Who was Miss Annie E. Wilson?

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Here is a question for our readers: Who was Miss Annie E. Wilson?

We know a few things about her, and there is still much that we do not know. Perhaps some of our readers can enlarge our understanding of this late 19th and early 20th century Presbyterian author. Let’s start with what we know so far.

Along with Isabella M. Leyburn Ritner, Wilson co-edited (and contributed various articles to) Electra: A Belles Lettres Monthly For Young People in 1883-1884. That volume notes:

Miss Wilson is the grand-daughter of the late Professor S.B. Wilson, D.D., of Union Theological Seminary, Va., and Miss Leyburn is the daughter of the late Rev. Geo. W. Leyburn, who laid down his life in mission service in Greece.

Wilson, Anneliza Carruthers signature photo.jpg

She was a prolific writer. From 1883-1915 we have compiled at least 12 separate published writings by her, and we know of additional works by her as well. She was educational works for youth, historical fiction, articles, short stories and more.

She lived in Louisville, Kentucky, and it is thought that she worked as a Presbyterian Sunday School teacher there.

She is identified by various sources as Anneliza Carruthers Wilson. Annie E. Wilson was the pen name under which she published. Sometimes she has been referred to as Ann Eliza Carruthers Wilson.

From the introduction to Webs of War in White and Black, it would appear that she was teaching near Farmville, Virginia around 1913.

T.C. Johnson, in his 1897 review in the Union Seminary Magazine of Wilson’s True Story of a Jewish Maiden (not yet available on LCP), described her work as “a useful gift” to the church. The Presbyterian and Reformed Review for January 1900 described her 1898 volume titled The Family Altar as encompassing “some wise instructions as to the management of household worship.”

We do not yet know when and where she was born or died or is buried, despite extensive ancestral research. We are hoping that a reader may yet provide that information to us. We are also lacking a picture of Anneliza Carruthers Wilson, aka Miss Annie E. Wilson. But we do have her signature.

Meanwhile, take a look at her page at Log College Press and peruse the works by her which we have assembled thus far. She was a gifted writer with a heart for educating the young especially, helping families, and for the conversion of unbelievers to a saving faith in Jesus Christ. A number of her books have been reprinted in the modern era. We are thankful to know her, and hope to get to know her better.

Recent Additions to Log College Press -- October 13, 2020

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We are always busy adding to the Log College Press website, but we don’t always announce what’s new. Today’s post highlights some recent additions to the site that are worth special notice.

  • Archibald Alexander and Samuel Davies Alexander, Dr. Alexander’s Sketch of Dr. Robert Smith (1855) - This biographical sketch by Archibald Alexander was among papers received by his son S.D. Alexander, and later submitted for publication in The Presbyterian. We also added Life Sketches From Scottish History, or, Brief Biographies of the Scottish Presbyterian Worthies (1855) by S.D. Alexander, which is a wonderful collection of biographical sketches.

  • Donaldina MacKenzie Cameron (1869-1968), The Story of Wong So (1925); and Ming Quong Home (1925). She was a New Zealand-born Presbyterian missionary who worked in San Francisco to help Chinese women escape from slavery and sex trafficking.

  • Anne James Carter (1834-1908), Recollections of the Early History of the Presbyterian Church of Fredericksburg, VA (1906) — This fascinating, brief and rare work was recently acquired, scanned and uploaded to LCP. It was written by a church member on her 72nd birthday and gives an account of the early ministers of the church, including Samuel B. Wilson, A.A. Hodge, and much more.

  • Isabella Marshall Graham (1742-1814), The Power of Faith: Exemplified in the Life and Writings of the Late Mrs. Isabella Graham, of New-York (1816); and The Unpublished Letters and Correspondence of Mrs. Isabella Graham, From the Year 1767 to 1814; Exhibiting Her Religious Character in the Different Relations of Life (1838). She was a member of John Witherspoon’s church in Scotland, before coming to America and beginning a life of philanthropy to help others in need.

  • Andrew Patton Happer (1818-1894), A Professorship of Missionary Instruction in Our Theological Seminaries (1876); Is the Shang-Ti of the Chinese Classics the Same Being as Jehovah of the Sacred Scriptures? (1877); A Visit to Peking, With Some Notice of the Imperial Worship at the Altars of Heaven, Earth, Sun, Moon and the Gods of the Grain and the Land (1879); The Missionary Enterprise: Its Success in Other Lands the Assurance of Its Success in China (1880); The State Religion of China (1881); The Population of China (1883); What Shall Be Done With Converts Who Have More Than One Wife? (1883); The Number of Buddhists in the World (1883); A Retrospect (1884); and Influence of the College in the Civilization of the World: A Sermon (1894). He was a Presbyterian missionary in China for 40 years. 

  • David Raymond Taggart (1880-1958), Science and the Flu (1919); The Faith of Abraham Lincoln (1943); and A Catechism For Covenanter Children (n.d). Taggart was a Reformed Presbyterian minister. His 1919 article concerns the Spanish Flu pandemic, and in it he writes: “Would it not be the part of wisdom, and the ultimate conclusion of science, that instead of closing the churches first, as the nonessential gathering of the people, that they should be made the exception, and considered one of the essentials for the health of the community.”

  • Isaac Malek Yonan (1871-1941), Persia, Its Religions and Mission Work (1894); Persian Women: A Sketch of Woman’s Life From the Cradle to the Grave, and Missionary Work Among Them, With Illustrations (1898); The Armenian Church (1898-1899); and March 27, 1917 Letter (1917). Yonan was a Persian-born Presbyterian pastor who studied under T.D. Witherspoon.

  • Nez Perce Presbyterian Mission, IdahoRobert Williams (1846-1896), Gospel Hymns in the Nez Perce Language (1897). He was the first Nez Perce ever ordained as a Presbyterian minister. James Hayes (1857-1928), Gospel Hymns in the Nez Perce Language (1897). He was a Nez Perce Presbyterian minister. Kate Christine McBeth (1832-1915), Gospel Hymns in the Nez Perce Language (1897); and The Nez Perces Since Lewis and Clark (1908). Susan Law McBeth (1830-1893), Diary entries from 1858 and 1860. These sisters were missionaries to the Nez Perce in Idaho. Henry Harmon Spalding (1803-1874) also contributed to the making of Gospel Hymns in the Nez Perce Language (1897).

Many more authors and works have been added in recent weeks, but these may serve to whet the reader’s appetite. Church history and biography is so rich with fascinating accounts of servants of the Most High King, and their contributions to the work of the kingdom. These authors — who were pastors, missionaries, and regular church members — all lived remarkable lives and have remarkable things to tell. Take a look at these new additions, and keep checking back for more.