Draft:Johnson Theodore Gayles
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Rev. Johnson Theodore Gayles was born in Leake County, Mississippi on December 25, 1865. At two years of age, he was brought by his parents, Stephen and Minerva Johnson Gayles, to Big Deer Creek, Mississippi. In a log hut prayer meeting in 1871, he professed religion and joined the St. Paul Baptist church in Nitta Yuma, MS on March 4, 1882. He married the former Miss Indiana Commodore (daughter of Lucy Ford and William Commodore) on March 1, 1882 in Sharkey County, Mississippi. In 1886, the St. Paul church granted Rev. Gayles local license to preach. In 1887, he was ordained at the Pleasant Green Baptist church by a council composed of the following: Revs. G. P. Phillips, Joe Cannon, Tom Grant, and others. He then accepted the pastorate of the St Paul church. In three years, this congregation was much increased, spiritually built up and a $2000 edifice erected. Some few prejudiced hearted neighbors regarded his success as a crime, and had the landlord, on whose plantation the church was located, to advise Rev. Gayles to discontinue his services at this church, on his plantation. The St. Paul church has a number of earnest working members who stood by Rev. Gayles in making the church what it is today. About the time Rev. Gayles took charge of a faction of the Pleasant Green church and with it organized the Union Chapel. In two years, seventy-six were added to the church, and a fine edifice was built. In 1893, he was called to the Good Hope church, Elizabeth, MS and Mt Elam church, Swain Station, MS. At these churches he has done work commensurate to his consecrated energy and ability. In 1894, Rev. Gayles took charge of St. Peter Baptist church at Leland. He found this work in bad shape but soon put it in good working order and now it is rapidly growing.[1]
References
[edit]- ^ Thompson, Patrick H.; Woodson, Carter Godwin; Association for the Study of African-American Life and History, former owner GEU (1898). The history of Negro Baptists in Mississippi.
This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.