Changes in Old Calabar—Death of
Mr. Ashworth, 1871—Mr. George Thomson's Sanatorium—Ordination of Ukpabio, 1872
—Arrival of Rev. D. Campbell—Deaths of King Archibong II., etc.—"Young Calabar"
On Aug. 8, 1871, the first anniversary of the
death of Mr. Lewis, Mr. George Ashworth, the European missionary teacher at
Creek Town, died from debility following a slight gastric derangement, after a
little over twenty-seven months' service in Calabar. In his last letter to the
Foreign Mission Secretary, dated June 27, he wrote:—
I have cause to thank God for the excellent
health and strength I have enjoyed since I came to Old Calabar. 1 have not had
one day's sickness, and I prefer both the climate and the country to that of my
own. Of course we cannot expect all constitutions to be adapted to a tropical
climate like this. "Some have come out here that ought to have remained at
home," is what some people tell us, as if God's servants were not called upon to
face danger, and even death, that the heathen may be brought to life eternal.
Dr. Robertson, writing of his death, remarked,
"The will to serve long was taken for the deed"; and Mr. Anderson, writing on
Aug. 10, said :—
To us at Duke Town the event appeared to be very
sudden. We never heard of his illness till he had been dead eight hours ! It
might be well to return to our old custom of signalling from one mission-house
to another, though, to be sure, the progress of vegetation in some measure
prevents this. Mr. Ashworth was of an ardent poetic temperament, which is,
perhaps, not the best for a climate like this. I have no doubt that it suits him
well where he is to-day. . . .
Our repeated
bereavements may have a damping influence on the minds of some of the young men
of the Church. This ought not to be the result. Surely no youth belonging to the
United Presbyterian Church needs to be informed, though it might be well that
all, both old and young, were occasionally reminded that "the post of danger is
the post of honour."
May He, in whose hands are all hearts, incline
some— yea, many—of the youth of the Church to buckle on their armour, and to
come forth to "the help of the Lord—the help of the Lord against the mighty"! .
. .
At this time appeals for four missionaries (two
of them ordained), besides a medical missionary for Old Calabar, were appearing
in the Missionary Record.
On Dec. 22, 1871, Mr. Anderson wrote a letter,
addressed to Rev. J. Law, George Gray, John Chisholm, James Duncan, and R.
Elliot:—
Friends greatly Beloved and Esteemed,— I
addressed you in this manner about the beginning of the year, when it was judged
necessary for Mrs. A. to take a voyage and a change for restoration of shattered
health. She speaks very warmly of the reception which she met from all old
friends in what is in some measure to her a strange land. She feels especially
indebted to you for the munificent donation which you subscribed for her. £10 in
money and a quantity of goods beside was what she never dreamed of receiving
from you or from any other. She was quite astonished when Mrs. Chisholm handed
her the above-named sum as a contribution from you whose names are at the head
of this page, and also (she thinks) from one or two others. May Eskbank not
suffer for the liberality manifested towards us! "Blessed be ye in basket and
store, in going out and coming in."
You will have heard ere now that she arrived here
safe and sound on Nov. ist, having had a new experience at sea, however, viz. a
taste of shipwreck. The Biafra was mercifully preserved, while other vessels, as
good and strong, foundered. The last week of October was to me a very anxious
one. We began to look out on the 22nd, and expected the Biafra every hour, but
she appeared not. After an anxious watch of a week, we concluded that something
had gone wrong. On Oct. 30th a steamer rounded Seven Fathoms Point. There she
comes at length, yet, when she approaches, it is surely not the Biafra. A
telescope enables us to read Lagos,— we hurry on board — what can have happened?
The mind is made up for the worst, and it is a relief to hear, the moment we
step on board, "The Biafra disabled in a gale in the Channel—put back to
Falmouth for repairs — will be here in a week." Letters from herself soon put
all right. The Lagos left A.M. Wednesday, November 1st; so we thought, Well,
four or five days more and we may again look out for the Biafra. In three hours,
however, my little people come jumping into my room to say, "Ma k'edi! Ma
k'edi!" "Mammy is coining! Mammy is coming!" All right, though unexpectedly at
the time, she comes, and we have renewed reasons for grateful acknowledgments to
the Ruler of winds and waters. Hymn 104, U.P. Hymn-Book, suitable to us. She
feels greatly benefited by the change, and continues active and vigorous as in
her earlier days.
Matters are moving on pretty smoothly with us
just now. King Archibong is always wonderfully civil, but immersed in
superstition. Would to God that it were otherwise! I often remember what Mr. Law
said to me when I was spending a day with him in Innerleithen in 1857—"It would
be a great matter to get some of your kings converted. The soul of a slave is
doubtless as valuable as that of a king, but from his position a converted king
could do more good than a converted slave." Notwithstanding the coldness of some
of our great men and the opposition of others, our influence is being extended.
We have had larger congregations on Sabbath at Duke Town this year than during
any previous year. There are some of whom we have good hope, even although they
have not become members of the Church. There is a young man, of whom till lately
I knew but little, a slave of an apostate member of the Church, and manager of
his master's business. Some months ago he was sent to one of the interior
markets, but would on no account trade on Sabbath. It came to his master's ears
that he (the slave) had lost some splendid opportunities of both buying and
selling, owing to his Sabbath-keeping. On his return he was called to account,
and acknowledged that he had not traded on God's day, as his heart would not
allow him to break God's law. His master was very wroth— chained him to a post
on a daily allowance of a morsel of yam and a glass of water, declaring that he
should remain there till he should promise to trade as other market-people do. A
week passed away, but no promise of amendment could be wrung from the lad (Asuquo
Etifit). His services were again needed, and he went off again to market,
avowing to his master, as well as to others, his resolution never to trade on
the day of God. I knew nothing of all this till weeks after it had occurred.
Though not a member of the Church, I wish all who are so would walk as
consistently as he. . . .
We are withal rather presumptuous here. We are
preparing a Memorial for next meeting of Synod, urging on in our small way the
union of the Churches. I sometimes said in services at home—and we are all of
the same mind on the matter—"Here is a small town with, say, 3000 to 4000
inhabitants—and, behold, 2 Established Churches— 1 or 2 Free—1 or 2 U.P.—a
Baptist—a Congregationalist —and a Methodist—7 or 8 churches and ministers: now,
it is a downright shame to see the means of the Church frittered away in that
style," etc. etc. Here is poor Duke Town, with its 6000 inhabitants and the
60,000 belonging to its plantations, with only one church and one minister ! Is
this right?
In the Annual Report for 1S71, Dr. MacGill, in
giving details from the pen of Mr. Anderson regarding Duke Town, said:—
Mr. Anderson continues to labour with unabated
vigour in preaching and teaching, and has done even more in visiting from house
to house than during former years. He refers to another period of his own "
unbroken health " ; and, as an evidence of the great benefit Mrs. Anderson
derived from her brief visit to this country, notes that in a great measure she
has renewed her youth. Miss Patterson, a new European agent from Jamaica, after
teaching for four months at Duke Town, was removed to Ikoneto, where her
services are much required. Mrs. Sutherland, to whose indefatigable and most
useful labours among the women Mr. Anderson always bears the most emphatic
testimony, has been following out her wonted winning and persistent course of
usefulness in visiting her own sex. She has thereby drawn many to the house of
God, and "has continued," says Mr. Anderson, "her great work among the masses of
women who are not allowed to attend either church or market." ... A very fine
spirit, due to the influence of the Mission, has fallen on the headmen of young
Henshaw Town. The chiefs of the town, over whom our missionary has gained a
pleasing and just ascendency, are desirous of "raising the tone of morality
among their people, and delivering both themselves and their dependents from the
reign of superstition." To the influence of this movement, in a great degree,
Mr. Anderson ascribes the fact that the Sabbath attendance at Duke Town during
1871 has exceeded that of any other period ; and he is thankful for the past and
trustful for the future.
The statistics for the year are as follows:—
European Female Teacher—Mrs. Sutherland. Native
Teachers—William Cobham and James Ballantyne. Members ......... 47
Sabbath attendance in Church.....400
Candidates.........14
Sabbath-school pupils.......150
Day-school pupils.......120
Contributions— £51. 18s. 0½d
Out-stations—Henshaw Towns (North and South),
Efut, and Ed'i'be-Edibe.
With reference to the day-school, Mr. Anderson
said:—
William Cobham has been nominally in charge of
the school; but owing to his absence for a month at Dr. Robb's Training
Institution, and to repeated attacks of sickness since, which have prostrated
him somewhat, I have had a good deal of the teaching work to attend to myself.
The attendance has not been encouraging. Our proximity to the shipping, and
especially now that we have four or five steamers monthly, gives strong
inducements to our rising young men, and particularly to the more energetic
among them, to abandon continuous study, and devote themselves to commerce.
In the general introduction to the Report of the
Old Calabar Mission for 1871, Dr. MacGill wrote:—
Our mission in West Africa has proved a trying
one. It has cost life as well as labour and funds; but, with all our regrets
over those graves, to which no less than three were added during the year before
last, yet no labourer in that insalubrious and depressing climate has ever
hinted at abandonment. On the contrary, all our brethren in the field unite in
urging its claim, and in asking additional labourers; and from their near and
vivid view of the obduracy of the field, and of the inadequate number who labour
in it, repeat words which have an awful pathos there, however coldly they may be
uttered here: "The harvest truly is plenteous, but the labourers are few." After
many earnest appeals repeated for years, we have succeeded in obtaining the
services of one missionary, the Rev. Dugald Campbell, who has completed his
medical as well as his theological curriculum, and has put himself at the
disposal of the Mission Board for Calabar. As Duke Town has the strongest claim,
on his services, whether regard is had to the number of agents there, or to the
amount of the population, it has been resolved that he be located at that
interesting station as the colleague of Mr. Anderson.
It is only justice to the Mission Board to
mention their cordial appreciation of the services of George Thomson, Esq.,
architect, who, after a long and deeply-cherished interest in the Old Calabar
Mission, has spontaneously devoted himself, and no small amount of time and
means, to the solution of a problem, in practically resolving which he hopes to
provide our own and other missionaries on the West African coast with an asylum
where they may find shelter from fever and death without returning to this
country. Without attempting to answer his own earnest questions upon this
subject by correspondence, he resolved to go and see. Accordingly, at his own
charges and at the risk of his life, he has gone to try the country, and to find
some mountain retreat for the missionaries, far above the miasma of the climate.
. . . He has swept along its coast; he has ascended its rivers; he has visited
its mission stations far and near. He has done what few attempted before; he has
climbed its mountains, and has found, as he thinks, a summit [Cameroons] where a
debilitated missionary, by dint of breathing fresh air, without returning to
this country, might by God's blessing obviate a fatal fever, and prolong his
days for future service. Though no official correspondence has taken place
between Mr. Thomson and the Mission Board, yet the Board, considering the
importance of the enterprise, and the self-denial displayed in the attempt to
carry it into effect, has authorised their Secretary ... to express their
cordial appreciation of an undertaking so disinterested and an object so
important.
It is a matter for regret that the United
Presbyterian Church has never taken steps to establish a sanatorium for its
missionaries in Calabar, as other missionary societies working on the West Coast
have done. A change to another station does not mean a change of climate. A
regular holiday change each year is even more necessary in Calabar than at home;
but such change and rest are impossible to be got in Calabar itself. A few days'
trip to Opobo in the mail steamer is all that can be got now that Calabar is one
of the termini of the West Coast boats, and the boats for the South-West Coast
no longer call at Duke Town.
The Report goes on to notice the ordination of
the first native pastor:—
There is yet one other fact in the history of
this Mission which we hope will render 1872 a memorable year, and that is the
ordination of the first convert of the Old Calabar Mission, Ukpabio, to the
Christian ministry. Every month goes to deepen the conviction of those who think
most anxiously on the subject, of the necessity of developing a native ministry.
While our experience in Calabar has gone to prove that West Africa, and Central
Africa too, beyond the eastern mountains seen in clear weather from our mission
stations, can be converted to Jesus Christ, yet that experience has also
demonstrated that we have no right to expect this to be done without a native
ministry. The first ordination, therefore, of an African negro to read and to
expound that Efik Bibje which our Mission has given them, in a language having
not one scrap of literature when that negro first saw our missionaries, is an
epoch in the history of Calabar which calls for devout thanks to God.
Esien Esien Ukpabio was licensed on January 9,
and ordained by Mr. Goldie on April 9, the twenty-sixth anniversary of the
Mission. A vigorous ordination charge was delivered in Efik by Mr. Anderson from
Tim. iv. 14-16,and the congregation was addressed by Mr.Edgerley.
In anticipation of the arrival of a colleague,
Mr. Anderson wrote a letter, in giving extracts from which Dr. MacGill said:—
The Rev. W. Anderson,
writing under a recent date, begins the following communication with allusions
to his abundant labours. lie is entitled to do so, for his work comprises
constant and exhausting occupation as a schoolmaster as well as a missionary,
his conviction being that one of the most effectual means of exerting Christian
influence upon the Efik race is in the school, upon the minds and hearts of the
rising generation.
Mr. Anderson wrote:—
At the risk of being considered egotistical, I
feel it but right to state that, owing to the sickness of one of my teachers and
the opening of a second school by the other, the burden of the work of the
day-school devolves almost continuous on me. I wish the attendance were greater
than it is, but at the same time I find it sufficient to tax all my energies,
when viewed in connection with my other work. I have three full services on
Sabbath, besides Sabbath school to attend to both forenoon and afternoon. I have
four evening meetings to conduct weekly, palavers to settle now and then, and
house-to-house visitation, in so far as I can overtake it. My Saturday
half-holiday is devoted to preparation for Sabbath, and announcing its approach
to the natives. Days, weeks-, and months sweep past so quickly that I have often
to leave past and future to take care of themselves. I am rejoicing in hope
that, ere many weeks more pass away, a brother possessed of youth and vigour
will relieve me from several of my present engagements.
In glancing over my recent very brief jottings, I
find that deaths have been occurring at the usual rate among both Europeans and
natives; that there have been several bad cases of administering the esere,
which led to the usual amount of remonstrance and condemnation on the part of
the Mission; that there have been reported to us, but without that proof which
would warrant a charge of breach of treaty, a number of murders of twin
children; that one twin was saved and brought to the mission-house, where it
died in a few days; that there have been several cases of murder among the
natives—one a very bad case, for which a prince of the blood (a son of the late
King Eyamba's) was condemned to die, but he made his escape to Fernando Po; that
two native women were lately admitted to the fellowship of the Church. I find
two very pleasant entries—one in reference to a young man, [See ante, p. 497.
Asuquo Etifit Nsa, now an elder in Duke Town Church. There is an interesting
letter from him in the article, "Young Men at Duke Town " (Record, May 1873)]
not a member of the Church, who was put in chains by his master for refusing to
trade, when at the interior markets, on the Sabbath. He was kept chained to a
post for a week, in expectation that he would give in and promise to act like
others in time to come ; but he was firm, and was at length released
unconditionally. A few Sabbaths ago I observed that his master and he were
sitting quite near each other in church. . . .
When lately visiting Henshaw Town North—it is
separated from Duke Town by a small creek—I was earnestly requested by several
of the influential men there to send over a teacher daily for the instruction of
their children and people. They expressed themselves quite willing to build a
schoolhouse, if I would ask King Archibong's consent, and get it, to such a
step. The population is, I think, from 300 to 400, and there is a larger
proportion of children among them than among the Duke Townites; so I promised to
do for them what I could. On an early day thereafter I took over James
Ballantyne with me to begin operations. On my recommendation, one of the headmen
gave us the use of his yard, in order that we might see whether a considerable
number would attend regularly, before they should be at the trouble of erecting
a schoolhouse. For a time James had between 50 and 60 pupils daily, 10 or 12 of
them adults; but latterly, owing to numbers having gone off to the plantation,
the attendance has been from 20 to 30. The population of that suburb is very
fluctuating.
After having considered the matter for a long
period, we have introduced a change in the hours of public worship in the
afternoon. The heat has often been so great from two o'clock to four that
neither natives nor Europeans could engage in divine service with comfort; so we
meet in the afternoon at the following hours:— Sabbath school, three; Efik
service, four; English, five. The change has been kept up for some time, and we
find that it answers well.
Our friend Mr. George Thomson had held a meeting
with the young men connected with the Church, and had given them a good deal of
information about societies of young men in Scotland, whose object is to use
efforts for the spread of the truth in destitute localities, and had suggested
to them that it would be well were they to go and do likewise. This led them to
request me to call a meeting to consider the subject. When that meeting was
held, ten of the male members of the Church formed themselves into a society for
Christian work, and agreed to rules and regulations which they had previously
requested Mr. Thomson to prepare. The work then agreed on was the regular
visitation of the town and surrounding settlements. This work had been engaged
in before, but in a desultory manner. Their formation into a society gave a
fresh impulse to their efforts, and has proved very beneficial.
Of the arrival of the Rev. Dugald and Mrs.
Campbell on July 7, Mr. Anderson wrote:—
They had been long looked for, and our rejoicing
on account of their arrival was proportionately great. We earnestly pray that
both may be long spared to each other and to the important work on which they
are entering.
Mr. Anderson wrote as follows, on Aug. 28, 1872,
regarding the deaths of Archibong II. and David King,
and Charles Haddison :—
I embrace the earliest opportunity of intimating
to you that King Archibong n. died here, after a reign of thirteen years, on
Monday evening last, the 26th inst. This is the date given officially, but many
allege that he died the previous day. All agree, however, in regard to the fact
that he is now in his grave.
Mr. Anderson received, in answer to questions
about the king's health, the two following notes, the one signed by "Big Adam,"
the king's secretary, and both signed by George Duke:—
Aug. 26, 1872.
Mr. Anderson, My dear Friend,—It is not so.
Except yesterday king had so much strong sick, and we have not allow any persons
to go inside the king's house. Yesterday I been over yon to doctor house. One
time doctor come and give medicine, other time he give me medicine to give king
; but now king very sick.
George Duke.
Duke Town, Old Calabar,
August 27, 1872.
Mr. Anderson, My dear Friend,—I am very much
sorry indeed to write you this few lines for let you know that our King
Archibong n. is no more here: the death has carry him away. Now he is died, in
truth. Just now I trusting you well.—Yours very truly,
Big Adam Duke and George Duke.
From all that I can hear, I conclude that King
Archibong has died as he lived, without God and without hope. I visited him
Saturday after Saturday for many years, but he avoided as much as possible
anything like attention to the truths of the gospel. Four Saturdays bygone I
have not been permitted to see him. I suppose that he and his attendants knew
that I would "make palaver" about the idiong by which he kept himself
surrounded. His brother, Adam Archibong, now blind, will probably be his
successor as king. I do not anticipate that the change will affect the
operations of the Mission.
Another death took place on Sabbath morning [Aug.
25], viz., David King, king of Ikorofiong. David was the first man who was
baptized at this station, but he has been neither a comfort nor an ornament to
the Church. He ran well—or at least appeared to do so—for a few years, but fell
away—alas, how sadly! In company with Mr. Campbell I saw him about a week before
his death. Mr. Campbell warned him that his end was near; and I reminded him of
past privileges and professions, and entreated him to make renewed application
to the blood which cleanseth from all sin; but he seemed utterly callous. I
prayed with him briefly, but there was nothing like an Amen from him. In some
respects his deathbed was surrounded by a deeper gloom than that of King
Archibong. Both have been men of blood, but King Archibong has not to deplore
apostasy from the truth.
On the 19th inst. one of our Church members,
Charles Haddison by name, entered on his rest. He has led a quiet, consistent
Christian life for six or seven years. What a difference between his deathbed
and those of the heathens at no great distance! He died in faith, committing his
spirit with almost his latest breath into the hands of the great Mediator. These
solemn dispensations call upon all of us to work while it is day. The night
cometh.
On Sabbath, 14th ult., three young women, natives
of neighbouring countries, were received into the fellowship of the Church by
baptism.
During this month and the last we have had no
fewer than six marriages, which we look upon as indicating progress.
Mr. Anderson gave in the Record for May 1873 some
touching sketches of Young Calabar, which revealed something of the heart of the
minister as well as of the youths in whom he was so deeply interested, one of
which is subjoined :—
James Ballantyne has just been thrown on me by
Providence—was bought by I Ienry Cobham, perhaps fifteen or sixteen years ago,
when little more than an infant— a little slave—found wonderful attraction at
school —dozed away for days and nights at the mission-house— then missed by
Henry, sent for, beat, cursed, tied to a post—when loosed, would remain about
his master's premises till he saw he was forgotten—off to school and the mission
premises again—again missed, sent for, scolded, beat, tied to a post. Up to us
again—another capture—another escapade (this may be amusing to read, but it
causes the big salt tears to course down my cheeks)—till at length, when I had
spoken to Henry the twentieth time in his behalf, he (Henry) exclaimed, to my
satisfaction, "That little boy too bad boy ; I no fit to keep him; he run away
all time; I no want to see him no more; let him stand for you." So he has "stood
for me" —is now about twenty years of age, I suppose—is a member of the
Church—has assisted William Cobham and myself in school for three years or
so-—can write tolerably good English—can parse any common English sentence— is
now at the second conjugation Latin Grammar—writes very full outlines of my
Sabbath discourses, both Efik and English—and promises to be a useful agent of
the Mission.
In the Annual Report for 1872 it is noted:—
Mr. Anderson's district has in it now, its
politics, its incipient public opinion, its antagonisms and affinities, if not
its factions. The influence of the gospel has stimulated any thought or
enterprise it has attained above mere trade in palm oil and rum. The extent of
the moral changes already produced consists of a thousand details, difficult to
be realised or numbered. It is saying much, but it is after all a feeble
understatement of the fact, to affirm that the change produced is worth the
labour of thirty years.
After referring to the arrival of Mr. and Mrs.
Campbell, and the death of Archibong II., Mr. Anderson says:—
A brother of King Archibong, known as yet by the
name of Adam Archibong, is likely to be his successor. Already he executes the
office of king. Adam is nearly if not altogether blind; and he will prove as a
ruler very much what his Cabinet will make him. One of our old scholars, who now
styles himself Prince Eyamba, seems to be already installed as Prime Minister.
Our Henshaw Town young men have for a
considerable time been desirous to have a king of their own, and to be an
independent community. But they have damaged their cause very much by
precipitate action. Their best friends both in the Mission and in the river
advised them to go on quietly building their town, drawing to it a large
population, clearing off all debts to the shipping, increasing their trade,
etc., till they should be able to command the respect of all neighbours and
rivals, and tlien to consider any change in their position. But, instead of
acting thus, they determined some months ago that they would have a king
immediately. So they procured a sort of crown from a Dutch supercargo, and a few
weeks ago they crowned their headman, calling him King Henshaw ill. This aroused
the hostility of Duke Town, whose grandees seem determined that no one in their
neighbourhood, save one of themselves, shall bear the English title of "king."
They are quite willing that the headman of Henshaw Town, like the other headmen
of all the other towns in the whole region, should exercise regal or even
imperial authority; but to call such a one by the name of "king" is, they say,
an infringement of their prerogative. The young premier of Duke Town, with great
diplomatic skill,—aided, however, by some masked European,— enlisted the white
traders and the whole Egbo fraternity on the side of Duke Town versus Henshaw
Town. The result of this coalition is that Henshaw Town has been compelled to
surrender the crown and the regal title for the present. No one, so far as can
be ascertained, denies the abstract right of the Henshaw Town people to act as
they choose on their own territory, but there can be only one opinion as to the
inexpediency of their late movement. They will be subjected to a heavy fine,
not, it is said, for making a king, but for a serious breach of Egbo law in
connection with the matter. The fine will likely be such as will cripple their
resources and their energies for years to come.
Some time ago they requested the Presbytery to
send them a teacher. They named Miss Patterson, as one whom they would like to
have among them. The Presbytery granted their request, in expectation that they
would contribute liberally for Miss Patterson's support. In their present
circumstances it is not likely that they will be able to do much in the way of
contribution.
In regard to the day-schools, Mr. Anderson
wrote:—
Owing to the long-continued sickness of the
senior native teacher [W. Cobham], the senior missionary has had to do duty as
schoolmaster for ten months during the year. This has been a very serious
hindrance to the very important work of visitation from house to house. Indeed,
the question has often forced itself on the missionary, whether it would not be
better in the circumstances to keep school only once a day, for two and a half
or three hours, that he might be able to devote other two or three hours to
household visitation. . . . There is also a small school of from 20 to 30
scholars, taught by one of our young men at Henshaw Town (North). It is but
right to mention here that there are several small schools in the town taught by
immigrants from Accra quarter, so that the 120 or 130 names on the roll-books of
our mission schools must not be looked on as the secular education gauge of the
kingdom of Duke Town.
Old Town, Walkerwood, [A station, about two miles
from Old Town, sustained by the liberality of Captain J. B. Walker, F.R.S.E., a
trader in the river and member of Duke Town Church.] Qua, etc., will henceforth
be more immediately under the superintendence of our vigorous young brother, Mr.
Campbell, just as the Creek Town out-stations are under that of the junior
brother there, Mr. Edgerley. Efut and Edibe-Ed'ibe farms have been visited
weekly by several of the native members of the Church.
The Rev. D. Campbell devotes a portion of his
time to medical and surgical work; he has for about six months relieved his
senior brother from most of the duties connected with the English services, both
on Sabbath days and week days; he has been diligent in the study of the Efik
tongue, and has so far mastered it as to be able to conduct the reading
department at our Efik services on Sabbath. Mrs. Sutherland's work among the
women has necessarily been interrupted by her quinquennial trip to the north. It
is hoped she will return with renewed vigour for the prosecution of her
important labours.