Preacher, educator, and president of Burritt College.
Alvinzi Gano Thomas was born in Tarversville, Twiggs County, Georgia on June 10, 1833. His father was a Baptist minister and a teacher. A.G. studied under his father and attended Mercer University for one session. He then enrolled at Bethany College in Virginia (now West Virginia) and came under the influence of Alexander Campbell. He was Georgia's first student at Bethany, receiving the A.B. degree, July 4, 1851. He then taught school at Griffin and Hampton, Georgia, while studying law and became a Disciple at Griffin in 1853. Both his father and Dr. Daniel Hook influenced him to begin preaching. Thomas pursued his education further by going back to Bethany College for two more years of Graduate study, and had the A.M. degree conferred upon him in 1856. He read ten languages and spoke four. He often accompanied Campbell on his preaching visits to the various churches. He was officially ordained to preach at Bethany with Alexander Campbell, Isaac Errett (1820-1888), and D.S. Burnett (1808-1867) officiating. Returning to Atlanta, his first work was preacher for the Atlanta church. While there he studied further at Atlanta Medical College, beginning about 1859, and received the M.D. degree. In 1857 he married Miss Susan Adelaide Reynolds, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E.B. Reynolds of the Atlanta church. Very soon after returning to Atlanta, he became Co-Editor with James S. Lamar on Georgia's first pre-Civil War publication, Christian Union. The first issue of the monthly contained 32 pages, and was published at Augusta, dated January, 1856. Funded greatly by Georgia's loving benefactress, Emily H. Tubman, the short-lived paper helped struggling members of the Church of Christ throughout the state. When the Civil War began, Dr. A.G. Thomas, being loyal to the Confederacy, join the ranks of the 7th Georgia Volunteer Infantry Regiment as a chaplain. Before the war, his commitment to the south was noted by a visit from Tolbert Fanning, editor of the Gospel Advocate. Fanning was in Atlanta for a visit, beginning Dec. 21, 1860, and stayed in the Thomas home. He wrote in the Gospel Advocate, "Dr. A.G. Thomas is a brother of fine address, superior talents and learning, but we saw him with a feather in his hat and a glittering sword in his right hand, and doubted if he would be able to hold the sword of Georgia in one hand and the sword of the Spirit in the other." (G.A., Feb. 1861, p. 39) J. Edward Moseley, in his book, Disciples of Christ In Georgia, stated in a footnote on page 190, that, "when the 'Atlanta Rifles' were organized in May, 1861, Dr. Thomas became an orderly-sergeant. (Wallace P. Reed, History Of Atlanta, Georgia [Syracuse, N.Y.: D. Mason & Co., 1889], p.116)." Later, in a footnote on page 224, Moseley wrote, "After the war, Dr. A.G. Thomas was school principal at Irwinton, Twiggs County, Ga. He preached there and at Toomsboro, Sandersville, and at other neighboring churches. In the spring of 1869, he went to a pastorate at Greenfield, Ind. A year or so later he became professor of Latin at what is now Butler University, Indianapolis." In July, 1877, the Thomas family returned to Atlanta from Indianapolis. In 1879, he received a lifetime call from the Atlanta church, but relinquished that position to J.S. Lamar in 1885. From 1877-1896, Thomas preached monthly, except for three years, at the Acworth congregation, home congregation of Nathan W. Smith. In 1879, Thomas established the first Negro Church of Christ in Atlanta. Moseley noted on p.247, "In February, Mrs. Mary D. Howell informed Dr. Thomas that a number of these colored friends, who had enlisted her interest and advice, were anxious to become members of the Church of Christ, and to be organized into a congregation." A Brother Jones was authorized to preach and the Negro congregation was established, meeting in a room on Marietta Street in Northwest Atlanta. In 1881 Dr. Thomas was elected as president of the Georgia Convention where it was stated that there were twenty-three churches from Georgia represented. J.S. Lamar claimed that at least sixty churches were not represented. His greatest honor in the brotherhood was conferred upon him two years later at the General Christian Missionary Convention in St. Louis, Mo. when he was elected president of the Convention. Moseley said, p. 239, "No other Georgian, before or since, received such recognition from the national brotherhood." From 1886-87, Dr. Thomas served as president of Burritt College, Spencer, Tennessee. After his return to Atlanta, he served as president of the Georgia College of Medicine and Surgery. Dr. A.G. Thomas passed from this life, December 14, 1903, in Atlanta, Georgia. He was buried in Atlanta's beautiful Oakland Cemetery.
--Most of this biographical sketch was compiled by Scott Harp from excepts of information in Disciples Of Christ In Georgia, by J. Edward Moseley, Bethany Press, St. Louis, MO, c.1954. cf. www.therestorationmovement.com
Family Members
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Susan Adelaide Reynolds Thomas
1840–1904
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Ganova Thomas
1858–1861
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Edwin Nel Thomas
1859–1860
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Adeline Thomas
1861–1881
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Alva Lorena Thomas Fairbanks
1862–1941
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Lois Olenza Thomas Pease
1866–1948
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Ewart Thomas
1872–1873
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Lois Adelia Thomas Bolles
1882–1974
Flowers
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Records on Ancestry
Dr Alvinzi Gano Thomas
1900 United States Federal Census
Dr Alvinzi Gano Thomas
North America, Family Histories, 1500-2000
Dr Alvinzi Gano Thomas
Fulton and Campbell Counties, Georgia, Cemetery Records, 1857-1933
Dr Alvinzi Gano Thomas
Texas, U.S., Death Certificates, 1903-1982
Dr Alvinzi Gano Thomas
1880 United States Federal Census
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