.
* * *
The journey from King Hall to the grave was made through a drizzling rain; as if even the Heavens were weeping over the loss the school, the community, and the educational world at large had suffered.
Said one at the funeral: “When we come to yonder hill-slope grave, and have said ‘Ashes to ashes, dust to dust’ I trust we will think, even if we do not speak aloud, in the words of the poet, this fond wish for our friends of their years.
“’Warm summer sun shine brightly here;
Soft southern breeze blow gently here;
Green sod above lie light, lie light;
Good night, dear heart;
Good night! Good night!”
Beautiful the thought, and unusual the experience for hundreds of students, past and present, and for hosts of friends to circle the grave in the falling rain, and as the casket was being lowered sing with strong, confident faith, numerous gospel songs including Dr. Robert Lowry’s great resurrection song:
“Up from the grave He arose
With a mighty triumph o’er his foes;
He arose a victor from the dark domain,
And He lives forever with His saints to reign;
He arose! He arose! Hallelujah
A pledge to the conviction that
Labels: 1934, Ernest Crabill, King Hall, Pastor Carl Wheeler, Ruth Kummerer, Sunset Knoll
In part 6 of the 10 part series of the Life of John A. Davis from the 1934 Theologue the Practical Bible Training School was started. In part seven the school moves to its present location on Riverside Drive. I hope you have been enjoying this series. If you have missed any of the posts I have the links listed below, also there is a section on the side column for all of the issues as they are posted to the blog. Keep on reading and enjoying the History of Davis College.
The School was rapidly growing and it was realized that it would be necessary to seek larger quarters with dormitory accommodation and campus facilities. Just outside of the city limits of
the cars.
At this time Evangelist John A. Davis was residing on West End Avenue, in Binghamton, so that in was necessary for him to ride on this street car line on his way to and from the city. Thus, he was familiar with the conditions existing on the cars and also to a certain extent with the conditions prevailing at the “
This brewery-backed resort was a separate organization for the purpose of selling liquors. As such, it had the backing of the brewery and liquor interests, and any effort to obtain the grounds for other purposes would naturally meet with the determined resistance of those financially interested. This resistance was felt keenly. There was many a struggle and many a prayer. For two years
A Binghamton business man interested in the School, though not aware of Mr. Davis’ hopes regarding the park, secured a short term option on the property and wired Mr. Davis rushed back, and within three hours had called his board together and exercised their option, which gave them title to the property with all the buildings on it, one of the which was a large and roomy hotel.
The transformation which immediately took place on the grounds of the “
The moving from the old building at
After the equipment had been moved, the hard work of cleaning up began. Every building on the premises had to be renovated from top to bottom, and all the equipment had to be cleaned before it could be used. The articles used in the servicing of liquors had to be destroyed. The kitchen equipment included the usual supply of cooking utensils, all of which had to be received liberal applications of elbow grease furnished by willing hands. In the midst of all this labor, regular periods of devotion were carried on when the students came together and thanked God for the place an for the opportunity of getting it ready for the great days ahead.
The first instruction on the grounds took place in Davis Hall as that was one of the first buildings that could be made ready for school purposes. The teacher was
The United States Post Office today is housed in what was the moving picture hall of the old “
Another of the important buildings on the campus is known as the
In the meantime the Students’ League of Many Nations had become a permanent organization in the School. The regular buildings were crowded and as many graduates were among the League Students, another building with dormitory facilities was greatly needed. Mr. and
Another important building on the campus is Friendship Cottage, the home of President and
A slope of ground at the extreme west end of the campus overlooking the Susquehanna Rive, was set apart for Vesper Services and named “Sunset Knoll.” Seats were arranged in a semi-circular form, a platform was built, and every pleasant evening during the Summer Bible Conference a short service is held here directly after supper. It is on this knoll that the body of
In May, 1912, Evangelist Davis lost his voice. This affliction continued for two or three years until he met
After he lost his voice,
It was not the purpose of the founder of the
A work of this character must inevitably become known and acknowledged as praiseworthy in a high degree. Such was the case here. Taylor University of Upland, Indiana on June 14, 1922, conferred upon
Labels: 1910, 1911, 1912, 1922, 1924, Harrison Street, King Hall, Manrow, post office, Students Leageue of Many Nations, Sunset Knoll, Taylor University, the Inner Circle, White City Amusement Park