So you must be aware that there was no glossolalia in the church until Charles Parham arrived on the scene in the 1900 ?
That just isn't true. If you look throughout history there are plenty of indications that manifestations such as glossolalia were observed and described. Parham was seminal in formulating the doctrine of initial evidence, but he did not "invent" Christian glossolalia.
In addition to 1 Corinthians, we have much evidence that glossolalic or ecstatic speech was present in Christian communities in both Antiquity and in more modern times. In addition to accounts that the gift of tongues remained within the church (which do not distinguish between human and spiritual languages), there are descriptions of what seem to be glossolalia called other things, such as what the mystics called jubilation. Jubilation was described by figures such as St. Augustine (354-430), Isidore of Seville (died 636), and Gregory the Great (634-687).
In addition to glossolalia by other names, we have in Christian history accounts that clearly connect the gift of tongues to ecstatic speech. Tertullian (AD 160-225) writes in
Against Marcion 5.8 (a text written to oppose the heresy of Marcionism) the following challenge to Marcion:
Therefore let Marcion exhibit gifts of his god: some prophets, who have spoken yet not from human sense, but from the spirit of God, who have both predicted future events and conveyed hidden things of the heart; let him produce some psalm, some vision, some speech, insofar as it is spiritual, in ecstasy--that is, in amentia [madness]--if, perhaps, he undertakes an interpretation of tongues. Let him show to me as well a woman who prophesies among them, from these his great holy women, I say. If I can proffer all these things easily, and assuredly these are in agreement with the rules and directions and instructions of the Creator, without doubt Christ and the spirit and the apostle belong to my God.
[The "apostle" mentioned is the Apostle Paul, who Marcion believed was Christ's chief apostle.]
Tertullian here notes that his side can produce all of these spiritual gifts in accordance with Christ's placing them within the Church. Tertullian notes elsewhere in his writings that spiritual gifts were evident at the church in Carthage. In his treatise
On the Soul, he describes "a sister among us receives gifts of revelation, which she experiences during the rites on the Lord's day."
Hildegard of Bingen (1098-1179) spoke in tongues and left behind the
Lingua Ignota ("Unknown Language"), which she purportedly received by revelation.
French theologian and mystic Jean Gerson (1363-1429) writes:
The hilarity of the devout . . . in a certain wonderful and unexplainable sweetness seizes the mind . . . so that now it does not contain itself. There happens some sort of spasm, ecstasy or departure . . . the mind springs forth; it leaps, or dances by means of the gestures of the body, which are comely, and then it jubilates in an inexpressible way . . . the purity of the heart sings along with the voice.
The early Quakers most likely practiced glossolalia, as George Fox (1624-1691) described:
We received often the pouring down of the Spirit upon us . . . as in the days of old, and our hearts were made glad, and our tongues loosed, and our mouths opened, and we spoke with new tongues, as the Lord gave us utterance, and as his Spirit led us.
During the Great Awakening of the 18th century, Thomas Walsh, a friend of John Wesley, recounted: "This morning the Lord gave me a language I knew not of, raising my soul to him in a wonderful manner."
A critic of George Whitfield described his revival meetings during the Great Awakening as follows:
These meetings would continue until 10, 11, or 12 o'clock at night; in the midst of them sometimes 10, 20, 30, and sometimes many more would scream and cry out, or send forth the most lamentable groans, while others made great manifestations of joy by clapping their hands, uttering ecstatic expressions, singing psalms, and inviting and exhorting others.
It is well documented that glossolalia occurred in American revival meetings prior to Pentecostalism.