| |

|
Dakota Datebook
November 19, 2003
"Billy Sunday"
|
|
I'm against sin. I'll kick it as long as I've got
a foot, and I'll fight it as long as I've got a fist. I'll butt it as
long as I've got a head. I'll bite it as long as I've got a tooth. And
when I'm old and fistless and footless and toothless, I'll gum it till
I go home to Glory, and it goes home to perdition!
Those were words spoken by the famous Billy
Sunday pro-baseball player turned preacher who was born
on this day in 1862.
Billys father, a Civil War soldier, died when he
was less than a year old, and the boy was raised in an orphanage. It comes
as no surprise that his early years were hard; beginning at age 14 he
worked many jobs including fireman, janitor, and undertaker's assistant.
But his real talent lay in his legs. Sunday was an extremely
fast runner, and when he was 21, he was discovered by Chicago White Stockings
manager "Cap" Anson. Anson signed him, and Sunday played baseball
for the Sox for 8 years.
Three years into his baseball career, Sunday became born-again
while listening to a street preacher from the Pacific Garden Mission in
Chicago. Five years later he retired from baseball and went on to became
a minister himself.
Sunday soon held citywide crusades across America, and
his converts were said to "hit the sawdust trail," because the
floors of his temporary wooden tabernacles were covered with
sawdust. He was a fire-and-brimstone preacher with an acrobatic flare
on the platform. Speaking with passion as well as humor, he would say
things like, Temptation is the devil looking through the keyhole.
Yielding is opening the door and inviting him in. At the close of
each service scores of people would rush to grasp his hands to show theyd
been converted.
In April 1912, Billy Sunday brought his crusade to Fargo.
A special tabernacle, built near present-day downtown, was dedicated before
a crowd of about 2,000 people on Thursday, April 4th. Three days later,
on Easter Sunday, the crusaders services began. The Fargo Forum
reported that about 12,000 people attended the three services that he
held that first day. Sundays Fargo crusade lasted six weeks.
His style was tremendously popular. He used colorful,
slang-filled language, along with mimicry, impersonations and anecdotes,
to entertain and instruct his audience. He railed against the theory of
evolution, divorce, birth control, and other modern day sins. He bombasted
cigarette smokers, dance halls, Unitarianism and women who played bridge.
But his most passionate topic the evils of alcohol was the
mainstay of his campaigns. Bars often closed when he came to town, and
by the early 20th century, Billy Sunday played a key role in getting prohibition
enacted.
But that part didnt really affect us... North Dakota
was dry before it ever became a state and continued that way until the
end of prohibition. It was cities like the one across the Red River that
Billy Sunday was targeting: Moorhead, otherwise known as Sin City.
While Fargo was dry, Moorhead had a boom in the liquor trade with about
45 bars... in a town of only 3,700 people.
Sunday, Sunday, Sunday.... Billy Sunday carried out his
revivals for 20 years before dying of a heart attack in 1935.

This text and audio may not be copied
without securing prior permission from North Dakota Public Radio.
|