Guide to the Bradley Family Papers
Open for research.
Daniel Beach Bradley (1804-1873) was born and raised in Marcellus, New York. He first applied to the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions in 1832 for appointment as a missionary. Bradley became a physician in 1833 after studying medicine at the University of New York. In 1834 he married Emelie Royce (1811-1845) of Clinton, New York. That same year, the Bradleys were sent to Siam by the A.B.C.F.M. In 1845 Emelie died of tuberculosis. Dr. Bradley subsequently returned to the United States, where he married his second wife, Sarah Blachly Bradley (1817-1893) in 1848. In that year he parted with the A.B.C.F.M. over doctrinal differences and was commissioned by the American Missionary Association to continue work in Siam. In 1850 he returned to Siam and nine years later became a financially independent missionary.
At the Siam Mission, Dr. Bradley practiced medicine out of a floating house used as a dispensary. He was especially known for his mass inoculation during a small pox epidemic and ties to Siam royalty through his medical pursuits. Furthermore, Bradley published numerous tracts and newsletters in an effort to both educate and proselytize the Siamese people. His most notable literary accomplishment was the publication of the Dictionary of the Siamese Language, completed in 1873, also the year of his death.
In his lifetime, Dr. Bradley had at least seven children: Sophia Royce, Emily Jane, Cornelius Beach, Irene Bell, Sarah Adorna, and two who died in infancy. Cornelius Beach Bradley (1843-1936) became pastor of the Siam Mission Church after his father's death. He was affiliated with the American Missionary Association as a missionary in Siam from 1871-1874. He later returned to the United States where he worked as a college professor.
This collection consists primarily of correspondence, edited abstracts of Dr. Bradley's journal, and biographical sketches. The majority of the correspondence was written either by Reverend George Whipple (General Secretary of the American Missionary Association) to Dr. Bradley and the Siam Mission, or from Dr. Bradley to his relatives. One of the biographical sketches contains numerous family photographs. The collection also includes several mission newsletters as well as the record book of the Siam Mission Church, which Dr. Bradley and other fellow missionaries founded in 1852.
Series 2 contains letters written about Dr. Bradley or to or from other Bradley family members. It also includes the transcribed diary and an image of Emelie Royce Bradley as well as two booklets describing Cornelius Bradley's experiences in Siam.
SERIES 1: DANIEL BEACH BRADLEY, 1837-1930, n.d.
SERIES 2: BRADLEY FAMILY PAPERS, 1836-1986, n.d.
General information about the Siam Mission can be found in RG 84, Board of Foreign Missions (P.C.U.S.A./U.P.C.U.S.A.) Records, Secretaries Files, Thailand Mission, 1865-1973. RG 84 also contains personal reports (including the annual missionary reports) and statistical summaries (submitted annually for each station and each institution within the station).
Researchers may also wish to consult the Henry R. O'Brien Papers, 1921-1970 (RG 394) which contains correspondence pertaining to the diraries of Dr. Bradley. The diaries of Dr. Samuel Reynolds House (RG 215), a contemorary doctor and missionary at the Siam Mission, also contain references to Dr. Bradley.
Researchers should also check the card catalog for additional materials relating to Dr. Bradley, including the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions--Siam/Thailand Mission Records (MS AM 35).
The complete multi-volume collection of Dr. Bradley's journal is in the library of Oberlin College, Ohio. The manuscripts written by Cornelius Beach Bradley are reprints from the University of California Chronicle: Siam Revisited is from vol. 12, no. 2 and Vignettes from Siamese Legend and Life is from vol. 13, no. 4.
The booklets written by Cornelius Bradley, the abstracts of Daniel Beach Bradley's journal, and the 1928 biographical sketch were all donated by the United Presbyterian Mission Library. The transcribed diary of Emelie Royce Bradley was donated by Mrs. Connie Hudson.
Collection processed and finding aid prepared: January 1997
Robert Lukens, Archives Technician.
Box | Folder | Description | |
1 | 1 | Finding Aid to Record Group 403 | |
Researchers should use care in handling the early correspondence and the documents of Cornelius Bradley, which are fragile. | |||
SERIES 1: DANIEL BEACH BRADLEY, 1837-1930, n.d. | |||
1 | 2 | Biographical sketch, 1928 | |
1 | 3 | Biographical sketch, n.d. | |
1 | 4 | Biographical sketch (including photographs), n.d. | |
1 | 5 | Correspondence, 1837-1872, n.d. | |
1 | 6 | Edited abstract of Daniel Beach Bradley's journal, 1930 | |
1 | 7 | Edited abstract of Daniel Beach Bradley's journal, 1930 | |
1 | 8 | Edited abstract of Daniel Beach Bradley's journal, 1930 | |
1 | 9 | Siam Mission Church record book, 1852-1874 | |
SERIES 2: BRADLEY FAMILY PAPERS, 1836-1986, n.d. | |||
1 | 10 | Bradley Family correspondence, 1836-1933, n.d. | |
2 | 1 | Transcribed diary of Emelie Royce Bradley, 1986 | |
2 | 2 | Image of Emelie Royce Bradley, n.d. | |
2 | 3 | Bound booklet, Vignettes from Siamese Legend and Life, by Cornelius Beach Bradley, 1911 | |
2 | 4 | Bound booklet, Siam Revisited, by Cornelius Beach Bradley, n.d. |