Fountain E. Pitts (July 4, 1808 – May 22, 1874) was an American Methodist minister and Confederate chaplain. He established Methodist missions in Brazil and Argentina in 1835–1836. During the American Civil War, he was a chaplain and colonel in the Confederate States Army, and he became known as the "Fighting Parson". After the war, he was the first pastor of the McKendree Church (later known as the West End United Methodist Church) in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S. He also grew poppies to make opium.
Pitts was ordained as a Methodist preacher in 1824.[1] He was ordained as an elder by Bishop Joshua Soule in 1828.[1][2] In 1835–1836, he went to Brazil and Argentina,[3][4] where he established missionary posts that were manned by American men dispatched by the Methodist Church.[1] Pitts owned at least one slave, named David, who died in 1855.[5]
During the American Civil War of 1861–1865, Pitts joined the Confederate States Army, first as a chaplain in the 11th Tennessee regiment for six months, and later as a colonel in the 61st Tennessee regiment in the Great Smoky Mountains.[1] He also fought "Federal gunboats for about five months at Vicksburg."[2] He became known as "Fighting Parson."[1][2]
Pitts was ordained as a Methodist deacon by Bishop B. T. Roberts in 1866.[1] Shortly after, he was appointed by Bishop Holland Nimmons McTyeire as the first pastor of the West End Methodist Church in Nashville, Tennessee.[1][6] It was then known as the McKendree Church.[1] Pitts was described as "one of the most notable men in the Tennessee Conference" by The Clarksville Chronicle,[2] and as "one of the pioneers of Southern Methodism" by The Pulaski Citizen.[1]
In 1871–1872, alongside Dr. J. W. Morton, Pitts grew poppies to make opium.[7][8]
His portrait was painted by Washington Bogart Cooper, and it was installed in the art gallery of the West End United Methodist Church (then still known as the McKendree Church) in 1903.[16]
^Weaver, Blanche Henry Clark (November 1952). "Confederate Immigrants and Evangelical Churches in Brazil". The Journal of Southern History. 18 (4): 446–468. doi:10.2307/2955219. JSTOR2955219.
^"OPIUM. Successful Experiments in its Culture Around Nashville". Nashville Union and American. July 7, 1871. p. 3 – via Newspapers.com. This new enterprise, first inaugurated by the gallant Doctor, was followed up and successfully entered into by the Rev. Fountain E. Pitts, who brought to our office a few days since some balls of opium, free from any adulterations, and looking unctious enough to make the mouth of the opium-eater water.