John Sparkman
The
following “short notice” of John
Calloway Sparkman was written by William Henry Harrison Hays, and was published in Texas Historical and
Biographical Magazine, by J. B. Link, (Volume 1, 1891, as found in The
Baptist Standard Bearer, Inc. Version 1.0, 2005).
REV.
JOHN SPARKMAN
— The subject of this short notice was born in Jasper
county, Ga., in the year A.D. 1831; professed faith in Christ in his 18th year,
and was baptized into the fellowship of the Bethesda[i]
Baptist church by Eld. John Dodd.[ii]
He afterwards united by letter with the Flint
River Baptist church, in Henry county;[iii]
was united in marriage with Martha
Jarrell in 1853,[iv]
who at the time had three children, all of which were boys, who are now useful
men with families, two of them being physicians, the other one a successful
farmer in Rusk county, Texas,—all of them being prominent members of the
Baptist church.
He moved with his family to Texas the same year in
which he was married, and settled in Rusk county, where he and his wife united
with the Holly Springs church.[v]
He was licensed to preach by this church in 1860,
— was ordained to the full work of the ministry in 1861 — Elders William
Gwin, G.
W. Rogers and M.
Melton acting as presbytery.
He had born to him seven children, four boys and
three girls, five of whom are still living: Addie, the wife of James Wallace,
in Austin county, Texas; Thomas, who is a successful physician, now at Alvord;
Virgil, who is with his brother in the drug business in the above mentioned town;
A. D. Sparkman, a promising young lawyer, who is the present county attorney of
Rusk county; Mattie, the youngest daughter, who now has charge as teacher, of
the music school at Clayton, Panola county, Texas. His wife still survives him,
and is living at Minden, Rusk county, Texas, where she is spending a happy old
age.
Eld. John Sparkman was a self-made man; but his
great familiarity with the Bible made him successful, and a power whereever he
went. He started in this life poor; not having the advantages of early training
in school, he dug his theology from the Bible by a pine knot light at night. It
is said of him, that while following his plow, he had a board arranged upon the
beam, where he would lay his open Bible, and read and study as he plowed. The
Bible was his dictionary, geography, grammar, rhetoric and logic. He was a man
of strong convictions, devotedly pious, and earnest and forcible as a speaker,
carrying the masses with him in his plain, scriptural arguments, drawing his
illustrations principally from the common field of nature, his leading theme
being the doctrines of grace, while he was well posted in the distinctive
principles of the denomination, and ably defended them when it became
necessary.
While he was a great preacher, he was at the same
time a successful farmer,—an avocation in which he delighted when not actively
engaged in the ministry; hence, by this means, he left his family in good
circumstances.
His entire ministerial life was spent in Eastern
Texas; being pastor, at different times, of the most prominent churches in
Rusk, Panola and Nacogdoches counties. He served with honor to himself, and
satisfaction to the brethren, the Mt. Zion Association, as Moderator, for ten
years. While he kept no record of the number of conversions and baptisms in
connection with his labors, yet there are numbers in the eastern and far
western portions of Texas, that were brought to a knowledge of the truth
through his preaching, and were by his hands buried in baptism.
He was afflicted with cancer of the face, about
one year before his death. Amidst his great affliction, which confined him to
his room almost continually, his faith was unshaken, and his principal
conversation was upon the love of Christ and the fulness of His great atoning sacrifice.
On the 23rd day of Oct., A.D. 1882, peacefully and
quietly, like the beautiful setting sun, he fell asleep in Jesus. His remains
were laid away at Zion Hill
church,[vi] of which he had been a
member, and the beloved pastor since its constitution, in the midst of a great
throng of the brethren and sisters of Zion Hill and neighboring churches, as
well as friends from all over the country, who had loved and honored him in
this life. As we walk through the church yard at Zion Hill, our eyes are attracted
by a simple marble slab, that tells us of the last resting place on earth of
Eld. John Sparkman.
“Servant
of God, well done;
Rest
from thy loved employ,
The
battle fought, the victory won,
Enter
thy Master’s joy.”—W.H.H.H.
[i] Hays gives the name as “Bethesda,”
but it probably should be Bethsaida. Robert G. Gardner, Georgia Baptist
Historical Society and Senior Researcher in Baptist History, Mercer University,
wrote, “The only Bethsaida church was in Fayette County, with J. S. Dodd as
pastor in at least 1849-1853. His post office address was Fayetteville (1849-1850)
and Fairburn (1852-1853).” Bethsaida
Baptist Church, formed in 1829, was led by itinerant preachers
traveling in the area. In April, 1843, John S. Dodd, was called to pastor the
church on a permanent basis. He faithfully served the church for 50 years,
retiring January 25, 1892.” In 1975, Bethsaida merged with Capitol View Baptist
Church to form United Baptist Church. Further support of Dodd baptizing
Sparkman comes from the fact that the Sparkmans and the Dodds are living in
same county – Fayette County, Georgia – when the 1850 census was compiled. 1850
would be roughly the time Sparkman was in his 18th year.
[ii]
If the above is correct, the baptizer of John Sparkman was John
Sample Dodd (1809-1892). Dodd was a pioneer Baptist preacher in
Georgia. He pastored the Bethsaida Church of Campbell County, Georgia for fifty
consecutive years.
[iii] “Flint
River Baptist Church (predecessor of First Baptist Jonesboro) was organized
January 25, 1825, and was located on three acres of land southwest of what is
now Spring Street and Highway 19/41. Rev. William Mosely served as the church’s
first pastor for three years, during which time membership increased from 14 to
79.”
[iv] Martha
M. Buckner married Henry Jarrell in Butts County, Georgia in 1846. After his
decease, she married John Sparkman.
[v] It
appears that the Sparkman family lived in three different locations in Rusk County – somewhere near the Holly
Springs Church (Pine Hill), somewhere near the Mt. Carmel Church (Glenfawn
area), and lastly somewhere near Zion Hill.
[vi] Sparkman led in forming
the Zion Hill Church in 1868, and the Smyrna
Church in 1873. He was the first pastor of each of these. Sparkman
also pastored the Mt.
Carmel Church in Rusk County and the Union
Church in Nacogdoches County, among others.
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