IRA DAVID SANKEY
was born in the village of Edinburg, Pa., August 28, 1840. He was of
Scotch-Irish ancestry. After some years his father, the Hon. David Sankey, and
his mother, removed to a farm where young Ira grew up assisting in the farm
work. He received the usual school privileges of those days.
In 1857 the family removed to Newcastle, Pa. This
afforded him the opportunity of attending high school. Soon after arriving in
Newcastle he joined the Methodist Episcopal Church. Here he began his first
choir work. His voice soon began to attract attention, and crowds of people
came into the Sunday-school to hear the singing. In 1860 he responded to the call
of President Lincoln for volunteers, and enlisted in the Twelfth Pennsylvania
Regiment. While in the army he frequently led the singing in the
religious services. When his term of service as a soldier expired, he
returned home to assist his father as a collector of internal revenue. In
1863 he married Miss Fanny V. Edwards, who was truly a blessing and
helpmate to him throughout his entire life-work.
Mr. Sankey was in possession of a fine voice, which
had been enriched by cultivation, and his services as a gospel singer were in
great demand in both Pennsylvania and Ohio. In 1870 he was a delegate to
the Y.M.C.A. Convention at Indianapolis, Ind. Here he first met Mr.
Moody. The singing had been rather poor, and Mr. Sankey was asked to lead.
He began by singing the familiar hymn, “There is a fountain filled with
blood.” The congregation joined heartily in the song, which put new life
into the meeting. At the close of the service, the singer was introduced
to Mr. Moody. Mr. Sankey describes their meeting thus:
As I drew near Mr. Moody, he
stepped forward, and, taking me by the hand, looked at me in that keen,
piercing fashion of his, as if reading my very soul. Then he said abruptly,
“Where are you from?” “Pennsylvania,” I replied. “Are you married?” “I am.”
“How many children have you?” “Two.” “What is your business?” “I am a
government officer.” “Well, you’ll have to give it up!” I was too much
astonished to make any reply, and he went on, as if the matter had already
been decided: “I have been looking for you for the last eight years. You’ll
have to come to Chicago and help me in my work.”
In 1871, after a delay of several months,
and much urging on Mr. Moody’s part, he consented to spend a week with him
in Chicago; and before the week was over he resigned his government position
and joined forces with him for their life-work. Thus began the great work of
Dwight L. Moody and Ira D. Sankey that made the names of Moody and Sankey
household words the world over. Mr. Moody’s keen intellect foresaw the great
future for the young singer. He did not sing himself; but he said:
I feel sure the great majority
of people do like singing. It helps to build up an audience—even if you do
preach a dry sermon. If you have singing that reaches the heart, it will fill
the church every time. There is more said in the Bible about praise than
prayer, and music and song have not only accompanied all Scripture revivals,
but are essential in deepening spiritual life. Singing does at least
as much as preaching to impress the word of God upon people’s minds. Ever
since God first called me, the importance of praise expressed in song has
grown upon me.
In October, 1871, the great fire occurred in
Chicago, which compelled them to suspend their work for a short time. In 1872
Mr. Sankey moved his family to Chicago. The evangelists then accepted an
invitation to hold services at Springfield, Ill. Their efforts were crowned
with success. In 1873 they sailed for England, where they held many successful
meetings. Mr. Sankey’s solo singing was very effective. “Jesus of Nazareth
passeth by” was the most popular at this time.
The expression, “singing the gospel,” was first
used by the Rev. A.A. Rees of Sunderland, England, in describing Mr. Sankey’s
soul-stirring hymns. Gospel songs were something new in that country at
that time. In Scotland they only used the Psalms of David; others were called
“human hymns,” but with Mr. Sankey’s tact and skill as a singer and evangelist,
he soon won the hearts of even the bonny Scotland people to sing “human
hymns,” and in such a prayerful spirit that scores were brought into the
kingdom.
Mr. Sankey composed his first gospel song, entitled
“Yet There is Room,” while in Edinburgh, Scotland. Dr. Horatius Bonar, who
attended the meetings, wrote the words. While holding meetings in London, many
of the prominent people attended, among whom might be mentioned the Hon. Wm. E.
Gladstone, Lord Kinnaird, Queen Victoria, the Princess of Wales, and others.
They enjoyed Mr. Sankey’s solos, especially “The Ninety and Nine.” The
evangelists remained in Great Britain for two years, and held meetings in many
of the leading cities of England, Scotland and Ireland. They returned to
America in 1875.
Their first meeting after their return was held at
Northfield, Mass. Then followed meetings in Brooklyn, Philadelphia, New York,
Chicago, Boston, St. Louis, and hundreds of other cities were visited, not only
throughout the United States, but in Canada and Mexico, and great good was
accomplished wherever they labored.
During the years which followed the evangelists
made several trips to Great Britain. The campaign of 1881-1884 was a memorable
one. Mr. Sankey had delightful experiences on his visit to the Holy Land in
1898. He travelled over the road that Jesus travelled on His way to Calvary to
die for the sins of the world. He sang on the Tower of David while at
Jerusalem. He visited many of the ancient cities, and other places of interest,
and wherever he went, his fine baritone voice was heard singing the songs of
salvation.
Mr. Sankey was not only a great singer and his own
best accompanist, but he proved a prolific composer, his original work being of
a character that instantly commended itself to religious audiences. Mr. Sankey was
one of the authors of the famous Gospel Hymns, and of various other
hymnals. Among his most popular songs are “The Ninety and Nine,” “The Cross of
Jesus,” “Jesus of Nazareth,” “Onward and Upward,” “There’ll Be No Dark Valley,”
“Call Them Now,” “A Little While,” “Room For Thee,” “A Shelter in the
Time of Storm,” “Tell It Out,” “When the Mists Have Rolled Away,” “While
the Days Are Going By,” “Hiding in Thee,” etc.
The history of the famous “Ninety and Nine” is most
extraordinary. While in Scotland Mr. Sankey found the poem in a newspaper,
which he was reading on a train. He clipped the poem from the paper and put it
in his pocket. That very week Mr. Moody preached upon “The Prodigal
Son.” At the conclusion of his discourse he asked Mr. Sankey to sing something
appropriate with which to close the service. “I had nothing suitable in mind,”
writes Mr. Sankey, “but at that moment a voice seemed to say to me, ‘Sing
the hymn you found on the train!’ I thought it impossible, but I placed the
little slip on the organ in front of me, lifted my heart in prayer, and began
to sing. Note by note the tune was given, and it has not been changed from that
day to this.”
Mr. Sankey was a noble man. Among his gifts, he
presented a handsome new building to the Y.M.C.A. at Newcastle, the town
in which he spent his boyhood. Mr. Sankey spent the last few years of his life
in blindness. He died at his residence at Brooklyn, N.Y., August 13, 1908.

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