Religious Freedom Leading Theme for October Activities

October 4: Walter Rauschenbusch, Christian Social Gospel activist, was born in 1861, in Rochester, NY. ABHS holds the bulk of his papers, manuscripts and photographs. Rauschenbusch is pictured here.

October 5: William Carey, a leading Baptist missions proponent, was baptized in England in 1783.

October 8: John Clarke, an early advocate of religious liberty in New England, was born in England in 1609.

October 11: Four Baptists were brought before the Massachusetts court and told to cease ‘schismatical practices” in 1665.

October 14: The Warren Association in Massachusetts petitioned the Continental Congress for religious liberty in 1774. ABHS holds the Warren Association Minutes from 1767.

October 24: Ann Hasseltine Judson, one of the first American overseas missionaries, died in Burma at age 37 in 1826.

October 25: Ralph Elliott was fired by Midwestern Seminary (an SBC affiliated seminary) in the midst of the controversy over his Genesis interpretation in 1962. ABHS holds his personal papers.

October 31: John Mason Peck, pioneer missionary to the western frontier (Ohio and Illinois), was born in Litchfield, CT in 1789. ABHS holds his correspondence from 1833-1852 and a journal from 1854.

Award for Local History Celebration Announced

The American Baptist Historical Society is accepting nominations for the “George D. Younger Award for Excellence in Local or Regional American Baptist History”.  The deadline is May 1, 2017.

Projects eligible for nomination include but are not restricted to church anniversary celebrations, congregational or regional histories, oral history projects, or other historical programs that promote Baptist history in the local community or region.  The winner will be announced at the 2017 Biennial Convention in Portland, OR.  Nominations will be accepted for projects completed in either 2015 or 2016.

Nominations should include the following documentation:

  1. cover sheet listing the name of the project and the name and contact information for the sponsoring church, group or institution,
  2. a short (one or two page) description of the project or program, including a project timeline of the dates and locations of project events,
  3. supporting material, such as program bulletins, newspaper clippings, and comments by those who participated, either by creating the program/project or as part of the targeted audience,
  4. evidence of the quality (historical content and production quality) of the program or project,
  5. written evidence or evaluations of the project or program may be supplemented by other records of the program, such as videos, newspaper clippings, audio-recordings, or photographic images,
  6. evidence of impact on the targeted audience, with special consideration given for impact on a broader than Baptist community.

Mail nominations and supporting materials to be received at the Historical Society no later than May 1, 2017 to

The Younger Award                                                                                                                                                   American Baptist Historical Society                                                                                                                      3001 Mercer University Drive                                                                                                                             Atlanta, Georgia 30341-4155

For more information please call ABHS at 678-547-6680 or email ABHS@abhsarchives.org.

New Baptist Covenant Meeting in Atlanta

The New Baptist Covenant is holding  a summit in Atlanta now. Dr. Priscilla E. Eppinger, ABHS’s Executive Director, will bring greetings to the gathering on Thursday morning.  New Baptist Covenant was started in 2007 by President Jimmy Carter, who brought together prominent leaders from across the Baptist family. These leaders represented more than 30 Baptist organizations and over 20 million people. He challenged them to explore new opportunities for fellowship and cooperation. From this effort, a ministry of action named the New Baptist Covenant was born, uniting Baptists and renewing the pursuit of unity and justice on the local and national scale.

New Baptist Covenant churches, who are working together for racial justice and reconciliation, are not the first Baptists to come together with this goal.  In the 1890s black and white Baptist churches worked together to sponsor New Era Baptist Institutes to train leaders in the black churches.

Dr. Deborah Van Broekhoven, ABHS’s immediate past Executive Director,  will give a lecture on the New Era Baptist Institutes on Friday, September 30, at 7 p.m. in the Atlanta Administration and Conference Center, 2930 Flowers Road South, Atlanta.

For more information about this lecture, see our Post on August 26.  For more information on the current meeting, Google New Baptist Covenant.

The photo shows Rev. Alyssa Aldape, Rev. Heather Mustain sharing the Lord’s Supper, courtesy of the New Baptist Covenant.

 

Baptists Were Busy in September

1st   First issue of the precursor to American Baptist Magazine was published in 1803.   It is the oldest extant religious magazine.

5th Obadiah Holmes was brutally whipped in 1651 for religious beliefs, but he continued to preach during the whipping.

9th   The first Baptist church in Oklahoma was organized in 1832 by 3 Blacks, 1 Creek Indian and 2 Whites.

17th   Joseph Murrow organized the Indian Orphans’ Home in Oklahoma in 1902, the first Baptist orphanage for Indians.

18th   Alderson Academy (in West Virginia) began classes in 1901 with 40 students.  It subsequently became Alderson-Broadus College.

19th   The Philadelphia Association stated its support for local church autonomy in 1749.  ABHS’s collection of Philadelphia Association minutes goes back to 1770.

22nd The first Baptist missionaries to Alaska, Ernest and Ida Roscoe, arrived on Kodiak Island in 1886 (see photo of Kodiak above).

23rd The National Baptist Convention, USA Inc., was organized in 1895 in the Friendship Baptist Church, Atlanta, GA

26th Joanna P. Moore, lifelong teacher in Southern Black communities was born in 1832.

August Events in Baptist History

4: Franklin College became the first college in Indiana to admit women in 1842.

8: Virginia Baptists met with President Washington to press for guarantees of religious liberty in 1789.

10: Annie J. Ward received the first ‘four-year’ diploma from Chowan College in North Carolina in 1853.

12: James Ware and James Pittman were tried in Caroline County, VA, for having preaching in their homes in 1772.

17: Pensylvania’s Northumberland Baptist Association took a strong stand against slavery in 1855.

22: Nathaniel Saunders was summoned to appear in court in Culpepper county, VA, for preaching in 1772.

24: William Jewell college, the first four-year college west of Mississippi River, was charted in Liberty MO, in 1849.

26: Four Baptist ministers were tried in Middlesex County, VA, for preaching outside the state church in 1771.

Drawing of Franklin College from Cathcart’s Baptist Encyclopedia.

Emma Rauschenbusch-Clough and Social Christianity

Emma Rauschenbusch-Clough may have been as much an apostle of Social Christianity as her famous brother Walter. Walter Rauschenbusch talked of Christianizing communities and societies. Emma Rauschenbusch was a part of this process and witnessed it in Ongole, India, in the aftermath of a terrible famine in the mid to late 1870s. During this time, she witnessed many horrors, but she also witnessed the conversion of thousands of people in the Madiga tribe. The Madiga were a pariah tribe in India and lived in poverty, ignorance, and under a curse. Why did so many of these pariahs convert to Christianity?

Emma argued that it was because Christianity gave the Madigas a place to belong, whereas they had none in their own society. Education is obviously one if not the most important aspect of a person’s life and their chances to influence society for love, justice, and sustainability. These and other factors combine to what she calls “environment.” She writes, “Outward conditions have been created that make it possible for the Pariahs to become educated and prosperous, even though Sudra and Brahmin regard them as outcasts. But who shall plant in their hearts the desire for advancement? Much power lies in the power of environment; yet a motive within to impel forward makes environment more effective. . . .When Christianity comes to the Pariahs of India, it comes not merely as a religion. If it is true to the teachings of its Founder, it comes to create a new environment.”

But did Christianity provide such a new environment? Emma Rauschenbusch’s answer is unequivocally “Yes.” She concludes her reflection on what she witnessed among the Madigas by writing, “The Madigas say ‘Our ancestress, Azrunzodi, cursed us, saying, ‘Though you work and toil, it shall not raise your condition. Unclothed and untaught you shall be, ignorant and despised, the slaves of all.’ During many centuries the curse rested heavily upon us. Christianity has removed it. It is no more.”

What is the power of Christianity? Emma argued that it was simply the life and death of Jesus Christ, who cries, “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.” (Matthew 11:28-30) The power of Christianity lies in the breaking of the yokes of slavery and the acceptance of Jesus’s yoke of rest, justice, mercy and peace.

The power of Christianity is the true fast described in Isaiah 58:6-9:

“Is not this the kind of fasting I have chosen:
to loose the chains of injustice
and untie the cords of the yoke,
to set the oppressed free
and break every yoke?
Is it not to share your food with the hungry
and to provide the poor wanderer with shelter—
when you see the naked, to clothe them,
and not to turn away from your own flesh and blood?
Then your light will break forth like the dawn,
and your healing will quickly appear;
then your righteousness will go before you,
and the glory of the Lord will be your rear guard.

 Then you will call, and the Lord will answer;
you will cry for help, and he will say: Here am I.”

Emma Rauschenbusch did all of these things a more in India and it created the environment needed for the Madigas to be set free and to live in freedom. May we learn from her example and break the yokes of those who have been beaten down by the current social order and offer them another yoke: the yoke of Christ. The yoke of Love.

Andrew Scott, ABHS research assistant

Source of photograph

Google books link: https://books.google.com/books?id=GEQoAAAAYAAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=sewing+sandals&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwis5I22sYfOAhVD4SYKHQg8CUIQ6AEINjAA#v=onepage&q=sewing%20sandals&f=false

 

Archive and Manuscript Catalog Now On-Line

We invite you to explore our new online catalog for archives and manuscripts. (Click on  ‘Continue Reading…’ below for the link) The catalog contains entries for our holdings of personal papers, missionary correspondence, and more.   Several entries contain digital images of items from the collections.  This catalog is a work-in-progress, with new entries being added on a regular basis.  We invite your comments, questions, and suggestions regarding its usability.  Email your remarks to jballard@abhsarchives.org; subject line: “online catalog.”

 

 

Emma Rauschenbusch-Clough and the Rights of Women

Perhaps one of the most influential theologians of the early twentieth century was Walter Rauschenbusch, who has been described as a prophet of one of the most influential ideas in theology in the early part of his era: the social gospel. He is the author of many influential writings. His most important book was Christianity and the Social Crisis, which was published in 1907 and made Rauschenbusch a very sought-after speaker. Additionally, his Christianizing the Social Order, Prayers for Social Awakening, and A Theology for the Social Gospel are also among his most influential writings.

However, Walter Rauschenbusch is only one person in a Rauschenbusch family legacy. Most do not know that Walter had two sisters: Frida Rauschenbusch, born in September 1855, and Emma Rauschenbusch-Clough, born in 1859. Both sisters would go on to do work within the field of social redemption. However, I think that Emma is perhaps the most interesting member of the Rauschenbusch family. In an autobiographical note to his wife Pauline, Walter would describe Emma as “a wild bumble bee. . . She was active physically, up to mischief, with an inclination to insist on her rights, and with a capacity for friendship and also for jealousy of others.”

Little did Walter know this “inclination to insist on her rights” would be something that Emma would do her for her entire life.  Her insistence on her rights would eventually expand to include all women. In her dissertation, A Study of Mary Wollstonecraft and the Rights of Woman, she explored the life, writings, views and legacy of famous feminist Mary Wollstonecraft and the theme of what she called the “emancipation of women.”

In the conclusion of her dissertation, Emma demanded that a woman “win for herself the rights to which she has claim as a human being.” She continued to long for and to fight for the day that to pass “when one human being could dictate to another: Thy rank in society, or in this case thy sex, robs thee of the opportunity of striving after the attainment of the highest possible degree of development of all thy faculties.” This, in an age in which the role of the woman in society was to keep the home and to bear children, was a radical idea. It still is today. Even today, Emma’s vision has not truly been realized. Even today there is a glass ceiling that keeps women from attaining the highest development and use of all of their abilities. “No!” cries Emma. Women are human beings too and thus deserve all of the rights pertaining to men as their equal. May we continue this fight today as we honor a mind well ahead of her time – and, perhaps, even our time, as well.

Andrew Scott

ABHS Research Assistant

 

Sources:

Christopher H. Evans, The Kingdom is Forever Coming:  A Life of Walter Rauschenbusch (Grand Rapids, Michigan:  William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2004).

Title page from book drawn from Emma Rauschenbusch’s dissertation.  Google books link:  https://books.google.com/books?id=cIQEAAAAYAAJ&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_ge_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false

 

 

Walter Rauschenbusch Family History

In the study of social Christianity, the family name “Rauschenbusch” is a familiar one. Most of the time, however, the surname is synonymous with only one first name: “Walter.” Walter Rauschenbusch was a great mind and social gospel innovator. However, I believe that his family is often overlooked in how they worked with and in social Christianity; or, at the very least, how they influenced Walter in his thinking.

His father, August (or Augustus) Rauschenbusch was a German Baptist evangelist and later teacher in the German Department of Rochester Theological Seminary, where Walter would later be educated. August’s ministry was certainly not based on a social gospel like Walter’s. His driving passion was to save the souls of individuals. He possessed a very intense personality and would be regarded by his peers as “a great man, a man of God.” However, his relationship with his family was one characterized by long periods of absence along with fits of rage when he was present.

There seems to be little known about Walter’s mother, Caroline Rauschenbusch, except that her marriage to August was very rough. Rauschenbusch biographer Christopher H. Evans notes that the marriage “was volatile and, at the minimum, verbally violent.” Walter would go to write later in life that his parents’ estrangement was one of “the great sorrows in my life.” However, most significantly, during Walter’s pastorate of the Second German Baptist Church in New York City from 1886-1897, Caroline Rauschenbusch filled the important social role of the pastor’s wife in the congregation. Walter was young and unmarried, so Caroline did help support Walter during his ministry in New York – a ministry that would shape his future thoughts as a social gospel innovator.

Walter’s oldest sister, Frida Rauschenbusch Fetzer, was born in September 1855. Christopher Evans notes that he did not develop a close relationship with Frida until his thirties. Not much is known about her. However, clues in a letter regarding her by Walter gives clues that she was a reformer in her own right. Rauschenbusch wrote to Reverend George Huntington:  “Mrs. Fetzer was not simply a wife and mother, but an active missionary force. She was, I suppose, the only college woman among the German Baptists, and she brought over the traditions of educated and progressive womanhood in America . . . She has for years edited the monthly paper of the young women’s organizations and has spoken and agitated wherever possible among the churches for organization and active participation of women in church life.” He goes on to conclude,“According to my judgment she has been more of a pioneering force than any of the American men.” She certainly seemed to have a passion for women and the active participation of women in the church.

I find his other sister, Emma Rauschenbusch Clough, to be perhaps the most interesting member of the family besides Walter himself. She was a missionary in the Telugu Mission in South India, where she educated girls and women. She also endured a major famine and witnessed a “second Pentecost,” when thousands of members of the Madiga clan where baptized. She worked with missionary – and, later, husband — John Clough to build Christianity into the social order of the people that she lived. If Walter discussed social Christianity, Emma actually did it. She earned a PhD degree and later authored two books: While Sewing Sandals and Social Christianity in the Orient (the authorship of which is attributed to her husband John Everett Clough). Emma Rauschenbusch is a woman that deserves more study and research as part of the Rauschenbusch family legacy.

Andrew Scott, ABHS Student Research Assistant

 

Sources:

Christopher H. Evans, The Kingdom is Forever Coming:  A Life of Walter Rauschenbusch (Grand Rapids, Michigan:  William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2004)

Letter from Walter Rauschenbusch to George B. Huntingdon, April 21, 1913.  Walter Rauschenbusch Family Papers, RG 1003, box 36, folder 2.  American Baptist Historical Society, Atlanta, Georgia.

Image:  Emma Rauschenbusch-Clough, While Sewing Sandals (London, Hodder and Stoughton, 1899).  Google Books:

Historical Events in Baptist History

July 6, 1849: the first Baptist church in California was organized in San Francisco by Osgood Church Wheeler.

July 13, 1813:  Adoniram and Ann Judson arrived in Rangoon, Burma, to begin missionary work.  Adoniram worked for 37 years in the mission field.  Ann died in 1826, and Adoniram married Sarah Boardman  (1803-1845) and then Emily Chubbuck (1817-1854).

July 19, 1651: John Clarke, Obadiah Holmes and John Crandall arrived in Lynn MA, and began preaching illegally.

July 27, 1707: The Philadelphia Baptist Association was founded as the first Baptist association in what became the United States.

July 31, 1861: Helen Barrett Montgomery (pictured above), the first woman president of the Northern Baptist Convention, was born in Kingsville, OH.  She was president in 1921-22.

Eppinger Named American Baptist Historical Society Executive Director

The American Baptist Historical Society welcomes Rev. Dr. Priscilla Eppinger as the next Executive Director.  She will begin her duties on August 15.  Dr. Eppinger comes to the Historical Society from Graceland University Community of Christ Seminary in Lamoni, Iowa, where she has been Professor of Religion since 2002. She was educated at Agnes Scott College (BA), Andover Newton Theological School (M.Div), and Northwestern University and Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary (PhD). At Graceland University, she has been teaching religious studies, theology, and church history to seminary students and undergraduates.

Her roots in American Baptist Churches (ABC) life run deep, having served as a missionary to Zaire and on staff for the American Baptist Home Mission Societies.  She has also been a member of the General Board of ABC and the board of ABC Educational Ministries, as well as on the ABC biennial planning committee. As an ordained minister, she served churches in Massachusetts and Illinois.

A public welcome is being planned by the Board of Managers for Friday, September 30.

Walter Rauschenbusch and the Social Gospel: Introduction

Throughout the history of the Christian religion, there have been different views of Jesus and his redeeming work. In fact, one man once said that “No individual, no Church, no age of history has ever comprehended the full scope of God’s saving purposes in Jesus Christ.” That man was Walter Rauschenbusch. Born on October 4, 1861 to German immigrants Augustus and Caroline Rauschenbusch in Rochester, New York, Rauschenbusch went on to become an advocate for a movement that would later be termed the “social gospel.”

This term, particularly in Rauschenbusch’s thought, was driven by one key concept: the Kingdom of God. Throughout his pastoral ministry in Second German Baptist Church in New York City’s Hell’s Kitchen from 1886-1897, Rauschenbusch quickly began to realize that an individual conception of salvation and the kingdom was not enough for his congregation. He realized that the scope needed of this concept had to be broadened. Jesus prayed that God’s kingdom come on earth as it is in heaven. This concept of an earthly order of affairs shaped by the teachings of Jesus Christ continued to grow in Rauschenbusch’s writings and teachings at Rochester Theological Seminary where he taught from 1897 until his death in 1918.

In one of his first major published works, “The New Evangelism,” Rauschenbusch talks of the need for a new evangelism to rise up and replace the old evangelism. Rauschenbusch says that “It (the powerlessness of the old evangelism) lies in the fact that modern life has gone through immense changes and the Church has not kept pace with it in developing the latent moral and spiritual resources of the Gospel which are needed by the new life.” In this new life, Rauschenbusch argues, one needs to simply personal piety, e.g. going to church, staying sober, avoiding sexual promiscuity, and so forth.  But one must also attend equally to the social realm because choosing only personal sanctity allows one to contribute to an oppressive social system.

Rauschenbusch continued his life work attempting to flesh out this new evangelism that will only come when the church is open and observant to the developments that are happening in the current world around us. For Rauschenbusch himself, these developments were best found in communion with the working class factory worker in inhumane working environments, child labor, and the growing gap between the rich and the poor. What are our markers today? How can we, in the spirit of Rauschenbusch, look to create a more just society based upon the teachings of Jesus? How can we continue to plant the seeds of the kingdom in the soil of our current society for the Father to water? How can we continue the growth of the kingdom? These are questions that we must ask ourselves, for the Kingdom is always but coming.

Andrew Scott, ABHS Student Research Assistant

Source:  Christopher H. Evans, The Kingdome is Forever Coming: A Life of Walter Rauschenbusch (Grand Rapids, Michigan: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2004).

Walter Rauschenbusch Family Papers Closed Through December 2016 for Curatorial Care

The Walter Rauschenbusch Family Papers will be closed to researchers from May 1 through December 31, 2016, so that the collection may be better organized, described, and preserved.  The purpose of these archival processing efforts is to ensure better care of the Rauschenbusch Papers while providing greater access to them.   During this closure period, Rauschenbusch-related blogs will be posted on the ABHS website by Andrew Scott, a graduate student in the McAfee School of Theology program.  Andrew is an ABHS research assistant who is helping archivist Jan Ballard to process the collection.

Walter Rauschenbusch (1861-1918) was an American Baptist theologian whose writings provide the theological underpinnings of the Social Gospel movement.  The Rauschenbusch Family Papers (1861-1970) document the life, work, writings, and influence of Walter Rauschenbusch and, for the half-century following his death in 1918, the lives and political activities of his wife, Pauline, and their children and spouses.  This significant Christian ethics collection – one of the crown jewels of the ABHS’s holdings – is of interest to researchers in the history of religion and Baptist studies, American political and intellectual history, and women’s history.

Curatorial work on the Rauschenbusch Family Papers anticipates events and activities beings scheduled in 2018 to commemorate the 100th anniversary of Walter Rauschenbusch’s death.  Among these is “The Legacy of Walter Rauschenbusch,” a conference co-sponsored by the American Baptist Historical Society, the Acadia Center for Baptist and Anabaptist Studies,  Mercer University’s Center for Theology and Public Life and McAfee School of Theology.  The conference will be held April 8-11, 2018 on the Mercer University campus in Atlanta, GA.

Baptist Anniversaries in June

4– In 1768 Five Virginia Baptists were imprisoned by the state for ‘disturbing the peace’.

9 – 1834, William Carey died at the age of 72, in his 42nd year as a missionary to India.

16 – In 1636 the residents of Providence Plantations (RI) drew up a compact allowing religious freedom.

18 – In 1781 the Severns Valley Church was organized in Kentucky.  This was the first Baptist church west of the original 13 colonies.

19 – In 1809 First Baptist Church, Philadelphia, offered “brethren of color’ the use of its building.

22 – In 1875, Dong Gong was ordained to ministry in Portland, OR.  He was the first Asian-American ordained by Baptists.  He is pictured here.

 

Helen Barrett Montgomery, First Woman President of Northern Baptist Convention

Helen Barrett Montgomery (1861-1934) was born in Ohio, but her family moved to Rochester, NY, when she was 9  years old.  While she was at Wellesley she began the study of Greek, which she continued for the rest of her life.  She was very active in the Lake Avenue Baptist Church, organizing and leading a women’s Bible Class which she taught for 44 years.

Her concern for social reform and civic causes grew out of her biblical and theological understandings.  As the first woman elected to public office in Rochester (twenty years before women got the vote), she served on the Rochester School Board and served for 10 years.

While the cause of woman’s suffrage was important to her, most of her efforts were given to the women’s missionary movement.  She wrote many books, led many missionary groups, and traveled to many mission fields.

In 1921 she was elected the president of the Northern Baptist Convention and presided over the 1922 convention. As the first women president of any protestant denomination, she led the Baptists through controversy with grace and prayers.

ABHS has a booklet about her life called Envoy of Grace, by Conda Delite Hitch Abbot.  It is available for $5.  Order by sending a check to ABHS, 3001 Mercer University Drive, Atlanta, GA 30341.

Rare Book Collection Being Brought To Light

McAfee School of Theology student Traveous Adkins is working with ABHS’s rare book collection.  The goal is to put our books in an on-line catalog which can be accessed by researchers.  These books date from the early 1600s, and deal with religious matters primarily.  Church leaders spoke out on such issues as baptism, church membership and the evils of the day.  These books are considered rare because they are old, but also because there may be only one or two other copies in this country.  This work is part of  our campaign, At Your Fingertips, which is seeking donations with the goal to digitize parts of our collection.

Retirement Announced by Executive Director

Deborah Bingham Van Broekhoven will retire as executive director of the American Baptist Historical Society (ABHS) in August 2016.  Van Broekhoven   announced her plans at the annual ABHS Board of Managers meeting October 2nd.  The Executive Committee of the ABHS board is forming a search committee to conduct a nation-wide search for her successor.

“It has been a privilege to lead the Historical Society, “Van Broekhoven said.  “When I became executive director, the archives were located in two places, Valley Forge, PA, and Rochester, NY.  During my tenure, I was able to bring the two parts together and work through the move to the Atlanta campus of Mercer University.  We are now well settled in our new home and ready to move into another phase of our development.”  One unexpected benefit of the Atlanta location has been its convenience for visitors from Myanmar, who generally include in their U.S. itinerary a visit to ABHS, as well as some of the forty Atlanta-area congregations made up of refugees from Myanmar (also called Burma).

Van Broekhoven holds a doctorate in history from Bowling Green State University (Ohio) and was a professor at Ohio Wesleyan University before being named executive director of ABHS in 1998.  She has been active in American Baptist congregations throughout her life, most recently as a member of Friendship Baptist Church in Atlanta.

At the last biennial, Van Broekhoven led the kick off of the At Your Fingertips campaign, the goal of which is to raise $550,000 to move the archives into the digital age.  “I am especially proud of the digital resources ABHS has been able to make available to researchers around the world, as evidenced in the special website created for the Judson Bicentennial, www.Judson200.org.”  Many of the images and documents scanned for the website were suggested by visitors from Myanmar (also called Burma).

 

“With our strong Board of Managers and staff, I’m confident that ABHS will make the history and archives of the American Baptist Churches and the Baptist World Alliance secure and available to researchers in digital forms both currently and in the future,” Van Broekhoven declared.  “I will miss the frequent contact with researchers from around the world,” she added, “but I am sure that my activities in retirement will include historical projects.”

 

Donation Highlights Social Justice Activity

Rev. Brooks Andrews recently retired as pastor of Japanese Baptist Church in Seattle, the same church his father, Emery Andrews (born in 1894), was serving when WWII began. Brooks was only a small child then, but remembers that the members of the congregation were forced into internment camps along with 100,000 other Japanese Americans. Emery Andrews and his family followed his congregation to Minidoka, the camp in Idaho, where he continued to minister to them.   Rev. Andrews worked for justice for the Japanese Americans who were stripped of their property and dignity.

Following the war, Emery Andrews became involved in the ‘House for Hiroshima’ project that built homes, day care centers and other structures in Hiroshima. He made trips to Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1949 and 1951. During that time he kept a dairy, made a scrapbook and took many photographs.

This week, Brooks Andrews brought these remembrances of his father’s activities during the post war period to ABHS. He has donated them to the ABHS archives so that they can be made available to researchers.

American Baptist Women’s Ministries: A Look at Ruth McKinney

by Shabria Caldwell

The American Baptist Churches USA has a rich history concerning its diversity, ranging from gender leadership to minority leadership. Ruth McKinney (1900-1966) is a proud representation of both as she is perhaps one of the most prominent names in ABC history. An influential speaker and leader, McKinney is the first Black woman to hold a top office in the American Baptist Convention.

McKinney’s roots were an early indication of her Baptist leadership. The daughter of a reverend, Annie Ruth Berry was born in Birmingham, Alabama to Reverend Samuel and Ada Virginia Berry. She was educated at both Spelman College and Columbia University. Ruth was working as a college teacher when she married her husband, Wade, in 1924.

Wade Hampton McKinney was born in Cleveland, Georgia, in 1892. He attended Atlanta Baptist College Academy, Morehouse College, and Colgate Rochester Theological Seminary. Furthermore, he served in the U.S. Army during World War I. Ruth and Wade McKinney can be reverenced as one of the many Black power couples of their time.

With the migration of African Americans to northern cities in the 1920s and 1930s in search of industrial work, many flooded into the Cedar-Central neighborhood of Cleveland, Ohio. This added to the congregational numbers of neighborhood churches. Most recognizable was Antioch Baptist Church because of its leadership role in the community. Antioch provided financial support for other neighborhood churches, and supported the NAACP.

Reverend Wade McKinney was called upon to lead Antioch Baptist Church in 1928. He is revered as one of the most important and influential leaders in Antioch’s history, serving the Church for 28 years. During that period, Ruth worked as a teacher at the Church School and also served as the youth choir director for 33 years.

Ruth and Wade were pivotal figures not only in the Christian Church community, but also within the African American community as civic leaders. In 1947, Reverend Wade worked to establish a credit union to aid returning African American veterans as well as local residents in securing loans. In addition, he served as a spokesman for the community, leading many voter registration campaigns and serving on the Cuyahoga County Grand Jury.

As the wife of an esteemed minister, and as an achieved and educated woman, Ruth became active in the affairs of religious organizations across the nation. She was in great demand as a speaker. Beginning in 1952, she began broadcasting 1-minute radio “Thot-O-Grams” which included brief, inspirational messages under the supports of the United Church Women of Cleveland.

In addition, McKinney was also a member of the vice presidents board in the National Council of American Baptist Women in the Division of Christian Service during the mid-50s. Her responsibilities included enlisting women in active service within the ministry.

Independently, McKinney saw the importance of the woman’s presence in the church. In the November, 1956 The American Baptist Woman newsletter McKinney wrote, “Many [women] merely have their names on the church roll; others, attend the Sunday worship service, but their service through any organization of the church is not given. Think of this great loss in women power!”

Photo credit:  McKinney, Ann Ruth Berry:  1953, by Herman Seid.  From the Cleveland Press Notable Blacks of Cleveland collection, Cleveland State University, Michael Schwartz Library, Special Collections.  Courtesy of the Cleveland Memory Project

ABHS Preserves Images from Burma

The American Baptists’ first overseas mission was to Burma, in 1813.

It is due to our long history in Burma that the ABHS is now home to a range of photo collections from American Baptists who lived in Burma.  On the Judson200 web site, we display a selection of these early images from three missionaries.

Sydney V. Hollingworth  was born and grew up in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.  He worked for the Superior Printing Company in Akron, Ohio before being sent to Burma, accompanied by his wife and their three children, by the American Baptist Foreign Mission Society in 1921. He worked at the Mission Press in Rangoon (Yangon) and lived in the country until 1936.

Arthur E. and Laura H. Carson highlight the Chin people of the Haka Hills, where the Carsons established and operated a mission from 1899 until Arthur’s death in 1908.   After her husband’s death, Laura continued serving at the mission until 1924, when her own failing health compelled her to return to the United States

Elva Jenkins Hendershot  served from 1924 to 1927 as an American Baptist missionary nurse in Kengtung, a town in the Shan state of Burma.  She was given an  album of drawings by an artist from the nearby village of Yan Hlwa to thank her for caring for his sick wife.  Only a few examples of Shan albums still exist today, and of these, the 26-page album dated 1925 in the ABHS holdings is one of the most complete.  These albums comprise “illustrations of multiple ethnic groups, each represented by paired male and female figures in distinctive costumes, often holding an emblematic artifact which evokes a characteristic cultural practice.”

Click here for more information about the missionaries and to see the images preserved in the ABHS archives.