Early life
On March 5, 1839, Silas Comfort Swallow was born in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania to George Swallow, a trustee of Wyoming Seminary, and Sarah Thompson and was named after Methodist preacher ''Silas Comfort'' (1803–1868), an anti-slavery member of the Genesee, Oneida and Missouri Conferences. While serving in St. Louis, Missouri, Swallow admitted as evidence in a church trial the testimony of a Negro, a practice which was forbidden in public trials in Missouri at the time. He was censured by his Conference, but that censure was overturned by the 1840 General Conference. The General Conference then bowed toCareer
In 1862, he enlisted into the Union Army and served as a First lieutenant in the 18th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry Regiment during the American Civil War. He entered the Baltimore Conference in 1863 and became a charter member of the Central Pennsylvania Conference upon its organization in 1869. On January 20, 1866, he married Rebecca Louise Robins. He worked a church builder, presiding elder, and editor of ''The Central Pennsylvania Methodist''. As editor he attacked alcohol, spiritual indifference, and political corruption in the state government that led to him being prosecuted and convicted of slander and fined $500 in 1897, but the verdict was later reversed by the State Superior Court. In 1901 he was criticized for a recent editorial critical of William McKinley that was released shortly after his death.Politics
He was theDeath
Swallow died at his home inChurch service
Dr. Swallow's official conference service record lists the following appointments: *1863–1864 Milton circuit. *1864–1866 Berwick. *1866–1868 Catawissa. *1868–1871 Newberry. *1871–1873 Williamsport Third Street. *1873–1875 Milton. *1875–1877 Altoona Eighth Avenue. *1877–1881 presiding elder, Altoona District. *1881–1884 York First. *1884–1886 Williamsport Grace. *1886–1887 agent, Dickinson College. *1887–1892 Harrisburg Ridge Avenue. *1892–1902 superintendent, Harrisburg Methodist book room. *1902–1908 no appointment, by request. *1908–1930 retired.Writings
Being an editor, Swallow made certain that his life story was recorded for posterity. Upon reaching his 70th birthday in 1909, he published a 482-page hardback autobiography: ''III Score and X – Selections, Collections, Recollections of Seventy Busy Years''. This proved to be so successful that he came out with periodic updates as follows: *''Toasts and Roasts of III Score and X'', 1911. *''Then and Now – Some Reminiscences of an Octogenarian'', 1919. *''IV Score and More'', 1922. Other booklets and pamphlets by Swallow, all of which are preserved in the archives of the Central Pennsylvania Conference of the United Methodist Church, range in date and content from his 1879 ''Camp Meetings and the Sabbath'' to his 1917 ''A Sermon on Thanksgiving and Thanksliving''.Electoral history
References
External links
* * {{DEFAULTSORT:Swallow, Silas C. 1839 births 1930 deaths 19th-century Methodist ministers 20th-century American politicians American abolitionists History of Methodism in the United States Pennsylvania Prohibitionists People of Pennsylvania in the American Civil War Politicians from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania Politicians from Williamsport, Pennsylvania Prohibition Party (United States) presidential nominees Candidates in the 1904 United States presidential election Writers from Pennsylvania American Methodist clergy Methodist abolitionists