Sketches Of
Tennessee's Pioneer Baptist Preachers
LINDSAY COOPER
(pages 124 - 126)
Lindsay Cooper was born in Campbell County,
Tenn., November 1, 1833. He was a son of John Cooper, who was born, at
Ellicott's Mills, in the state of Maryland, and served in the War of 1812. In
May, 1850, young Cooper professed faith in Christ and was baptized into the
fellowship of Indian Creek Church, in his native county. December 21, 1856, he
was married to Miss Mary Gaylor. To this union were born nine children, seven
sons and two daughters. In December of 1860 he moved to Morgan County. At the
outbreak of the Civil War he "refugeed" for a time in Kentucky. August
8, 1861, with Capt. Joseph A. Cooper, who afterwards became General Cooper, and
three other brothers, he was mustered into the service of the Union army, as a
member of "Company A, First Tennessee Infantry," He served in the war
three years and seven months. Returning from the war he changed his church
membership from Longfield Church, near Coal Creek, to Liberty Church, in Morgan
County. By this church he was "licensed to exercise a public gift,"
and in 1866 Pleasant Grove Church "ordained" him to the full work of
the ministry. He was pastor of Union, Liberty, Pleasant Grove, Indian Creek,
Coal Hill, Pine Orchard, Crab Orchard, Emory, Black Creek, New River, Cooper's
View, Pisgah, Glen Mary, and other churches. He was chiefly instrumental in the
constitution of five new churches and in the erection of two new meeting houses.
He did a great deal of missionary and evangelistic work, and baptized hundreds
of people. His ministry was mostly in Campbell, Scott, Morgan and Roane
counties, extending over a period of forty-nine years, and, for the most part,
was pioneer
From the home of one of his daughters, near
Wartburg,
Elder Cooper is survived by his widow and six children, twenty-eight grandchildren, two great-grandchildren, an only brother, Sylvester Cooper, who is upwards of 90, and two nephews, deserving of special mention on account of their marked service to the denomination: Dr. D. H. Cooper, formerly of the East, at one time a schoolmate of the writer, now of Oklahoma, and W. R. Cooper, since 1874 a deacon of the Broadway (or McGee Street) Church, Knoxville, for nineteen years clerk of the Tennessee Association, and for other "nineteen years" the efficient and stalwart moderator of that body.
Burnett, J .J. Sketches of Tennessee's Pioneer Baptist Preachers. Nashville, Tenn.: Press of Marshall & Bruce Company, 1919.
URL: http://www.knoxcotn.org/tnbaptists/index.html
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