Ira David Sankey
1840-1908
American Gospel singer & composer
Quotes:
Ira Sankey on
his initial reaction to Moody's invitation to join him in
evangelistic work:
"I
felt not the slightest inclination at the time that the
answer would be 'yes,' for it was no small matter to
resign a well-paying job, break up my home and move to a
strange city."
Biography
Ira Sankey
was the pioneer music director of the masses in American
evangelism. The Sweet Singer of Methodism brought to the
Moody revivals zest and inspiration that prepared hearts for
the messages of the famed evangelist. He set the pattern for
those who later followed in his footsteps--Charles
Alexander, Homer Rodeheaver, and Cliff Barrows. More than
any other man, he was the one who ushered in the gospel song
era. Sankey was a great leader of congregations and choirs.
He was a soloist of great ability, singing special music
wherever he went. He also helped in the inquiry room.
Sankey seldom
wrote poetry as did Fanny Crosby and P.P. Bliss. However, he
did compose music and provide the tunes for some of the
great hymns written during those days. Sankey can be
credited with providing the melody for the following: A
Shelter in the Time of Storm, Faith Is the Victory, Grace
'Tis a Charming Sound, Hiding in Thee, I Am Praying for You,
The Ninety and Nine, There'll Be No Dark Valley, Trusting
Jesus, Under His Wings, and When the Mists Have Rolled Away.
Ira David
Sankey was born into the home of pious Methodists, David and
Mary Sankey. One of the chief pleasures of his boyhood was
to join the family circle around the great log fireplace.
Long winter evenings were spent singing the old hymns of the
church. He learned to read music this way and by the age of
eight, he could sing many famous hymn tunes correctly.
Spiritual interests were kindled by a Mr. Fraser, who loved
children. Along with his own sons, he took Sankey to a
Sunday School held in an old schoolhouse. Sankey had
educational opportunities that many were denied. He became a
Christian in 1856 at the age of 16, while attending revival
meetings at a church known as the King's Chapel, located
about three miles from his home. A year later the family
moved to Newcastle where he became a member of the Methodist
Episcopal Church. His talents were soon recognized and he
was elected superintendent of the Sunday School, director of
the choir, and class leader. His father was the president of
the bank which also provided young Sankey with a job.
He became
active in the fight to bring musical instruments into church
services and he was responsible for the first organ to be
installed in his own church. Here he gained invaluable
experience and his voice began to attain that rich, resonant
quality which was to make him world famous later on.
When
President Lincoln called for men to help the government in
1860, Sankey was one of the first young men to enroll as a
soldier. His company was sent to Maryland. In the army, his
love of singing endeared him to his companions and he often
led the singing for religious services held in the camp. He
organized a male chorus in the company and assisted the
chaplain with services. President Lincoln appointed his
father as a Collector of Internal Revenue and after his term
of service and the Civil War was over, Sankey returned to
Newcastle to assist his father and enter governmental
service. He remained with the Internal Revenue Department
for several years.
At the age of
23, on September 9, 1863, he married Fanny V. Edwards, who
was a member of his choir and a teacher in his Sunday
School. The Sankeys had three sons, one of whom was born in
Scotland.
In 1867, a
branch of the Y.M.C.A. was organized at Newcastle and he
became its secretary and, later, president. Many years
later, he had the pleasure of presenting a Y.M.C.A. building
to his city. The building, including a gymnasium and
library, cost more than $40,000. The funds were realized
from the sale of his gospel hymns.
Sankey's fame
as a singer spread throughout western Pennsylvania and
eastern Ohio. He received invitation after invitation to
sing for conventions, conferences, and political gatherings.
He attended
so many musical conventions, and spent so much of his time
in religious work, that his father once said, "I'm afraid
Ira will never amount to anything. All he does is run around
the country with a hymn-book under his arm!"
To which his
mother replied, "Well, I'd rather see him with a
hymn-book under his arm, than with a whiskey bottle in his
pocket!"
Sankey had no
desire to make music a profession. It was never his custom
to receive any remuneration for his ser- vices. In his work
with the Y.M.C.A., he found an ever widening field of
usefulness. In June of 1870, he was appointed a delegate to
the International Convention in Indianapolis. For several
years he had read in the religious press of the work of
Dwight L. Moody. In connection with the convention, it
was announced that Moody was to speak at an early morning
prayer meeting in a Baptist church on a Sunday morning.
Sankey was most anxious to hear and meet the man. Having
arrived a little late at the meeting, he sat near the door
with a Presbyterian minister who urged Sankey to start a
song. At the right moment, as Moody requested a song, Sankey
started to sing There Is a Fountain Filled with Blood. The
congregation joined in heartily and the meeting took on a
new impetus. At the close of the service, he was introduced
to Moody, who abruptly asked him terse questions. When asked
about his business, Sankey replied that he was employed by
the government. Moody remarked, "You will have to give it
up!" Nonplussed, Sankey listened to the evangelist who
said, "I have been looking for you for eight years."
Sankey was interested but not ready to render a decision.
Moody asked him to meet him at a certain street corner the
next day. Moody brought a big box and asked Sankey to mount
it and then requested that he sing something. Sankey
complied and sang Am I a Soldier of the Cross. Moody then
began to speak to a large crowd of working men, who had left
the mills to hear him. At the end of the service, he
announced that he would continue the meeting at the Opera
House. Sankey led that large packed Opera House gathering in
singing Shall We Gather at the River?
It took
Sankey six months to consent to spend a week with Moody in
Chicago. This visit concluded with a great mass meeting at
Farwell Hall where Sankey sang Come Home, Prodigal Child at
the last service. Soon, his resignation was sent to the
Secretary of the Treasury, and a life of faith began.
At the age of
30, Sankey began his work with Moody early in 1871 and
labored with him daily until the great Chicago Fire erupted
on October 8, 1871, which destroyed everything. Moody had
just finished speaking to a crowded Farwell Hall audience.
As Sankey was singing, in the middle of a song, his voice
was drowned by the clanging of fire engines. Confusion arose
from the streets and Moody dismissed the congregation.
Sankey had
spent many hectic hours in the confusion that followed the
fire. At first, he tried to aid in preventing the spread of
the flames, but a large wind all but doomed the city. The
fire was moving toward the business section and Farwell
Hall. The flames followed so closely, he was compelled to
shake falling embers from his coat. When he arrived at his
room, he grabbed his most valued possessions and left the
building. He could find no means of transportation so headed
toward Lake Michigan. After many harrowing experiences, he
reached the lake shore in safety, exhausted, and very
thirsty. He found a small rowboat, and, putting his
possessions on board, rowed out far enough to find fresh
water. Tying his boat in position, he watched the
destruction of the city.
A whole day
passed and now, on the evening of the 9th, Sankey determined
to return to shore, even though the city was still engulfed
in flames. To his dismay, he discovered that the line which
fastened his boat had broken. He was swept out on the
rolling lake and for a time his life was in danger. But God
overruled and brought him to shore safely.
He took a
train for his Pennsylvania home and stayed there until a
brief telegram arrived from Moody asking him if he would
please return to Chicago and assist in the new ministry at
the crude temporary tabernacle that had been recently
constructed. Returning, Sankey was to discover that he and
Moody would often sleep together in a corner of the
tabernacle with only a single lounge for a bed. During these
busy months Moody was soliciting funds for the
reconstruction of the church. Soon, a new edifice was
dedicated.
Sankey moved
his family to Chicago in October of 1872. While Moody was in
England during this year, Sankey, with good assistance, kept
the great work in Chicago going. Upon Moody's return, they
seemed to work together better than ever. An evangelistic
campaign in Springfield, Illinois, saw unusual power and
blessing.
About this
time, Sankey's esteemed friend, P.P. Bliss, returned from
Europe with impressive engagements lined up. He made Sankey
an enticing offer to accompany him and assist in the
services of song--but Sankey declined. The partnership with
Moody continued as they worked well together. Moody would
arouse and startle his hearers with his preaching and at the
conclusion of his appeal, Sankey would rise and sing. His
melodious voice was soothing and comforting, with deep
conviction, and he believed that souls could be saved with
each note he sang. Moody decided that Sankey would be his
associate on the next trip abroad, and agreed to pay him
$100 per month.
The memorable
1873-75 revival throughout the British Isles began in June
of 1873. Mrs. Sankey and Moody's family accompanied the
team. En route to Liverpool, where they landed, they had
been notified that the men who had invited them to come to
England were dead and no meetings were scheduled.
Remembering the Y.M.C.A. at York had invited him to speak
there, should he ever return to England, Moody obtained the
use of the Independent Chapel and evangelistic services were
announced. The first service was attended by fewer than
fifty persons and Sankey found the people unaccustomed to
his methods and to his type of songs. F.B. Meyer, a leading
Baptist minister of the city, helped turn the tide by his
enthusiastic endorsement of the team. Invitations began to
come from various towns. At Sunderland, Sankey sang several
favorite songs, unaware of the opposition by the pastor to
solos, organ music, and choirs. However, the Reverend Rees
was impressed and posted notices announcing that Mr. Sankey,
from Chicago, would "sing the gospel." This phrase
came to be widely used thereafter. One night as Sankey sang
Come Home, O Prodigal, Come Home, a cry pierced the
silence and a young man rushed forward and fell in the arms
of his father, begging forgiveness. The entire congregation
was impressed and hundreds pressed to an adjoining room
seeking prayer and pardon. Next came Newcastle, where he
first began to use the songs Sweet By and By and
Christ Arose. Here, the first choir was organized and
revival fires burned for two months.
The
Edinburgh, Scotland, crusade began on November 23, 1873.
Apart from the Psalms, music was not used to any degree.
Man-made hymns had much prejudice against them. Moody caught
a cold and could not speak the first night. J.H. Wilson was
to take his place. Tactfully, Sankey asked the congregation
to join in singing a portion of the 100th Psalm. Scripture
and prayer followed. Sankey then sang his first solo,
Jesus of Nazareth Passeth By. The intense silence bore
testimony that this novel method of presenting the gospel
was being accepted. After the message, he selected Hold
the Fort and asked the congregation to join in the
chorus. Scotland was now ready for the ministry of Moody and
Sankey. Gospel singing and the organ were now being
accepted. The 1875 climax was the great London Crusade.
Arriving back
home in America, on August 14, 1875, their first services
were in Northfield, Massachusetts, Moody's home town.
Moody's mother professed conversion there and Sankey sang
The Ninety and Nine for the first time in America.
The team's
first large campaign in the states began on October 31,
1875, in Brooklyn. Sankey's choir numbered 250 voices, aided
by a large organ. However, when he sang, he accompanied his
solos on a small organ, a practice which he always
preferred, not wanting the music to detract from the
message. The next crusade began in Philadelphia on November
21st where, despite torrential rains, 9,000 showed up for
the opening service. Here, his choir numbered 500 voices.
The New York crusade began on February 7, 1876, at the Great
Roman Hippodrome on Madison Avenue. A choir of 600 voices
was led by Sankey, and Moody had his largest audience to
date.
Sankey's
health was somewhat impaired, so he returned to his home in
Newcastle. He busied himself preparing his new song book,
Gospel Hymns Two, with his good friend, P.P. Bliss,
assisting him. Bliss was to die a tragic death later that
year, while on his way to visit the Chicago Crusade. The
Boston Crusade began on January 28, 1877, in a temporary
structure, and the staid, old city enjoyed his renditions as
much as any.
Cities across
the nation, in Canada and Mexico, were to enjoy the team in
the years that followed. Back in the British Isles, 1881-84,
they found many converts of former years.
Sankey's
publishing ventures grew to tremendous proportions. His
first hymn book, published in England in 1873, was called
Sacred Songs and Solos. It included 23 selections. Then
his Gospel Hymn series followed, with numbers one to
six being published between 1875 and 1891. These contained
hundreds of hymns still widely used. Several editions of
these enjoyed sales that totaled millions of copies in many
languages. Royalties from his song books would have given
him a modest fortune, However, much of the royalty income
was used to help Moody's educational ventures, especially
the erection of his first school, Northfield School for
Girls. Sankey was active in the Northfield Conferences which
Moody conducted, and Sankey lived in Northfield in the
summer.
Fanny Crosby, also, spent several summers with the
Sankeys there.
Sankey, his
family, and a few friends sailed from New York in January of
1898 for a visit to the Holy Land. This was one of the great
delights of his life. In 1899, Sankey returned to Great
Britain. There, he held special services in sacred song and
story, in some 30 cities and towns. It was this extended
engagement that impaired his health to the extent that he
eventually lost his eyesight.
The team of
Moody and Sankey was to be together for the last time at a
Brooklyn Church pastored by a Dr. Storr. The two spent a
Sunday together in New York and then parted for the last
time. Moody's last letter was dated November 6, 1899, and he
died soon after. Sankey continued conducting services of
sacred song and story for some time.
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As blindness
overtook him in 1903, he lived out his days at his Brooklyn,
New York, home on South Oxford Street. During his last five
years, he had extreme weakness and much pain as glaucoma had
destroyed the optic nerve. Sankey maintained a sweet spirit
of patience, and his mind remained clear to the end. Of all
his earthly friends, who cheered him during his lonely
hours, none proved a greater benediction than his beloved
friend, Fanny Crosby. They would sing, pray, and fellowship
in their blindness and discomfort. How they rejoiced in
knowing that they would soon be together in glory with the
Saviour they adored and reunited with D.L. Moody and other
loved ones.
His
publication, My Life and the Story of Gospel Hymns,
came out in 1906. It was written from the memory of the
original manuscript, which was lost in a fire in 1901 at
Battle Creek, Michigan, just prior to publication.
Sankey passed
on in his sleep without a struggle. Funeral services were
held at the LaFayette Avenue Presbyterian Church, where
Sankey was a member during his latter years. Several of his
own hymns were sung at the funeral by an aged cousin, C.C.
Sankey, including: The Ninety and Nine, There'll
Be No Dark Valley, Faith Is the Victory, and
Hiding in Thee. The sermon was delivered by the pastor,
Charles E. Locke. Buried in the local Greenwood Cemetery,
his grave stone has a bar of music with 'Good Night'
and 'God Is Love' above and below it.
Stories of
his hymn compositions seem a fitting way to conclude this
biography. His first and most famous composition was The
Ninety and Nine. Sankey and Moody were en route from
Glasgow to Edinburgh, Scotland, in May, 1874, as they were
to hold a three-day campaign there. This was at the urgent
request of the Ministerial Association. Prior to boarding
the train, Sankey bought a weekly newspaper for a penny. He
found nothing of interest but a sermon by Henry W. Beecher
and some advertisements. Then, he found a little piece of
poetry in a corner of one column that he liked, and he read
it to Moody, but only received a polite reply. Sankey
clipped the poem and tucked it in his pocket. At the noon
day service of the second day of the special series, Moody
preached on The Good Shepherd. Horatious Bonar added a few
thrilling words and then Moody asked Mr. Sankey if he had a
final song. An inner voice prompted him to sing the hymn
that he found on the train. With conflict of spirit, he
thought, this is impossible! The inner voice continued to
prod him, even though there was no music to the poem, so he
acquiesced. As calmly as if he had sung it a thousand times,
he placed the little piece of newspaper on the organ in
front of him. Lifting up his heart in a brief prayer to
Almighty God, he then laid his hands on the keyboard,
striking a chord in A flat. Half speaking and half singing,
he completed the first stanza, which was followed by four
more. Moody walked over with tears in his eyes and said,
"Where did you get that hymn?" The Ninety and Nine
became his most famous tune and his most famous sale from
that time on. The words were written by Elizabeth Clephane
in 1868. She died in 1869, little realizing her contribution
to the Christian world.
Trusting
Jesus was written by Edgar Page Stites in 1876. The poem
first appeared in a newspaper and was handed to D.L. Moody.
He, in turn, gave it to his partner, Ira Sankey, and asked
him to set it to music. Mr. Sankey agreed to do so, on one
condition, that Moody would vouch for the doctrine taught in
the verses, which he did. It became the favorite hymn of
W.B. Riley.
A Shelter
in the Time of Storm was written by V.J. Charlesworth.
Sankey found it in a little paper published in London,
called the Postman. This song became a favorite of fishermen
in the northern part of England. Sankey composed a practical
melody for church use in preference to a former weird, minor
sound it first had.
I Am
Praying for You was written by Samuel O'Malley Cluff.
Sankey found the poem on a leaflet, in 1874, when he was
with Moody in Ireland. The song was first used in the Moody-Sankey
campaign in London in 1875. This was his second musical
setting with only the famous, The Ninety and Nine,
preceding this.
When The
Mists Have Rolled Away was written in 1883 by Annie
Herbert Barker. Mr. Sankey added the musical touch and
another hymn was born.
Other Sankey
songs, not mentioned in the beginning, were: Why Not
Tonight?; Yet There Is Room; Welcome,
Wanderer, Welcome; Take Me As I Am; It Is
Finished; Jesus, I Will Trust Thee; Now Now,
My Child; Tell It Out; The Smitten Rock,
and one of the tunes of the famed Beneath the Cross of
Jesus.
Who
knows--perhaps it was Moody, rather than Sankey, who
benefited most at that fateful meeting in Indianapolis in
1870, where God brought their ministries together.
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