Holy Rollers:
Murder and Madness in Oregon's Love Cult
by T. McCracken and Robert Blodgett
(Caxton Press, $16.95, 295 pages, ISBN 0-87004-424-9)
 
 
Holy Rollers is a story that has everything a good read should have: sex, religious fervor, mass insanity, the downfall of prominent families, murder and sensational court trials.
 
And it's all true.
 
John Terry, the Oregonian's 'Oregon's Trails' columnist says of the book: "A dandy piece of research and a good read. Lots more stuff than I was aware of. It deserves an audience."
 
In 1903 Edmund Creffield lured most of Corvallis's Salvation Army's soldiers to his own church. They called themselves The Church of the Bride of Christ. Everyone else called them The Holy Rollers. Most of Creffield's followers were women, and not just any women, but women who were the wives and daughters of respected men, women of high character and standing, God-fearing, decent women.
 
Their going's on were page one news--and not just in the Pacific Northwest, but around the world. Stewart H. Holbrook, a reporter for the Oregonian and an historian, said of the Holy Roller's story: "It seems to me, the most incredible of all the cases I have studied." Yet few today know the story, not even many folks in Waldport, Oregon where the final chapter takes place.
 
Waldport is a small town--it's population is about 2,000 today--the sort of place where everybody knows everything about everyone else. But asking anyone about the Holy Rollers is an offense. "We were always told to not talk about it," an old-timer will tell you with eyes cast down, "and I'm not going to."
 
What little most folks in town know was gleaned from a magazine article a student at Waldport High happened upon in the 1950s. The girl had never before heard of Edmund Creffield, but she knew almost everyone else mentioned in the piece. "Do you know who these people are?" she asked after reading the article aloud on the school bus. "Whose mothers these are? Whose fathers these are?" Everyone on the bus knew who they were because everyone in town knew who they were. They were some of the town's earliest settlers, some of the town's best-respected citizens.
 
That--not murder--may be the most unsettling part of this story. Unsettling because these were normal people. Sane people. People like you and me. If things like these could happen to them, things like these might happen to anyone.
When the Waldport High students asked their parents for more information about the doings of the Holy Rollers and Edmund Creffield, all were shushed up and told to never bring up the subject again. A group of men went up and down the coast buying and destroying every copy of the offending magazine they could find.
 
The young people obeyed their parents and never did bring the subject up again.
 
And neither did anybody else in town.
 
Until now.
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