Bill Burchard jerked his head up
and peered quizzically from among the cornstalks. What was that noise? He pushed a crumpled blue bandana slowly
across his brow and then stood scanning the underbrush 40 yards away.
Seeing nothing, he moved to the next stalk
and ripped the blades off. His family of
seven had long since consumed the last of the corn, and now, early in September
1894,
he was salvaging the blades to feed his scrawny cow.
Burchard worked
five days a week in the Dayton Coal and Iron Mine. He ascended from the brutal bowels of the
earth to go to church on Saturday, and this schedule left Sunday as his only
day to catch up on work around his home.
He straightened up again. He had heard something. A screeching jay betrayed two men about to
disappear over a low ridge.
Burchard thought
nothing more about the incident until one evening a week or two later when he
came home to find Sheriff Darwin sitting on his front stoop. The sheriff rose slowly as Burchard approached.
“Help ya ‘t all, Sheriff?” Burchard asked.
Darwin
looked down, slipping the four fingers of each hand into his front pockets.
“I’m sorry, Bill,” he mumbled, “but I got to
take ya in.”
“Take me in!” Burchard’s face
paled in shock, even under the layer of coal dust. “But what
in the world for?”
“Here,” said the sheriff, slipping a long
folded piece of paper out from under his vest, “listen to this.”
“State of Tennessee, To the Sheriff of Rhea
County, Greeting: You are hereby commanded to take the body of William S. Burchard, if found in your county, and him safely keep, so
that you have him before the judge of our Circuit Court . . .
at the Courthouse in the town of Dayton, on the first Monday in March next,
then and there to answer the state for violating Sabbath. Herein fail not. . . . C. G.
Gillespie, Clerk.”
By the time Burchard
finally returned home, he understood what his two secretive visitors had been
doing that Sunday.
Burchard lived
four and a half miles from Graysville, Tennessee,
in a little valley called the Cove. In
Graysville, a town of 600, about 20 percent of the town kept
the seventh-day Sabbath. The religious
community had built up around Graysville
Academy, a school begun two years
earlier by a Sabbath- keeping minister named G. W. Colcord. (The school was later moved and grew into
what is now known as Southern Adventist University near Chattanooga.)
Not only Burchard
but also Colcord and two of the Academy teachers, along with several other Sabbathkeepers,
were under indictment for violating Tennessee’s
Sunday law. Burchard
was charged on two counts—stripping fodder and helping to dig a well on
Sunday. Others were charged with such
crimes as putting chicken wire around a garden or carrying a few boards.
The trials made it obvious that the chief
instigator of the trouble was an angry coal miner named Wright Rains, who had
been refused credit by the Sabbath-keeping proprietor of a local grocery
store. Two of his friends had slipped out
of the services in their Sunday church, just over the ridge from Burchard’s cabin, to spy on him.
For more than 15 years, Sabbathkeepers
had been subjected to sporadic persecution for Sunday-law violations in various
states. They believed at the time that
to rest on Sunday was an admission of Sunday’s sacredness. They believed that that would be giving in to
a false system of worship.
To
be continued . . .