Alfred Sturge
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Alfred Sturge (1816-1901) was a notable Baptist who ministered in Devon, India and Kent.
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[edit] Ancestry and early life
Alfred Sturge was born in London in 1816.
Alfred came from a family prominent among the Society of Friends from the days of George Fox. His grandfather, Thomas Sturge, was one of the founders of the British and Foreign Bible Society. George Sturge, one of his uncles, left £500,000 to charity, and another uncle, Thomas Sturge, was an intimate friend of Lord Macaulay. On his mother’s side, he was descended from a noble French family, and Count Emerie de St. Dalmas was his maternal grandfather, whose eldest son converted to the Protestant Christian faith, and was consequently prevented by the law of those times from inheriting his father’s title and estates.
He was educated at a Quakers’ School, but found the long and sometimes silent meetings very trying, being only a small boy. The visit of some Quaker Missionaries from America seems to have been the chief factor in him committing his life to Christ. On leaving school, he sat under the ministry of Rev. George Clayton, and sometimes heard such men as Leifchild and Binney. Subsequently he moved to Plymouth, where he sat under the ministry of Samuel Nicholson of the George Street Church, which he joined when he was about twenty-five years old.
[edit] Ministry
He began to preach in the villages around Plymouth, and was eventually invited to become pastor of the church at Modbury. After some hesitation he accepted the call, and finally abandoned business for the life of a Christian minister. After several happy years at Modbury, a Mr. Page of Plymouth asked him to become the pastor of the Baptist Church at Madras in India. He worked there for four years, but found the climate too oppressive for his young growing family.
On returning to England, he resided for some time with his uncle, Thomas Sturge of Northfleet, and became known in the neighbouring town of Dartford, where he assisted the pastor of the Congregational Church. After the death of that pastor, he established a Baptist church in that growing town on April 7, 1867 which met in the Working Men’s Institute. The work was so successful, that a more permanent chapel was constructed in Highfield Street and dedicated on April 20, 1868. The work continued to prosper under his charge, and was held in high honour by all classes in the community, until his retirement in 1886.
His influence grew with the years, and his commitment to his local community. He was a member, and for a long time chairman, of the School Board, a member of the Board of Guardians, a governor of the Grammar School, and a willing helper in any worthwhile enterprise, including the local emigration society.
[edit] Retirement
Like many dedicated men, his retirement did not mean any lessening in his commitments, which only seemed to grow. He was the willing friend and adviser of all the neighbouring churches and pastors, and was known and loved everywhere as the “Bishop of West Kent”. His bright and happy disposition seemed to carry sunshine wherever he went, and his depth of experience and tender sympathy gave him an influence unlike any other, especially at the regular meetings of the London Baptist ministers' fraternal.
The last year of his life was marked by a debilitating weakness, though he maintained his interest in national and denominational affairs. He died on January 25, 1901, and was sadly missed.
[edit] Sources
- Memoirs of Ministers - No 38 Alfred Sturge, pages 212-214 in The Baptist Hand-Book for 1902, edited by Rev. W.J. Avery, Council of the Baptist Union of Great Britain and Ireland, London 1901.
- Chronological List - No 426 Dartford Highfield Road, page 203 in The Baptists of London, 1612-1928: Their Fellowship, Their Expansion, with Notes on Their 850 Churches, by WT Whitley, Baptist Historical Society, London ca 1928.
- Minutes of the Members’ Meeting, Ipswich Baptist Church, Ipswich (Qld) 1874.