George Davis Herron was an American clergyman, educator, author, and Social Gospel advocate. He was a leading exponent of the so-called "Social Gospel" movement.
Background
George Davis Herron was born on January 21, 1862, in Montezuma, Indiana, United States. He had an intensely religious but economically insecure childhood in Montezuma, Indiana. He remembered his mother, Isabella (Davis) Herron, as enveloped in prayer. His father, William Herron, guided his education at home with an ambitious reading program. A sickly boy, Herron found companions among heroic biblical and historical personages.
Education
In 1879 George entered the preparatory department of Ripon College in Ripon, Wisconsin, United States. His formal education ended after two years, when he withdrew in 1881 for health and financial reasons.
Career
George began work in the printer's trade at the age of 10. Entering the ministry in 1883, Herron served a series of small Congregational churches in several states. He was self-conscious about his educational deficiencies and immersed himself in theology, philosophy, and social and economic literature. Contemporary liberal theological ideas and a growing body of social criticism affected him profoundly.
Herron attracted wide attention in 1890 when he delivered a speech titled “The Message of Jesus to Men of Wealth” to Minnesota’s Congregational Club. That message demanded self-sacrifice on behalf of others, which businessmen were particularly positioned to practice. Although his ideas were typical of the Protestant Social Gospel, Herron expressed them with unusual rhetorical power. This address led him to the position of associate pastor at the First Congregational Church in Burlington, Iowa, and then to a meteoric rise to leadership in the Social Gospel.
Herron vigorously expanded the Burlington church’s programs and began publishing collections of his sermons and lectures. His increasingly sharp social criticism evoked rumblings within the congregation, but he won the admiration of others, notably Carrie Rand, a wealthy widow, and her daughter Carrie, and President George A. Gates of Iowa College in Grinnell.
Working with Gates, Carrie Rand endowed a chair in applied Christianity, to which Herron was appointed in mid-1893. Herron soon made Grinnell the center for the “Kingdom movement,” which included summer “Schools of the Kingdom”, a periodical, the Kingdom (1894–1899), and the American Institute of Christian Sociology (1893). Prominent Social Gospel clergy and academicians contributed to these endeavors. Herron’s classes initially drew astonishing crowds. In addition, his ideas inspired the founding of the Christian Commonwealth Colony in Georgia (1896–1900) and its periodical, the Social Gospel. Herron traveled widely to lecture to enthusiastic audiences.
George lost much of his backing by the late 1890s, and the “Kingdom movement” disintegrated. Social Gospel academicians preferred an inductive social science to his normative, moralistic preachments. Influential clergymen faulted his sweeping dismissal of institutions as agents of reform. Distanced from the Social Gospel’s meliorative approach, he lost much of his religious audience. Disenchantment among the Grinnell College trustees, over his teachings, absences, and neglect of family, led to a move for his ouster. After one attempt failed, he resigned in October 1899.
A longtime socialist voter, George now endorsed socialism publicly as a movement that embodied the sacrificial love and social solidarity of primitive Christianity. In 1900, he campaigned for the Social Democratic Party presidential candidate, Eugene V. Debs. He helped organize the Socialist Party of America in 1901, wrote for socialist publications, spoke at socialist meetings, and inspired several other ministers who played leadership roles in the party.
Beginning in Burlington, the close relationship between Herron and Carrie Rand had invited rumors. In 1901, in short order, Mary Herron agreed to sue for divorce on grounds of desertion and cruelty, receiving a cash settlement from Rand for herself and the four Herron children, Herron and Rand married in a legal but unconventional ceremony, and a Congregational council in Iowa revoked his ordination. The uproar that followed lasted for years. The press hounded the newlyweds, and enemies of socialism made the story the centerpiece of an attack on socialism as antifamily. Unable to live peaceably in the United States, the Herrons moved to a villa near Florence, Italy, in 1905. Thereafter, they made numerous contributions to American socialism, including the establishment of the Rand School of Social Science in New York City, the socialists’ leading academic institution, with trust from Carrie Rand Herron.
During World War I, Herron broke with the socialists, first, with the Germans for support of their government, and next with the Americans for their opposition to American intervention. He corresponded with individual socialists, however, and his friendship with Debs remained unshakable. His enthusiasm for Woodrow Wilson’s foreign policy led Wilson to use him in varied diplomatic assignments during and after the war. Herron considered Wilson’s peace plans essential to a stable world and defended them despite the compromises at Versailles. Carrie Rand Herron, who bore two sons, died in 1914. Herron died at age 63 in Munich.
Achievements
George Herron was famous due to his publicized divorce and remarriage to the daughter of a wealthy benefactor which scandalized the polite society of the day. He then became noted as an activist of the anti-militarist Socialist Party. He filed regular intelligence reports on German public opinion to the American and British governments in support of the Allied war effort. Herron with his second wife also established the Rand School of Social Science.
In 1889 George became active in the Society of Christian Socialists, which proclaimed that Jesus’ teachings implied democratic socialism.
Politics
Herron was a supporter of the Socialist Labor Party of America.
Connections
In 1883 George Herron married Mary Everhard. In March 1901 his wife divorced him for “cruelty culminating in desertion, ” and was given for the support of herself and the five children the personal fortune of Carrie Rand, amounting to sixty thousand dollars. On May 25, 1901, Herron and Carrie Rand were married in New York City by a ceremony, wherein “each chose the other as companion, ” thus dramatizing his avowed opposition to “all coercive institutions”. On the death of his second wife in 1914, he married Friede B. Schoeberle.
Father:
William Herron
Mother:
Isabella (Davis) Herron
Spouse:
Friede B. (Schoeberle) Herron
ex-spouse:
Carrie (Rand) Herron
ex-spouse:
Mary (Everhard) Herron
References
The Biographical Dictionary of Iowa
Iowa has been blessed with citizens of strong character who have made invaluable contributions to the state and to the nation. In the 1930s alone, such towering figures as John L. Lewis, Henry A. Wallace, and Herbert Hoover hugely influenced the nation’s affairs.