Billy Sunday: the man and his methods (period newspaper, c.1905)

The Man and His Methods.

“It is impossible to describe William A. Sunday. He simply gets there. While he shocks some of the staid old deacons by his rough and ready way of putting things, the great throng stand on and applaud. He has a wonderful gift of street slang and he uses the choicest of it. He can preach using as fine English as any man in the country, but he is dreadfully lonesome doing it. He likes to employ language people best understand.

He is a slight man, weighing less than 140 pounds, but is wiry and as scienced as Jeffries. He is a bundle of nerves, and from the moment he throws a beautiful fur coat from his shoulders to the close of the meeting every nerve is put in play. Those who hear him go away stating that he cannot stand it long to work with the nerve force he does, but he has stood it for eight years and is as able today as he was in the beginning. He pleads, he entreats, he prays and weeps, and the crowd are with him. Few men have the power to sway crowds like Sunday. He can cause them to break out in peals of laughter and can make them weep copiously as he appeals to sympathy. He is great on storytelling and can embellish with all the facial expressions necessary. He is so agile on the stage that without any trouble at all he can lean over backward and touch his head to the floor, and, if occasion demanded, could turn a flip with the best of them.

It is this that undoubtedly arouses the curious and those who wish to be entertained. But it doesn’t end there. He can preach powerful sermons. If you go once you go twice and if you go twice, you will find that at the close of his month’s services you have been present at about every service.”

– The Sioux City Journal (Sioux City, Iowa) · Sun, Feb 26, 1905 · Page 9.