Billy Sunday

Sunday, Billy

Sunday, Billy (1862–1935), evangelist. William Ashley Sunday was born in Ames, Iowa. His youth was marked by poverty and intermittent education. A gifted athlete, Sunday in 1883 joined the Chicago White Stockings baseball team. Having converted to Christ in 1886, he left baseball in 1891 to engage in Christian ministry. After assisting two traveling evangelists, Sunday set out on his own in 1896. Ordained as a Presbyterian minister in 1903, he maintained a grueling schedule of revival meetings in small midwestern towns. But by 1910 he was holding huge evangelistic campaigns in major cities throughout America.

Over his lifetime, Sunday preached to and converted more people than any American revivalist before Billy Graham. He “got results” because of his simple language, physical stunts, and dramatic theatrics. Undergirding Sunday's showmanship was an extraordinary organizational apparatus managed by his wife, Nell Sunday.

Sunday vehemently attacked what he viewed as the evils afflicting modern America, including urban corruption, immigration, and most important, alcohol—concerns shared by many Progressive Era reformers. Sunday's solution was appealingly (or appallingly) simple: Conversion to Christ brought with it common decency; if enough people converted, America could be righteous again.

During World War I, Sunday was a prominent and chauvinistic supporter of the U.S. war effort and vehement in his denunciations of Germany. Soon thereafter his career began to fade, in part because of family and health problems, but he kept preaching until his death. Billy Sunday's legacy includes the estimated one million individuals who came forward in his revivals, and the Fundamentalist movement that continued his crusade against forces perceived to be turning America into a moral wasteland.
See also Protestantism; Revivalism; Temperance and Prohibition; Twenties, The.

Bibliography

William G. McLoughlin Jr. , Billy Sunday Was His Real Name, 1955.
Douglas W. Frank , Less than Conquerors: How Evangelicals Entered the Twentieth Century, 1986.
Lyle W. Dorsett , Billy Sunday and the Redemption of Urban America, 1991.

William Vance Trollinger Jr.

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Paul S. Boyer. "Sunday, Billy." The Oxford Companion to United States History. 2001. Encyclopedia.com. 27 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

Paul S. Boyer. "Sunday, Billy." The Oxford Companion to United States History. 2001. Encyclopedia.com. (May 27, 2012). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O119-SundayBilly.html

Paul S. Boyer. "Sunday, Billy." The Oxford Companion to United States History. 2001. Retrieved May 27, 2012 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O119-SundayBilly.html

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Billy Sunday

Billy Sunday (William Ashley Sunday), 1863–1935, American evangelist, b. Ames, Iowa, in the era around World War I. A professional baseball player (1883–90), he later worked for the Young Men's Christian Association in Chicago (1891–95) and, during that time, became associated with the Presbyterian itinerant evangelist J. Wilbur Chapman (1859–1918). After leading a successful revival in Garner, Iowa (1896) Sunday became a full-time evangelist. Known as "the baseball evangelist," Sunday drew large crowds to his revivals with his flamboyant style. As the most popular American evangelist of the World War I era, he raised much of the popular support for prohibition .

Bibliography: See W. G. McLoughlin, Jr., Billy Sunday Was His Real Name (1955).

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Sunday, Billy

Sunday, Billy ( William Ashley) (1862–1935) US Presbyterian revivalist. After three years in professional baseball, he became a famous preacher at huge evangelical meetings across the country. He preached against the consumption of alcohol, gaining a reputation as a temperance leader.

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"Sunday, Billy." World Encyclopedia. 2005. Encyclopedia.com. 27 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

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"Sunday, Billy." World Encyclopedia. 2005. Retrieved May 27, 2012 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O142-SundayBilly.html

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Free newspaper and magazine articles

Stotty On Sunday: Billy Liddell tribute.(Features)
Newspaper article from: Sunday Mirror (London, England); 7/8/2001
VOICE OF THE SUNDAY PEOPLE: Billy Bandwagon's hopes are riding on voters'...
Newspaper article from: The People (London, England); 4/29/2001
Stotty on Sunday: It's Billy the Cut.(Features)
Newspaper article from: Sunday Mirror (London, England); 5/13/2001

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