William Edgar Geil: Difference between revisions
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{{More citations needed|date=September 2024}}[[File:Geil Age 37.jpg|alt=Dr. William Edgar Geil, Age 37|thumb|William Edgar Geil, Age 37]] |
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'''Dr. William Edgar Geil''' (1 October 1865, [[Doylestown, Pennsylvania]] – 11 April 1925, [[Venice]]) was an unordained [[evangelism|evangelist]], Baptist missionary, [[explorer]], [[lecturer]], [[photographer]] and [[author]] of 10 books related to his travels. He is believed to be the first person to have travelled the entire length of the 2,500 kilometer-long Ming section of the [[Great Wall of China]].<ref>{{cite journal|author=Lin, Jennifer|date=29 June 2009|title=Great Wall's forgotten man Doylestown explorer's century-old photos are back from oblivion|journal=Philadelphia Inquirer|url=http://www.doylestownhistorical.org/PhilaInquirer0709.html}}</ref> |
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'''William Edgar Geil''' (October 1, 1865, in [[Doylestown, Pennsylvania]] – April 11, 1925, in [[Venice]]) was an unordained [[evangelism|evangelist]], explorer, lecturer, photographer, and author of 10 books related to his travels. He lectured all over the world, illustrating his talks with lantern slides. He is believed to be the first American to have traveled the entire length of the 2,500-kilometer-long Ming section of the [[Great Wall of China]].<ref>{{cite journal|author=Lin, Jennifer|date=June 29, 2009|title=Great Wall's forgotten man Doylestown explorer's century-old photos are back from oblivion|journal=[[The Philadelphia Inquirer]]|url=http://www.doylestownhistorical.org/PhilaInquirer0709.html}}</ref> He visited the Five Sacred Mountains of China, about which he wrote in ''The Sacred 5 of China''.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.newreligion.eu/2013/05/chinese-religion-thinking-in-fives.html|title=Religion in China: thinking in fives; New Religion|publisher=newreligion.eu|access-date=8 August 2013}}</ref> He came to be considered an expert in Chinese culture and religion.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.newreligion.eu/2013/05/william-edgar-geil-and-religion-in-china.html |title=William Edgar Geil and religion in China; New Religion |publisher=newreligion.eu |access-date=8 August 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine|title=GEIL, William Edgar|magazine=The International Who's Who in the World|year=1912|page=499|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=I-wRAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA499}}</ref> |
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== Early years and education == |
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==Biography== |
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William Edgar Geil was born on October 1, 1865, in New Britain, Pennsylvania on his family farm. Geil moved to nearby Doylestown, Pennsylvania, where he acquired his education at the public schools, the Doylestown English and Classical Seminary, and Lafayette College, Easton, Pennsylvania, where he attended briefly but never completed graduation.<ref>{{Citation|chapter=Geil, William Edgar, (died 11 April 1925), explorer|date=December 1, 2007|publisher=Oxford University Press|doi=10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.u196819|title=Who Was Who}}</ref> At an early age Geil manifested a deep interest in religious matters and became an earnest and active member of the church. An indefatigable student, he became thoroughly versed in the Scriptures as well as in most of the important sacred literature, ancient and modern.<ref name="Davis 1905"/> |
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Geil graduated from Doylestown Seminary and [[Lafayette College]]. Travelling widely to examine the state of Christian missions, Geil became interested in travel for its own sake. He visited the Five Sacred Mountains of China, about which he wrote in ''The Sacred 5 of China''.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.newreligion.eu/2013/05/chinese-religion-thinking-in-fives.html |title=Religion in China: thinking in fives; New Religion |publisher=newreligion.eu |date= |accessdate=2013-08-08}}</ref> Geil then went on a journey along the entire length of the Great Wall of China. He came to be considered an expert in Chinese culture and religion.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.newreligion.eu/2013/05/william-edgar-geil-and-religion-in-china.html |title=William Edgar Geil and religion in China; New Religion |publisher=newreligion.eu |date= |accessdate=2013-08-08}}</ref> He went on a four-year exploration of the land of the pygmies in central Africa.<ref>{{cite magazine|title=GEIL, William Edgar|magazine=The International Who's Who in the World|year=1912|page=499|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=I-wRAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA499}}</ref> He lectured all over the world, illustrating his talks with lantern slides. He visited cannibal tribes in New Guinea.<ref>{{cite journal|date=15 Nov 1915|title=Milwaukee Visitor Tells of Customs of Man-eating New Guinea Tribes.|journal=The Milwaukee Journal|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1499&dat=19151116&id=A2oWAAAAIBAJ&sjid=_iAEAAAAIBAJ&pg=3206,5602582}}</ref> In 1912 he married Constance Emerson (1873–1959), a relative of [[Ralph Waldo Emerson]].<ref>{{cite journal|title=Exploring the first man to explore the Great Wall of China|journal=Courier Times, Doylestown|date=5 May 2013|url=http://www.phillyburbs.com/my_town/doylestown/exploring-the-first-man-to-explore-the-great-wall-of/article_f6641e95-bfaa-5b87-840f-2dcb55780cbe.html}}</ref> The couple lived in a mansion in Doylestown, until 1919 when Geil made travelled to China.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.newreligion.eu/2013/07/william-edgar-geil-and-religion-in.html |title=William Edgar Geil and Religion in China II; New Religion |publisher=newreligion.eu |date= |accessdate=2013-08-08}}</ref> After William Geil's death, Constance Emerson Geil adopted a child. The Doylestown History Society has 21 boxes of photographs and memorabilia, which were sold by the descendants of the Geil family to a bibliophile, Walter Raymond Gustafson, whose descendants donated the materials.<ref>{{cite magazine|title=A Yankee in China|date=1 August 2006|magazine=Smithsonian Magazine|url=http://www.smithsonianmag.com/people-places/yankee-in-china.html}}</ref> |
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== Career == |
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=== Orator and evangelistic work === |
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After leaving college, where he was famous as an orator, he engaged in evangelistic work, with credentials from the Doylestown church, and soon after made several trips to Europe. Geil visited Egypt, the Holy Land, and many of the ancient cities of the Mediterranean. Returning to America, Geil again engaged in evangelistic work. He then began his life work in religion with success and acclaim. He held revival meetings in various parts of New Jersey, New York and New England, and later made a tour of the south and west, addressing meetings of thousands of hearers and making thousands of converts. The ''Cincinnati Enquirer'' says of him: "His success has been more pronounced than that of any evangelist since Moody;" and the "Lowell (Mass.) Citizen" says that the meetings conducted by him were "the most remarkable series of meetings ever held in this city."<ref name="Davis 1905"/> |
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=== Isle of Patmos and Return to the Middle East === |
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In 1896 he made another extended trip abroad, revisiting the Holy Land and its ancient environs, and many of the ancient towns of Asia Minor, and the Mediterranean. Among other points he visited the Isle of [[Patmos]], and on his return wrote and published his book, "The Isle that is called [[Patmos]]," which reached a sale of many thousands{{Clarify|date=September 2024|reason="Many thousands" could theoretically be anything between 2,000 and 100,000}}, and was rewritten, enlarged and republished in 1904, after his second visit to the island, in that year. The alarming illness of his mother, to whose early training he says he owes most of his success, called him home in the early part of 1897, and soon after closing the eyes of his beloved parent in her last sleep, on May 2, 1897, he returned to Europe for a brief sojourn and then again took up his work in his native country with increased success.<ref name="Davis 1905"/> |
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== The Great World Wide Tour == |
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=== Purpose === |
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On April 29, 1901, William Edgar Geil left on four-year trip around the world he self dubbed "The Great World Wide Tour". Geil wanted the United States to observe the state and conditions of missionaries around the world. The Great World Wide Tour's purpose was as best described by his pastor, as an "... independent observation of the whole missionary field, in its actual condition, operations, modes of organization, instruction and efforts, its different peculiarities, its needs, its difficulties, its relation to existing heathen religion, to international and denominational policies of political events; and what encouragement or discouragement may exist in the great work of extending the gospel to the world, and especially to the neglected parts of heathendom. A special object is to visit schools, colleges and institutions of sacred learning in connection with missionary operations and report the results to the whole Christian church."<ref name="Davis 1905">{{Cite book|title=History of Bucks County, Pennsylvania|last=Davis|first=William W. H., A.M|publisher=The Lewis Publishing Company|year=1905|location=New York-Chicago|pages=152–154|url=http://pagenweb.org/~bucks/BIOS_DAVIS/williamegeil.html}} {{PD-notice}}</ref> During this four-year trip Geil would use photography, notes, and maps to interact with the various peoples and cultures of the world. His three books ''Ocean and Isle'' (1902), ''Yankee on the Yangtze'' (1904), and ''A Yankee in Pigmy land'' ( 1905) would capture his stories and experiences of his travels during the Great World Wide Tour. |
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=== Ocean and Isle (1901–02) === |
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Leaving [[Philadelphia]] on April 29, 1901, he crossed the continent to California, and, sailing from the Golden Gate for the Sandwich and [[South Sea Islands]], visiting the [[Hawaiian Islands|Hawaii]], [[Samoan Islands|Samoa]], [[Fiji]], and many other regions in Oceania, and noting their condition and work, as well as the condition and characteristics of their [[Indigenous peoples|indigenous populations]]. Geil also focused on the relations between governmental and commercial matters to the propagation of the [[New Testament|Gospel of Christ]]. He proceeded thence to [[New Zealand]], and Australia, reaching Sydney in November 1901, and in [[Melbourne]] the following April and May, he organized and participated in the greatest religious revival the continent has ever known, speaking daily to audiences of 3,000 at noon and 10,000 at night during "The Great Melbourne Mission".<ref name="Davis 1905"/> The first part of Geil's Great World Wide Tour is described in his book ''Ocean and Isle''. |
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=== Yankee on the Yangtze ( Mid 1902 – early 1903) === |
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From Australia he proceeded to [[New Guinea]], the Philippines and Japan in late 1901.<ref>{{cite journal|date=November 15, 1915|title=Milwaukee Visitor Tells of Customs of Man-eating New Guinea Tribes.|journal=The Milwaukee Journal|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1499&dat=19151116&id=A2oWAAAAIBAJ&sjid=_iAEAAAAIBAJ&pg=3206,5602582}}</ref> Throughout 1902, Geil made an extensive trip through China, going up the [[Yangtze|Yangtze river]] in a native gunboat, and was carried over the mountains of western China in a bamboo mountain chair. Geil also very visited [[Manchuria]], [[Korea]] and Siberia, and later traveled extensively in [[Myanmar|Burma]].<ref name="Davis 1905"/> While on the [[Yangtze|Yangtze river]], he visited English, American, Australian, and Belgian missionaries in China and also became fascinated with Chinese culture as a whole. On the Chinese people, Geil stated that "The better qualities of the Chinese are shown by their ability to do good. There were great charities and benevolent institutions in China before Columbus discovered America". The second part of Geil's Great World Wide Tour and his first journey through China along the Yangtze is described in ''Yankee on the Yangtze''. |
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[[File:A Yankee on the Yangtze - being a narrative of a journey from Shanghai through the central kingdom to Burma (1904) (14784619252).jpg|thumb|Map of Dr. Geil's journey along the Yangtze River (1902)]] |
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=== Yankee in pigmy land ( Late 1903) === |
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The last part of Geil's Great World Wide Tour was across Africa from Mombasa on the eastern coast to the Pigmy Forest, and thence down the Congo river to the western coast.<ref name="Davis 1905"/> The journey across equatorial Africa was around 2,500 miles and lasted from June to January 1904. The conclusion of his Great World Wide Tour and description of Geil's time in equatorial Africa can be found in ''Yankee in pigmy land''. |
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== Return Trips To China == |
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[[File:罗文峪.png|thumb|Photo of the Great Wall taken by Dr. Geil]] |
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<gallery> |
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File:A Yankee on the Yangtze - being a narrative of a journey from Shanghai through the central kingdom to Burma (1904) (14781875481).jpg |
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File:A Yankee on the Yangtze - being a narrative of a journey from Shanghai through the central kingdom to Burma (1904) (14598409508).jpg |
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File:A Yankee on the Yangtze - being a narrative of a journey from Shanghai through the central kingdom to Burma (1904) (14804848603).jpg |
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File:A Yankee on the Yangtze - being a narrative of a journey from Shanghai through the central kingdom to Burma (1904) (14781879311).jpg |
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File:A Yankee on the Yangtze - being a narrative of a journey from Shanghai through the central kingdom to Burma (1904) (14762004656).jpg |
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</gallery> |
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* Great Wall of China ( 1908) |
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* Eighteen Capitals of China (1909–1910) |
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* Sacred 5 of China (1919) |
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== Marriage and "The Barrens" == |
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On March 2, 1912, Geil purchased a 17-acre piece of land south of Doylestown along Easton road (present-day Route 611). A week later, on March 8, he retained well known [[Doylestown, Pennsylvania|Doylestown]] architect Oscar Martin to design a 30-room concrete mansion. On April 9, [[Allentown, Pennsylvania|Allentown]], Pennsylvania contractor Jacob Nagel was awarded the building contract and began construction. The home became known as "The Barrens". |
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Around that same time, during a lecture in [[Titusville, Pennsylvania|Titusville]], Pennsylvania Geil met Lucy Constance Emerson. Constance Emerson was the daughter of Edward Octavius and Lucy Emerson, and was a relative of a relative of [[Ralph Waldo Emerson]].<ref>{{cite journal|title=Exploring the first man to explore the Great Wall of China|journal=Courier Times, Doylestown|date=May 5, 2013|url=http://www.phillyburbs.com/my_town/doylestown/exploring-the-first-man-to-explore-the-great-wall-of/article_f6641e95-bfaa-5b87-840f-2dcb55780cbe.html}}</ref> Constance fascinated by his travels and humor fell in love, and in June 1912 the couple were wed at the First Baptist Church of [[Titusville, Pennsylvania|Titusville]]. |
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The couple lived in "the Barrens", until 1919 when the Geils traveled to China.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.newreligion.eu/2013/07/william-edgar-geil-and-religion-in.html |title=William Edgar Geil and Religion in China II; New Religion |publisher=newreligion.eu |access-date=8 August 2013}}</ref> |
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== Death and legacy == |
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In the years following his return from China and visit to the Sacred Five Mountains in China. Geil spent his time lecturing, writing, teaching Sunday School, and life at the Barrens with Constance, entertaining colleagues and guests from [[Bucks County, Pennsylvania|Bucks County]] and all over the world. In November 1924, William and Constance sailed from New York to Palestine to visit the Holy Land. It was Geil's last journey. |
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[[File:Geil Gravesite.jpg|alt=Dr. Geil's Grave, at Doylestown Cemetery in Doylestown, Pa.|thumb|Dr. Geil's Grave, at Doylestown Cemetery in Doylestown, Pa.]] |
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On April 11, 1925, at age 60, Dr. William Edgar Geil died in Venice, Italy on his way home, from influenza. |
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Constance Geil resided at the Barrens until her death in 1959, and preserved her husband's library, personal papers, and artifacts. In 1959, following her death, Walter Gustafson of [[Bucks County, Pennsylvania|Bucks County]] purchased the Geil library at public auction held at the Barrens. He preserved Geil's personal library until his death 2005. In 2008, his family donated the collection to the Doylestown Historical Society, where they are permanently housed and preserved today.<ref>{{cite magazine|title=A Yankee in China|date=August 1, 2006|magazine=Smithsonian Magazine|url=http://www.smithsonianmag.com/people-places/yankee-in-china.html}}</ref> |
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==Works== |
==Works== |
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*{{cite book|title=Pocket sword, a pocketbook of Scripture reading for all people|year=1891}} |
*{{cite book|title=Pocket sword, a pocketbook of Scripture reading for all people|year=1891}} |
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*{{cite book|title=Laodicea; or The great sermon of the stones|year=1897}} |
*{{cite book|title=Laodicea; or The great sermon of the stones|year=1897}} |
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*{{cite book|title=The isle that is called Patmos|year=1897|location=Philadelphia|publisher=A. J. Rowland}} |
*{{cite book|title=The isle that is called Patmos|url=https://archive.org/details/islethatiscalle00geilgoog|year=1897|location=Philadelphia|publisher=A. J. Rowland}} |
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*{{cite book|title=Ocean and isle|year=1902}} |
*{{cite book|title=Ocean and isle|year=1902}} |
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*{{cite book|title=A Yankee on the Yangtze|year=1904|location=NY|publisher=A. C. Armstrong & Son}} |
*{{cite book|title=A Yankee on the Yangtze|url=https://archive.org/details/cu31924023237393|year=1904|location=NY|publisher=A. C. Armstrong & Son}} |
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*{{cite book|title=The automatic calf: the Commandments up-to-date|year=1905|location=London|publisher=S. W. Partridge}} |
*{{cite book|title=The automatic calf: the Commandments up-to-date|year=1905|location=London|publisher=S. W. Partridge}} |
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*{{cite book|title=A Yankee in pigmy land|year=1905|location=London|publisher=Hodder & Stoughton}} |
*{{cite book|title=A Yankee in pigmy land|url=https://archive.org/details/yankeeinpigmylan00geiliala|year=1905|location=London|publisher=Hodder & Stoughton}} |
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*{{cite book|title=Man of Galilee|year=1906|location=NY|publisher=YMCA}} |
*{{cite book|title=Man of Galilee|year=1906|location=NY|publisher=YMCA}} |
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*{{cite book|title=The Great Wall of China|year=1909|location=NY|publisher=Sturgis & Walton}} |
*{{cite book|title=The Great Wall of China|url=https://archive.org/details/greatwallchina00geilgoog|year=1909|location=NY|publisher=Sturgis & Walton}} |
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*{{cite book|url=https:// |
*{{cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/eighteencapitals00geil|title=Eighteen capitals of China|year=1911|location=Philadelphia|publisher=Lippincott}} |
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*{{cite book|title=Adventures in the African jungle hunting pigmies|year=1917|location=Garden City, NY|publisher=Doubleday, Page & Co}}<ref>{{cite book|title=Book Review Digest|volume= |
*{{cite book|title=Adventures in the African jungle hunting pigmies|year=1917|location=Garden City, NY|publisher=Doubleday, Page & Co}}<ref>{{cite book|title=Book Review Digest|volume=13|chapter=GEIL, WILLIAM EDGAR. Adventures in the African jungle hunting pigmies|year=1918|page=212|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GlQyAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA212}}</ref> |
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*{{cite book|title=The sacred five of China|year=1926|location=London|publisher=J. Murray}}<ref>{{cite journal|journal=Nature|volume=118|page=223|date= |
*{{cite book|title=The sacred five of China|year=1926|location=London|publisher=J. Murray}}<ref>{{cite journal|journal=Nature|volume=118|issue=2963|page=223|date=August 14, 1926|doi=10.1038/118223a0|title=Book Review: The Sacred 5 of China is the 5th Book on China|doi-access=free}}</ref> |
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==References== |
==References== |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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*{{Commons category-inline}} |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Geil, William Edgar}} |
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[[Category:1865 births]] |
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[[Category:American travel writers]] |
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[[Category:American male writers]] |
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[[Category:Lafayette College alumni]] |
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[[Category:American explorers of Africa]] |
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[[Category:People from Doylestown, Pennsylvania]] |
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[[Category:Explorers of China]] |
Latest revision as of 13:14, 14 November 2024
This article needs additional citations for verification. (September 2024) |
William Edgar Geil (October 1, 1865, in Doylestown, Pennsylvania – April 11, 1925, in Venice) was an unordained evangelist, explorer, lecturer, photographer, and author of 10 books related to his travels. He lectured all over the world, illustrating his talks with lantern slides. He is believed to be the first American to have traveled the entire length of the 2,500-kilometer-long Ming section of the Great Wall of China.[1] He visited the Five Sacred Mountains of China, about which he wrote in The Sacred 5 of China.[2] He came to be considered an expert in Chinese culture and religion.[3][4]
Early years and education
[edit]William Edgar Geil was born on October 1, 1865, in New Britain, Pennsylvania on his family farm. Geil moved to nearby Doylestown, Pennsylvania, where he acquired his education at the public schools, the Doylestown English and Classical Seminary, and Lafayette College, Easton, Pennsylvania, where he attended briefly but never completed graduation.[5] At an early age Geil manifested a deep interest in religious matters and became an earnest and active member of the church. An indefatigable student, he became thoroughly versed in the Scriptures as well as in most of the important sacred literature, ancient and modern.[6]
Career
[edit]Orator and evangelistic work
[edit]After leaving college, where he was famous as an orator, he engaged in evangelistic work, with credentials from the Doylestown church, and soon after made several trips to Europe. Geil visited Egypt, the Holy Land, and many of the ancient cities of the Mediterranean. Returning to America, Geil again engaged in evangelistic work. He then began his life work in religion with success and acclaim. He held revival meetings in various parts of New Jersey, New York and New England, and later made a tour of the south and west, addressing meetings of thousands of hearers and making thousands of converts. The Cincinnati Enquirer says of him: "His success has been more pronounced than that of any evangelist since Moody;" and the "Lowell (Mass.) Citizen" says that the meetings conducted by him were "the most remarkable series of meetings ever held in this city."[6]
Isle of Patmos and Return to the Middle East
[edit]In 1896 he made another extended trip abroad, revisiting the Holy Land and its ancient environs, and many of the ancient towns of Asia Minor, and the Mediterranean. Among other points he visited the Isle of Patmos, and on his return wrote and published his book, "The Isle that is called Patmos," which reached a sale of many thousands[clarification needed], and was rewritten, enlarged and republished in 1904, after his second visit to the island, in that year. The alarming illness of his mother, to whose early training he says he owes most of his success, called him home in the early part of 1897, and soon after closing the eyes of his beloved parent in her last sleep, on May 2, 1897, he returned to Europe for a brief sojourn and then again took up his work in his native country with increased success.[6]
The Great World Wide Tour
[edit]Purpose
[edit]On April 29, 1901, William Edgar Geil left on four-year trip around the world he self dubbed "The Great World Wide Tour". Geil wanted the United States to observe the state and conditions of missionaries around the world. The Great World Wide Tour's purpose was as best described by his pastor, as an "... independent observation of the whole missionary field, in its actual condition, operations, modes of organization, instruction and efforts, its different peculiarities, its needs, its difficulties, its relation to existing heathen religion, to international and denominational policies of political events; and what encouragement or discouragement may exist in the great work of extending the gospel to the world, and especially to the neglected parts of heathendom. A special object is to visit schools, colleges and institutions of sacred learning in connection with missionary operations and report the results to the whole Christian church."[6] During this four-year trip Geil would use photography, notes, and maps to interact with the various peoples and cultures of the world. His three books Ocean and Isle (1902), Yankee on the Yangtze (1904), and A Yankee in Pigmy land ( 1905) would capture his stories and experiences of his travels during the Great World Wide Tour.
Ocean and Isle (1901–02)
[edit]Leaving Philadelphia on April 29, 1901, he crossed the continent to California, and, sailing from the Golden Gate for the Sandwich and South Sea Islands, visiting the Hawaii, Samoa, Fiji, and many other regions in Oceania, and noting their condition and work, as well as the condition and characteristics of their indigenous populations. Geil also focused on the relations between governmental and commercial matters to the propagation of the Gospel of Christ. He proceeded thence to New Zealand, and Australia, reaching Sydney in November 1901, and in Melbourne the following April and May, he organized and participated in the greatest religious revival the continent has ever known, speaking daily to audiences of 3,000 at noon and 10,000 at night during "The Great Melbourne Mission".[6] The first part of Geil's Great World Wide Tour is described in his book Ocean and Isle.
Yankee on the Yangtze ( Mid 1902 – early 1903)
[edit]From Australia he proceeded to New Guinea, the Philippines and Japan in late 1901.[7] Throughout 1902, Geil made an extensive trip through China, going up the Yangtze river in a native gunboat, and was carried over the mountains of western China in a bamboo mountain chair. Geil also very visited Manchuria, Korea and Siberia, and later traveled extensively in Burma.[6] While on the Yangtze river, he visited English, American, Australian, and Belgian missionaries in China and also became fascinated with Chinese culture as a whole. On the Chinese people, Geil stated that "The better qualities of the Chinese are shown by their ability to do good. There were great charities and benevolent institutions in China before Columbus discovered America". The second part of Geil's Great World Wide Tour and his first journey through China along the Yangtze is described in Yankee on the Yangtze.
Yankee in pigmy land ( Late 1903)
[edit]The last part of Geil's Great World Wide Tour was across Africa from Mombasa on the eastern coast to the Pigmy Forest, and thence down the Congo river to the western coast.[6] The journey across equatorial Africa was around 2,500 miles and lasted from June to January 1904. The conclusion of his Great World Wide Tour and description of Geil's time in equatorial Africa can be found in Yankee in pigmy land.
Return Trips To China
[edit]- Great Wall of China ( 1908)
- Eighteen Capitals of China (1909–1910)
- Sacred 5 of China (1919)
Marriage and "The Barrens"
[edit]On March 2, 1912, Geil purchased a 17-acre piece of land south of Doylestown along Easton road (present-day Route 611). A week later, on March 8, he retained well known Doylestown architect Oscar Martin to design a 30-room concrete mansion. On April 9, Allentown, Pennsylvania contractor Jacob Nagel was awarded the building contract and began construction. The home became known as "The Barrens".
Around that same time, during a lecture in Titusville, Pennsylvania Geil met Lucy Constance Emerson. Constance Emerson was the daughter of Edward Octavius and Lucy Emerson, and was a relative of a relative of Ralph Waldo Emerson.[8] Constance fascinated by his travels and humor fell in love, and in June 1912 the couple were wed at the First Baptist Church of Titusville.
The couple lived in "the Barrens", until 1919 when the Geils traveled to China.[9]
Death and legacy
[edit]In the years following his return from China and visit to the Sacred Five Mountains in China. Geil spent his time lecturing, writing, teaching Sunday School, and life at the Barrens with Constance, entertaining colleagues and guests from Bucks County and all over the world. In November 1924, William and Constance sailed from New York to Palestine to visit the Holy Land. It was Geil's last journey.
On April 11, 1925, at age 60, Dr. William Edgar Geil died in Venice, Italy on his way home, from influenza.
Constance Geil resided at the Barrens until her death in 1959, and preserved her husband's library, personal papers, and artifacts. In 1959, following her death, Walter Gustafson of Bucks County purchased the Geil library at public auction held at the Barrens. He preserved Geil's personal library until his death 2005. In 2008, his family donated the collection to the Doylestown Historical Society, where they are permanently housed and preserved today.[10]
Works
[edit]- Pocket sword, a pocketbook of Scripture reading for all people. 1891.
- Laodicea; or The great sermon of the stones. 1897.
- The isle that is called Patmos. Philadelphia: A. J. Rowland. 1897.
- Ocean and isle. 1902.
- A Yankee on the Yangtze. NY: A. C. Armstrong & Son. 1904.
- The automatic calf: the Commandments up-to-date. London: S. W. Partridge. 1905.
- A Yankee in pigmy land. London: Hodder & Stoughton. 1905.
- Man of Galilee. NY: YMCA. 1906.
- The Great Wall of China. NY: Sturgis & Walton. 1909.
- Eighteen capitals of China. Philadelphia: Lippincott. 1911.
- Adventures in the African jungle hunting pigmies. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, Page & Co. 1917.[11]
- The sacred five of China. London: J. Murray. 1926.[12]
References
[edit]- ^ Lin, Jennifer (June 29, 2009). "Great Wall's forgotten man Doylestown explorer's century-old photos are back from oblivion". The Philadelphia Inquirer.
- ^ "Religion in China: thinking in fives; New Religion". newreligion.eu. Retrieved August 8, 2013.
- ^ "William Edgar Geil and religion in China; New Religion". newreligion.eu. Retrieved August 8, 2013.
- ^ "GEIL, William Edgar". The International Who's Who in the World. 1912. p. 499.
- ^ "Geil, William Edgar, (died 11 April 1925), explorer", Who Was Who, Oxford University Press, December 1, 2007, doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.u196819
- ^ a b c d e f g Davis, William W. H., A.M (1905). History of Bucks County, Pennsylvania. New York-Chicago: The Lewis Publishing Company. pp. 152–154.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain. - ^ "Milwaukee Visitor Tells of Customs of Man-eating New Guinea Tribes". The Milwaukee Journal. November 15, 1915.
- ^ "Exploring the first man to explore the Great Wall of China". Courier Times, Doylestown. May 5, 2013.
- ^ "William Edgar Geil and Religion in China II; New Religion". newreligion.eu. Retrieved August 8, 2013.
- ^ "A Yankee in China". Smithsonian Magazine. August 1, 2006.
- ^ "GEIL, WILLIAM EDGAR. Adventures in the African jungle hunting pigmies". Book Review Digest. Vol. 13. 1918. p. 212.
- ^ "Book Review: The Sacred 5 of China is the 5th Book on China". Nature. 118 (2963): 223. August 14, 1926. doi:10.1038/118223a0.
External links
[edit]- Media related to William Edgar Geil at Wikimedia Commons