|
Date or
Time
Frame
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Events in the Life of D.
S. Warner are in black print.
Interesting
events in history given to provide a perspective in time are highlighted
in red print. |
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June 25, 1842 |
Daniel Sidney Warner born in Ohio to David and Leah Warner, the 5th of
6 children. |
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August 26, 1843 |
Charles Thurber patented the typewriter. |
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Circa 1843 |
The Warner family moved to New Washington, Ohio where D. S. Warner
spent his childhood. His father, David Warner, was a tavern keeper. |
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May 13, 1846 |
President Polk declared war on Mexico. |
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August 10, 1846 |
The Smithsonian Institution was chartered by Congress. |
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January 24, 1848 |
Gold was discovered at Sutter’s Mill and started the California Gold
Rush. |
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February 26, 1848 |
Marx and Engels published "The Communist Manifesto." |
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August 12, 1851 |
Isaac Singer patented the sewing machine. |
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November 24, 1859 |
Charles Darwin published On the Origin of Speciies. |
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February 8, 1861 |
The Confederate States of America was founded by seven southern states. |
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February 25, 1862 |
Paper currency ("Greenbacks") was introduced in the United
States by President Lincoln. |
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May 19, 1862 |
The Homestead Act became law and provided cheap land for settlement in
the West. |
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Circa 1863 |
The Warner family moved to Montpelier, Ohio. |
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Circa 1863 - 1864 |
D. S. Warner served as a private in Company C, 195th Regiment, Ohio
Infantry during the Civil War. He volunteered to serve in the place of his
brother, Joseph Warner, who had been drafted. |
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November 19, 1863 |
President Lincoln delivered the "Gettysburg Address." |
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September 27, 1864 |
Jesse James’ gang attacked a train by surprise and killed 150 people. |
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February 1865 |
D. S. Warner become a Christian at the age of 23. |
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April 14, 1865 |
President Lincoln was shot in Ford’s Theater by John Wilkes Booth. He
died the next day. |
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September 1865
Through
September 1866 |
D. S. Warner attended Oberlin College, taking the English Preparatory
Course. He taught school between terms to support himself. |
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March 30, 1867 |
The United States bought Alaska from Russia for $7.2 million. |
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Easter 1867 |
D. S. Warner preached his first sermon during a Methodist Episcopal
protracted meeting. His text was Acts 3:18. |
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September 5, 1867 |
D. S. Warner married Tamzen Ann Kerr. |
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September 28, 1867 |
Toronto became the capital of Ontario, Canada. |
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October 14,1867 |
The last Shogun resigned in Japan. |
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October 1867 |
D. S. Warner was licensed to preach by the West Ohio Eldership of the
Church of God (Winebrennerian). |
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November 3, 1868 |
John W. Menard of Louisiana became the first black person elected to
Congress. |
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October 8, 1871 |
The Great Chicago Fire killed 200 people and destroyed over four mile
of Chicago buildings. |
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November 10, 1871 |
Henry Stanley found Doctor Livingston in Central Africa. |
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March 1, 1872 |
Yellowstone became the world’s first national park. |
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May 26, 1872 |
Tamzen Warner died shortly after the birth of their still-born
children. |
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May 23, 1873 |
D. S. Warner was appointed to the Seward Mission, Nebraska. There were
37 states in the Union at this time. (Nebraska
was the 37th state, having entered the Union on March 1, 1867). |
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July 6, 1873 |
D. S. Warner preached his first sermon in Nebraska at the Anderson
School House near Seward. His text was Isaiah 62:6. |
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June 4, 1874 |
D. S. Warner married Sarah Keller of Upper Sandusky, Ohio. |
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Between June and October 1875 |
D. S. Warner was recalled from Nebraska to Ohio. He served as minister
for the Ashland Circuit out of Haysville, Ohio. |
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March 10, 1876 |
The first telephone call was made. Alexander Graham Bell called to
Thomas Watson, "Watson, come here, I want you." |
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June 25, 1876 |
The battle of the Little Bighorn was fought in which LTC George Custer
and 200 men of the 7th Cavalry perished. |
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During 1877 |
D. S. Warner attended Vermillion College, Hayesville, Ohio, while
serving on the Ashland Circuit. |
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July 6, 1877 |
D. S. Warner received the experience of Entire Sanctification. |
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September 15, 1877 |
The first charges for teaching holiness were raised against Brother
Warner by the Eldership (Winebrennarian Church of God). |
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October 1, 1877 |
The charges raised against Brother Warner were sustained after a church
trial. His license to preach was renewed on the condition that he would
not bring holiness workers in to hold meetings in the Churches of God (Winebrennarian)
without their consent. |
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October 1, 1877 |
D. S. Warner was appointed to the Stark Circuit out of Canton, Ohio. |
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November 23, 1877 |
Brother Warner resigned the Stark Circuit. |
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December 8, 1877 |
Brother Warner consecrated to God to be a holiness evangelist. |
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December 13, 1877 |
Brother Warner’s diary entry recorded his Covenant with God. (See Birth
of a Reformation, pages 159 through 161.) |
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January 30, 1878 |
D. S. Warner was expelled from the West Ohio Eldership of the Church of
God (Winebrennarian) for teaching entire sanctification. |
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January 31, 1878 |
Brother Warner took a spiritual stand out of sectarianism. "On the
31st of last January the Lord showed me that holiness could never prosper
upon sectarian soil encumbered by human creeds and party names, and he
gave me a new commission to join holiness and all truth together and build
up the apostolic church of the living God. Praise His name! I will obey
him." |
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January 1878 |
The first issue of the "Herald of Gospel Freedom" was
published from Wolcottville, Indiana. This paper was sponsored by the
Northern Indiana Eldership of the Church of God (Winebrennarian). |
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October 5, 1878 |
D. S. Warner was voted into the Northern Indiana Eldership at its 3rd
annual session. He was also elected Associate Editor of the "Herald
of Gospel Freedom." |
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November 26, 1878 |
Brother and Sister Warner moved to Rome City, Indiana. |
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February 22, 1879 |
F. W. Woolworth opened his first five-and-dime store in Utica, New
York. |
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March 11, 1879 |
Brother Warner became half owner and joint editor along with I. W.
Lowman of the ‘Herald of Gospel Freedom." |
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January 1880 |
Brother Warner was given complete charge of the "Herald of Gospel
Freedom." |
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January 27, 1880 |
Thomas Edison patented the electric incandescent lamp. |
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During 1880 |
D. S. Warner published his work Bible Proofs of the Second Work of
Grace. In the minds of early Church of God leaders, this action
signified the beginning of the Church of God Reformation movement. |
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December 23, 1880 |
The "Herald of Gospel Freedom" was consolidated with
"The Pilgrim" (published in Indianapolis, Indiana by G. Haines)
and became "The Gospel Trumpet." |
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February 1881 |
Brother and Sister Warner moved to Indianapolis, Indiana. |
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March 18, 1881 |
Barnum and Bailey’s Greatest Show on Earth opened. |
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April 22, 1881 |
Brother Warner came out of all holiness associations. "We were
positively denied membership [in any holiness association] on the
ground of not adhering to any sect. And now we wish to announce to all
that we wish to cooperate with all Christians, as such, in saving souls—but
forever withdraw from all organisms that uphold and endorse sects and
denominations in the body of Christ." |
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May 21, 1881 |
The American Red Cross was founded by Clara Barton. |
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June 1881 |
G. Haines dissolves partnership with Warner and starts an
"opposition" holiness paper. J. C. Fisher joins Brother Warner
as partner in "The Gospel Trumpet." |
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June 24, 1881 |
Sidney Warner, the only surviving child of D. S. Warner, was born. |
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October 1881 |
D. S. Warner separated from the Northern Indiana Eldership of the
Church of God (Winebrennarian) at its Eldership meeting at Beaver Dam,
Indians. Five other saints took a stand with Brother Warner and thus
formed the first congregation in this Reformation. |
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October 1881 |
J. C. and Allie R. Fisher, along with about eighteen other saints,
separated from the Northern Michigan Eldership of the Church of God (Winebrennarian)
at Carson City, Michigan and thus formed the second congregation in this
Reformation. |
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August 20, 1880 |
Tchaikovsky’s "1812 Overture" opened in Moscow. |
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Fall, 1882 |
"The Gospel Trumpet" was moved to Cardington, Ohio. |
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May 24, 1883 |
The Brooklyn Bridge opened. |
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Between
January 1884 and
April 1884 |
After accepting a doctrine of marital celibacy and super-holiness taught
by R. S. Stockwell, Sarah Warner, wife of D. S. Warner, left Brother
Warner and denounced him, "The Gospel Trumpet" and "come-outsim."
She returned to her parents’ home in Upper Sandusky, Ohio. |
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April 1884 |
"The Gospel Trumpet" was moved to Williamston, Michigan. |
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May 31. 1884 |
Kellogg’s Corn Flakes was patented. |
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Fall 1884
Through
Summer 1887 |
Brother Warner conducted revival tours and preached at camp meetings in
the Midwestern United States. Brother Warner formed his evangelistic
company in the summer of 1885. The members of this company included Nannie
Kiger of Payne, Ohio; Francis Miller or Battlecreek, Michigan; Sarah Smith
of Jerry City, Ohio; and John U. Bryant and D. Leiniger of Beaver Dam,
Indiana. Barney E. Warren joined the company in 1886. |
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March 26, 1885 |
The Salvation Army was organized. |
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January 29, 1886 |
The first successful gasoline-driven car was patented by Karl Benz in
Germany. |
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June 1886 |
"The Gospel Trumpet" was moved to Grand Junction, Michigan. |
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Early in 1887 |
J. C. Fisher leaves "The Gospel Trumpet" and the church of
God over the issue of divorce and remarriage. He had fallen in love with a
younger woman and divorced his wife to marry the younger woman. |
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June 21, 1887 |
E. E. Burym purchased Fisher’s share of "The Gospel
Trumpet" and became its publisher and business manager. |
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June 1887 to
April 1888 |
Brother Warner conducted an evangelistic tour through Indiana,
Illinois, Missouri, Kansas, and Colorado. |
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Summer 1888 |
Brother Warner preached at camp meetings in Missouri, Indiana, Ohio,
and Pennsylvania. |
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September 4, 1888 |
George Eastman patented the first roll-film camera and registered the
name "Kodak." |
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October 9, 1888 |
The Washington Monument in Washington, D. C., opened to the public. |
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Winter of
1888 - 1889 |
Brother Warner conducted and evangelistic tour to Ontario, Canada. |
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March 31, 1889 |
The Eiffel Tower in Paris opened to commemorate the French Revolution. |
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During 1890 |
Sarah Warner finally divorced D. S. Warner and remarried. She turned
over custody of Sidney Warner, their only surviving child, to Brother
Warner. |
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August to
December 1889 |
Brother Warner conducted an evangelistic tour as far west as Nebraska. |
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September 25, 1890 |
Congress established Yosemite National Park in California. |
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Winter 1890 |
Brother Warner conducted a southern evangelistic tour into Mississippi
and Alabama. Brother Warner’s evangelistic company dissolved after this
tour. |
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Spring 1890 |
Brother Warner conducted an evangelistic tour as far west as Colorado. |
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November 29, 1890 |
The first Army-Navy football game was held at West Point. Score: Navy
24, Army 0. |
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December 29, 1890 |
The Battle of Wounded Knee, South Dakota, the last major conflict
between the Indians and the United States. |
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During 1891 |
Brother Warner conducted evangelistic tours in Pennsylvania and
Ontario, Canada. |
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August 1892 to
February 1893 |
Brother Warner conducted and evangelistic tour as far as California. |
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December 192 1892 |
The premier of Tchaikovsky's "Nutcracker Suite." |
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May 24, 1893 |
Sarah Warner died of typhoid fever in Cincinnati, Ohio. |
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August 12, 1893 |
D. S. Warner married Francis Miller. |
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January through
February 1894 |
Brother Warner helped with a Floating Bethel evangelistic tour on the
Ohio River. |
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June 30, 1894 |
The Tower Bridge in London opened. |
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December 1, 1895 |
Brother Warner preached his last sermon on Sunday morning at the Gospel
Trumpet Office in Grand Junction, Michigan. The topic of his sermon was
Christian growth. |
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December 12, 1895 |
Brother Warner passed into the eternal presence of God. |
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December 28, 1895 |
The world’s first movie theater opened in Paris, France. |