Young Olympia Brown. |
Note—The Unitarian Universalist
Association (UUA) gathers this
week in Columbus Ohio for its Annual
General Assembly. The theme this
year celebrates crossing borders of religion and spiritual practice to create
wholeness individually and collectively.
That includes special attention to anti-racism
work, support for the Black Lives
Matter and Moral Monday movements,
support for the rights of immigrants and refugees,
and solidarity with both the Islamic and LBGT communities which are under renewed attack. It is a bold agenda informed by the successful
and on-going Standing on the Side of
Love campaign. It offers a special
opportunity to look back at a pioneer woman Universalist minister whose life
and work continue to challenge and inspire this generation of Unitarian
Universalist.
On June 25, 1863 Olympia Brown was ordained as a minister by the St. Lawrence Association of Universalists
in New York State. She was the first woman in America
ordained as a minister with full
denominational authority. A handful of other women had been
ordained by individual congregations,
been licensed to preach, or founded their own churches.
The twenty-eight year old Brown came fully
and formally educated in a
denomination—Universalism—that had often relied on self-educated preachers to spread the liberal gospel of Universal
Salvation.
Brown was born to Vermont Yankee stock
on a pioneer farm near Prairie Ronde, Michigan in 1835. The
family of devout Universalists placed a high
value on education. Her father built a school house on his farm and raised
money from neighbors to hire a
teacher. Later Olympia, the eldest of four children, attended
school in the nearby aptly named town of
Schoolcraft.
But she craved more than semi-frontier schools could offer. Her father agreed to enroll her in
prestigious Mount Holyoke Female
Seminary in Massachusetts but
the school strict Calvinism deeply offended her sensibilities.
She was much happier at Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio, which was presided over by noted Unitarian
social reformer and educator Horace
Mann. She sent such glowing reports of the school home that
her parents relocated the whole family
to Yellow Springs so the other
children could benefit from the same
fine education.
While at Oberlin, Brown invited Rev. Antoinette Brown (Blackwell)
to speak and preach. As a young woman the then Antoinette Brown
(no relation to Olympia, by the way) had struggled
to become licensed to preach by the Congregationalists, was hired to serve a small New York church,
and was irregularly ordained by a Methodist minister. She was a staunch abolitionist and suffragist
who became a noted lecturer after
her brief pastorate. Blackwell electrified the young Brown, “It was the first time I had
heard a woman preach and the sense of victory lifted me up. I felt as though
the Kingdom of Heaven were at hand.”
She determined to enroll in a theological school and pursue the ministry herself. That was easier
said than done. No theological
school in the country then regularly
admitted women to degree programs,
though a handful allowed them to take
classes. Even such bastions of liberal theology as the Unitarian School of Meadville in Pennsylvania and Oberlin turned her down, although Oberlin said she could attend
classes but “not participate in public
exercises” or expect a degree.
She took a somewhat ambiguously discouraging letter from
the president of the Universalist Divinity School of St. Lawrence University as
an acceptance and surprised him by appearing for the 1861 term.
Sheepishly, he had to admit her. It was characteristic
of Brown’s bold determination. She afterward wrote, “I was told I had not
been expected and that Mr. Fisher
had said I would not come as he had written so discouragingly to me. I had
supposed his discouragement was my encouragement.” Brown efficiently
completed her course of study in 1863 with distinction.
Encountering
resistance at every turn she doggedly
convinced skeptical authorities to first ordain her, and then allow her to be called as a
denominational minister. Shortly after
graduation the St. Lawrence Association ordained her. After a period of pulpit supply preaching Brown was called as a minister to a Weymouth Landing, Massachusetts church. While
serving there she became deeply involved in the organized women’s movement.
Lucy Stone recruited Brown for suffrage work in Kansas. |
In the summer of 1867 Lucy Stone, the sister-in-law of her old inspiration Antoinette Brown, urged her to travel to Kansas to lead a campaign in support of a state constitutional amendment to extend the franchise to women.
She arrived in the state to find no
organization on the ground or
any support. She had to schedule her own appearances, book
halls, make traveling and lodging arrangements and then speak to often hostile audiences. Traveling relentlessly to all corners of the state she made over
300 speeches and attracted national
attention. Although the state’s male voters overwhelmingly rejected the
amendment, Susan B. Anthony commended
her work as “a glorious triumph.”
Brown found herself in demand as
a speaker, but yearned to return to parish ministry. In 1870 she was called to the large, prosperous congregation in Bridgeport,
Connecticut, the home church of active
Universalist layman Phineas T. Barman. She found the church far less progressive than her first pastorate and, although she enjoyed support of the majority of members,
a persistent minority campaigned against
her in favor of calling a man.
During her service she married John Henry Willis in 1873. While on maternity
leave with their first child, agitation by the minority to
permanently replace her increased. By
the end of 1874 she had enough and resigned
her ministry. The family remained in
Bridgeport and added a second child, but Brown—who kept her maiden name—searched
for another pulpit.
She found one in Racine, Wisconsin on the shores of Lake Michigan just north of Illinois.
The church was in “unfortunate
condition” after a series of failed
pastorates, was demoralized, and
was struggling to maintain membership
and keep afloat. Brown recognized
that only churches in this condition
were desperate enough to call a
woman. She eagerly accepted the
challenge. Her supportive husband closed his Bridgeport business to move
with his wife. Eventually he became part owner of the local newspaper in
Racine which not only helped support the
family financially but gave support to Olympia’s ministry.
The church building of the Universalist Society of Racine, Wisconsin as it looked when Olympia Brown served the congregation. |
Under her leadership the church flourished, grew in membership, stabilized
its finances and became a cultural
center for Racine. She sponsored
regular speaking engagements by leading feminists
and social reformers including Anthony, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, and Julia Ward Howe. After nine successful years at age 53 Brown
decided to dedicate more of her time to the cause of women’s suffrage. The Racine
congregation was on firm ground and continued
thrive. In the 20th Century the congregation took the name Olympia Brown Unitarian Universalist Church in her honor.
Brown continued to serve small Wisconsin Universalist congregations on a part time basis or as a pulpit supply
preacher, but spent most of her time as President
of the Wisconsin Suffrage Association
and as Vice-president of the National Woman Suffrage Association. She belonged to the Elizabeth Cady Stanton wing of the women’s movement which believed
that reform on many issues in
addition to obtaining the right to vote was
essential for women. She was particularly concerned about
educational opportunities for women and campaigned
for previously all male schools to admit women—and to encourage women to dare to seek higher education.
By the 1890’s Brown was concerned
that conservative leadership by Carrie Chapman Catt was sapping the strength of the
movement. In 1913 she was happy to
embrace Alice Paul’s new militant
and confrontational Women’s Party. As a charter
member she said, “I belonged to this party before I was born.” At the age of 80 she was delighted to take to the streets.
She once burned Woodrow Wilson’s speeches
in front of the White House because
of his refusal to support suffrage. She
risked arrest time and again.
In her old age Brown remained a committed activist for women's rights and peace who repeatedly risked arrest. She was one of the few elder suffrage leaders who lived to cast a ballot. |
After the 19th Amendment to the Constitution finally passed in 1919, Brown
became one of the few veteran movement
leaders to survive to cast her vote.
Not
content with that victory, she turned her energy to the peace movement becoming one of the founding members of the Women's International League for Peace and
Freedom.
In old age she summered in Racine
and spent the cold months with a daughter in Baltimore, where she let her
opinions be known on a number of issues.
When she died there in 1926 at the age of 91 the Baltimore Sun wrote, “Perhaps no phase of her life
better exemplified her vitality and intellectual independence than the mental
discomfort she succeeded in arousing, between her eightieth and ninetieth
birthdays, among the conservatively minded Baltimorans.”
Brown’s body was returned to Racine where, after an overflow service at her
old church, she was laid to rest next to
her husband.
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