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Billy James Hargis Papers Addendum

 Collection
Identifier: MC 1412a

Scope and Content Note

The Billy James Hargis Papers Addendum includes materials related to Billy James Hargis and his family; his early career; and the activities and personnel of the Christian Crusade organization. It includes more than 15,000 photographs and slides documenting Hargis’s personal and professional life as well as the activities of the Christian Crusade. Audio-visual materials include more than 500 VHS tapes and 1,200 audio-cassette tapes; they feature radio and television programs hosted by Hargis and by Jess Pedigo, as well as speeches and sermons from the Christian Crusade’s annual Homecoming and Bible Conference events.

Dates

  • 1930-2012

Creator

Language of Materials

Collection materials are in English.

Access Information

Please call (479) 575-8444 or email specoll@uark.edu at least two weeks in advance of your arrival to ensure availability of the materials.

Use Information

No Use Restrictions Apply.

No Interlibrary Loan.

Standard Federal Copyright Laws Apply (U.S. Title 17).

Biographical Note

Billy James Hargis was born on August 3, 1925, in Texarkana, Texas, being adopted by Jimmie Earsel Hargis and Laura Lucille Hargis. He graduated from Texarkana High School, and briefly attended Ozark Bible College in Bentonville, Arkansas, before dropping out to become a preacher. Ordained as a minister by the Disciples of Christ denomination while still a teenager, he later received a degree in theology from Burton College and Seminary in Colorado Springs, Colorado. He served as pastor to churches in Sallisaw, Oklahoma, and Granby, Missouri, before becoming pastor of First Christian Church in Sapulpa, Oklahoma, in 1948. In Sapulpa he began editing the Christian Echoes magazine and founded the Christian Echoes Hour radio. In November 1950 he resigned his position with First Christian Church to establish a national ministry, the Christian Crusade Against Communism. In 1951 he married Betty Jane Secrest; together they had four children.

Hargis became affiliated with Carl McIntire of Collingswood, New Jersey, the leader of the fundamentalist International Council of Christian Churches. From 1953 to 1958 Hargis directed that organization’s Bibles by Balloons Project, which launched scriptures tied to balloons in West Germany across the border into communist countries. Afterwards he returned to Oklahoma, choosing Tulsa as his ministry’s headquarters. By the early 1960s he produced programs that regularly ran on 250 television and 500 radio stations. In 1966 he founded the David Livingstone Missionary Foundation, which ran medical clinics and orphanages in Asia and Africa. In 1971 he founded American Christian College in Tulsa. During his career he authored more than 100 books, as well as countless articles for the Christian Crusade Weekly newspaper.

An ultraconservative minister, Hargis’s career was plagued with controversy. In addition to his anti-communist views, he was a supporter of racial segregation, and reputedly held anti-Semitic and anti-Catholic views. In the early 1960s the Internal Revenue Service determined that his work was political in nature and stripped his organization of its tax exempt status. Then comments Hargis made in 1964 caused an opposing journalist to demand equal time; denied this, the journalist file suit, leading to the Supreme Court case Red Lion Broadcasting Co. v. FCC (1969) which affirmed the Fairness Doctrine. In 1968 Hargis launched an attack on sex education programs, only to be accused in 1974 of having sexual relations with both male and female students at his college. This controversy resulted in his writing an autobiography, My Great Mistake, published in 1985; he denied the allegations. The controversies, along with poor health and the 3ffects of aging, eventually caused the decline of his ministry. Suffering from Alzheimer’s Disease and a series of heart attacks, Hargis died in Tulsa on November 27, 2004.

Extent

89 Linear Feet (128 boxes)

Arrangement of the Papers

Series I. Personal Materials, 1930-2004 (Boxes 1-3)

Series II. Christian Crusade Materials, 1943-2011 (Boxes 4-6)

Series III. Christian Crusade Publications, 1950-2012 (Boxes 7-21)

Series IV. Research Files, 1957-1990 (Boxes 22-25)

Series V. Audio-Visual Materials, 1954-2003 (Boxes 26-70)

Series VI. Photographs, 1936-2011 (Boxes 71-85)

Series VII. Scrapbooks, 1953-1968 (Boxes 86-91)

Series VIII. Artifacts and Oversize Materials, (Boxes 92-109; 5 Items)

Series IX. Bound Newspapers (Boxes 110-122)

Acquisition Information

The Billy James Hargis Papers Addendum was donated to Special Collections, University of Arkansas Libraries on May 28, 1994, by Billy James Hargis of Neosho, Missouri.

Related Materials

Records relating to the Billy James Hargis Papers Addendum include:

Billy James Hargis Papers MC 1412

Processing Information

Processed by Todd E. Lewis; completed February 2016. Additional audio reels not processed in 2016 were incorporated into Series 5 as Boxes 123-128 by Katrina Windon in November 2021.

Title
Billy James Hargis Papers Addendum
Status
Completed
Author
Todd Lewis
Date
February 2016
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin
Language of description note
Finding aid is written in English.

Repository Details

Part of the Special Collections Department Repository

Contact:
University of Arkansas Libraries
365 N. McIlroy Avenue
Fayetteville AR 72701 United States
(479) 575-8444