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Edmund Levi “E. L.” Kelley Sr.

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Edmund Levi “E. L.” Kelley Sr.

Birth
Vienna, Johnson County, Illinois, USA
Death
10 May 1930 (aged 85)
Jackson County, Missouri, USA
Burial
Independence, Jackson County, Missouri, USA Add to Map
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1.) BISHOP E. L. KELLEY DIES.
"He Presided Over Reorganized Latter Day Saints, 1884 to 1912."
Edmund L. Kelley, 85 years old, former presiding bishop and financial head of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, died this afternoon at his home, 1300 West Lexington street, Independence, from the infirmities of age. Bishop Kelley served as presiding bishop of his church from 1884 until 1912 when he retired.

He came to Independence in 1904, when the headquarters of the church was moved from Lamoni, Ia.

He leaves his widow, Mrs. Katherine B. Kelley, of the home; three daughters, Mrs. Jeanette Craig of the home, Mrs. Ruth Lichtenwalter of Philadelphia and Mrs. Laura Green, 915 South Main Street, Independence, and five sons, W. B. Kelley, 414 North River boulevard, Independence; J. S. Kelley, 416 North River boulevard; D. E. Kelley, Kansas City; E. L. Kelley, Jr., Hardin, Mont., and Richard C. Kelley, Philadelphia.
SOURCE: newspapers.com; The Kansas City Star
Kansas City, Missouri · Saturday, May 10, 1930, p. 2

2.) "Lamoni Residents I Have Known" by Joseph H. Anthony
E. L. Kelley. My first contact with the subject of this sketch occurred when I was but a lad when upon several occasions I called at his office, which at that time was located in the west wing of the old Herald Office building. From the moment of that first meeting, I felt I had met a friend. He spoke with a soft, evenly modulated voice and his manner was so kind and gracious it gave me the feeling that he was interested in me and my problems. I never knew him to be otherwise, always courteous and gentlemanly and he treated my visits there with the same consideration and concern as he would have done if I were a mature man and my business contacts of really great importance.

But because he was kind and soft-spoken was no indication that he did not possess determination and the will to fight for the things he knew to be right and continued acquaintance with him proved this to be his make-up even though at times the odds against him seemed to be overwhelming. Such was the condition when the general conference of the church, in session at Kirtland, Ohio, voted to close Graceland College. People of Lamoni were greatly shocked by this news. Many of them had worked hard and faithfully to help get the struggling institution upon its feet and had built up a great hope that some day there would be a flourishing institution of learning upon the hill. But there were even some in Lamoni who did not feel that way. In fact, there were those who were free to criticize the men who had supported the school, and although it was quite generally conceded that if the doors of the college were once closed they would never be reopened, many of her critics felt under the existing circumstances it was the proper thing to do and they openly commended the action of the conference.

Quite naturally in this crisis all eyes turned toward E. L. Kelley, due to the fact that he was at the head of the financial interests of the church and also because he was generally conceded to be one of the strongest supporters of the college. For days the subject of the conference action was the main topic of conversation in the homes and on the streets of Lamoni. One evening, shortly after the adjournment of the conference, a small group of men stood upon what is now the Lewis-Gamet store corner discussing this all-important question when E. L. Kelley walked leisurely past them and went into the store.

Immediately they followed him and when the moment seemed opportune one of the group addressed him and inquired as to his opinion of the effect of the conference decision. There was not the slightest change in his manner, and the tone of his voice was calm and perfectly controlled, such as it would have been had he been addressing the clerk regarding his recent purchase, as he replied: "I do not think the doors of Graceland College will ever be closed."

We all know that story. The doors did not close because E. L. Kelley was convinced that Graceland had a mission to fulfill and he was determined to see that she was not robbed of that opportunity. The storm of criticism which followed his action proved the type of man he really was, for no matter how severe they criticism nor how unjust the charges hurled at him, his purposes and intentions were never thrown off balance. Graceland's standing today definitely proves that point.

When the Lamoni Coliseum was built, its promotion and construction also brought forth a storm of criticism. The men who took the lead in promoting it faced insurmountable difficulties both from the financial angle as well a the moral problem involved. Some contended that such a building used for the purposes intended would not be in keeping with the standards that Lamoni should maintain.

When the building was finally completed, E. L. Kelley was chosen to make the dedicatory address. The reason for this choice was obvious. The promoters of the project felt it to be a worthy one and they knew that unless their case was properly presented their cause was lost. They also knew if any man among us was capable of uniting the opposing forces, E. L. Kelley was that man. The gentleman was introduced the speaker of the evening endeavored to be tactful and spent no little time in explaining certain phases of the construction which had been criticized and then presented the speaker.

Mr. Kelley stepped forward with his usual calmness. His voice bore the same calm note of assurance as he proceeded somewhat after the manner: "The speaker who preceded me sounded almost apologetic as he explained some of the features and advantages of this fine new building. Why apologize for a building which houses the possibilities this one does? If it proves a detriment to the development of Lamoni then you citizens are responsible - not the building. You have it within your power to make it one of the most valuable assets, and if you fail to make it such the failure is yours. See to it, that its purpose is for the enlightenment and edification of the people of Lamoni and if you will do this, future generations will forget this present controversy and speak nothing but praise for it and for those who have worked in faithfully to build it."

Of course he said many other things that night, but the prophetic nature of those words is significant. You may draw your own conclusions. What would Lamoni do without her Coliseum today?

I think Lamoni is mighty proud to claim E. L. Kelley as one of her very own. He was a man of vision and purpose, with the determination to give momentum to every project which promised advancement to the community. He was a gentleman whose courteous, gracious manner was so much a part of him that even during his final illness it was a source of inspiration to all who knew him. A champion of every righteous cause, a true gentleman, a Lamoni citizen, a very important figure in Lamoni's passing parade.
SOURCE: The Lamoni Chronicle, published in Lamoni, Iowa on Thursday, October 31st, 1946, p. 2

3.) Benjamin F. Biographies and Portraits of Progressive Men of Iowa Conaway & Shaw. 1899:
Edmund Levi KELLEY, presiding Bishop of the Reorganized Church of Latter Day Saints, whose signature appears in business circles as E. L. KELLEY, is a resident of Lamoni, Decatur County, but was formerly a resident of Glenwood, Mills County, and from 1874 to 1884 a member of the law firm of KELLEY Bros. at that place.

His father, Richard Yancey KELLEY, moved from Illinois to Mills County in 1854, arriving there in the month of October. He entered a piece of and engaged in farming, and owned one of the best farms in the county at the time of his death, which occurred June 10, 1861.

Richard Y. KELLEY was the grandson of Richard KELLEY and Maria GIBBS, who immigrated to America in 1773, settled in North Carolina, and took part with the patriots in the war for Independence. They reared a family of seven boys, among the number, Benjamin Franklin KELLEY, who was born March 4, 1784. This son, Benjamin, at an early time moved to Middle Tennessee and made himself a home in the forests of Robinson County, near Nashville, and in 1805 was married to Miss Nancy YANCEY, born August 27, 1787, daughter of Colonel and Mrs. Austin YANCEY.

Benjamin F. KELLEY and wife raised a family of six sons and one daughter, among the number, Richard Y. KELLEY, who was born January 23, 1814. On May 31, 1837, he was married to Miss Sarah E. F. BALLOWE at Nashville, Tennessee. Miss BALLOWE was born in the state of Virginia, July 3, 1814. Her parents were Virginians. Her father, Eli P. BALLOWE, born March 3, 1786, and her mother, Sarah Howard WINFREY, August 3, 1795. They were extensive planters and slave holders, and when Miss Sarah BALLOWE was in her tenth year they moved to Tennessee and built a home near Nashville, where many of the relatives still live.

Samuel WINFREY, a brother of Miss Sarah WINFREY, who lives four miles east of Nashville, on the Murfreesborough road, is a man of extensive resources, and during the War of the Rebellion his house was the headquarters for a number of the federal officers stationed at Nashville.

Mrs. Mary S. WELCH, a sister of Mrs. Sarah E. F. KELLEY, also still lives and has good property in Nashville.

Richard Y. KELLEY was opposed to the idea of slavery, and upon his marriage decided to try a free state. In the fall of 1837 he moved with his wife to Johnson County, Illinois, where they continued to reside until going to western Iowa in 1854. Here they reared a family, all of whom were born in Illinois prior to going to Iowa, consisting of seven sons and one daughter, namely:

Benjamin Franklin KELLEY, the eldest, at one time a large farmer and stockman of Mills County, now deceased. His family lives in Mills County, respected by those who know them.

John S. KELLEY, an honorable and worthy farmer, who resided on the old homestead in Mills County; died since the writing of this sketch.

William H. KELLEY, a resident of Kirtland, Ohio. A minister of eloquent and pleasing address, and author of a work entitled "Presidency and Priesthood in the Church of Christ." He enlisted in the army in 1864, and was honorably discharged at Washington in 1865, at the close of the war.

Mrs. Mary J. H. RYERSON, wife of Mr. John RYERSON, a farmer in Mills County.

Edmund L. KELLEY, the subject of this sketch.

George T. KELLEY, attorney at law; graduate of the State University of Iowa, and now practicing law at Plainville, Nebraska.

Parley P. KELLEY, attorney at law, Glenwood; graduate of the State University, and one of the best posted attorneys in the western part of the state. P. P. KELLEY died at his home in Glenwood since this sketch was written.
NOTE: Parley P. KELLEY was the second attorney for the RLDS Church.

James M. KELLEY, cashier of the State Bank of Macedonia, Pottawattamie County. He is a graduate of the Iowa State University.

Edmund L. KELLEY was born the 17th of November, 1844, near Vienna, Johnson County, Illinois. When ten years of age his father moved to western Iowa, which at that time was little settled, the Indian trail being then the most conspicuous mark of bottoms and fine rolling prairies, and the dark-skinned hunter a familiar object to the settler. The subscription school was relied upon in great part for the advantages of an education, and three months in the winter and two in summer the maximum time to be used in mental improvement by those best prepared to take advantage of the situation.

The 15th of April, 1861, his father started him to school at Glenwood, with the statement that he might go as long as he wanted to, and the country boy in blue jeans began his work with a satisfied heart. Not two months passed, however, before the death of the father called the boy home to work on the farm, and the next schooling of importance was in the fall of 1862, when he went back to Glenwood, found a place where he could do chores for his board and studied until the middle of December, when upon the recommendation of the principal of the school and the county superintendent, he took a large school on Silver Creek in Mills County and taught his first term. Judge W. S. LEWIS, of Mills County, then a small boy, received his first start at this term of school. At the close of the term, having a desire for a better education, he arranged with the county superintendent and judge to recommend him to the State University under the law providing for representatives from each county, and in April, 1863, he began a course of study in the University as the first representative student from Mills County.

The hard times of 1863 and 1864 made it necessary for him to "hire out" during the vacation and labor on a farm to replenish his exchequer, which he did at Iowa City, attending school while in session, until May, 1864, when he returned home and began teaching in Pottawattamie County, and in the winter taught again on Silver Creek, Mills County, where he had taught his first term.

In the year 1865 he determined to try a business education, and took a course in the H. G. Eastman Business College, Poughkeepsie, New York. In December, 1865, he called upon the state superintendent at Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, and applied for a school. The superintendent had just received application for a teacher for the boys' high school at Williamsport, Pennsylvania, the boys of the raging canal on the Susquehanna having succeeded in driving two teachers from the school at the point of stone ink jugs. Arrangements were at once entered into in which KELLEY agreed to remain in the school and conduct it or charge nothing for his services. At the end of a four months' term he received unanimous commendation from the Association of Teachers at Williamsport, and the special thanks of Dr. ARMSTRONG of Dickenson College for his work among the boys.

Western life, however, had not lost its attractions for him, and he left Williamsport for the west, and taught in the public schools of Illinois and Iowa until September, 1867, when he entered upon the drug business at Logan, Harrison County, Iowa. In 1873 he graduated from the law department of the Iowa State University, and the same year was elected superintendent of schools of Mills County, where he resided. His work was sufficiently satisfactory, so that when a successor was to be chosen he was assured by the leaders of both political parties in the county that if he was a candidate for the position there would be no opposition to him. However, having entered upon the practice of the law, he declined to continue further in school work. In law he was successful. His practice grew rapidly, and he was admitted to practice in the United District and Circuit Courts and in the Supreme Court of the United States.

In the year 1881 the Reorganized Church of Latter Day Saints, of which he is a member, selected him to act in connection with Hon. Z. H. GURLEY of Decatur County, Iowa, upon a committee to urge upon Congress the necessity of passing an effective law against the practice of polygamy in the territories of the United states, and early in December of that year he proceeded to Washington and, with Mr. GURLEY, began work among the members of the Forty-seventh Congress upon that question. They issued and placed in the hands of each member of Congress and the President, a pamphlet entitled "The Utah Problem and Its Solution," and subsequently another, entitled "Polygamy a Crime - Not a religion." The committee was also favored with a personal interview with President ARTHUR in which to present its views and documents, and Mr. KELLEY made an argument before the House Judiciary committee upon the question, answering the speech of Mr. CANNON, the Utah delegate. The committee later learned from Hon. Edwin F. WILLITS that when he, with others of the committee called upon the President to ascertain what the President had to recommend touching the Utah question, the President placed the documents furnished him by the committee in their hands, asking for them a careful consideration.

After the passage of the law known as the Edmunds Bill the committee quit Washington, and in April, 1882, Mr. KELLEY was appointed Counselor to the Bishop of the Reorganized Church of Latter Day Saints and continued to fill this position until the death of the Bishop in September, 1890, when he acted in the office by virtue of appointment and his trusteeship as Counselor until the General Conference of the Society, and on the 10th of April, 1891, he was chosen the Presiding Bishop of the Reorganized Church, which position he continues to fill.

This position, in addition to spiritual duties in the church to which he belongs, makes him the chief financial officer of the body. His special work is to look after all church properties and finances, and the receipts and expenditures of himself and agents annually amount to more than $100,000, and the church property of which he is trustee is valued at upwards of half a million. He is also president of the Board of Publication of the Herald Publishing House, Lamoni.

From 1884 until 1891 he resided, with his family, at Kirtland, Ohio, to better perform his work as Counselor in the church, and when there took as active interest in the public schools and other work, was a member of the board of education and held commissions as justice and notary from Governors FORAKER and CAMPBELL.

In his church work, as any other, he has always been ready to present and defend either in public or private, any principle or doctrine that he believed, and in maintaining these has met in public discussion some of the most eminent debaters in the United States. Among his public debates may be mentioned that in Kansas City in 1882 with Mr. David ECKLES, leader of the Liberal League at that time in that city.

In 1884 he held a discussion with Rev. Clark BRADEN of the Disciple, or Christian Church. This debate was published in a large volume containing 400 pages, and has already had a second edition.

In 1888 he engaged in a discussion with Rev. J. D. WHITEHEAD, Christadelphian, in Boston, Massachusetts. Later he held a discussion at Lee's Summit, Missouri, with Rev. D. B. RAY, D. D., of the Baptist Church, St. Louis, and in 1889 with Mr. D. R. DUNGAN, at the time professor of Theology in Drake University and later president of Bethany College, Nebraska.

Mr. KELLEY is one of the projectors and promoters of Graceland College, located at Lamoni, Iowa. This is a non-sectarian school in all its departments and features, and so guaranteed to be in its articles of incorporation, notwithstanding the fact that it is under the fostering care of the church. Religion, as such, is not taught in the school, and the professors religiously have membership with different denominations, or are not members of any church. He was elected a member of the board of trustees and directors at the beginning of the institution and filled these positions until April 20, 1900, when he resigned both places.

Politically, Mr. KELLEY is a republican, having cast his first vote for General Grant for President and has last for William McKinley. In 1873 he was elected on the anti-monopolist ticket for superintendent of schools, and in 1875 was a candidate on an independent ticket in Mills County against Hon. John Y. STONE for Representative, but was defeated in the election by 125 votes. He is a protectionist and bimetallist in sentiment and voted for McKinley believing that was the preferable way to attain both objects.

On the 21st of December, 1876, he was married to Miss Cassie BISHOP, daughter of Mr. John and Mrs. Mary BISHOP, Malvern, Iowa, and from this union they have a family of eight children, ranging in age from twenty-two down to three years, and named as follows:

Winifred Bishop, born November 30, 1877; he was a soldier in Co. M, 50th Regiment, Iowa Volunteer Infantry, during Spanish-American war; now law student Iowa State University;
Edmund L., Jr., born March 25, 1880;

Richard Carlyle, born September 30, 1882;
Laura Belle, born September 20, 1884;
Jeannette Vivian, born July 23, 1887;
Joseph Stanley, born February 4, 1890;
David Emlin, born October 16, 1893,
and Ruth Alix, born December 8, 1896.

Miss BISHOP was born [1853] in Monroe County, Iowa, and reared in Monroe and Mills Counties. Her father's family were from Danbury, Connecticut; he was a corporal in an Indiana company in the Mexican was and slightly wounded at the battle of Buena Vista. Her mother, formerly Miss Mary J. HUMESTON, was born in Indiana and was in that state married to Mr. BISHOP. Mr. BISHOP is a thorough stockman and owns an extensive ranch, stocked with cattle and horses, at Bailey, Cherry County, Nebraska.

On the 9th of April, 1807, Bishop KELLEY was called to the position of Counselor to the President of the church of which he is a member, and has filled this position since, in connection with his duties as Presiding Bishop of the society.
SOURCE: Benjamin F. Biographies and Portraits of Progressive Men of Iowa Conaway & Shaw. 1899.
Contributor: Observer4wing (47373768)
1.) BISHOP E. L. KELLEY DIES.
"He Presided Over Reorganized Latter Day Saints, 1884 to 1912."
Edmund L. Kelley, 85 years old, former presiding bishop and financial head of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, died this afternoon at his home, 1300 West Lexington street, Independence, from the infirmities of age. Bishop Kelley served as presiding bishop of his church from 1884 until 1912 when he retired.

He came to Independence in 1904, when the headquarters of the church was moved from Lamoni, Ia.

He leaves his widow, Mrs. Katherine B. Kelley, of the home; three daughters, Mrs. Jeanette Craig of the home, Mrs. Ruth Lichtenwalter of Philadelphia and Mrs. Laura Green, 915 South Main Street, Independence, and five sons, W. B. Kelley, 414 North River boulevard, Independence; J. S. Kelley, 416 North River boulevard; D. E. Kelley, Kansas City; E. L. Kelley, Jr., Hardin, Mont., and Richard C. Kelley, Philadelphia.
SOURCE: newspapers.com; The Kansas City Star
Kansas City, Missouri · Saturday, May 10, 1930, p. 2

2.) "Lamoni Residents I Have Known" by Joseph H. Anthony
E. L. Kelley. My first contact with the subject of this sketch occurred when I was but a lad when upon several occasions I called at his office, which at that time was located in the west wing of the old Herald Office building. From the moment of that first meeting, I felt I had met a friend. He spoke with a soft, evenly modulated voice and his manner was so kind and gracious it gave me the feeling that he was interested in me and my problems. I never knew him to be otherwise, always courteous and gentlemanly and he treated my visits there with the same consideration and concern as he would have done if I were a mature man and my business contacts of really great importance.

But because he was kind and soft-spoken was no indication that he did not possess determination and the will to fight for the things he knew to be right and continued acquaintance with him proved this to be his make-up even though at times the odds against him seemed to be overwhelming. Such was the condition when the general conference of the church, in session at Kirtland, Ohio, voted to close Graceland College. People of Lamoni were greatly shocked by this news. Many of them had worked hard and faithfully to help get the struggling institution upon its feet and had built up a great hope that some day there would be a flourishing institution of learning upon the hill. But there were even some in Lamoni who did not feel that way. In fact, there were those who were free to criticize the men who had supported the school, and although it was quite generally conceded that if the doors of the college were once closed they would never be reopened, many of her critics felt under the existing circumstances it was the proper thing to do and they openly commended the action of the conference.

Quite naturally in this crisis all eyes turned toward E. L. Kelley, due to the fact that he was at the head of the financial interests of the church and also because he was generally conceded to be one of the strongest supporters of the college. For days the subject of the conference action was the main topic of conversation in the homes and on the streets of Lamoni. One evening, shortly after the adjournment of the conference, a small group of men stood upon what is now the Lewis-Gamet store corner discussing this all-important question when E. L. Kelley walked leisurely past them and went into the store.

Immediately they followed him and when the moment seemed opportune one of the group addressed him and inquired as to his opinion of the effect of the conference decision. There was not the slightest change in his manner, and the tone of his voice was calm and perfectly controlled, such as it would have been had he been addressing the clerk regarding his recent purchase, as he replied: "I do not think the doors of Graceland College will ever be closed."

We all know that story. The doors did not close because E. L. Kelley was convinced that Graceland had a mission to fulfill and he was determined to see that she was not robbed of that opportunity. The storm of criticism which followed his action proved the type of man he really was, for no matter how severe they criticism nor how unjust the charges hurled at him, his purposes and intentions were never thrown off balance. Graceland's standing today definitely proves that point.

When the Lamoni Coliseum was built, its promotion and construction also brought forth a storm of criticism. The men who took the lead in promoting it faced insurmountable difficulties both from the financial angle as well a the moral problem involved. Some contended that such a building used for the purposes intended would not be in keeping with the standards that Lamoni should maintain.

When the building was finally completed, E. L. Kelley was chosen to make the dedicatory address. The reason for this choice was obvious. The promoters of the project felt it to be a worthy one and they knew that unless their case was properly presented their cause was lost. They also knew if any man among us was capable of uniting the opposing forces, E. L. Kelley was that man. The gentleman was introduced the speaker of the evening endeavored to be tactful and spent no little time in explaining certain phases of the construction which had been criticized and then presented the speaker.

Mr. Kelley stepped forward with his usual calmness. His voice bore the same calm note of assurance as he proceeded somewhat after the manner: "The speaker who preceded me sounded almost apologetic as he explained some of the features and advantages of this fine new building. Why apologize for a building which houses the possibilities this one does? If it proves a detriment to the development of Lamoni then you citizens are responsible - not the building. You have it within your power to make it one of the most valuable assets, and if you fail to make it such the failure is yours. See to it, that its purpose is for the enlightenment and edification of the people of Lamoni and if you will do this, future generations will forget this present controversy and speak nothing but praise for it and for those who have worked in faithfully to build it."

Of course he said many other things that night, but the prophetic nature of those words is significant. You may draw your own conclusions. What would Lamoni do without her Coliseum today?

I think Lamoni is mighty proud to claim E. L. Kelley as one of her very own. He was a man of vision and purpose, with the determination to give momentum to every project which promised advancement to the community. He was a gentleman whose courteous, gracious manner was so much a part of him that even during his final illness it was a source of inspiration to all who knew him. A champion of every righteous cause, a true gentleman, a Lamoni citizen, a very important figure in Lamoni's passing parade.
SOURCE: The Lamoni Chronicle, published in Lamoni, Iowa on Thursday, October 31st, 1946, p. 2

3.) Benjamin F. Biographies and Portraits of Progressive Men of Iowa Conaway & Shaw. 1899:
Edmund Levi KELLEY, presiding Bishop of the Reorganized Church of Latter Day Saints, whose signature appears in business circles as E. L. KELLEY, is a resident of Lamoni, Decatur County, but was formerly a resident of Glenwood, Mills County, and from 1874 to 1884 a member of the law firm of KELLEY Bros. at that place.

His father, Richard Yancey KELLEY, moved from Illinois to Mills County in 1854, arriving there in the month of October. He entered a piece of and engaged in farming, and owned one of the best farms in the county at the time of his death, which occurred June 10, 1861.

Richard Y. KELLEY was the grandson of Richard KELLEY and Maria GIBBS, who immigrated to America in 1773, settled in North Carolina, and took part with the patriots in the war for Independence. They reared a family of seven boys, among the number, Benjamin Franklin KELLEY, who was born March 4, 1784. This son, Benjamin, at an early time moved to Middle Tennessee and made himself a home in the forests of Robinson County, near Nashville, and in 1805 was married to Miss Nancy YANCEY, born August 27, 1787, daughter of Colonel and Mrs. Austin YANCEY.

Benjamin F. KELLEY and wife raised a family of six sons and one daughter, among the number, Richard Y. KELLEY, who was born January 23, 1814. On May 31, 1837, he was married to Miss Sarah E. F. BALLOWE at Nashville, Tennessee. Miss BALLOWE was born in the state of Virginia, July 3, 1814. Her parents were Virginians. Her father, Eli P. BALLOWE, born March 3, 1786, and her mother, Sarah Howard WINFREY, August 3, 1795. They were extensive planters and slave holders, and when Miss Sarah BALLOWE was in her tenth year they moved to Tennessee and built a home near Nashville, where many of the relatives still live.

Samuel WINFREY, a brother of Miss Sarah WINFREY, who lives four miles east of Nashville, on the Murfreesborough road, is a man of extensive resources, and during the War of the Rebellion his house was the headquarters for a number of the federal officers stationed at Nashville.

Mrs. Mary S. WELCH, a sister of Mrs. Sarah E. F. KELLEY, also still lives and has good property in Nashville.

Richard Y. KELLEY was opposed to the idea of slavery, and upon his marriage decided to try a free state. In the fall of 1837 he moved with his wife to Johnson County, Illinois, where they continued to reside until going to western Iowa in 1854. Here they reared a family, all of whom were born in Illinois prior to going to Iowa, consisting of seven sons and one daughter, namely:

Benjamin Franklin KELLEY, the eldest, at one time a large farmer and stockman of Mills County, now deceased. His family lives in Mills County, respected by those who know them.

John S. KELLEY, an honorable and worthy farmer, who resided on the old homestead in Mills County; died since the writing of this sketch.

William H. KELLEY, a resident of Kirtland, Ohio. A minister of eloquent and pleasing address, and author of a work entitled "Presidency and Priesthood in the Church of Christ." He enlisted in the army in 1864, and was honorably discharged at Washington in 1865, at the close of the war.

Mrs. Mary J. H. RYERSON, wife of Mr. John RYERSON, a farmer in Mills County.

Edmund L. KELLEY, the subject of this sketch.

George T. KELLEY, attorney at law; graduate of the State University of Iowa, and now practicing law at Plainville, Nebraska.

Parley P. KELLEY, attorney at law, Glenwood; graduate of the State University, and one of the best posted attorneys in the western part of the state. P. P. KELLEY died at his home in Glenwood since this sketch was written.
NOTE: Parley P. KELLEY was the second attorney for the RLDS Church.

James M. KELLEY, cashier of the State Bank of Macedonia, Pottawattamie County. He is a graduate of the Iowa State University.

Edmund L. KELLEY was born the 17th of November, 1844, near Vienna, Johnson County, Illinois. When ten years of age his father moved to western Iowa, which at that time was little settled, the Indian trail being then the most conspicuous mark of bottoms and fine rolling prairies, and the dark-skinned hunter a familiar object to the settler. The subscription school was relied upon in great part for the advantages of an education, and three months in the winter and two in summer the maximum time to be used in mental improvement by those best prepared to take advantage of the situation.

The 15th of April, 1861, his father started him to school at Glenwood, with the statement that he might go as long as he wanted to, and the country boy in blue jeans began his work with a satisfied heart. Not two months passed, however, before the death of the father called the boy home to work on the farm, and the next schooling of importance was in the fall of 1862, when he went back to Glenwood, found a place where he could do chores for his board and studied until the middle of December, when upon the recommendation of the principal of the school and the county superintendent, he took a large school on Silver Creek in Mills County and taught his first term. Judge W. S. LEWIS, of Mills County, then a small boy, received his first start at this term of school. At the close of the term, having a desire for a better education, he arranged with the county superintendent and judge to recommend him to the State University under the law providing for representatives from each county, and in April, 1863, he began a course of study in the University as the first representative student from Mills County.

The hard times of 1863 and 1864 made it necessary for him to "hire out" during the vacation and labor on a farm to replenish his exchequer, which he did at Iowa City, attending school while in session, until May, 1864, when he returned home and began teaching in Pottawattamie County, and in the winter taught again on Silver Creek, Mills County, where he had taught his first term.

In the year 1865 he determined to try a business education, and took a course in the H. G. Eastman Business College, Poughkeepsie, New York. In December, 1865, he called upon the state superintendent at Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, and applied for a school. The superintendent had just received application for a teacher for the boys' high school at Williamsport, Pennsylvania, the boys of the raging canal on the Susquehanna having succeeded in driving two teachers from the school at the point of stone ink jugs. Arrangements were at once entered into in which KELLEY agreed to remain in the school and conduct it or charge nothing for his services. At the end of a four months' term he received unanimous commendation from the Association of Teachers at Williamsport, and the special thanks of Dr. ARMSTRONG of Dickenson College for his work among the boys.

Western life, however, had not lost its attractions for him, and he left Williamsport for the west, and taught in the public schools of Illinois and Iowa until September, 1867, when he entered upon the drug business at Logan, Harrison County, Iowa. In 1873 he graduated from the law department of the Iowa State University, and the same year was elected superintendent of schools of Mills County, where he resided. His work was sufficiently satisfactory, so that when a successor was to be chosen he was assured by the leaders of both political parties in the county that if he was a candidate for the position there would be no opposition to him. However, having entered upon the practice of the law, he declined to continue further in school work. In law he was successful. His practice grew rapidly, and he was admitted to practice in the United District and Circuit Courts and in the Supreme Court of the United States.

In the year 1881 the Reorganized Church of Latter Day Saints, of which he is a member, selected him to act in connection with Hon. Z. H. GURLEY of Decatur County, Iowa, upon a committee to urge upon Congress the necessity of passing an effective law against the practice of polygamy in the territories of the United states, and early in December of that year he proceeded to Washington and, with Mr. GURLEY, began work among the members of the Forty-seventh Congress upon that question. They issued and placed in the hands of each member of Congress and the President, a pamphlet entitled "The Utah Problem and Its Solution," and subsequently another, entitled "Polygamy a Crime - Not a religion." The committee was also favored with a personal interview with President ARTHUR in which to present its views and documents, and Mr. KELLEY made an argument before the House Judiciary committee upon the question, answering the speech of Mr. CANNON, the Utah delegate. The committee later learned from Hon. Edwin F. WILLITS that when he, with others of the committee called upon the President to ascertain what the President had to recommend touching the Utah question, the President placed the documents furnished him by the committee in their hands, asking for them a careful consideration.

After the passage of the law known as the Edmunds Bill the committee quit Washington, and in April, 1882, Mr. KELLEY was appointed Counselor to the Bishop of the Reorganized Church of Latter Day Saints and continued to fill this position until the death of the Bishop in September, 1890, when he acted in the office by virtue of appointment and his trusteeship as Counselor until the General Conference of the Society, and on the 10th of April, 1891, he was chosen the Presiding Bishop of the Reorganized Church, which position he continues to fill.

This position, in addition to spiritual duties in the church to which he belongs, makes him the chief financial officer of the body. His special work is to look after all church properties and finances, and the receipts and expenditures of himself and agents annually amount to more than $100,000, and the church property of which he is trustee is valued at upwards of half a million. He is also president of the Board of Publication of the Herald Publishing House, Lamoni.

From 1884 until 1891 he resided, with his family, at Kirtland, Ohio, to better perform his work as Counselor in the church, and when there took as active interest in the public schools and other work, was a member of the board of education and held commissions as justice and notary from Governors FORAKER and CAMPBELL.

In his church work, as any other, he has always been ready to present and defend either in public or private, any principle or doctrine that he believed, and in maintaining these has met in public discussion some of the most eminent debaters in the United States. Among his public debates may be mentioned that in Kansas City in 1882 with Mr. David ECKLES, leader of the Liberal League at that time in that city.

In 1884 he held a discussion with Rev. Clark BRADEN of the Disciple, or Christian Church. This debate was published in a large volume containing 400 pages, and has already had a second edition.

In 1888 he engaged in a discussion with Rev. J. D. WHITEHEAD, Christadelphian, in Boston, Massachusetts. Later he held a discussion at Lee's Summit, Missouri, with Rev. D. B. RAY, D. D., of the Baptist Church, St. Louis, and in 1889 with Mr. D. R. DUNGAN, at the time professor of Theology in Drake University and later president of Bethany College, Nebraska.

Mr. KELLEY is one of the projectors and promoters of Graceland College, located at Lamoni, Iowa. This is a non-sectarian school in all its departments and features, and so guaranteed to be in its articles of incorporation, notwithstanding the fact that it is under the fostering care of the church. Religion, as such, is not taught in the school, and the professors religiously have membership with different denominations, or are not members of any church. He was elected a member of the board of trustees and directors at the beginning of the institution and filled these positions until April 20, 1900, when he resigned both places.

Politically, Mr. KELLEY is a republican, having cast his first vote for General Grant for President and has last for William McKinley. In 1873 he was elected on the anti-monopolist ticket for superintendent of schools, and in 1875 was a candidate on an independent ticket in Mills County against Hon. John Y. STONE for Representative, but was defeated in the election by 125 votes. He is a protectionist and bimetallist in sentiment and voted for McKinley believing that was the preferable way to attain both objects.

On the 21st of December, 1876, he was married to Miss Cassie BISHOP, daughter of Mr. John and Mrs. Mary BISHOP, Malvern, Iowa, and from this union they have a family of eight children, ranging in age from twenty-two down to three years, and named as follows:

Winifred Bishop, born November 30, 1877; he was a soldier in Co. M, 50th Regiment, Iowa Volunteer Infantry, during Spanish-American war; now law student Iowa State University;
Edmund L., Jr., born March 25, 1880;

Richard Carlyle, born September 30, 1882;
Laura Belle, born September 20, 1884;
Jeannette Vivian, born July 23, 1887;
Joseph Stanley, born February 4, 1890;
David Emlin, born October 16, 1893,
and Ruth Alix, born December 8, 1896.

Miss BISHOP was born [1853] in Monroe County, Iowa, and reared in Monroe and Mills Counties. Her father's family were from Danbury, Connecticut; he was a corporal in an Indiana company in the Mexican was and slightly wounded at the battle of Buena Vista. Her mother, formerly Miss Mary J. HUMESTON, was born in Indiana and was in that state married to Mr. BISHOP. Mr. BISHOP is a thorough stockman and owns an extensive ranch, stocked with cattle and horses, at Bailey, Cherry County, Nebraska.

On the 9th of April, 1807, Bishop KELLEY was called to the position of Counselor to the President of the church of which he is a member, and has filled this position since, in connection with his duties as Presiding Bishop of the society.
SOURCE: Benjamin F. Biographies and Portraits of Progressive Men of Iowa Conaway & Shaw. 1899.
Contributor: Observer4wing (47373768)


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  • Created by: Karen
  • Added: Mar 24, 2011
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/67384783/edmund_levi-kelley: accessed ), memorial page for Edmund Levi “E. L.” Kelley Sr. (17 Nov 1844–10 May 1930), Find a Grave Memorial ID 67384783, citing Mound Grove Cemetery, Independence, Jackson County, Missouri, USA; Maintained by Karen (contributor 47279283).