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Historian Focuses on Lay Person Who Impacted American Church

“The author’s comprehensive knowledge of Gardiner’s life and thought, drawn from exhaustive research in primary sources, coupled with the book’s rich historical context, skilled analysis, and convincing interpretations, makes this a rich, authoritative, and intellectually provocative study.”—Alfred Moss, coauthor of Dangerous Donations: Northern Philanthropy and Southern Black Education, 1902–1930

Columbia, MO November 28, 2005 — In his time, Robert Hallowell Gardiner III (1855–1924) was the heart and soul of the Progressive Era’s movement to establish cooperation among all Christian churches. Gardiner’s legacy today is the World Council of Churches. From his home on the Kennebec River and from the Maine town that bears his family’s name, Gardiner carried on an extensive letter-writing campaign on behalf of the reunion of worldwide Christianity.

John F. Woolverton incorporates Gardiner’s eleven thousand letters, as well as his published speeches and articles and family records, to present the first biography of a man who was a seminal figure in the early twentieth-century Christian ecumenical movement.
   
Gardiner was remarkable in that, as a layperson in the traditionally clergy-dominated, hierarchical Episcopal Church, he was able to bring along his own often reluctant denomination, as well as the Eastern and Russian Orthodox churches, major American and European Protestant bodies, and for a time the Roman Catholic Church itself. In addition, in the 1890s Gardiner was a leader in Boston’s famous Social Gospel, moving on to the Young Manhood Movement of the 1910s. He was an outspoken advocate for giving women a voice and vote in the church, as well as a leader in the major 1916 revision of Christian education in his denomination.
   
In his study, Woolverton analyzes Gardiner’s commitment as an internationalist to multilateral peace efforts on the threshold of World War I. He also discusses Gardiner’s relationships with well-known figures from that era: U.S. Senator George Wharton Pepper, Francis Stetson, John R. Mott, Newman Smyth, Mary Kingsbury Simkhovitch, John J. Wynne, Cardinal James Gibbons, Episcopal Bishop Charles Henry Brent, and Vida D. Scudder. Woolverton shows how, despite the ravages of war, Gardiner was able to build a vast network of cooperating political and religious leaders.
About the Author
   
Rev. John F. Woolverton is former professor of Church History at Virginia Theological Seminary and is Editor of Anglican and Episcopal History. He is the author of Colonial Anglicanism in North America, The Skeptical Vestryman: George W Martin and The Education of Phillips Brooks. He resides in Center Sandwich, New Hampshire.
   
Robert H. Gardiner and the Reunification of Worldwide Christianity in the Progressive Era
(0-8262-1603-X, $42.50) is available at local bookstores, or directly from the University of Missouri Press. http://www.umsystem.edu/upress/fall2005/woolverton.htm 1-800-828-1894.

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Beth Chandler
University of Missouri Press
573-882-0180
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