COLLECTION GUIDES

1746-1948

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Portions of this collection are available as color digital facsimiles (see links below). Where digital facsimiles are available, use of the originals is restricted.


Collection Summary

Abstract

The Society for Propagating the Gospel Among the Indians and Others in North America records include historical materials, correspondence, general business records, diaries, and financial records of the first Protestant missionary society of its kind in North America.

Historical Sketch

The Society for Propagating the Gospel Among the Indians and Others in North America was the first Protestant missionary organization of its kind in North America. It existed in concept prior to its 1787 charter as a group of Boston individuals sponsoring missionary work in New England.

The Society was officially founded in 1787 by a group of Massachusetts citizens concerned with converting the Native Americans to Christianity. Inspired by the Society in Scotland for Propagating Christian Knowledge, a group of 21 prominent Massachusetts citizens petitioned the Massachusetts General Court for a charter. These men shared certain characteristics, such as political views and educational backgrounds (several were Harvard graduates).

The Society's object was "the dissemination of Christian knowledge, and the means of religious instruction among all those, in their country, who were destitute of them." It was difficult for the missionaries to convert the Native Americans, to whom Christianity was unknown. The early missionaries, such as John Eliot, Gideon Hawley, the Mayhews, and John Cotton, mastered Indigenous languages, formed alphabets and grammar books, and learned to preach in these languages. Conducting sermons and visiting Native American homes were early ways of propagating the gospel.

Around the first decade of the 19th century, education in missionary schools became the focus. The outcome of the Civil War and the freeing of enslaved people added to the shift toward industrial education, as white society tried to "civilize and Christianize" Black Americans as well as Native Americans. During the mid-19th century, industrial schools for Black people sprung up in the southeast, such as Claflin University, Tuskegee Normal School, and Hampton Institute in Virginia. Inspired by reform groups like the Temperance Society, the focus of education for Native Americans and Black Americans shifted away from reading and writing and more toward assimilation with the white majority.

Collection Description

The records of the Society for Propagating the Gospel Among the Indians and Others in North America, housed in 23 boxes, include missionary diaries, missionary and Society correspondence, the Society's commission, annual Select Committee reports documenting missionary work, annual accounts of stock and income, auditor's reports, business correspondence, receipts and vouchers, as well as some 1910 photographs of missions.

The contents may be broken down into two large series: a general category and a business category. The general section, the bulk of the collection, consists of missionary and Society member correspondence between 1756 and 1922, primarily written to the Society's secretary and treasurer. Included are letters from New England missionaries such as Elijah Kellogg and Abraham Plumer. There are letters from the presidents of industrial schools for Native Americans and Black Americans beginning around 1850 and 1870, respectively. Of particular note are letters from Booker T. Washington, president of Tuskegee Normal School. The general section also includes some New England missionaries' diaries documenting their daily work.

Due to the policy of assimilation of Native Americans and Black Americans through industrial education, which developed toward the second half of the 19th century, there is a noticeable change in the style and content of the general correspondence by this period. The letters shift from daily missionary documentation of their field work, sometimes in diary form, to letters to the heads of industrial schools describing the set-up at their schools.

The diaries of six missionaries all date between 1791-1828, with the exception of George Kenngott's. The diaries reveal missionary thought with an emphasis on family or health problems. They usually contain daily entries covering a several-month period. The Native American point of view is very under-represented in the diaries, as well as in the general correspondence. A better account of Native American life may be found in George Kenngott's 1910 report of his travels among the western tribes. Photographs are included.

Finally, the general section also includes historical papers pertaining to the founding of the Society, as well as material which predates its founding in March 1787. Letters between Gideon Hawley and Edward Wigglesworth document the work conducted under the Society's leadership prior to 1787 which inspired its founding. The business section consists of annual Select Committee reports, 1828-1913; annual treasury reports, 1807-1909; auditor's reports, 1921-1947; four bank books, 1841-1850; Select Committee meeting minutes; receipts; vouchers; and some business correspondence.

There is some overlap between papers in the general and business sections. For example, both contain correspondence, albeit with different content. All of the materials after 1922 are filed in the business section because the bulk of it is business correspondence concerning the treasurer or the secretary.

There is material missing during certain years throughout the collection, including a particularly large gap in the general correspondence between 1863 and 1874. However, published annual committee reports, which may be found at the MHS, attest to the continued existence of the Society since 1787.

Acquisition Information

Deposited by the Society for Propagating the Gospel Among the Indians and Others in North America in 1957.

Restrictions on Access

Portions of this collection are available as color digital facsimiles (see links below). Where digital facsimiles are available, use of the originals is restricted.

Other Formats

Portions of this collection are available as color digital facsimiles.

Detailed Description of the Collection

I. General records, 1746-1922Digital Content

A. Historical materials, 1746-1899Digital Content

Arranged chronologically.

These records pre-date the official founding of the Society in 1787. Included is a letter from Archbishop Becker to Reverend Dr. Johnson, October 1768, concerning the founding of a missionary society in Boston; an inquiry letter from Dr. Hale into the Society's history, May 1898; a newspaper article on the origins of the Society's history as discussed at the annual meeting, 2 June 1899; a series of letters from missionary Gideon Hawley to Edward Wigglesworth from various spots in Maine and Massachusetts spreading the gospel among the Native Americans, 1752-1756; and "The Commission by The Society in Scotland for Propagating Christian Knowledge to the Gentlemen within named as a corresponding Board at Boston, North America, March 1787."

Box 1Folder 1Digital Content

Society's history, 1787-1899

Box 1Folder 2Digital Content

William Hyslop writing about a vindication of Patrick Grant, 1746

Box 1Folder 3Digital Content

Correspondence, 25 May 1756-13 September 1756

Box 1Folder 4Digital Content

Correspondence, 20 October 1756-21 March 1758

Box 1Folder 5Digital Content

Correspondence, 17 April 1758-1762

B. Missionary diaries/journals, 1787-1832, 1910Digital Content

Arranged chronologically.

These diaries were kept by missionaries in the field as documentation of their daily work. Included are five diaries of Reverend Samuel Kirkland, a missionary sponsored by the Society in Scotland and Corporation of Harvard College to the Oneida Nation and others of the Six Nations, June 1787-October 1791; two journals of John Sergeant with the Oneida in Massachusetts, 1791; an extract from a journal of John Strickland in Hancock and Washington counties, Maine, 1796; William Maclean's journal during his time in Camden, Maine, and the surrounding areas, 1800; two journals of John Sawyer in Brewer and Bangor, Maine, 1828-1832; and one long report of Reverend George F. Kenngott from his travels out west, July-August 1910. The latter's report includes typewritten documentation of his visits to missions, as well as photographs of the missions and their inhabitants.

Box 1Folder 6Digital Content

Samuel Kirkland, part A, 1787-1791

Box 1Folder 7Digital Content

Samuel Kirkland, part B, 1787-1791

Box 1Folder 8Digital Content

John Sergeant, 1791

Box 1Folder 9Digital Content

John Strickland, 1796

Box 1Folder 10Digital Content

William Maclean, 1800

Box 1Folder 11Digital Content

John Sawyer, 1828, 1832

Box 1Folder 12Digital Content

George Kenngott, first part, 1910

Box 1Folder 13Digital Content

George Kenngott, second part, 1910

Box 1Folder 14Digital Content

George Kenngott, third part, 1910

Box 1Folder 15Digital Content

George Kenngott, fourth part, 1910

Box 1Folder 16Digital Content

George Kenngott, fifth part, 1910

Box 1Folder 17Digital Content

George Kenngott, sixth part, 1910

Box 1Folder 18Digital Content

George Kenngott, seventh part, 1910

Box 1Folder 19Digital Content

George Kenngott, eighth part, 1910

C. Missionary and Society correspondence, 1782-1922Digital Content

Arranged chronologically.

This subseries primarily consists of letters from missionaries to Society members describing their work up to 1838, living and traveling among the Native Americans in New England and New York. The bulk of this period, until the middle of the century, consists of correspondence to Abiel Holmes, secretary of the Society, and head of the Select Committee. Holmes was a noted Congregationalist and the father of the poet Oliver Wendell Holmes. Notable among the other correspondents are Elijah Kellogg, working among the Passamaquoddy tribe in Perry Point, Maine, and Frederick Baylies, missionary to the Narragansetts in Edgartown, Massachusetts.

There is some overlap of subject and style between these personal letters and the missionary diaries from the 1787-1832 period, as well as some brief diaries included in the general correspondence. Included is documentation of daily activities, i.e. preaching and baptisms, as well as descriptions of lifestyle and health problems, but very little reflecting the Native American point of view. More of that aspect may be located in the journals or diaries.

Around the mid-1840s, the correspondence becomes more business-oriented and less personal. The missionary correspondence is more sparse and focuses more on requests for payment of salary and the need of resources for the missions, rather than descriptions of the missionaries' lives among the Native Americans. Correspondence from Abraham Plumer, missionary at Damariscotta and other parts of Maine, provides good insight into the thoughts of a Society missionary.

The correspondence from 1851-1857 is very sparse, and there are only two letters representing the 1858-1862 period, with another gap from 1862-1874. The bulk of the letters from this early middle period is between Society officers concerning business matters. Noteworthy among the officers of this period are treasurer James Savage and secretary Francis Parkman. Letters between these two concern payment of missionaries and recommendations of new missionaries.

The 1874-1922 period is characterized by correspondence from industrial school officers describing in depth the work of their institutions and requesting financial assistance from the Society. These institutions vary from schools for Black students in the south, such as Claflin University and Calhoun Colored School in Alabama, to Scandinavian missions in the north and midwest. Some are schools for Native Americans like White River Indian Agency in Colorado and Twinsburg Seminary for Indian Youth in Ohio. The main recipients of this correspondence are secretary Rufus Ellis and treasurer Thornton K. Lothrop.

At this time, the Society still sponsored individual missions in New England, among them the Isle of Shoals mission, the Gay Head mission, and Samuel May's mission for the Onondaga Nation. These reports are similar to the earlier correspondence. In particular, the letters of Mrs. L. M. Wight from her mission in Versailles, New York, give good insight into Native American mission life. Other correspondence of interest includes nine letters from Native American students of Siletz Indian Agency in Oregon to their missionary Thomas Eliot in March 1882. During the 1880s and 1890s, there are also letters between missionaries and government officials concerning reservations and assimilation policies.

All missionaries and organizations receiving appropriations from the Society wrote detailed annual reports of expenditures and progress. Significant among these correspondents is Booker T. Washington, president of Tuskegee Normal School. His many letters contain lengthy descriptions of this type of agricultural university for Black students in the 1890s and early 20th century.

Correspondence after 1922 is more business-oriented and doesn't describe missionary or student life, so it has been filed with the business section.

1782-1815Digital Content

Box 2Folder 1Digital Content

Correspondence, 5 August 1782-18 October 1788

Box 2Folder 2Digital Content

Correspondence, 1789-November 1793

Box 2Folder 3Digital Content

Correspondence, 30 August 1796-1803

Box 2Folder 4Digital Content

Correspondence, 30 May 1806-29 August 1806

Box 2Folder 5Digital Content

Correspondence, 16 September 1806-25 December 1806

Box 2Folder 6Digital Content

Correspondence, 1 January 1807-15 April 1807

Box 2Folder 7Digital Content

Correspondence, 1 May 1807-25 July 1807

Box 2Folder 8Digital Content

Correspondence, 5 August 1807-28 December 1807

Box 2Folder 9Digital Content

Correspondence, 13 January 1808-27 May 1808

Box 2Folder 10Digital Content

Correspondence, 4 June 1808-26 July 1808

Box 2Folder 11Digital Content

Correspondence, 6 October 1808-12 December 1808

Box 2Folders 12-14

Correspondence, 1809

Box 2Folders 15-16

Correspondence, 1810

Box 2Folders 17-19

Correspondence, 1811

Box 2Folders 20-22

Correspondence, 1812

Box 2Folders 23-24

Correspondence, 1813-1815

Box 3

1818-1827

Box 4

1828-1830

Box 5

1831-1834

Box 6

1835-1838

Box 7

1839-1857, 1861-1862

Box 8

1874-1880

Box 9

1881-1887

Box 10

1888-1899

Box 11

1900-1911, 1914-1922

II. Business records, 1783-1948

A. General business, 1828-1924

Arranged chronologically within type of record.

This series contains general business records central to the organization and running of the Society, other than the financial records. These include the 1924 by-laws; annual meeting minutes and announcements; certificates and appointments of missionaries and officers; lists of officers; and miscellaneous reports.

Also included are reports of the Select Committee, loose and bound annual reports, and minutes written by the secretary to document expenditures and progress in propagating the gospel. The secretary lists the organizations and missionaries receiving appropriations and describes the reports he has received from them. These school reports often discuss specific pupils and what they are learning.

The loose reports are filed chronologically in Box 12, and the bound volumes in Box 19. See also Box 22 for oversize deeds.

Box 12Folder 1

By-laws, 1924

Box 12Folders 2-8

Reports of the Select Committee, 1828, 1839, 1871-1875, 1878-1913

B. Financial, 1783-1948

Arranged chronologically.

Box 13Folders 1-5

1. Annual treasury reports, 1807-1947

Included are accounts of stock and income for each year, as well as lists of appropriations and money received from stock investments. Particularly notable is the Society stock in railroads, such as the Western Railroad, the Missouri Railroad, and the Pacific Railroad.

The oversize accounts are filed in Box 22. See also Boxes 20-21 for bound account reports.

Box 13Folders 6-8

2. Auditor's reports, 1923-1947

Included are annual auditor's reports for 1923, 1947, 1929, 1934-1935, and 1937-1947.

Box 13Folder 9

3. Bank account balance books, 1838-1850

Included are four bank account balance books, 1838-1850.

4. Treasurers' correspondence, receipts, and vouchers, 1783-1948

Included is treasurers' correspondence related to the allocation of funds, requests for money from outside institutions, and contributions to the Society; lists of appropriations to missionaries, including the person and amount allocated; receipts of salary from missionaries; statements of missionary and mission expenses; checks, insurance forms, and bills from missionary expenditures; and nine statements of property, 1894-1901, under Arthur Lincoln, treasurer.

During the 1920s, there is a large amount of business correspondence between treasurer Henry Ware and the Society attorney, Stephen Phillips, concerning financial investments. The sole missionary correspondent from this period is G. E. E. Lindquist of the Lawrence, Kansas, mission. All of his correspondence concerns payment of his salary and other financial matters. On 1 November 1934, there is a letter from Lina Ware to her father Henry Ware regarding the questionable worth of the Society's missionary work, in reference to Thomas Riggs of the Oahe Industrial School. Also included are letters between Conveyancers Title Insurance and Mortgage Company and the Society.

Box 14

1783-1824

Box 15

1825-1846

Box 16

1847-1858

Box 17

1859-1927

Box 18

1931-1948

III. Bound volumes, 1787-1936

Arranged chronologically.

A. Reports of the Select Committee, 1787-1904

Box 19Vol. 1

1787-1829

Box 19Vol. 2

1787-1904

Box 19Vol. 3

1789-1870

Box 19Vol. 4

1790-1818

B. Account reports, 1788-1936

Box 20Vol. 1

1788-1806

Box 20Vol. 2

1789-1806

Box 20Vol. 3

1858-1867

Box 20Vol. 4

1862-1866

Box 20Vol. 5

1867-1880

See also Box 13.

Box 21Vol. 1

1867-1879

Box 21Vol. 2

1879-1903

Box 21Vol. 3

1903-1936

See also Boxes 13 and 22.

IV. Oversize materials, 1807-1909

A. Annual treasury reports, 1807-1909

Included is a treasurer's list of yearly expenses and income.

See also Boxes 13 and 22.

Box OS 1Folders 1-3

B. Miscellaneous materials, 1849-1880

Included is a blueprint of plans for a mission school in 1880 and miscellaneous deeds, 1849, 1857.

Box OS 1Folder 4

V. Printed materials, 1787-1937

A. Society for Propagating the Gospel, 1787-1932

This subseries contains materials by or about the Society for Propagating the Gospel Among the Indians and Others in North America, hereafter abbreviated as SPGAIONA.

Box 22

An Act to Incorporate Certain Persons, by the Name of the SPGAIONA, n.d.

Box 22

Bates, Joshua. A Sermon Delivered Before the SPGAIONA at their Anniversary, Nov. 4, 1813. Boston: Published by Cummings and Hilliard, for the Society, 1813.

Box 22

Brief Account of the SPGAIONA. (Inside title reads Historical Sketch of the Institution, Design, &c. of the SPGAIONA.) n.p., [1798].

2 copies.
Box 22

By-laws. n.p., n.d. -- [Approved, at the last semi-annual meeting of the Society, in November. . .], n.d.

2 copies.
Box 22

Hinman, Rev. George W. Christian Activities Among American Indians: A Field Study Undertaken for the SPGAIONA. Published by the Society, dated 15 Oct. 1932.

Box 22

Lindquist, G. E. E. "Early Work Among the Indians: One Hundred and Fifty Years Among Native Americans." Missionary Review of the World. Reprint.

Box 22

Massachusetts. Commonwealth of Massachusetts. In the Year of Our Lord. one thousand seven hundred and eighty seven. An act to Incorporate certain Persons, by the Name of the SPGAIONA. Boston, 23 Nov. 1787.

Broadside.
Box 22

Parish, Elijah. A Sermon, Preached at Boston, November 3, 1814, Before the SPGAIONA. Boston: Printed by Nathaniel Willis, for S. T. Armstrong, 1814.

Box 22

Porter, Ebenezer. The Duty of Christians to Pray for the Missionary Cause: A Sermon Preached in Boston, November 1, 1827 Before the SPGAIONA. Andover: Printed by Flagg and Gould, 1827.

Box 22

Report of a Special Committee of the SPGAIONA, submitted March 21, 1911, with the Report of George F. Kenngott, Travelling Agent, July 4-August 29, 1910. n.p., [1911?].

Box 22

The SPGAIONA, 1787-1887. University Press, printed for the Society, 1887.

B. Missionary, training school, and industrial school publications, 1827-1937

Box 22

Hampton Institute. The Southern Workman. 66, no. 5 (May 1937).

Box 22

Lincoln Institute. Centennial Review of the Rise, Progress, and Condition of the Lincoln Institute, near Jefferson City, Missouri. n.p., [1876?].

Box 22

Principals of the Calhoun Colored School. Fifteenth Annual Report of the Principals of the Calhoun Colored School of Calhoun, Lowndes County, Alabama with the Reports of the Heads, of the Departments. Boston: Geo. E. Ellis Co., Printers, 1907.

Box 22

Propagation of the Gospel: To All Who Love the Prosperity of Zion, and are Disposed to Aid in Propagating the Gospel among the Heathen, Philadelphia, Feb. 4th 1806. Boston: Printed by Belcher and Armstrong, n.d.

Box 22

Society for Promoting Religious Instruction at the Isles of Shoals. Sixth Annual Report. Newburyport: n.p., 1827.

Box 22

Ten Years Among the Freedmen of South Carolina: Work of a Volunteer Missionary and Its Result, n.d.

Box 22

Santee Normal Training School. What Does the Indian Worship? Santee, Nebraska: Santee Normal Training School Press, n.d.

Box 22

Woonspe Wankantu. Santee Normal Training School, Santee Nebraska, for the Year, ending June 1, 1916. Santee: Santee Normal Training School Press, 1916.

C. Miscellaneous, 1915-1930

Box 22

Eliot, Samuel A. Report upon the Conditions and Needs of the Indians of the Northwest Coast. Washington, D.C.: n.p., 1915.

Box 22

Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation. Indian Notes. 7, no. 3 (July 1930).

D. Newspapers, 1894-1934

Box 22

Every Other Sunday: A Paper for the Sunday School and the Home. 10, no. 6 (18 Nov. 1894).

Box 22

Ganado News Bulletin. Ganado, Arizona. 5, no. 5 (Dec. 1934).

Box 22

Iapi Oaye. Santee, Nebraska. 44, no. 10 (Dec. 1915).

Box 22

Iapi Oaye. Santee, Nebraska 45, no. 6 (June-July 1916).

Box 22

The Word Carrier of Santee Normal Training School. Santee, Nebraska. 36, no. 3 (May-June 1907).

Box 22

The Word Carrier of Santee Normal Training School. Santee, Nebraska. 44, no. 1 (Jan.-Feb. 1915).

Box 22

The Word Carrier of Santee Normal Training School. Santee, Nebraska. 44, no. 6 (Nov.-Dec. 1915).

Box 22

The Word Carrier of Santee Normal Training School. Santee, Nebraska. 45, no. 1 (Jan.-Feb. 1916).

Box 22

The Word Carrier of Santee Normal Training School. Santee, Nebraska. 45, no. 2, (Mar.-Apr. 1916).

Box 22

The Word Carrier of Santee Normal Training School. Santee, Nebraska. 45, no. 3, (May-June 1916).

E. Map, 1882

Box 22

Map showing Indian Reservations in the United States, West of the 84th Meridian and Number of Indians Belong There. n.p., 1882

Preferred Citation

The Society for Propagating the Gospel Among the Indians and Others in North America records, Massachusetts Historical Society.

Access Terms

This collection is indexed under the following headings in ABIGAIL, the online catalog of the Massachusetts Historical Society. Researchers desiring materials about related persons, organizations, or subjects should search the catalog using these headings.

Persons:

Baylies, Frederick.
Hawley, Gideon, 1727-1807.
Holmes, Abiel, 1763-1837.
Kellogg, Elijah, 1761-1842.
Kenngott, George Frederick, 1864-1934.
Kirkland, Samuel, 1741-1808.
Lindquist, G. E. E. (Gustavus Elmer Emanuel), 1886-1967.
Maclean, William.
Parkman, Francis, 1823-1893.
Plumer, Abraham.
Savage, James.
Sawyer, John.
Sergeant, John, 1747-1824.
Strickland, John.
Washington, Booker T., 1856-1915.
Wigglesworth, Edward, 1732-1794.
Wight, L. M., Mrs.

Organizations:

Claflin University.
Hampton Institute.
Society in Scotland for Propagating Christian Knowledge.
Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute.

Subjects:

African Americans--Education.
Indians of North America--Education.
Indians of North America--Missions.
Missionaries--United States.
Missions--Societies, etc.