Background
Crawford was born in Warren County, Kentucky. He was the fourth son of John and Lucretia Crawford.
Crawford was born in Warren County, Kentucky. He was the fourth son of John and Lucretia Crawford.
He graduated in 1851 at the head of his class. He attended the Denmark Male Academy where he was top of his class. She had studied at the Institute of Lafayette in Alabama.
At the beginning of 1848 he entered Union University, Murfreesboro, Tennessee, where his studies were supported in part by the West Tennessee Baptist Convention. Doctor Crawford worked on a farm in Denmark, Tennessee to help pay for his early education. The Big Hatchie Baptist Association helped pay his way to Union University.
The women of Browns Creek Baptist, Big Black Creek Baptist, Maple Springs Baptist and Clover Creek Baptist all sold their eggs and milk gathered on Sundays to help support him, and later Lottie Moon.
He was first ordained by the Big Black Creek Baptist Church in Denmark, Tennessee. Brother Obediah Dodson was his pastor and very passionate about missions.
Crawford married Martha Foster, who had become Baptist in 1845. Crawford had a domineering character that caused much dissent.
Some Americans were concerned and he was rebuked by the American consul in Shanghai.
Crawford insisted that preaching was the sole duty of the missionary. He was dismayed by the fiasco involving Charles Gutzlaff"s Chinese evangelists. He thereafter insisted Chinese should never be paid out of mission funds.
Crawford itinerated widely around local villages (131 in 1875 alone).
His singlemindedness meant that he closed down his wife"s school in 1879, perhaps out of jealousy at her success with Lottie Moon at Shaling. He continued to criticize the mission board of the American Southern Baptist Mission, who he thought should have no say on mission matters.
They disagreed and removed him in 1892. Crawford formed the Gospel Mission, and eight (of fourteen) Southern Baptist missionaries joined him.
By the turn of the century, the mission had grown to nineteen.
All the Gospel missioners wore Chinese clothing, lived in Chinese houses, and solely preached the gospel. This was similar to the practices of the missionaries of the China Inland Mission. In 1867 she formed a boys" school in their home.
Several of the students went on to become pastors at the successful Huangxian and Pingdu stations.
She also wrote The Three Maidens, a book for children, which was subsequently widely used throughout China. At the Second Missionary Conference (1877), she spoke on "Women"s Work for Women", stressing missionary wives should visit house-to-house, personally instruct local women, and prepare suitable literature for them.
In his book The Patriarchal Dynasties, Crawford announced his conviction that in 1876 the world was 14,376 years old. He believed that the Garden of Eden was a theocratic confederacy, with a population of 1,174,405,120.