THROUGH THE DECADES: A TIMELINE OF THE B&R

Baptist and Reflector

FRANKLIN — In a sense, the issue of the Baptist and Reflector that you are currently reading has been 190 years in the making.

Established in 1835, the newspaper ranks among the longest-running publications in the nation.

Here’s a look at the B&R’s historic milestones:

1833 – The first Tennessee Baptist Convention is formed.

January 1, 1835THE BAPTIST newspaper is born in Nashville under the direction of pastor R.B.C. Howell, who sees the major limitation of church growth as lack of communication.

1842 – The TBC dissolves and forms into the Baptist General Association of Tennessee.

1848 – Controversial evangelist and writer James R. Graves becomes editor for 41 years. THE BAPTIST, often referred to as Tennessee Baptist, becomes a stage for Landmarkism (the belief that the Baptist church is the one true church), calling out “imposter” pastors by name, with pages loaded with opinion columns.

1861–1865 – Outbreak of the Civil War. The paper does not publish for several months during the war.

1874 – The present-day Tennessee Baptist Convention is formed.

August 1889THE BAPTIST merges with American Baptist Reflector of Chattanooga, where Edgar E. Folk is editor, to become Baptist and Reflector. Folk becomes the first editor of the paper to be a Tennessee native.

1895 – Edgar Folk brings other state paper editors together to form the Southern Baptist Press Association, which becomes the Association of State Baptist Publications.

1917 – The era of long editorial tenures ends temporarily after Folk’s death. Three editors follow with short tenures: Albert Bond, Murphy R. Cooper, and Hight C. Moore (who serves as a temporary “caretaker”).

January 1921 – The Tennessee Baptist Convention purchases the newspaper from Murphy Cooper for $15,000. Jesse D. Moore becomes editor.

1925 – Under editor John D. Freeman, the B&R provides coverage of “the Scopes Monkey Trial” held in Dayton. The trial revolves around the inclusion of evolution being taught in public schools.

1935 – Editor Oury Wilburn Taylor celebrates the paper’s 100-year anniversary by publishing a 64-page edition of the B&R that recognizes “100 years of service to our people.”

1950 – Richard N. Owen begins his 18-year stint as editor of the B&R and guides the paper through a time of financial hardships.

1974 – Eura Lannom becomes the first female to serve as interim editor of the Baptist and Reflector.

2015 – The Baptist and Reflector homepage, baptistandreflector.org, is launched with its own URL. For the previous 17 years, dating back to its original launch in 1998, the B&R webpage had been housed on the TBMB page.

The B&R has had 17 editors in its 190-year history. Here are the men and women who served and their years of tenure:

  • R.B.C. Howell, 1835-47
  • James Graves, 1848-89
  • Edgar Folk, 1889-1917
  • Albert Bond, 1917-1920
  • M.R. Cooper, 1920-21
  • Hight Moore, 1921
  • Jesse Moore, 1921-25
  • Oscar Bryan, 1925
  • John Freeman, 1925-33
  • Oury Wilburn Taylor, 1933-50
  • Richard Owen, 1950-68
  • James A Lester, 1968-73
  • Eura Lannom, 1974-76 (interim)
  • Alvin Shackleford, 1976-87
  • Wm. Fletcher Allen, 1987-98
  • Lonnie Wilkey, 1998-2024
  • Chris Turner, 2025-present

Note: Information for the timeline on page 9 and the list above was taken from Telling the Truth in Love: A Brief History of the Baptist and Reflector from 1835 by former B&R editor Wm. Fletcher Allen, and a 2020 B&R article entitled “Looking Back: The Origin, Editors and Staying Power of the ‘News Journal of Tennessee Baptists’” by Art Toalston.

 

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