CRISIS OF THE CONFLICT—ROBERTS AND M’CREERY EXPELLED
Mr. Roberts finally chose his personal friend, the Rev.
L. Stiles, Jr., to assist him in his defense, and so the trial proceeded. No
effort whatever was made by the prosecution to prove that the contents of the
Estes pamphlet were slanderous, or that they were in any degree untruthful.
This was an undertaking for which they had not the courage. They chose rather to
take this point, so vital to the case, for granted. “So at the outset it was
assumed that the pamphlet, the avowed author of which was still an official
member of the M. E. Church, was so wicked in its character, that to aid in
its circulation was a mortal offense.”
For an offense of so grave a character as that named
in the bill of charges one would naturally suppose that a Conference of
ministers, in proceeding to try a brother minister, would have such an abundance
of reliable evidence as to carry conviction to honest minds generally. Was such
the case? Let us see.
The only testimony furnished by the prosecution to
sustain the general charge and the three principal specifications, was that
given by the Rev. John Bowman—and his testimony was impeached! It was
particularly in the essential point of assisting in the publication of the Estes
pamphlet, a matter which was stoutly contradicted by Mr. Estes, that Mr. Bowman
gave the following testimony:
I have seen this document entitled, “New School
Methodism,” and “To whom it may concern,” signed “George W. Estes,” before. I
first saw it on the cars between Medina and Lockport. Brother Roberts
presented it to me; several were presented In a package; there were, I think,
three dozen. Brother Roberts desired me to leave a portion of them at Medina,
conditionally. He requested me to circulate them; he desired me to leave a
portion of them with Brother Codd, or Brother Williams of Medina, provided I
fell in company with them. I put a question to him whether they were to be
distributed gratuitously or sold. He said he would like to get enough to
defray the expense of printing, but circulate them anyhow; he desired me not
to make it known that he had any agency in the matter of circulating the
document, if I could consistently keep it to myself. I do not know where
Brother Roberts got on the cars. My impression is, we were traveling east. I
do not know as anything more was said about the payment of printing them; my
recollection is not very distinct; be mentioned he had been at some
considerable expense.”
The prosecution had hoped to put another witness on the
stand, namely, the printer of the Estes pamphlet. They had imported him to the
seat of the Conference, from thirty-five miles across the country, on the
supposition that he would give testimony damaging to the case of the defendant.
But when they found that he would tell the truth if put on the witness stand,
they had no further use for him. And yet the Rev. F. W. Conable, in his “History
of the Genesee Conference,” has the effrontery to say: “The printer refused to
testify as to the authorship, and we have no law to oblige attendance at an
Ecclesiastical Court.” [1]
In a brief review of Mr. Conable’s book, [2]
in “Why Another Sect ?“ Mr. Roberts says:
“Mr. Conable, and all his indorsers who were at
the Perry Conference, know that this is not true. The most
unscrupulous, unless rendered desperate, seldom venture upon a falsehood so
glaring. The printer of the Estes pamphlet was present at the trial! One of
the preachers opposed to me took him there and back, about seventy miles
across the country, in a carriage. They did not call upon him to
testify.”
Mr. H. N. Beach, editor of the Brockport Republican,
was the printer of the pamphlet; and in a personal note to Mr. Roberts, he said:
The Rev. E. M. Buck got me to Perry in the case,
at the time of the Conference; but I was not called to testify, because, I
suppose, my evidence was not what was wanted.
It will be seen from the foregoing that Mr. Conable
thus became responsible for the publication of two unmitigated falsehoods—first,
in saying the printer of the pamphlet did not attend Court, and second, in
saying that the printer refused to testify. Moreover, these statements were
voted into the archives of the Genesee Conference of the Methodist Episcopal
Church by men who were fully apprised of their utter falsity! “If the light that
is in thee be darkness, how great is that darkness !“
In his defense Mr. Roberts proved, from George W.
Estes, that he had nothing whatever to do with the publication of the pamphlet.
On the direct examination Mr. Estes gave the following testimony:
Brother Roberts had nothing to do with publishing,
or assisting In publishing the document under consideration, to my knowledge,
and I presume to know. He had nothing to do with the writing of the part that
bears my name; I do not know that he had any knowledge that its publication
was intended; he never gave his consent that the part entitled, “New School
Methodism” should be republished by me, or any one else, to my knowledge; he
was never responsible for the publication, either in whole or In part; he
never contributed anything to the payment of its publication, to my knowledge;
I intended that so far as sold, it should go to defray the expenses of
publication; I never sold him any.
On cross-examination he said:
“I never forwarded, or caused to be forwarded, any
of them to Brother Roberts; I never gave him any personally; I do not know of
any one giving or forwarding him any. I never gave orders to any one to
forward Brother Roberts any, to my knowledge.”
In regard to the alleged circulation of the
pamphlet Mr. Roberts offered the following testimony:
Rev. Russell Wilcox called:
“I am a local Deacon of the M. E. Church in Pekin.
I am intimately acquainted with Brother Roberts, the pastor of the Church In
Pekin. I do not know that he has ever circulated this pamphlet anywhere; I
first saw it after I left home, on my way to this Conference.”
Rev. J. P. Kent called:
“I did ask the defendant for one of these
pamphlets; I wished to see one of them, and I asked Brother Roberts If he
could let me have one; he said he did not circulate them, but he had no
objection to my seeing the one he had. This was a few weeks ago, at the Holley
or Albion grove meeting; perhaps it was about the first of August.”
The only testimony the prosecution brought forward to
prove the specifications, and in support of the general charge, was that of the
Rev. John Bowman, and even he confessed, “My recollection is not very
distinct,” and was not sure as to the direction in which they were traveling
when, as he alleges, Mr. Roberts gave him a copy of the pamphlet and desired him
to assist in its circulation, but says, “My impression is, we were traveling
east!” Moreover, his testimony was impeached by several members of the
Conference.
On the other hand there was nothing hesitant or hazy
about the recollection of George W. Estes, whose every statement was direct,
positive, and very distinct, like that of a man who means to tell the truth, and
is conscious that he is doing so. He asserts that he, and he alone, was
responsible for the republication of “New School Methodism,” and that Mr.
Roberts “never gave his consent” to its republication; that “He [Roberts] had
nothing to do with the part that bears my name ;“ and, also, “I do not know that
he had any knowledge that its publication was intended ;“ that “he never
contributed anything to the payment of its publication ;“ and, finally he says,
“I never sold him any.”
Mr. Roberts himself says: “The fact is, I had
nothing to do with the publishing of the pamphlet, and took but little interest
in it. I was busy with other work.”
Yet in face of all these contradictions of Mr.
Bowman’s testimony, and without even circumstantial evidence of any kind to
corroborate it, that one man’s testimony appears to have outweighed all other
testimony given in the case, in the minds of a majority of the Conference-a fact
for which there is no other explanation than that of their having predetermined
Mr. Roberts’s fate in the secret meeting held before any steps toward a trial
had been taken. Could any man or party of men sustain a case before an honorable
Court of Justice anywhere in the United States on such limited and doubtful
evidence? Do not divine and human laws alike provide that “in the mouth of two
or three witnesses shall every word be established”? But here is a case in
which, by the mouth of one witness, and he hesitant and nebulous in his
recollection, the testimony of several witnesses, of distinct recollection and
of direct and positive statements, is set aside as valueless! With those who had
condemned Jesus Christ before an unlawful secret meeting of the Sanhedrin, no
evidence of his innocence could possibly have any weight. It is ever thus when
enmity, jealousy, and persecuting hatred usurp the place of calmness,
deliberation, and love of righteousness.
It should be remembered that Mr. Roberts, desirous
of throwing light on various points raised in the Estes pamphlet, examined many
witnesses on those points. In doing so he proved, by witnesses favorable to the
prosecution, that secret meetings had been held, and what was done in those
meetings, as well as other things not to the credit of the prosecution, some of
which have already been considered.
The prosecution and the defense had both rested
their cases, and the pleadings were concluded, at an early hour in the evening.
The impression made was such that, had the case gone to vote that evening, it
can scarcely be doubted that a verdict would have been rendered in favor of the
defendant. That is when the case should have been voted on, to say the least, as
the chances were then much more favorable for an honest verdict than they could
be at a later time. Fearing that a vote that night would insure an acquittal,
the leaders of the “Regency” party secured an adjournment, held another
secret meeting, and so strengthened the nerve of those considered weak and
doubtful in the case, that the majority came into the sitting the next morning
and voted a verdict of guilty, and then voted the defendant’s expulsion from the
Conference and from the Church!
Later it was alleged, as an attempted justification
of the proceedings in Mr. Roberts’s case, that he was expelled because he
undertook to prove the Estes statements true. There are two things wrong,
however, with that theory: First, Mr. Roberts made no kind of attempt to prove
the truth of the statements contained in the Estes pamphlet. With their truth or
falsity he had nothing to do in the whole course of his trial. He did, however,
state in open Conference, to his accusers, that if shown that he had
misrepresented any of his brethren in what he had written, he would, with
suitable apology, publish corrections of the same in the various Church
periodicals. No one claimed to have been misrepresented, and so no corrections
were made.
Not only was the foregoing allegation a baseless
fabrication, but it shows the animus of the proceedings by which Mr. Roberts was
expelled from the Conference and from the Church in a still stronger light.
Think of it! In thus trying to excuse a palpably unrighteous action, at least
tacit admission is made of having condemned the object of their persecution, and
inflicted upon him the most extreme penalty known in ecclesiastical
jurisprudence, for an offense of which he had not been accused. He was
arraigned and tried on a charge of “Contumacy,” but was condemned and
ecclesiastically executed for being a “fanatic” and a “Nazarite.”
It is not strange, therefore, that the Rev. C. D.
Burlingham, commenting on the trials of Mr. Roberts in 1857 and 1858, should
have expressed himself in the following pertinent and forceful language:
It is a notorious fact that those verdicts are not
based on testimony proving criminal acts or words. Several who voted
with, and others who sympathize with the “majority,” have said, “Well, if the
charges were not sustained by sufficient proof, the Conference served them
right, for they are great agitators and promoters of disorder and fanaticism.”
There you have it. Men tried for one thing and
condemned for another! What iniquitous jurisprudence will not such a principle
cover?
Why not try them for promoting disorder and
fanaticism? Because the failure of such an effort to convict would have been
the certain result. [3]
As an evidence that his persecutors did not seriously
regard Mr. Roberts as “unchristian” or “immoral” during the period in which
proceedings were pending against him, attention is now called to the following
facts:
1. His appointments during this somewhat protracted period were all that he
could have asked, and were of such a responsible character as they would not
likely have been had the “majority” really believed him “unchristian and
immoral.”
2. Twice during his last trial his brethren in the Conference paid him such
tokens of respect as would have been self-stultifying on their part had they
believed him guilty of any criminal offense, and such as perhaps no one ever
heard of being paid by a Court to a man under trial for a crime of any
character. Once they adjourned the trial for a day to attend a funeral in honor
of the Rev. W. C. Kendall, who had died during the year; and, perceiving the
eminent fitness of the selection, by unanimous vote they appointed Mr. Roberts
to preach the funeral sermon before the Conference. He responded to the
appointment, and preached on the occasion, with two of the Bishops sitting in
the pulpit. On another occasion pending the progress of the trial, the
anniversary of the American Bible Society was celebrated, and Mr. Roberts was
appointed to preside over these public exercises!
Referring to these events in “Why Another Sect ?“
Mr. Roberts asks: “Was this in imitation of the old idolaters who first crowned
with garlands the victims they were about to sacrifice; or, was it rather the
natural homage which men often instinctively pay to those whom they know to be
right, even while they persecute them ?“
We now briefly present the account of the trial of
the Rev. Mr. McCreery on a twofold charge of “Contumacy” embodying substantially
and almost identically the same specifications as those accompanying the like
charge in the case of the Rev. Mr. Roberts. The proceedings were published in
1860, in pamphlet form, entitled, “Trial of Rev. J. McCreery, Jr., Before the
Genesee Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, at Perry, N. Y., October
22, 1858,” and were reported by S. K. J. Chesbrough, and J. McCreery. The
account we now submit was probably written chiefly by Mr. McCreery himself, but
is in substantial accord with the officially reported proceedings, a copy of
which is before the author as he pens these paves. Some allowances must be made
by the reader for the occasional sarcasm indulged, but he may rest assured that
the substantial facts in the case are correctly given, while Mr. McCreery’s
version of it, by its racy style, enlivens the account, and also serves to show,
with characteristic conciseness and pungency, the farcical character of his
so-called trial before the Conference. The following is his way of putting the
matter:
THE TRIAL OF REV. J. MC CREERY, JR.
“Died Abner as a fool dieth.”—2 Sam. 3: 33.
Rev. J. G. Miller was appointed to assist in
conducting the prosecution.
The defendant declined any counsel. He had not
been summoned to his real trial which had been going on In secret for
several nights past in the Odd Fellows Hall, in Perry, and did not think it
worth while to trouble any one to act as counsel in a judicial farce.
The prosecutor said they had concluded not to
traverse the items of the Bill of Charges, which had occupied so much time In
the preceding trial. “We will limit the case to the two main points of the
Publication and the Circulation.”
The defendant replied they might omit the whole,
if they chose —or any part they pleased. He was not at all particular about
the matter. It would save time to forego the trial and vote the verdict at
once. I appeal to the General Conference. The Bishop remarked that the notice
of appeal was premature.
Rev. C. P. Clark and W. Scism testified that
defendant had circulated the Estes pamphlet. The prosecution here Introduced
as testimony, a card about three Inches by two, of rather dingy appearance,
and seriously nibbled at one corner, and marked on one side with certain
ominous and cabalistic letters and figures. * *
The card was grabbed up by S. M. Hopkins, as
stated in his testimony, and carefully kept unto the day of doom. The
defendant had traveled the Parma circuit, one of the best and most Methodistic
In the Conference, for the two years previous, and Hopkins had been sent on by
the Buffalo Regency, to watch Brother Abell, and pick up something that might
be used In this conspiracy against the defendant. For this service, his
masters voted him sixty dollars out of the Conference funds, under the
pretense that this faithful discharge of duty had lessened his receipts to
that amount. On canvassing the Conference, it was found impossible to get a
majority committed against Brother Abell; and there was also lack of adequate
“help in the gate” to warrant the undertaking. Carlton, who was at the bottom
of an this trickery (all the while as sober and solemn as a saint), did not
think it policy to attack him seriously. The character of Brother A., was
merely arrested, slurred a little, and allowed to pass. So this card was the
only available crumb of Hopkins’ scratching and picking. After being duly
testified to, as herein followeth, It was marked “H” with commendable gravity,
and solemnly filed among the documents of this persecution.
Rev. J. B. Wentworth called.—Are you acquainted
with defendant’s handwriting? Ans.—I am. I have received letters from him. It
is my opinion that this card is in his handwriting. I am quite sure It Is.
Rev. J. M. Fuller called—Are you acquainted with
defendant’s handwriting? Ans.—I am, sir. I have no doubt this card is in his
handwriting. I can’t say when or where I first saw this card; It was a few
weeks since.
Rev. S. M. Hopkins called.—Did you ever see this
card before? Ans.—Yes. I saw it first in the pulpit of the M. E. Church, in
Parma Center, about the middle of last November. There was a four days’
meeting there, called by some a general quarterly meeting. Defendant was
there. I saw the Estes pamphlet at that meeting; there was an abundance of
them. I saw, as near as I could judge, a hundred or a hundred and fifty
copies. I bought some from a carriage In which Sister McCreery rode, and also
Sister Fuller, who had been living with them. I did not see the defendant come
to the meeting; but, on inquiry, I judged it to be his carriage.
Cross-questioned.-—I first saw the card lying on
the kneeling stool in the pulpit. I considered it an Important document. I
thought It might shed light on the fountain whence these fly-sheets came. I am
not positive whose buggy the fly-sheets were in. I bought eight copies from
the arm-full that was brought from the buggy by Sister Fuller, to whom I paid
the money. I do not recollect the exact price I paid. Brother Estes was at the
meeting. I do not know whether they were sold on his account or not. Sister
Fuller seemed to do the business; whether the money went to Brother Estes or
somebody else, I cannot say. I bought a dollar’s worth. Part of them I found
in the house of Brother Dunn. I paid all the money to Sister Fuller. I do not
know that she was living at Brother Duel’s at the time; she was at the
defendant’s house during Conference. I soon found these pamphlets In almost
every Methodist family on the circuit.
Ques.—Did you send a copy to any Methodist by
mail?
This question was objected to by the prosecutor,
who remarked that Brother Hopkins was not on trial for circulating the
document. Though a hundred were engaged in a crime, It would not excuse any
individual participant.
The defendant wished to show that everybody had
circulated the pamphlet. No one ever dreamed of crime or contumacy in doing
so. Both Regency and Nazarite preachers, men, women and children, did it with
all the freedom they would an almanac or Foxe’s Book of Martyrs. The charge of
contumacy for doing what everybody else did was a ridiculous farce, Seven
hours ago, at the bidding of his masters, this witness stood up and voted
Brother Roberts expelled from the Church, on a charge of circulating this
pamphlet; and has pledged himself in secret conclave to do me the same service
a few hours hence. Now, I wish to say by implication, that the criminality In
the case Is an after thought; a fiction fabricated for the occasion. Other
witnesses have volunteered to tell what they did with their packages. I wish
to know what the witness did with his dollar’s worth.
The witness stated that he had had a bill of
charges served on him, exactly like that against the defendant; In fact it was
the identical bill with defendant’s name erased, and his own inserted In its
place.
The Bishop decided that the witness could not be
required to answer so as to criminate himself.
Ans.—I think I did the Church no harm in what I
did with the copies I bought; I had the best interests of the Church in view.
The testimony of Brother Estes was substantially
the same that he gave in Brother Roberts’s trial, to wit: That he alone was
the responsible author and publisher of the pamphlet bearing his name. He did
not forward a copy to defendant for proof-reading. He had no recollection of
ordering the printer to do so. He presumed he ordered it to be sent somewhere,
to some body. As the Conference had seen fit to assume that the publication
was a crime, he should not put them on the track of any more victims by saying
to whom he ordered It sent. Several laymen saw It before It was published.
Some advised the publication, and some dissuaded from It. He had been
threatened with a civil prosecution for the publication. He was ready for it
any day. He alone was responsible; and he was ready and able to prove all he
had published, in a civil Court. whenever he should be called upon. Everybody
had circulated it.
Testimony for the defense:
Rev. S. Hunt called.—Have you seen in the
Buffalo Christian Advocate, a notice of the proceedings of the last
Conference in the case of Brother Roberts?
Ans.—I think I read a reference to it. (Here
Bishop Baker hastily left the chair, and Bishop Janes took it). Ques.—Did that
paper give the charge and specifications of the trial? This question was
objected to as Irrelevant, by the prosecutor, who said, “We are not trying
newspapers here.”
Defendant: “But we are doing the next thing to
It—we are trying a pamphlet. Now I wish to show that newspaper falsehood is
justification for pamphlet truth as an antidote. The trial of Brother Roberts
had become a notorious newspaper fact The Buffalo Advocate had
published ex parte reports, whitewashing one side, and blackballing the
other. And when It was asked, as It was concerning one guilty of something
like the same crime, eighteen hundred years ago, “Why, what harm hath he done
?“ the only response of this organ of the Genesee Conference Sadducees was:
Unchristian and immoral conduct! On this text, furnished by a judicial
trickery of the lowest grade, the changes were rung; while the thing he did
was carefully kept out of sight. Truth demanded the republication of “New
School Methodism,” that people might know what sort of writing It was that was
so criminal. And a justifiable curiosity demanded a faithful exposé of the
several Carltonian modes of reasoning employed by the masters of this judicial
ceremony, to bring the Conference to this strange verdict of “Immorality,”
in the case. The defendant claims it his right to show this in justification
of the facts charged in the indictment.
The objection was sustained by the Bishop.
Whereupon all further defense was silently declined.
Thus the defensive testimony amounts in all, to
two questions and one answer.
The prosecutor made a grandiloquent plea.
The defendant answered not a word.
The defendant was voted guilty of the
specifications, and of the charge.
And he was expelled from the Conference and from
the Church, by the usual number of votes—50.
SYNOPSIS OF THE VOTE
Regular Regency men |
33
|
Presiding elderlings |
15
|
Serious ninnies, affrighted with the bugbear of Nazaritism |
2
|
Total for
expulsion |
50
|
Members who voted against expulsion |
17
|
Members of Conference who did not vote at all |
53
|
Total who did not
vote for expulsion |
70
|
Total number of
members |
120
|
It will be noticed that a remarkably large number
of the preachers did not vote. Carlton had managed to have it carefully
whispered around, so loud that all could hear it, that the Bishop was going to
make the appointments of the preachers according to their standing up for
the Church, i. e., the regency faction,—in this eventful crisis. All the
Presiding Elders were fast friends of the Church, i. e., the tools of
Carlton, Robie & Co.,—except one; and he was removed at this Conference, and
expelled at the next. The skilful rattling of the loaves and fishes in the
market baskets labeled P. B. did the thing. It worked both ways; gaining both
votes, and blanks, or no votes.
This accounts for a large number who would not
vote wickedly, and dare not vote righteously. The appointing power is
omnipotent ;—and he who has the faculty of fawning, or bullying, or deceiving
It into his service, can do or be anything he pleases.
Both Mr. Roberts and Mr. McCreery gave notice of appeal
to the General Conference, having full confidence that if their cases could come
before that body their vindication would be complete, and their restoration to
the Church and to the Conference would follow. Their appeals were never
permitted to come before that body, however, greatly to their own disappointment
and to the disappointment of thousands throughout the borders of American
Methodism. The reason will appear as we proceed with our story.
|