Callison, Rufus Gilmore

From Lane Co Oregon

[edit] History

Rufus Gilmore Callison was born in December 24, 1839 in Hancock Co., IL to Gilmore and Elizabeth Callison. They went to Oregon in a 1852 wagon train. He married Elizabeth Callison. His main income was Stock raising. He planted churches in Fall Creek and Jasper. He died July 7, 1915 while preaching at Turner. He is buried in Pleasant Hill Pioneer Cemetery.

With both a preaching father and preaching grandfather, it's easy to picture Rufus G. Callison as a circuit riding gospel preacher. He was thirteen when he arrived in Oregon with parents. Their wagon train completed the journey from Illinois in 1852.

The family settled at Pleasant Hill, Oregon and his father Gilmore became the regular preacher at the Pleasant Hill Church of Christ.

Early in life, R. G. Callison gained experience in working as a circuit-riding preacher. In fact, when the world-famous Alexander Phimister Proctor was commissioned to create a statue of a circuit-riding preacher for the Oregon State Capitol grounds, Mr. Callison's saddle bags were used as the model. Rufus Callison married Martha Willis in 1868. They lived in a number of communities in Lane County including Cottage Grove, Springfield, Fall Creek and Eugene. For advanced education, Mr. Callison attended the prestigious Columbia College located on College Hill in Eugene.

Mr. Callison was selected as the Lane County Superintendent of Schools in 1875. He worked hard to improve school system. He wrote about the local schools:

One of the wealthiest districts crowds its children into a seven by nine foot house constructed of logs; the two windows are mere slits in the side . . . . Moreover, the door of this wonderful temple of learning is placed in the gable because the elevation of the building will not permit it at the side.

The family moved to Fall Creek in 1883. It was probably at this time the Falls Creek Christian Church came into being.

R. G. Callison was the Reading Clerk in the 1889 Legislative Assembly.

Mr. Callison organized a Christian Church in the community of Jasper in 1889. Some years later, the church moved from the school house to their own building.

Martha died at Pleasant Hill in the summer of 1912 and was buried there. In the Fall of 1914, Mr. Callison married Sarah J. Hastings, who was three years his senior, and settled in Vancouver, Washington. The ceremony was performed by A. D. Skaggs.

He died while addressing an audience of several hundred people at the Oregon Christian Convention at Turner in July of 1915. His sermon theme had been that a good, devoted, useful Christian life is necessary as a preparation for the future life. His final words were, "Prepare to live and you will be prepared to die." He collapsed on the platform and died in his 74th year.

One of Mr. Callison's favorite songs was "The Unclouded Day."[1]

Rufus Gilmore Callison (1839-1915) & Martha Willis (1849-1912)

| Irene Callison (1869-1933)

| Lena Callison (1871-1938)

| Mabel Callison (1873-1954)

| Margaret Callison (1875-1943)

| Ralph Willis Callison (1877-1950)

| Rufus G. Callison Jr. (1879-1952)

| James Garfield Callison (1881-1934) | Emery Edgar Callison (1885-)

| Martha Callison (1887-1927)

| Henry Errett Callison (1894-1945)

| Joyce Callison (1897-1900)

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Eugene's The Guard (1867), July 13

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