G. C. Brewer
Biographical Sketch Of The Life Of G.C. Brewer
Grover Cleveland Brewer was born December 25, 1884, at
Pulaski in Giles County, Tennessee. His parents were Hiram
and Virginia Arietta Brewer. He had two brothers, Charles
R. Brewer, gospel preacher, and teacher at David Lipscomb
University for a number of years and Robert Larimore
Brewer.G. C. Brewer
Schools he attended included Kimberlin Heights, Nashville
Bible School, University of Texas, Austin College, where he
received the B.A. degree. Later Harding College and Abilene
Christian College each awarded Brewer with a LL.D. degree.
He was also honored later with the Carnegie Medal.
On October 24, 1911, he married Mary Elizabeth Hall. To
this union, one girl, Virginia Elizabeth, was born.
He began preaching at the age of 16 in Florence, Alabama,
and also preached in a number of congregations around
Florence. His ministry took him to many churches in many
States. Some of the churches where he preached were:
Chattanooga, Tennessee; Columbia, Tennessee; Winchester,
Tennessee; Austin, Texas; Cleburne, Texas; Sherman, Texas;
Union Avenue in Memphis, Tennessee; Jackson Avenue in
Memphis, Tennessee; and Central in Los Angeles, California;
and Lubbock, Texas. He preached in all the States in the
Union except the States along the Canadian border.
Brewer was, by nature, a controversialist and he enjoyed
and felt at home in any sort of controversy. He ranged
through its whole field and ever acquitted himself as a
champion whether his opponent was the worldly-wise Judge
Ben Lindsay (whom he debated many years ago in Memphis on
the subject of Companionate Marriage), or D. N. Jackson,
the skilled Baptist debater, or some of the hobby-riding
brothers among us. For more than 40 years, his booming
voice and his trenchant pen were employed in the defense of
that which his great heart and active mind believed to be
right. In the pulpit, on the lecture platform, and in the
classroom, he was equally at home. He ever exhibited that
rare quality of being able to differ with others and, at
the same time, to respect and love them.
During his last years, and until almost the moment of
death, he was chiefly active in, and found his greatest
satisfaction from, editing the Voice of Freedom, a paper
designed to awaken the people in and out of the church to
the threat of Catholicism and Communism, both religiously
and politically inclined. It is our conviction that the
stature of G. C. Brewer will continue to increase with the
passing of the years; and that he will take his place, in
the final estimate of history, among the greatest of recent
generations.
Brewer had an excellent speaking voice and, in most places
where he worked with a congregation, had a weekly radio
program. Some of the places were KFYO in Lubbock, Texas,
and WHBI in Memphis, Tennessee. In addition to his regular
local work with a congregation, he usually held about
twelve meetings each year. He was a prolific writer and
some of his books included "The Model Church," "Brewer's
Sermons," "Contending For the Faith," "As Touching Those
Who Were Once Enlightened," "Forty Years On The Firing
Line," and many pamphlets and other books.
Brewer wrote an autobiography during the last months of his
life. He died June 9, 1956, at Searcy, Arkansas. He is
survived by one daughter, Mrs. Perry Mason, two
grandchildren, six great-grandchildren. Funeral service was
conducted by George S. Benson of Searcy, Arkansas, and
brother Ijams of Memphis, Tennessee. Funeral was held in
Memphis, Tennessee, and burial was in the Memorial Park in
Memphis.
-From In Memoriam, Gussie Lambert, Shreveport, LA,
pages 34,35
Directions to Grave
G.C. Brewer is buried in the Memorial Park Cemetery in
Memphis, Tennessee. Take I-240 to Poplar Ave. Go west and
the cemetery will be on your right. Enter at the Poplar
Ave. entrance. Take your first right and go to your first
left. Go past the Rest Rooms and continue past the Crystal
Shrine Grotto. Go on down to just past the Flower Shop and
turn to your first left. You will then see section three
coming up on your right. Go past the Section 3 sign and
before you come to an oak tree stop and go into section 3
about 8 rows in Lot 132 #6. GPS Coordinates - N35º 06. 724'
x WO 89º 52. 517'