James Madison Pickens -- 1836-1881
Gospel Preacher in Alabama & Mississippi
Biographical Sketch on the Life of J.M.
Pickens
In the latter part of 1867, at the call of Bro. J. M.
Pickens, of North Alabama, a meeting was held at Columbus,
Miss., for the purpose of consulting with reference to the
condition and needs of the church in Alabama and
Mississippi, and of inaugurating a cooperative meeting, I
know not what churches, nor how many, were represented.
From the report made at the time, I learned that the
brethren in attendance had a very pleasant and harmonious
meeting, discussing the state of affairs, and listening to
the good sermons that were delivered by the preachers who
were present, The only practical result of the meeting so
far as I know, was that Bro. Pickens was selected to
evangelize in Alabama and Bro. Manire in Mississippi. The
selection of myself was at the suggestion and urgent
solicitation of Dr. S. R. Jones, as I learned from him on
his return from the meeting. It was resolved that our
salary for the year's labor should be fifteen hundred
dollars each, that is, provided that we raise it ourselves.
This proviso, it is true, was not expressed in the
resolution; but it ought to have been, for so far as our
financial support was concerned, it was the very gist of
the whole matter. An executive committee was appointed to
solicit contributions for the work; but, if that committee
ever received a dollar, or even a penny, I never heard of
it. That treasury was filled with emptiness from beginning
to end. Bro. Pickens entered on the work in his State, but
for want of an adequate support was soon compelled to enter
the schoolroom as a teacher, and that ended the Alabama
part of that cooperation.
J. M. Pickens was then comparatively a young man, although
he had been preaching for several years. He was a man of
superior ability both natural and acquired. He afterwards
labored extensively both in North Alabama and North
Mississippi, and had more than ordinary success,
considering the times and the circumstances. In 1870, as I
remember, he began the publication of the "Southern
Christian Monthly" in Columbus, Mississippi. This was
afterward changed to the "Southern Christian Weekly," which
was published for a short time at Eutaw, Alabama, then at
his residence, Mountain Home, Alabama, and finally at
Jackson, Tennessee, where he sold it to William E. Hall,
who moved it to New Orleans, and changed it into the "Iron
Preacher."
Only a man of Bro. Pickens' indomitable perseverance,
untiring, energy, and inflexible will, could have sustained
such a work so long under conditions so unfavorable. He was
fond of discussion, and had a number of debates, the most
noted of which was with the renowned Jacob Ditzler. With
all these, the brethren who heard them were not only
satisfied but also delighted, and with none more so than
with his debate with Ditzler. The doughty Dr. not expecting
to find such a man in the mountains of North Alabama, had
anticipated an easy victory, but was doubtless as badly
disappointed as in any debate he ever held, for Pickens
picked him all to pieces. The last year of Bro. Pickens'
regular work as a preacher was spent in Columbus,
Mississippi. Returning to his home in Alabama in 1880, he
became a candidate for Governor of the State on the
Greenback ticket, but was defeated. Resuming his studies
and labors as a preacher, he was wantonly murdered in the
spring of 1881, in broad daylight, and within sight of his
own house. He was in the very prime of a vigorous manhood,
and had hardly reached the zenith of his power and
usefulness, when he was so strangely and so sadly cut off.
--From
"Reminiscences of Preachers And Churches In
Mississippi," by B.F. Manire, Chapter 5
Before and After Photos of Scott Harp's chalking work
Before, they are almost impossible to read.
After his work; of course no damage is done to the stone
and the rain will wash the chalk away.
J.M. Pickens is buried in Columbus, Mississippi in the
Friendship Cemetery.
From Main St. in Columbus, go south on 4th St. one mile and
the cemetery will be on your right. (Note: 4th St is
one-way -northbound- leading into Main St. for one block,
so you will need to go up one block and make your way back
around to 4th St. so you can head south.)
When you get to the cemetery, enter from the east side and
take the first left. When you come to a fork, take the
right fork and loop around the section. The stone will be
just to your left facing east (so you can't read the stone
from the drive) If you get to the "Elm St" sign you've just
passed it. The stone will be back three plots from the Elm
St. sign next to the drive in Plot #12xx.
Photos by Tom Childers; text opied from
www.therestorationmovement.com