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Edward L.R. Elson
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Edward L.R. Elson : ウィキペディア英語版
Edward L.R. Elson

The Reverend Edward Lee Roy Elson (December 23, 1906 -
August 25, 1993) was a Presbyterian minister and
Chaplain of the United States Senate.
==Life==
Edward Lee Roy Elson, the oldest of nine children, was born in
Monongahela, Pennsylvania, to Leroy Elson, a locomotive engineer,
and his wife, Pearl. Early on he was encouraged to study music and
gave concerts in the Pittsburgh area on the cornet with his sister
Hazel playing the piano. One of his favorite memories of high school
was the time he and his sister gave a concert in the very early days
of radio on KDKA, the pioneer radio station.
Dr. Elson was educated at Asbury College in Wilmore, Kentucky,
and then went to University of Southern California for a master's
in theology. He married Frances Sandys, a fellow Asbury College
student in 1929. At about the time of his ordination in 1930, he
learned that his young wife had a very serious illness, and owing
largely to this, he chose to go and serve at the La Jolla Presbyterian
Church because of its proximity to the
Scripps Clinic in La Jolla, California. His wife died
three years later on his birthday.
Having been invited to join the American Seminar in Europe and Russia,
Elson took an eye-opening trip to Europe in the summer of 1936. Shortly after returning from Europe,
Elson married Helen Chittick, a member of his church.
After having been in the chaplain reserves for ten years, he resigned
his position with the church and went on active duty with the Army in
1941, arriving in France in December 1944. Not long after, General
Frank Wilburn requested that Elson be his personal representative at
the execution by firing squad of a soldier for desertion. This
soldier, Eddie Slovik, was the first to be so executed by the
American military since the American Civil War. Another of his wartime
assignments was to
interview members of the clergy who had been imprisoned at
Dachau. After the German surrender, he
was asked to represent Dwight D. Eisenhower before the Consistory, a ruling
body of the German Protestant church, in order to determine how the
German Church would be rebuilt.
Upon returning to the U.S. from the war, he soon learned that he was a
candidate for the pastorate of the Covenant-First Presbyterian Church
in Washington, D.C. and ultimately became its pastor in 1946. One
of his first duties there was to oversee the transition of the
Covenant-First Presbyterian Church to the National Presbyterian
Church, a move that had been in the works for many years.
Eisenhower attended a pre-inaugural service at the church. A few
days later, on February 1, 1953, Dr. Elson baptized the president and
admitted him to formal membership of the church. The baptism came
after the president's brother, Milton, confirmed that though Ike had
regularly attended the River Brethren Church in
Abilene, Kansas, he had never officially joined the church
nor had he been baptized. In the 1960s, Elson oversaw, along with
the building committee, the construction of a large new church, which
was dedicated in 1967 on Eisenhower's birthday, October 14.
In 1967, he was named to a special committee of the Presbyterian
General Assembly to study the Vietnam War. In September 1967, while
he and his wife were still at their summer home in
Cape Breton Island, he received a phone call from the White House
asking him to be on a team to observe the upcoming elections in
South Viet Nam.
Dr. Elson was elected to the position of
Chaplain of the United States Senate in 1969, retiring from that position after having served for a
little over twelve years in February, 1981. During his tenure at the
Senate, he invited the first woman, Wilmina Rowland, to offer the
opening prayer.
He is buried in Arlington National Cemetery.〔http://www.arlingtoncemetery.net/relelson.htm〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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