Robert Arthington,
Leeds, England.
January 10th, 1879.
A NEW RECRUIT FOR THE MENDI MISSION.
It will be remembered that Rev. Floyd Snelson was compelled to return to this country, after a sojourn of about a year in our African mission, on account of the rapidly failing health of his wife. He has resumed the care of the Midway Church in Georgia, from the pastorate of which he was taken, against the wishes of his people, for the foreign work.
It was deemed necessary to make good the vacated place as soon as possible. In accordance with the expressed judgment of the missionaries on the field, the first want was of a man specially adapted to take charge of the saw-mill and other industrial interests at Avery Station, of which Mr. Jackson has had charge as well as of the church and school. Inquiries were instituted at once among our higher institutions for the right man, and we think we have found him.
Elmore L. Anthony was born a slave in Allen County, Kentucky, June 8th, 1848. Early in the progress of the war he ran away to join the Union army, but being rejected as a soldier on account of his youth, he returned to his old master, who was a stock trader, preferring, if he must be a servant to anybody, to serve him. In 1863 he left again, and soon after entered the regular army, where he served three years. He was promoted to be a sergeant, and while at Fort Duncan, in Texas, was detailed to be superintendent of laborers, having the oversight of over two hundred men. He says that he got on well in the army, simply because he was perfectly temperate and sober. He bears testimonials from his officers as to his moral character and faithfulness.
In 1870 he made his way to Berea, Ky., and entered the primary class. He has been there ever since, teaching during the last six years in his vacations; and was a member of the senior class when he came, at our call and by the advice and hearty commendation of the president and faculty of the college, to give himself to work in Africa. That he held, nearly from the beginning quite to the close of these years, the trusted position of janitor of the Ladies’ Hall, is no small evidence of the confidence which has been reposed in him. He is a man of stalwart frame, has been medically examined and pronounced perfect in health. He seems to us admirably adapted to the place as our “man of affairs,” competent at the same time to fill a gap in school as teacher when needed, and while not a preacher in any sense of the word, yet of such honest purpose to do good that he will be no less a missionary for that. He sailed the 13th of February via Liberia.