STIVERS Chart 0400

This is a Chart for Elisha Stivers Lydia J Church and Melissa ???

married(1) (2)married
2
LYDIA J CHURCH
born about
1831
Tennessee, USA
occupation
1870 Keeps House
1
ELISHA STIVERS
born about
1829
Indiana, USA
occupation
1870, 1880 Farmer
  3
MELISSA
born about
1831
Missouri, USA
occupation
1870 Keeps House

4
George
Franklin
STIVERS
(Rev.)
born about
18th August 1851
Washington County
Illinois, USA
died
12th March 1920
Eugene
Lane County
Oregon, USA

married(1)
23rd December
1869
Putnum County
Missouri
  USA
Clarissa J
SMITH

married(2)
18th December
1881
Terry Haute
Indiana
USA
Susan Lucinda
SMITH

married(3)
2nd July
1907
Garfield
Washington
USA
Oriana
VERNON
5
Henry G
STIVERS
born about
1851
Illinois, USA
occupation
1870 At Home
6
John R
STIVERS
born about
1858
Illinois, USA
occupation
1870 At Home
7
Deziah J
STIVERS
born about
1861
Illinois, USA
occupation
1870 At Home
8
Martha L
STIVERS
born about
1863
Illinois, USA
occupation
1870 At Home
9
Sarah I
(Sally)
STIVERS
born about
1865
Missouri, USA
occupation
1870, 1880
 At Home
10
William A
STIVERS
born about
1868
Missouri, USA
occupation
1870, 1880
 At Home
11
Charles F
STIVERS
born about
1870
(3 months on 1870
Census)
Missouri, USA
occupation
1870 At Home
  1. 1860 Township 2 S Range 1 W, Washington, Illinois, USA. 
    1870 Medicine, Putnam, Missouri, USA
    1880 Albion, Barton, Kansas, USA
  2. 1860 Township 2 S Range 1 W, Washington, Illinois, USA. 
    1870 Medicine, Putnam, Missouri, USA
  3. 1880 Albion, Barton, Kansas, USA
  4. 1860 Township 2 S Range 1 W, Washington, Illinois, USA. Father Elisha aged 31, Mother Lydia J aged 29, children George F aged 9, Henry G aged 7 and John R aged 3. They are down as STEVERS on Ancestry.com. but census is very feint.
    1870 Jackson, Putnam, Missouri, USA
    1880 Albion, Barton, Kansas, USA
    1900 Garfield, Whitman, Washington, USA
    1910 Spokane Ward 1, Spokane, Washington, USA
    The following appears for Garfield, Whitman County, Washington, USA 
    The naming of the town had a ring of the Restoration Movement because it was named in honor of the recently assassinated President James Garfield, a leader and minister among the Christian Churches.
    This congregation was organized by C. F. Goode and S. W. P. Richardson early in 1889 with 23 charter members.
    The charter members were from the following families: Allison, Bryant, Cox, Ewell, Laird, Mason, McMillion, Richardson, Vernon and Watson. Other early members included Homer Lewis Rouse and Ida Rouse and Henry Sheridan McClure and Amanda (Callison) McClure.
    They met in halls and groves until they were able to build in October of the same year. The 30 foot by 60 foot building was located on the southwest corner of Union and 4th Street. 
    George F. Stivers moved from Arkansas to be the first minister in 1889.
    Attorney Hiram Joseph Thorn made an eye-popping report to the Christian Standard in February of 1894.
    We commenced this meeting the first Sunday in January, and closed last Sunday night, covering three weeks of time, with 52 confessions, 4 added otherwise, making in all 56. Bro. F. Stivers did the preaching, except one very acceptable sermon by Bro. Armitage, late of Arkansas, when he (Armitage) was called to assist in a meeting at Spangle. 
    Bro. Stivers has lived here and preached for this congregation for the past five years, and the large audiences and visible results speak volumes for the life and power of the man. We closed with a crowded house, 2 confessions and a deep interest. . . . The congregation now numbers over 200 and considering the size of this town, only 800 inhabitants, and five denominations represented, we have done well. . . . 
    Mr. Stivers lived in the community 15 years. This is remarkable in a time of one-year preaching contracts. 
    Following Stivers, H. J. Thorn was minister briefly. Other ministers were Victor Emanuel Hoven and a personal friend of this writer, the late Clarence A. Boulton. At least four men from the Garfield church have entered full time Christian service: Elijah Stivers, Walter Straub, Clifford Jope and Wayne Bryant.
    Another congregation in the area that has left no history is the church at Silver Creek, about 10 miles NE of Garfield on the Garfield-Farmington Road. All that remains is the cemetery. S. W. P. Richardson was the circuit-riding preacher in 1888. 
    I have found on a "blog" the following information for the Reverend George Franklin STIVERS
    Ungovernor, 1912 - George Franklin Stivers
    Wed, 03/26/2008 - 8:55pm — stevenl
    George Franklin Stivers, the 1912 Prohibition Party candidate for Governor was no stranger to elections and political office. He had been a county commissioner in Texas, a county assessor in Missouri, and a city councilman in Garfield, Wash. He had run for the Washington State Senate as a Prohibitionist, and in 1904 as a presidential elector for that party. Stivers was part of a coterie of Disciples of Christ ministers from the Palouse Region who saw political election campaigns as an opportunity to spread the Word. In some ways they anticipated the modern evangelical Republicans. This network included Prohibition Party Ungovernor Dunlap (1896 and 1900) and Populist Neal Cheetham, who was elected Washington State Auditor in 1896.
    George was born Aug. 18, 1851 in Washington County, Ill., the son of Elisha and Lydia (Church) Stivers. He was the oldest of 8 children. In 1865, presumably when the Civil War ended, the family moved to Missouri.
    The first of his three marriages took place Dec. 23, 1869 when George married Clarissa J. Smith in Putnam County, Mo. For the next six years he was employed as a teacher in Putnam County.
    From 1876-1881 he moved to Blanco County, Texas and continued to teach. It was during this time he served as county commissioner. Also at some point before 1881 ended, either in Missouri or Texas, his wife died leaving him with three children.
    Stivers returned to Putnam County, still a teacher. On Dec. 18, 1881 he married Susan L. Trowbridge, the sister of his late wife. They had two children.
    In 1883 the growing Stivers family moved back to Texas. During this second residence in the Lone Star State, George obeyed the calling and became a minister. In 1885 they moved to Arkansas where George was part farmer, part evangelist. In 1889 the church sent him to Washington Territory.
    He arrived in Jan. 1889, during Washington's final year of territorial status. The Church sent him to the small farming community of Garfield, in Whitman County. The town had been named after the recently assassinated President, who by coincidence had also been a minister with the Disciples of Christ. The church members had to meet in makeshift places until a place of worship was constructed and finished in Oct. 1889. As the first minister, George helped oversee the new building. Garfield would remain his home for 15 years, which was highly unusual for the ever-shifting Disciples of Christ ministers of that era.
    What sort of minister was George? Here's how his entry in N.W. Durham's History of the city of Spokane and Spokane country, Washington (1912) describes him: " ... During that time he was also a pioneer minister, traveling over the country, as Garfield was only a mission at that time, the present church having been built by Mr. Stivers. He was an earnest, forceful speaker and his zeal in behalf of the church and his almost untiring labor for the upbuilding of the different church activities made him a very popular minister, holding revivals and establishing churches in different parts of the country. He conducted many funerals and marriages, not only for his own church people but for those of other denominations. He was district evangelist for four years and a member of the state church board for three years."
    The Christian Standard made this report in Feb. 1894 after visiting Garfield: "Bro. Stivers has lived here and preached for this congregation for the past five years, and the large audiences and visible results speak volumes for the life and power of the man. We closed with a crowded house, 2 confessions and a deep interest ... The congregation now numbers over 200 and considering the size of this town, only 800 inhabitants, and five denominations represented, we have done well ..."
    No wonder the Church didn't transfer him. Some of his outside Church activities included preaching in nearby St. John when Cheetham couldn't make it or when Dunlap couldn't cover. George worked with Cheetham in 1891-1892 to form a new church in Oakesdale. In 1895 Stivers and Dunlap teamed up to form a new congregation in the area of Grangeville, Idaho. In March, 1899, George formed the new church in Clarkston. Although he retired in 1901, he remained "on tap" until 1904.
    Durham describes George's first years in the 20th century:
    "In 1901, retiring from active ministry, he entered business life and, seeing the great future of this part of the country, he first bought a half section of land in Adams county. He continued buying and selling tracts of land, aggregating several sections. The success of his business being assured, he returned to Garfield and invested largely in land, since which time he has purchased valuable realty in Spokane and vicinity, in Pasco, Washington, and in Portland, Jefferson, Klamath Falls, and Eugene, Oregon. He purchased land adjoining Garfield and set out an orchard and later bought various orchards surrounding this town. He also has platted two additions to Garfield and has been instrumental in the attraction of new business to the town, notably the flour mill and the electric car line, of which he was one of the five locaters. Mr. Stivers gave the initial contribution of five hundred dollars toward the Bible University at Eugene, Oregon, and in various ways has contributed of his means for the furtherance of Christian work, reaching a wider circle than would have been possible had he remained in the pulpit ... Mr. Stivers was an able man and successful in his calling and since, on turning his attention to business, he has maintained high ideals and has become a power for good in whatever relations he has formed. Essentially a self-made man, he has reason to feel an honest pride in his achievement and in his position as one of the highly honored citizens of Garfield.."
    Somewhere in all this activity George once again found himself a widower. He wed for third time, July 2, 1907, in Roseburg, Oregon to Oriana Vernon. They moved to Spokane by 1910.
    In 1912 Dunlap had moved to Arizona, leaving Stivers to run with the ball for the Prohibition Party gubernatorial race. With the enactment of prohibition in Washington State seeming inevitable (it became reality with the 1914 election) and an election with an exciting new Progressive Party, it was hard for Stivers to get any media ink. Women had won the right to vote in 1910, and the Prohibition Party did try to capitalize on this fact. Since alcoholism is a family disease the Prohibs thought they might have a chance with the new voting bloc.
    A pamphlet from the Party in that year states:
    "Out To Win"
    Prohibitionists of the State of Washington can WIN in 1912
    WE CAN ELECT a Prohibition Governor in 1912 and a Prohibition Legislature in 1914, if one-half the women voters will say so.
    We Appeal to the women of Washington to HELP ELECT the first Prohibition Governor and Congressman in the United States.
    The political wave is started that will sweep the liquor traffic OFF THE MAP. Will you work and pray for this?
    The 1912 estimate they give on the pamphlet is as follows: Republican 68,000; Progressive 78,000; Democrat 78,000; Socialist 30,000; Prohibition 80,000. Interesting they omit the Socialist Labor Party. Also, that they have the Republicans running 4th. The actual results, rounded off: Republican 97,000; Progressive 78,000; Democrat 97,000; Socialist 37,000; Socialist Labor 1,000; Prohibition 8,000.
    Actually, the Prohibs garnered 8,163 votes to be precise. Stivers generally placed 5th out of the six candidates, with the exception of Ferry and Jefferson counties where he was dead last. However, in Whitman County, where he was well known and loved, he placed a strong third, beating out the Progressive Party.
    George and Oriana had a son a couple years after the election. They moved to Eugene around 1915, where their daughter was born. George died at age 68 in Eugene, Mar. 12, 1920. He lived just long enough to see the Volstead Act pass Congress.

    The Church in  Garfield, Washington USA where George Franklin Stivers preached 
  5. 1860 Township 2 S Range 1 W, Washington, Illinois, USA. 
    1870 Medicine, Putnam, Missouri, USA
  6. 1860 Township 2 S Range 1 W, Washington, Illinois, USA. 
    1870 Medicine, Putnam, Missouri, USA
  7. 1870 Medicine, Putnam, Missouri, USA
  8. 1870 Medicine, Putnam, Missouri, USA
  9. 1870 Medicine, Putnam, Missouri, USA
    1880 Albion, Barton, Kansas, USA
  10. 1870 Medicine, Putnam, Missouri, USA
    1880 Albion, Barton, Kansas, USA
  11. 1870 Medicine, Putnam, Missouri, USA
    1880 Albion, Barton, Kansas, USA

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