Bucks County PA Archives Biographies.....Andrews, Silas M., Rev., D.D. ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/pafiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Joe Patterson, Patricia Bastik & Susan Walters Dec 2009 Source: History of Bucks County, Pennsylvania; edited by J.H. Battle; A. Warner & Co.; 1887 Doylestown A-L REV. SILAS M. ANDREWS, D. D. deceased, for nearly fifty years the esteemed pastor of the Doylestown Presbyterian church, was born in North Carolina, March 11, 1805. His ancestors were of that Scotch-Irish stock from which Presbyterianism in this country has received so much of its bone and sinew. After the usual preparatory course in school and academy, he entered the Sophomore class of the University of North Carolina in July, 1823. He had united with the church in October of the previous year. He was graduated in June, 1826, and spent two years in teaching, partly as a tutor in the University. On the 15th of December, 1828, he was matriculated as a student in the Princeton Theological seminary, where he took the full course of study. The year after entering the seminary he was taken under the care of the Presbytery of New Brunswick, as a candidate for the ministry and was licensed February 2, 1831. In May, 1831, he preached in the church of Doylestown as a candidate for the pastorate. On the 16th of the following October he was ordained and installed pastor of the united congregations of Deep Run and Doylestown. His pastorate closed with his death in March, 1881. During this long and useful period of earnest labor, he officiated at no less than 1,266 funerals and 1,242 wedding ceremonies, and received 1, 050 into church membership. He was for several years, commencing in 1835, principal of the academy, and afterwards had a school in his own house. He was trustee of Lafayette college thirty-five years, and clerk of the Synod of Philadelphia for many years. He was one of the projectors and managers of the Doylestown cemetery. In all objects of moral and religious interest he was always ready to lend his voice and influence. He was one of the leading members of the Bucks County Bible Society. He never took a vacation and was seldom absent from his pulpit more than one Sabbath at a time. No man in the community, either in the church or out of it, exercised a wider influence for good, and his death was sincerely mourned by all who knew him.