Review Irving Clinton Tomlinson was an American Universalist minister who converted to Christian Science, becoming a practitioner and teacher.
Background
Born Irving Clinton Tomlinson, in Perry, New York, he was the son of Dewitt Clinton, a minister and Emmeline C. Eaton Tomlinson. The family moved to Akron, Ohio, where his father was involved with raising funds to build a new Universalist educational institution, and where Tomlinson later went to preparatory school and college.
Career
He was the class president of a senior class of seven students, and business manager of The Argo, the first student publication at Buchtel College. While a senior, he and his classmates decided to surpass an effort made by the previous year"s graduating class, which had been to place a two-ton boulder on the campus, a lasting reminder of them. Tomlinson was sent to purchase the "pebble", as they called it, which measured 7 feet tall, 5 feet wide and 3.5 feet across (21×15×11m) and 90 cubic feet (23 m3).
The telephone has been invented, and lots else, and I think we can get lieutenant” They did have to pay a local building mover and the move took several days, but they were able to install "The Rock" on campus, where it remains a campus landmark.
Tomlinson graduated from Buchtel in 1880 with a Bachelor of Arts and in 1883, with a Master of Arts Buchtel later became the municipal University of Akron. Tomlinson then enrolled in the theological program of Tufts College in Medford, Massachusetts, receiving a Bachelor of Divinity degree in 1888.
Soon after graduating, he became the minister at the First Universalist Society of Arlington, Massachusetts, later First Universalist Church. Tomlinson on this committee at various times until 1927.
In addition, Tomlinson served in other capacities.
In 1903 and again in 1921, he was elected president of The Mother Church and most notably, he was one of Eddy"s secretaries for 12 years and a worker in her household from 1907 to 1910. His book, Twelve Years with Mary Baker Eddy was published in 1945, the year after his death. The Revelation of Saint John: An Open Book (1922)
Twelve Years with Mary Baker Eddy (1945).
Membership
He was also a member of Phi Delta Theta, a fraternity. Soon after the course was over, however, Tomlinson withdrew from the Universalist church, " found it impossible to ride two horses going in opposite directions." Tomlinson became a member of The Mother Church in 1897 and in 1898, was invited to be in the last class taught by Mary Baker Eddy.