- Horace Mellard DuBose
Horace Mellard DuBose (
7 November 1858 –15 January 1941 ) was an AmericanBishop of theMethodist Episcopal Church, South and The Methodist Church, elected in 1918. Bishop DuBose gained notability as an Author, and Editor, and a leader in the AmericanTemperance movement .Birth and Family
Horace was born on a
cotton plantation inChoctaw County, Alabama . He was the son of Hezekiah and Amanda (Hawkins) DuBose. Horace married Miss Rosa Chaney 6 December 1882. She died in 1895. Horace thenmarried Mrs. Gertrude V. Amis in 1899.Education
Horace was educated at Waynesboro High School,
Waynesboro, Mississippi , and under private tutors. He earned nocollege degree .Emory and Henry College conferred thehonorary degree "Doctor of Divinity " upon him in 1891.Ordained and Editorial Ministries
The Rev. DuBose was admitted on trial by the Mississippi Annual Conference of the M.E. Church, South in 1877. He served the following appointments in Mississippi: Chotard Circuit (1877-79) and Fayette Circuit (1879-80). He then transferred to the
Texas Annual Conference where he served these appointments:St. James Church,Galveston (1881-82); Huntsville (1882-84); Shearn Church,Houston (1884-86); and the Marvin Church inTyler, Texas (1885-88).Rev. DuBose then transferred again, to the
Los Angeles Annual Conference, where he was appointed Pastor of the Trinity Methodist Church in Los Angeles (1889-90). He then became Editor of "ThePacific Methodist Advocate" (1890-94). He transferred once again to Texas (theEast Texas Annual Conference), where he again became the Pastor of the Marvin Methodist Church in Tyler (1895-96). Then transferring back to Mississippi, where he was appointed Pastor of First Methodist Church, Jackson (1896-98).In 1898 Rev. DuBose was elected Secretary of the
Epworth League , serving the Church in this capacity for the next 12 years, insisting that the General Conference not re-elect him to that office. He then transferred to the North Georgia Annual Conference where he was appointed Pastor ofSt. John 's Church in Augusta (1910-12). In 1915 Rev. DuBose was elected Book Editor of theM.E. Church, South . He held this office until his election to theEpiscopacy .Episcopal Ministry
The Rev. Dr. Horace Mellard DuBose was elected to the office of Bishop and consecrated as such at the 1918 General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South.
Bishop DuBose died in
Nashville at the age of 82, the "elder statesman" of the M.E. Church, South. Noting his importance as a temperance leader, upon his death Time magazine quoted him as having said in 1932: "If theAngel Gabriel should come down and tell me that he had changed his mind on prohibition and wanted it resubmitted, I would not follow him."References
* "The New Bishops" in Christian Advocate (24 May 1918), Nashville: Methodist Episcopal Church, South, p. 56. [http://www.tngenweb.org/records/davidson/nca/nca15-10.htm]
* Time Magazine, notice of his death, 27 January 1941 issue. [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,801246,00.html]ee also
*
List of Bishops of the United Methodist Church
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