Guide to the Henry Harmon Spalding and Eliza Hart Spalding Papers
Open for research.
To browse this collection's digitized materials visit Pearl.
Materials marked "Digital" in the Collection Inventory may not be available on Pearl or in their entirety.
Henry Harmon Spalding was born at Bath, New York, in 1803 and died at Lapwai, Idaho Territory, in 1874. Spalding graduated from the Franklin Academy in Prattsburgh, New York in 1831, and from Western Reserve College in 1833. He attended but did not graduate from Lane Theological Seminary. In 1835 he was ordained by the Presbytery of Bath. Eliza Hart was born in Berlin, Connecticut, in 1807. In 1820 her family moved to Holland Patent, New York. In 1833 she and Spalding were married before he went to Lane Seminary. While there she attended classes in the Hebrew and Greek Bible and theological lectures of Lyman Beecher.
Early in 1836, the Spaldings, under appointment by the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions (ABCFM) to the Osage Indians, met Marcus Whitman who had returned from Oregon to recruit missionaries and settlers. Whitman persuaded the Spaldings to go to the Northwest as Presbyterian missionaries. The Spaldings and Whitman and his bride made a hazardous six months journey, the wives being the first white women to cross the Rocky Mountains. The Spaldings established a mission among the Nez Perces in the Lapwai Valley in present Idaho. They opened a school and set up the first printing press in the Northwest. Spalding also trained the Indians in farming.
After the massacre of the Whitmans in 1847, which the Spaldings escaped, it was twenty-four years before Spalding could return to Idaho as a missionary. The remaining three years of his life were spent in controversy with the Indian agent, but were also fruitful in the work among the Nez Perces and other Indian tribes of the area.
The collection consists of eight original letters of Henry and Eliza Spalding to family members. Also included with the record group are transcriptions of six other letters, the originals being in the Huntington Library in Los Angeles. There is also a transcript of a letter from an Oregon newspaper. The correspondence includes a letter from Spalding to Eliza's father for permission to marry her before he goes to seminary, her letter while they were at Lane and letters concerning their work in the Northwest. Additionally, there is biographical material about the Spaldings by the Rev. George L. Deffenbaugh.
SERIES I: CORRESPONDENCE, 1833-1850
SERIES II: TRANSCRIPTS OF LETTERS, 1840-1847
SERIES III: MANUSCRIPT BIOGRAPHY, CIRCA 1908
To browse this collection's digitized materials visit Pearl.
Materials marked "Digital" in the Collection Inventory may not have been digitized in their entirety.
For additional related material see:
Record Group 224, American Indian Collection: the Presbyterian Historical Society Collection of Missionaries' Letters
MS Sp15, Appendix to H.H. Spalding. Typed (in card catalog under: Drury, Clifford Merrill, 1897-)
MS Sp15, Copies of Spalding's letters replies, 1872-1876 (?) Originals filed in American Indian Correspondence (in card catalog under: Spalding, Henry Harmon, 1803-1874)
The accuracy of the transcribed letters can be determined only by checking the originals.
Collection processed and finding aid prepared: 1991
Glenn Colliver, Assistant Archivist
Box | Folder | Description | Alternative Formats |
1 | 1 | Finding Aid to Record Group 283 | |
SERIES I: CORRESPONDENCE, 1833-1850 | |||
1 | 2 | 1833-1850 | Digital |
SERIES II: TRANSCRIPTS OF LETTERS, 1840-1847 | |||
1 | 3 | 1840-1847 | |
SERIES III: MANUSCRIPT BIOGRAPHY, CIRCA 1908 | |||
1 | 4 | "Rev. and Mrs. H.H. Spalding - Their Life and Work," by Rev. George L. Deffenbaugh *Probably read at Synod of Washington which met at Moscow, Idaho, September 11, 1896 | |
1 | 4 | "Rev. Henry Harmon Spalding - Mrs. Eliza Hart Spalding. A Biographical Sketch," by Rev. George L. Deffenbaugh (Lapwai, Idaho), circa 1908 |