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American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions

The American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions (ABCFM) was among the first American Christian missionary organizations. It was created in 1810 by recent graduates of Williams College. In the 19th century it was the largest and most important of American missionary organizations and consisted of participants from Protestant Reformed traditions such as Presbyterians, Congregationalists, and German Reformed churches.

The Haystack Monument, Williams College, commemorates the event in 1806 that inspired the creation of the ABCFM.
The American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions issued shares to finance its new ship Morning Star in the year 1884

Before 1870, the ABCFM consisted of Protestants of several denominations, including Congregationalists and Presbyterians. However, due to secessions caused by the issue of slavery and by the fact that New School Presbyterian-affiliated missionaries had begun to support the Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions, after 1870 the ABCFM became a Congregationalist body.[1]

The American Board (as it was frequently known) continued to operate as a largely Congregationalist entity until the 1950s. In 1957, the Congregational Christian church merged with the German Evangelical and Reformed Church to form the United Church of Christ. As a part of the organizational merger associated with this new denomination, the ABCFM ceased to be independent. It merged operations with other missions entities to form the United Church Board for World Ministries, an agency of the United Church of Christ.

Other organizations that draw inspiration from the ABCFM include InterVarsity Christian Fellowship, the Conservative Congregational Christian Conference, and the Missionary Society of the National Association of Congregational Christian Churches.

Organization and functioning

The ABCFM conducted an annual meeting with a Prudential Committee (aka Executive Committee)[2] that took care of day-to-day business. It elected a Corresponding Secretary to produce written documents, and a Treasurer to receive donations. It also had board members.

The ABCFM held its first meeting on September 5, 1810, and elected Samuel Worcester as corresponding secretary.

Corresponding Secretaries and other key leaders

  • Samuel Worcester was the first corresponding secretary, starting in 1810.
  • Jeremiah Evarts, corresponding secretary of the ABCFM from 1821 to 1831[3]
  • At the 1822 annual meeting, board members elected officers: Evarts as corresponding secretary, John Treadwell as president, and Rev. Joseph Lyman as vice president. The Prudential Committee consisted of William Reed, Rev. Leonard Woods, Jeremiah Evarts, Samuel Hubbard, and Rev. Warren Fay.[4]
  • Elias Cornelius became corresponding secretary, serving Dec 1831 – February 1832 (his death)[5]
  • Benjamin B. Wisner, Rufus Anderson (1796–1880) and David Greene (1797–1866) became "coequal" secretaries in 1832. When Wisner died (February 9, 1835), William Jessup Armstrong took his place.[6]
  • Anderson, Greene, and Armstrong led as coequals from 1835 to 1846, with Anderson as foreign secretary, Armstrong as domestic secretary, and David Greene as secretary for American Indian missions and editor of the Missionary Herald[7] Rufus Anderson continued as foreign secretary until 1866. Armstrong died in a shipwreck between Boston and New Jersey in 1846.
  • Selah B. Treat was elected in 1843 as recording secretary. Rufus Anderson, Rev. David Greene, and Rev. William J. Armstrong were listed as "Secretaries for Correspondence." (President and vice president were listed respectively as Theodore Frelinghuysen LL. D. and Hon. Thomas S. Williams)[8]
  • By 1858, George Warren Wood was sole corresponding secretary, with Rev. Mark Hopkins as President and abolitionist William Jessup as Vice-President.[9] Hopkins had been the President of Williams College since 1836.
  • By 1866, Rev. Nathan George Clark and Rev G. W. Wood had joined Rufus Anderson and Selah Treat as corresponding secretaries.[10] Wood, as ABCFM Secretary in New York City, held his position from 1850 to 1871. Clark assumed the position of Foreign Secretary when Anderson left in 1866 and remained Foreign Secretary until 1894.[11][12]
Note: After some secessions due to the slavery issue and the movement of New School Presbyterian-affiliated missionaries to the Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions, the ABCFM was left as a Congregationalist body after 1870.[1]
  • In 1896, James Levi Barton became secretary when N.G. Clark died,[13] and he retired in 1927.[14]
  • In 1899, James L. Barton, Judson Smith, and Charles H. Daniels are the three Corresponding Secretaries of the ABCFM according to The Congregational Yearbook. It also lists Charles M. Lamson and D. Willis James as ABCFM president and vice president, respectively.[15]
  • Henry H. Riggs' brother Ernest Wilson Riggs (former president of Euphrates College 1910–1921 and Near East Relif worker) joined James Levi Barton as associate secretary and corresponding secretary of the ABCFM from 1921 to 1932.[16]
Note: After 1930, the ABCFM revised its constitution to create the position of "Executive Vice-President" to provide a position that was "first among equals" amongst ABCFM secretaries.[17]
  • Dr. Frank Field Goodsell was the first Executive Vice-President of the ABCFM, which he led from 1930 to 1948.[18]
  • Alford Carleton served as executive vice president of the board from 1954 to 1970.
Note: when the Evangelical and Reformed Church merged with the Congregational Christian Church in 1957, the Congregationalist-affiliated ABCFM merged with the E&R affiliated Board of International Missions[19] to become the United Church of Christ denomination's United Church Board of World Ministries under Carleton[20] On June 29, 1961, the ABCFM formally concluded. On July 1, 2000, a UCC restructure renamed UCBWM became "Wider Church Ministries" under the UCC's covenanted ministries structure.[21]

Board members

In 1826, the American Board absorbed 26 members of the United Foreign Missionary Society (UFMS) into its board.[22]

Early history

 
The Judsons, Newells, and Luther Rice set sail for India from Salem, Massachusetts on the Caravan on February 19, 1812.

In 1806, five students from Williams College in western Massachusetts took shelter from a thunderstorm in a haystack. At the Haystack Prayer Meeting, they came to the common conviction that "the field is the world" and inspired the creation of the ABCFM four years later. The objective of the ABCFM was to spread Christianity worldwide.[23] Congregationalist in origin, the ABCFM also accepted missionaries from Presbyterian (1812–70), Dutch-Reformed (1819–57) and other denominations.

In 1812, the ABCFM sent its first missionaries – Adoniram and Ann Hasseltine Judson; Samuel and Roxana Peck Nott; Samuel and Harriet Newell; Gordon Hall, and Luther Rice—to British India. Between 1812 and 1840, they were followed by missionaries to the following people and places: Tennessee to the Cherokee Indians, India (the Bombay area), northern Ceylon (modern day Sri Lanka), the Sandwich Islands (Hawaii); east Asia: China, Singapore and Siam (Thailand); the Middle East: (Greece, Cyprus, Turkey, Syria, the Holy Land and Persia (Iran)); and Africa: Western Africa—Cape Palmas—and Southern Africa—among the Zulus.

The fight against Indian removal

Jeremiah Evarts served as treasurer, 1812–20, and as corresponding secretary from 1821 until his death in 1831. Under his leadership, the board in 1821 expanded the role of women: it authorized Ellen Stetson, the first unmarried female missionary to the American Indians, and Betsey Stockton, the first unmarried female overseas missionary and the first African-American missionary.[24]

Evarts led the organization's efforts to place missionaries with American Indian tribes in the Southeastern United States. He also led the ABCFM's extensive fight against Indian removal policies in general and the Indian Removal Act of 1830 in particular.[25]

1830 through 1860

By the 1830s, based on its experiences, the ABCFM prohibited unmarried people from entering the mission field. They required couples to have been engaged at least two months prior to setting sail. To help the missionaries find wives, they maintained a list of women who were "missionary-minded": "young, pious, educated, fit and reasonably good-looking."[26] The policy against sending single women as missionaries was not strictly followed and was reversed in 1868. The secretary post was offered to Elias Cornelius in October 1831, but he became ill and died in February 1832.[27] Rufus Anderson was the General Secretary of the Board from 1832 through the mid-1860s. His legacy included administrative gifts, setting of policy, visiting around the world, and chronicling the work of the ABCFM in books.

 
Rufus Anderson (1796–1880)

Between 1810 and 1840, the ABCFM sought firstly to proclaim the Gospel of Jesus Christ. At home and abroad, the Board and its supporters undertook every effort to exhort the evangelical community, to train a cadre of agents, and to send forth laborers into the mission field. As a leader in the United Front and early federal American voluntary associations, the Board influenced the nineteenth-century mission movement.[28]

Missionary stations in 1855

By 1850, the American Board had sent 157 ordained, male missionaries to foreign posts.[29]

The January 1855 issue of the Missionary Herald[30] listed the Current missions of the Board as follow:

Africa

  • Mission to Gaboon (Baraka station, Olandebenk station, Negenenge station, one outstation at Nomba)
  • Mission to Zulus (Mapumulo station, Umvoti station, Esidumbini station, Umsunduzi station, Itafamasi station, Table Mountain station, Inanda station, Umlazi station, Ifumi station, Amahlongwa station, Ifafa station, Umtwalumi station)
  • Mission to Angola (Chilesso station)

Europe

Western Asia

Southern Asia

  • Mission to Bombay (Bombay station)
  • Mission to Ahmednagar (American Marathi Mission Marathi Christians) (Ahmednuggur station, Bhingar station, Seroor station, and outstations at Wudualey, Newasse, and Dedgaum)
  • Mission to Satara (Satara station and Mahabulishwar station)
  • Mission to Kolapoor (Kolapoor station)
  • Mission to Madras ( Royapoorum station, Chintadrepettah station, and Black Town station)
  • Mission to Madura (Madura East station, Madura Fort station, Dindiguel East station, Dindiguel West station, Periacoolum station, Tirumungalum station, Pasumalie station, Mandahasalie station, Tirupoovanum station, and Sivagunga station)
  • Mission to Ceylon (Tillipally station, Baticotta station, Oodooville station, Manepy station, Panditeripo station, Chavagacherry station, Oodoopitty station, Varany station, and outstations at Caradive, Valany, Poongerdive, Kaits, and Atchoovaley

Eastern Asia

  • Mission to Canton (Canton station)
  • Mission to Amoy (Amoy station)
  • Mission to Fuh-Chau (Fuh-Chau station)
  • Mission to Shanghai (Shanghai station)
  • Mission to Hong Kong/South China (Hong Kong and Canton stations)

North Pacific Ocean

North American Indians

  • Mission to Choctaws (Stockbridge station, Wheelock station, Pine Ridge station, Good Water station, Good Land station, Bennington station, Mount Pleasant station, Lenox station, and outstations at Mount Zion and Bok Chito
  • Mission to Cherokees (Brainerd Mission, Dwight station, Lee's Creek station, Fairfield station, Park Hill station, and an outstation at Honey Creek)
  • Mission to Dakotas (Yellow Medicine station and New Hope station)
  • Mission to Ojibwas (Bad River station)
  • Mission to Senecas (Upper Cattaraugus station, Lower Cattaraugus station, Upper Alleghany station, Lower Alleghany station, and an outstation at Old Town)
  • Mission to Tuscaroras (Tuscarora station and Mount Hope station)
  • Mission to Abenaquis (St. Francis station)

Recruitment efforts

Orthodox, Trinitarian and evangelical in their theology, speakers to the annual meetings of the Board challenged their audiences to give of their time, talent and treasure in moving forward the global project of spreading Christianity. At first reflective of late colonial "occasional" sermons, the annual meeting addresses gradually took on the quality of "anniversary" sermons. The optimism and cooperation of post-millennialism held a major place in the scheme of the Board sermons.

After having listened to such sermons and been influenced at colleges, college and seminary students prepared to proclaim the gospel in foreign cultures. Their short dissertations and pre-departure sermons reflected both the outlook of annual Board sermons and sensitivity to host cultures. Once the missionaries entered the field, optimism remained yet was tempered by the realities of pioneering mission work in a different milieu. Many of the Board agents sought—through eclectic dialogue and opportunities as they presented themselves, as well as itinerant preaching—to bring the cultures they met, observed, and lived in to bear upon the message they shared. The missionaries found the audiences to be similar to Americans in their responses to the gospel message. Some rejected it outright, others accepted it, and a few became Christian proclaimers themselves.

Other North American Missions to the Indians

Among the North American missions of the ABCFM north or west of the displaced Southeast tribes were the 1823 Mackinaw Mission (Mackinac Island and Northern Michigan), the Green Bay mission (Michigan Territory at Green Bay), the Dakota mission (Michigan Territory/Iowa Territory/Minnesota Territory primarily along the Mississippi and the Minnesota (St. Peters) Rivers), the Ojibwe mission (Michigan Territory/Wisconsin Territory/Minnesota Territory/ Wisconsin at La Pointe and Odanah, Yellow Lake, Pokegama Lake, Sandy Lake, Fond du Lac, and Red Lake), and the Whitman mission in Oregon.

Missionaries of the Dakota mission experienced the explosion of Dakota violence in August 1862 at the start of the U.S.-Dakota War. Some of them attended the imprisoned Dakota and accompanied the exiled Dakota when they were forced out of Minnesota in 1863, especially those of the Williamson and Riggs families.

The Dakota mission translated the Bible into Dakota and produced a dictionary and a schoolbook. The Ojibwe mission translated the New Testament into Ojibwe and produced a number of schoolbooks, but used a now-abandoned notation style to do so. Both were among the first to render these languages in print.

Work with indigenous preachers

Indigenous preachers associated with the Board proclaimed an orthodox message, but they further modified the presentation beyond how the missionaries had developed subtle differences with the home leaders. Drawing upon the positive and negative aspects of their own cultures, the native evangelists steeped their messages in Biblical texts and themes. At times, indigenous workers had spectacular or unexpected results. On many occasions, little fruit resulted from their labors. Whatever the response, the native preachers worked on—even in the midst of persecution—until martyrdom or natural death took them.

Native preachers and other indigenous people assisted Board missionaries in Bible translation efforts. The act of translating the Scriptures into a mother tongue reflected a sensitivity to culture and a desire to work within the host society. Second only to the verbal proclamation of the Gospel, Bible translation took place in all sorts of settings: among ancient Christian churches, such as the Armenians and the Assyrian [Nestorian] church; cultures with a written language and a written religious heritage, such as the Marathi; and creating written languages in cultures without them, such as among the animistic people in Hawaii.

Educational, social, and medical roles served by ABCFM missionaries

Printing and literacy played crucial roles in the process of Bible translation. Similarly, the press runs and literacy presentations contributed significantly to the social involvement exhibited by the Board. To a greater or lesser extent, education, medicine, and social concerns supplemented the preaching efforts by missionaries. Schools provided ready-made audiences for preachers. Free, or Lancasterian, schools provided numerous students. Boarding students in missionary homes allowed them to witness Christian life in the intimacy of the family.

Education empowered indigenous people. Mostly later than 1840, it enabled them to develop their own church leaders and take a greater role in their communities. Board missionaries established some form of education at every station. A number of Board missionaries also received some medical training before leaving for the field. Some, like Ida Scudder, were trained as physicians but ordained as missionaries and concentrated on the task of preaching. Others, such as Peter Parker, sought to practice both the callings of missionary and medical practitioner.

ABCFM in China

After the London Missionary Society and the Netherlands Missionary Society, the Americans were the next to venture into the mission field of China. The Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, representing the Congregational Churches of the United States, sent out Revs. David Abeel and Elijah Coleman Bridgman in 1829. They were received in February 1830 by Dr. Robert Morrison. These men worked first among the Chinese and Malays of the Straits Settlements. From 1842 to his death in 1846, Mr. Abeel devoted himself to establishing a mission in Amoy (modern Xiamen).

 
View of ABCFM compound in Fuzhou, ca.1911–1918

The American Board followed with many other appointments in rapid succession. Revs. Ira Tracy and Samuel Wells Williams (1812–1884), followed in 1833, settling at Singapore and Macau. In the same year Revs. Stephen Johnson (missionary) and Samuel Munson went to Bangkok and Sumatra. There were four great centers from which smaller stations were maintained. These were Fuzhou, in connection with which were fifteen churches; North China, embracing Beijing, Kalgan, Tianjin, Tengzhou, and Baoding, with smaller stations in the various districts of the center missions; Hong Kong; and Shanxi, with two stations in the midst of districts filled with opium cultivation and staffed by missionaries of the Oberlin Band of Oberlin College.

At Tengzhou missionaries established a college, over which Dr. Calvin Mateer presided. Tengzhou was one of the centers for Chinese literary competitive examinations. Mateer believed that the light of modern science shown in contrast with "superstition" would prove effective. He and his wife taught astronomy, mathematics, natural philosophy, and history. He trained young men to be teachers all over North China. The young men whom he had trained in Biblical instruction began native ministry. Drs. John Livingstone Nevius and Hunter Corbett (1862–1918) co-operated in this latter work, by giving a theological education to candidates for ministry during a portion of each year at Yantai.

At its principal stations in China, the Society maintained large medical dispensaries and hospitals, boarding schools for boys and girls, colleges for native students, and other agencies for effecting the purposes of the mission. It also helped create the Canton Hospital. As of 1890 it had twenty-eight missionaries, sixteen lady agents, ten medical missionaries, four ordained native ministers, one hundred and five unordained native helpers, nearly one thousand communicants, and four hundred and fifty pupils in its schools.[31]

ABCFM in the Middle East

The ABCFM founded many colleges and schools in the Ottoman Empire and the Balkans.[32] For example, the American College of Sofia in Bulgaria is the successor to a Boys' School founded by the ABCFM in 1860 in Plovdiv and a Girls' School in Stara Zagora in 1863. They were combined in Samokov, Bulgaria in 1871, and moved to Sofia in the late 1920s.[33]

Missionaries sponsored by ABCFM, listed by location

Africa

Europe

Western Asia

Southern Asia

Eastern Asia

North Pacific Ocean

North American Indians

Indigenous workers affiliated with the Board

  • Babajee (b. 1791)
  • Liang Fa (1789–1855)
  • David Malo (1795–1853)
  • Henry Opukahaia (c. 1792–1818; also known as ʻŌpūkahaʻia)
  • Puaaiki (c. 1785–1844)
  • Asaad Shidiak (c. 1797–c. 1832; also known as Asaad Esh Shidiak)
  • Joel Hulu Mahoe (1830–1890) second full-Hawaiian to be ordained.
  • Henry Blatchford, of the Ojibwe mission did translations and lay preaching beginning at Pokegama (Minnesota) in 1836, was ordained eventually and worked at the Odanah mission until he died in the late 19th century.
  • Abdullah Abdul Kadir (1797-1854), known as "Munshi Abdullah", was a Malayan scholar and translator under the employ of Alfred North, an ABCFM missionary stationed in Singapore.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b . Houghton Library, Harvard College Library. Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138 US. July 7, 2016. Archived from the original on September 6, 2016. Retrieved August 25, 2016. After some secessions due to the slavery issue and the formation by the Presbyterian Church of its own foreign mission board, the ABCFM was left as a Congregationalist body after 1870.
  2. ^ Maxfield, Charles A. (2001). "THE FORMATION AND EARLY HISTORY of the AMERICAN BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS FOR FOREIGN MISSIONS". Charles A. Maxfield (1995 Dissertation). Retrieved August 25, 2016. "The ABCFM held its first meeting on 5 September 1810, and elected Samuel Worcester corresponding secretary." ... The Prudential Committee (the Executive Committee of the ABCFM)
  3. ^ Maxfield, Charles A. (2001). "THE FORMATION AND EARLY HISTORY of the AMERICAN BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS FOR FOREIGN MISSIONS". Charles A. Maxfield (1995 Dissertation). Retrieved August 25, 2016. Jeremiah Evarts, corresponding secretary of the ABCFM from 1821 to 1831,
  4. ^ The Missionary Herald (Volume XVIII, No. 11 (November 1822) ed.). Boston: Samuel T. Armstrong. 1822. p. 338. Retrieved September 9, 2016. The Board then made choice of the following officers, for the ensuing year...
  5. ^ Maxfield, Charles A. (2001). "THE FORMATION AND EARLY HISTORY of the AMERICAN BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS FOR FOREIGN MISSIONS". Charles A. Maxfield (1995 Dissertation). Retrieved August 25, 2016. Elias Cornelius (1794–1832) accepted the position of corresponding secretary late in December 1831, left almost immediately on a fund raising tour, and died at Hartford, 12 February 1832
  6. ^ Maxfield, Charles A. (2001). "THE FORMATION AND EARLY HISTORY of the AMERICAN BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS FOR FOREIGN MISSIONS". Charles A. Maxfield (1995 Dissertation). Retrieved August 25, 2016.
  7. ^ Maxfield, Charles A. (2001). "THE FORMATION AND EARLY HISTORY of the AMERICAN BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS FOR FOREIGN MISSIONS". Charles A. Maxfield (1995 Dissertation). Retrieved August 25, 2016. "From 1835 to 1846 the Board had a period of stable leadership under the direction of Anderson, Greene, and Armstrong. In the division of labor of three co-equal secretaries, Rufus Anderson was foreign secretary, Benjamin Wisner and then William Armstrong were domestic secretaries, and David Greene was secretary for American Indian missions and editor of the Missionary Herald
  8. ^ Missionary Herald, Volume 39. Boston: Press of Crocker and Brewster. 1843. p. 429. Retrieved August 25, 2016.
  9. ^ The New York State Register, for 1858. New York City: John Disturnell. 1858. p. 179. Retrieved September 9, 2016. N/A
  10. ^ The Missionary Herald. Vol. 62. Boston: ABCFM. June 1866. p. 2. Retrieved August 25, 2016.
  11. ^ Public Opinion: A Comprehensive Summary of Press Throughout the World on All Important Current Topics. Vol. 20. New York City: The Public Opinion Company. January 16, 1896. p. 83. In 1866 he was appointed foreign secretary of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, a position which he retained until October, 1894
  12. ^ Ishii, Noriko Kawamura (March 1, 2004). American Women Missionaries at Kobe College, 1873–1909. Routledge. pp. 31–36. ISBN 9781135936204. Retrieved August 25, 2016.
  13. ^ Ishii, Noriko Kawamura (March 1, 2004). American Women Missionaries at Kobe College, 1873–1909. Routledge. p. 36. ISBN 9781135936204.
  14. ^ "Barton, James Levi (1855-1936)". History of Missiology. Boston University School of Theology. Retrieved August 26, 2016. He was elected president of Euphrates College, Harpoot, in 1892, but when his wife's ill health prevented continuing residence in Turkey, Barton became foreign secretary of the ABCFM. First among equals on the board staff, Barton believed that the primary need of indigenous Christian communities was well-trained leadership. Before his retirement in 1927,
  15. ^ The Congregational Year-book. Boston: Congregational sunday School and Publishing Society. 1899. p. 42. Retrieved August 25, 2016.
  16. ^ Shavit, David (1988). The United States in the Middle East: a historical dictionary. Greenwood Press. ISBN 9780313253416. "Riggs graduated.. and was ordained in 1910... president of Euphrates College from 1910 to 1921, child welfare director of the Near East Relief in 1920–1921; and associate secretary and corresponding secretary of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions (ABCFM) from 1921 to 1932.
  17. ^ Goodsell, Fred Field (1959). You Shall be My Witnesses: An Interpretation of the history of the American Board 1810–1960 (Library of Congress Card Catalog Number 59-15355 ed.). ABCFM. p. viii. Retrieved August 26, 2016. the Board's first Executive Vice-President Dr. Fred Field Goodsell"..."When the Constitution of the Board was revised to provide that among its secretaries one should be first among equals, a sort of Prime Minister... That man was Dr. Goodsell... he was called back to Boston to lead the Board... For nineteen years"
  18. ^ "Goodsell, Fred Field (1880–1976). Papers, 1928–1972 (bulk)". History Matters. Congregational Library & Archives. Retrieved August 26, 2016. In 1930, he moved to Boston where he was made the first Executive Vice-President of the ABCFM. After his retirement in 1948
  19. ^ "Timeline of Mission". Global Ministries. Global Ministries. Retrieved August 26, 2016. 1961 ABCFM merges with Board of International Missions to form the United Church Board for World Ministries (UCBWM)
  20. ^ . Oberlin College Archives. Archived from the original on July 28, 2016. Retrieved August 26, 2016. After serving as president of Aleppo College for seventeen years, Dr. Carleton returned to the United States to serve as executive vice president of the ABCFM. His first major task was to guide the Congregational Church in a merger with the Evangelical and Reformed Church, creating the United Church of Christ. Resulting from this merger, the ABCFM, formerly a branch of the Congregational Church, became the United Church Board of World Ministries. He served as executive vice president of the board from 1954 to 1970.
  21. ^ Finding Aid prepared by: Brigette C. Kamsler, September 2011. . Houghton Library, Harvard College Library. Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Archived from the original on September 6, 2016. Retrieved August 26, 2016. On 29 June 1961 the ABCFM was formally concluded, becoming part of the United Church Board for World Ministries (UCBWM), an instrumentality of the new denomination. On 1 July 2000, the UCBWM became Wider Church Ministries, one of the four covenanted ministries of the UCC.
  22. ^ Maxfield, Charles A. (2001). "THE FORMATION AND EARLY HISTORY of the AMERICAN BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS FOR FOREIGN MISSIONS". Charles A. Maxfield (1995 Dissertation). Retrieved August 25, 2016. In 1826 the UFMS and the ABCFM merged; in effect, the UFMS was absorbed by the American Board. At its annual meeting that year, the ABCFM added twenty-six new members to the Board,
  23. ^ "ABCFM 200", Exhibits, Congregational Library.
  24. ^ Maxfield, Charles A (1995). . The 'Reflex Influence' of Missions: The Domestic Operations of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, 1810–1850. Archived from the original on February 4, 2012. Retrieved June 20, 2006.
  25. ^ Andrew, John A., III (1992). From Revivals to Removal: Jeremiah Evarts, the Cherokee Nation, and the Search for the Soul of America. Athens, Georgia: University of Georgia Press. ISBN 0820314277.
  26. ^ "Did You Know?". Christian History & Biography. 90: 3. Spring 2006.
  27. ^ William Buell Sprague, ed. (1857). "Elias Cornelius, D. D. 1816–1832". Annals of the American Pulpit: Trinitarian Congregational. Robert Carter & Brothers. pp. 633–643.
  28. ^ Corr, Donald Philip "The Field Is the World": Proclaiming, Translating and Serving by the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, 1810–40 (Pasadena: William Carey Library Dissertation Series, 2009)
  29. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on December 21, 2012. Retrieved January 18, 2013.
  30. ^ ABCFM (1855). Missionary Herald Vol 51. Boston: T. R. Marvin. pp. 2–14. Retrieved May 11, 2017.
  31. ^ Townsend (1890), 233–234
  32. ^ American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, The Annual Report, 1917 full text, pp. 62–95.
  33. ^ "History". The American College of Sofia. Retrieved May 30, 2020.
  34. ^ "Mary Matthews' Biography · A Mount Holyoke Woman in Macedonia: Mary Matthews and the American School for Girls, 1888 to 1920 · Digital Exhibits of the Archives and Special Collections". ascdc.mtholyoke.edu. Retrieved February 1, 2022.
  35. ^ The Missionary Herald at Home and Abroad, Volumes 116-117. American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, General Council of the Congregational and Christian Churches of the United States. Missions Council, General Council of the Congregational and Christian Churches of the United States. Board of Home Missions. Congregational Churches. 1920. p. 23.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  36. ^ Anderson, Gerald H.; Stowe, David M. (1999). "Cochran, Joseph Gallup (1817–1871)". Biographical Dictionary of Christian Missions. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. p. 140. ISBN 978-0-8028-4680-8.
  37. ^ "Memorial records for Wilson A Farnsworth". Digital Library for International Research. American Board. Retrieved March 5, 2019.
  38. ^ "Memorial records for Caroline E. P. Farnsworth". Digital Library for International Research. American Board. Retrieved March 5, 2019.
  39. ^ Good, James Isaac. Life of Rev. Benjamin Schneider, D. D.: A Missionary of the Reformed Church in the United States Through the American Board at Brossa and Aintab, Turkey, 1834-1877. Board of foreign missions, Reformed church in the United States.
  40. ^ Missionary Herald, Volume 85. American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. 1889. pp. 184–186.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  41. ^ Shavit, David (1990). The United States in Asia: A Historical Dictionary. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 229. ISBN 978-0-313-26788-8.
  42. ^ Missionary Herald, Volume 36. American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. 1840. p. 24.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  43. ^ "Mary Frances Buckhout McVay Obituary (1910 - 2010)". Legacy.com. The Republican. February 5, 2010. Retrieved February 1, 2022.

Further reading

  • Bliss, Edwin Munsell, ed. The Encyclopaedia of missions. Descriptive, historical, biographical, statistical. With a full assortment of maps, a complete bibliography, and lists of Bible version, missionary societies, mission stations, and a general index online vol 1 1891, 724pp; online vol 2 1891, 726pp
  • Conroy-Krutz, Emily. Christian Imperialism: Converting the World in the Early American Republic. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2015.
  • Phillips, Clifton Jackson. Protestant America and the pagan world: the first half century of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, 1810–1860 (Harvard University Press, 1969)
  • Putney, Clifford (writer of introduction and editor with Burlin, Paul), The Role of the American Board in the World: Bicentennial Reflections on the Organization's Missionary Work, 1810–2010 (Eugene, Or: Wipf and Stock, 2012)
  • Strong, William Ellsworth. The Story of the American Board (1910) online[
  • Varg, Paul A. Missionaries, Chinese, and Diplomats: The American Protestant Missionary Movement in China, 1890–1952 (Princeton UP, 1958).

Publications

  • American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions (1838). Report, Volume 29. s.n. Retrieved April 24, 2014.
  • American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions (1836). Annual Report, Volumes 27-31. Retrieved April 24, 2014.
  • American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions (1840). Annual Report - American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Volumes 31-33. Retrieved April 24, 2014.
  • İdris YÜCEL, "An Overview of Religious Medicine in the Near East: Mission Hospitals of the American in Asia Minor (1880-1923)", Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies, Vol 14, Issue 40, Spring 2015.
  • İdris YÜCEL, “A Missionary Society at the Crossroad: American Missionaries on the Eve of the Turkish Republic”, Journal of Modern Turkish History, Vol 8 Issue 15, Spring 2012.
  • İdris YÜCEL,"An Overview of Religious Medicine in the Near East: Mission Hospitals of the American Board in Asia Minor (1880-1923)", Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies, Vol 14, Issue 40, Spring 2015.
  • İdris YÜCEL, Anadolu'da Amerikan Misyonerliği ve Misyon Hastaneleri (1880-1934), TTK Yayınevi, Ankara 2017.
  • İdris YÜCEL, Kendi Belgeleri Işığında Amerikan Board’ın Osmanlı Ülkesindeki Teşkilatlanması, Erciyes Üniversitesi, Yüksek Lisans Tezi, 2005

External links

  • Yale Library note
  • [Usurped!] at Nebraska State Historical Society
  • American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, ABC 1–91, at Houghton Library, Harvard University.
  • ABCFM Collection overview at Congregational Library and Archives
  • Santee Normal Training School, Woonspe Wankantu, 1881, 1882, 1884, 1885, American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions.
  • "Rev William Jessup Armstrong". Find a Grave. Retrieved August 26, 2016. Died in the wreck of the Steamer Atlantic, age 50. He labored long in the fields of central Virginia where he gathered a church. Born in Mendham NJ, son of the minister Dr A Armstrong. He died on one of his monthly returns to Boston.

american, board, commissioners, foreign, missions, abcfm, among, first, american, christian, missionary, organizations, created, 1810, recent, graduates, williams, college, 19th, century, largest, most, important, american, missionary, organizations, consisted. The American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions ABCFM was among the first American Christian missionary organizations It was created in 1810 by recent graduates of Williams College In the 19th century it was the largest and most important of American missionary organizations and consisted of participants from Protestant Reformed traditions such as Presbyterians Congregationalists and German Reformed churches The Haystack Monument Williams College commemorates the event in 1806 that inspired the creation of the ABCFM The American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions issued shares to finance its new ship Morning Star in the year 1884 Before 1870 the ABCFM consisted of Protestants of several denominations including Congregationalists and Presbyterians However due to secessions caused by the issue of slavery and by the fact that New School Presbyterian affiliated missionaries had begun to support the Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions after 1870 the ABCFM became a Congregationalist body 1 The American Board as it was frequently known continued to operate as a largely Congregationalist entity until the 1950s In 1957 the Congregational Christian church merged with the German Evangelical and Reformed Church to form the United Church of Christ As a part of the organizational merger associated with this new denomination the ABCFM ceased to be independent It merged operations with other missions entities to form the United Church Board for World Ministries an agency of the United Church of Christ Other organizations that draw inspiration from the ABCFM include InterVarsity Christian Fellowship the Conservative Congregational Christian Conference and the Missionary Society of the National Association of Congregational Christian Churches Contents 1 Organization and functioning 1 1 Corresponding Secretaries and other key leaders 1 2 Board members 2 Early history 2 1 The fight against Indian removal 2 2 1830 through 1860 2 3 Missionary stations in 1855 2 3 1 Africa 2 3 2 Europe 2 3 3 Western Asia 2 3 4 Southern Asia 2 3 5 Eastern Asia 2 3 6 North Pacific Ocean 2 3 7 North American Indians 2 4 Recruitment efforts 2 5 Other North American Missions to the Indians 2 6 Work with indigenous preachers 2 7 Educational social and medical roles served by ABCFM missionaries 3 ABCFM in China 4 ABCFM in the Middle East 5 Missionaries sponsored by ABCFM listed by location 5 1 Africa 5 2 Europe 5 3 Western Asia 5 4 Southern Asia 5 5 Eastern Asia 5 6 North Pacific Ocean 5 7 North American Indians 6 Indigenous workers affiliated with the Board 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 Publications 11 External linksOrganization and functioning EditThe ABCFM conducted an annual meeting with a Prudential Committee aka Executive Committee 2 that took care of day to day business It elected a Corresponding Secretary to produce written documents and a Treasurer to receive donations It also had board members The ABCFM held its first meeting on September 5 1810 and elected Samuel Worcester as corresponding secretary Corresponding Secretaries and other key leaders Edit Samuel Worcester was the first corresponding secretary starting in 1810 Jeremiah Evarts corresponding secretary of the ABCFM from 1821 to 1831 3 At the 1822 annual meeting board members elected officers Evarts as corresponding secretary John Treadwell as president and Rev Joseph Lyman as vice president The Prudential Committee consisted of William Reed Rev Leonard Woods Jeremiah Evarts Samuel Hubbard and Rev Warren Fay 4 Elias Cornelius became corresponding secretary serving Dec 1831 February 1832 his death 5 Benjamin B Wisner Rufus Anderson 1796 1880 and David Greene 1797 1866 became coequal secretaries in 1832 When Wisner died February 9 1835 William Jessup Armstrong took his place 6 Anderson Greene and Armstrong led as coequals from 1835 to 1846 with Anderson as foreign secretary Armstrong as domestic secretary and David Greene as secretary for American Indian missions and editor of the Missionary Herald 7 Rufus Anderson continued as foreign secretary until 1866 Armstrong died in a shipwreck between Boston and New Jersey in 1846 Selah B Treat was elected in 1843 as recording secretary Rufus Anderson Rev David Greene and Rev William J Armstrong were listed as Secretaries for Correspondence President and vice president were listed respectively as Theodore Frelinghuysen LL D and Hon Thomas S Williams 8 By 1858 George Warren Wood was sole corresponding secretary with Rev Mark Hopkins as President and abolitionist William Jessup as Vice President 9 Hopkins had been the President of Williams College since 1836 By 1866 Rev Nathan George Clark and Rev G W Wood had joined Rufus Anderson and Selah Treat as corresponding secretaries 10 Wood as ABCFM Secretary in New York City held his position from 1850 to 1871 Clark assumed the position of Foreign Secretary when Anderson left in 1866 and remained Foreign Secretary until 1894 11 12 Note After some secessions due to the slavery issue and the movement of New School Presbyterian affiliated missionaries to the Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions the ABCFM was left as a Congregationalist body after 1870 1 In 1896 James Levi Barton became secretary when N G Clark died 13 and he retired in 1927 14 In 1899 James L Barton Judson Smith and Charles H Daniels are the three Corresponding Secretaries of the ABCFM according to The Congregational Yearbook It also lists Charles M Lamson and D Willis James as ABCFM president and vice president respectively 15 Henry H Riggs brother Ernest Wilson Riggs former president of Euphrates College 1910 1921 and Near East Relif worker joined James Levi Barton as associate secretary and corresponding secretary of the ABCFM from 1921 to 1932 16 Note After 1930 the ABCFM revised its constitution to create the position of Executive Vice President to provide a position that was first among equals amongst ABCFM secretaries 17 Dr Frank Field Goodsell was the first Executive Vice President of the ABCFM which he led from 1930 to 1948 18 Alford Carleton served as executive vice president of the board from 1954 to 1970 Note when the Evangelical and Reformed Church merged with the Congregational Christian Church in 1957 the Congregationalist affiliated ABCFM merged with the E amp R affiliated Board of International Missions 19 to become the United Church of Christ denomination s United Church Board of World Ministries under Carleton 20 On June 29 1961 the ABCFM formally concluded On July 1 2000 a UCC restructure renamed UCBWM became Wider Church Ministries under the UCC s covenanted ministries structure 21 Board members Edit Timothy DwightIn 1826 the American Board absorbed 26 members of the United Foreign Missionary Society UFMS into its board 22 Early history Edit The Judsons Newells and Luther Rice set sail for India from Salem Massachusetts on the Caravan on February 19 1812 In 1806 five students from Williams College in western Massachusetts took shelter from a thunderstorm in a haystack At the Haystack Prayer Meeting they came to the common conviction that the field is the world and inspired the creation of the ABCFM four years later The objective of the ABCFM was to spread Christianity worldwide 23 Congregationalist in origin the ABCFM also accepted missionaries from Presbyterian 1812 70 Dutch Reformed 1819 57 and other denominations In 1812 the ABCFM sent its first missionaries Adoniram and Ann Hasseltine Judson Samuel and Roxana Peck Nott Samuel and Harriet Newell Gordon Hall and Luther Rice to British India Between 1812 and 1840 they were followed by missionaries to the following people and places Tennessee to the Cherokee Indians India the Bombay area northern Ceylon modern day Sri Lanka the Sandwich Islands Hawaii east Asia China Singapore and Siam Thailand the Middle East Greece Cyprus Turkey Syria the Holy Land and Persia Iran and Africa Western Africa Cape Palmas and Southern Africa among the Zulus The fight against Indian removal Edit Jeremiah Evarts served as treasurer 1812 20 and as corresponding secretary from 1821 until his death in 1831 Under his leadership the board in 1821 expanded the role of women it authorized Ellen Stetson the first unmarried female missionary to the American Indians and Betsey Stockton the first unmarried female overseas missionary and the first African American missionary 24 Evarts led the organization s efforts to place missionaries with American Indian tribes in the Southeastern United States He also led the ABCFM s extensive fight against Indian removal policies in general and the Indian Removal Act of 1830 in particular 25 1830 through 1860 Edit By the 1830s based on its experiences the ABCFM prohibited unmarried people from entering the mission field They required couples to have been engaged at least two months prior to setting sail To help the missionaries find wives they maintained a list of women who were missionary minded young pious educated fit and reasonably good looking 26 The policy against sending single women as missionaries was not strictly followed and was reversed in 1868 The secretary post was offered to Elias Cornelius in October 1831 but he became ill and died in February 1832 27 Rufus Anderson was the General Secretary of the Board from 1832 through the mid 1860s His legacy included administrative gifts setting of policy visiting around the world and chronicling the work of the ABCFM in books Rufus Anderson 1796 1880 Between 1810 and 1840 the ABCFM sought firstly to proclaim the Gospel of Jesus Christ At home and abroad the Board and its supporters undertook every effort to exhort the evangelical community to train a cadre of agents and to send forth laborers into the mission field As a leader in the United Front and early federal American voluntary associations the Board influenced the nineteenth century mission movement 28 Missionary stations in 1855 Edit By 1850 the American Board had sent 157 ordained male missionaries to foreign posts 29 The January 1855 issue of the Missionary Herald 30 listed the Current missions of the Board as follow Africa Edit Mission to Gaboon Baraka station Olandebenk station Negenenge station one outstation at Nomba Mission to Zulus Mapumulo station Umvoti station Esidumbini station Umsunduzi station Itafamasi station Table Mountain station Inanda station Umlazi station Ifumi station Amahlongwa station Ifafa station Umtwalumi station Mission to Angola Chilesso station Europe Edit Mission to Greece Athens station Mission to Jews Constantinople Smyrna Thessalonica Western Asia Edit Mission to Armenians Bebek Constantinople station Pera Constantinople station Hass keuy Constantinople station Koom kapoo Constantinople station Smyrna station Marash station Aintab station Talas Turkey station Sivas station Tokat station Marsovan station Trebizond station Ezroom station and Arabkir station Mission to Syria Beirut station Abeih station Hasbeiya station Trablous station Aleppo station and outstations at Bhamdoun Kfarshima Rashaya Ibel and Khiam Mission to Assyria Mosul station Diarbekir station and an out station at Hainee Mission to Nestorians Urmia station also known as Oroomaih and nearby Seir station Gawar station and outstations at Geog Tapa Ardeshai Supergan and Dizza Takha Southern Asia Edit Mission to Bombay Bombay station Mission to Ahmednagar American Marathi Mission Marathi Christians Ahmednuggur station Bhingar station Seroor station and outstations at Wudualey Newasse and Dedgaum Mission to Satara Satara station and Mahabulishwar station Mission to Kolapoor Kolapoor station Mission to Madras Royapoorum station Chintadrepettah station and Black Town station Mission to Madura Madura East station Madura Fort station Dindiguel East station Dindiguel West station Periacoolum station Tirumungalum station Pasumalie station Mandahasalie station Tirupoovanum station and Sivagunga station Mission to Ceylon Tillipally station Baticotta station Oodooville station Manepy station Panditeripo station Chavagacherry station Oodoopitty station Varany station and outstations at Caradive Valany Poongerdive Kaits and AtchoovaleyEastern Asia Edit Mission to Canton Canton station Mission to Amoy Amoy station Mission to Fuh Chau Fuh Chau station Mission to Shanghai Shanghai station Mission to Hong Kong South China Hong Kong and Canton stations North Pacific Ocean Edit Mission to Micronesia Rono Kittie station Ascension Island Shalong Point station Ascension Island Strong s Island station Mission to Hawaii Kailua station Kealakekua station Hilo station Kohala station and Waimea station Mission to Maui Lahaina station Lahainaluna station Wailuku station Mission to Molokai Kaluaaha station Mission to Oahu Honolulu station Punahou station Ewa station Waialua station and Kaneohe station Mission to Kauai Waimea station Koloa station and Waioli station North American Indians Edit Mission to Choctaws Stockbridge station Wheelock station Pine Ridge station Good Water station Good Land station Bennington station Mount Pleasant station Lenox station and outstations at Mount Zion and Bok Chito Mission to Cherokees Brainerd Mission Dwight station Lee s Creek station Fairfield station Park Hill station and an outstation at Honey Creek Mission to Dakotas Yellow Medicine station and New Hope station Mission to Ojibwas Bad River station Mission to Senecas Upper Cattaraugus station Lower Cattaraugus station Upper Alleghany station Lower Alleghany station and an outstation at Old Town Mission to Tuscaroras Tuscarora station and Mount Hope station Mission to Abenaquis St Francis station Recruitment efforts Edit Orthodox Trinitarian and evangelical in their theology speakers to the annual meetings of the Board challenged their audiences to give of their time talent and treasure in moving forward the global project of spreading Christianity At first reflective of late colonial occasional sermons the annual meeting addresses gradually took on the quality of anniversary sermons The optimism and cooperation of post millennialism held a major place in the scheme of the Board sermons After having listened to such sermons and been influenced at colleges college and seminary students prepared to proclaim the gospel in foreign cultures Their short dissertations and pre departure sermons reflected both the outlook of annual Board sermons and sensitivity to host cultures Once the missionaries entered the field optimism remained yet was tempered by the realities of pioneering mission work in a different milieu Many of the Board agents sought through eclectic dialogue and opportunities as they presented themselves as well as itinerant preaching to bring the cultures they met observed and lived in to bear upon the message they shared The missionaries found the audiences to be similar to Americans in their responses to the gospel message Some rejected it outright others accepted it and a few became Christian proclaimers themselves Other North American Missions to the Indians Edit Among the North American missions of the ABCFM north or west of the displaced Southeast tribes were the 1823 Mackinaw Mission Mackinac Island and Northern Michigan the Green Bay mission Michigan Territory at Green Bay the Dakota mission Michigan Territory Iowa Territory Minnesota Territory primarily along the Mississippi and the Minnesota St Peters Rivers the Ojibwe mission Michigan Territory Wisconsin Territory Minnesota Territory Wisconsin at La Pointe and Odanah Yellow Lake Pokegama Lake Sandy Lake Fond du Lac and Red Lake and the Whitman mission in Oregon Missionaries of the Dakota mission experienced the explosion of Dakota violence in August 1862 at the start of the U S Dakota War Some of them attended the imprisoned Dakota and accompanied the exiled Dakota when they were forced out of Minnesota in 1863 especially those of the Williamson and Riggs families The Dakota mission translated the Bible into Dakota and produced a dictionary and a schoolbook The Ojibwe mission translated the New Testament into Ojibwe and produced a number of schoolbooks but used a now abandoned notation style to do so Both were among the first to render these languages in print Work with indigenous preachers Edit Indigenous preachers associated with the Board proclaimed an orthodox message but they further modified the presentation beyond how the missionaries had developed subtle differences with the home leaders Drawing upon the positive and negative aspects of their own cultures the native evangelists steeped their messages in Biblical texts and themes At times indigenous workers had spectacular or unexpected results On many occasions little fruit resulted from their labors Whatever the response the native preachers worked on even in the midst of persecution until martyrdom or natural death took them Native preachers and other indigenous people assisted Board missionaries in Bible translation efforts The act of translating the Scriptures into a mother tongue reflected a sensitivity to culture and a desire to work within the host society Second only to the verbal proclamation of the Gospel Bible translation took place in all sorts of settings among ancient Christian churches such as the Armenians and the Assyrian Nestorian church cultures with a written language and a written religious heritage such as the Marathi and creating written languages in cultures without them such as among the animistic people in Hawaii Educational social and medical roles served by ABCFM missionaries Edit Printing and literacy played crucial roles in the process of Bible translation Similarly the press runs and literacy presentations contributed significantly to the social involvement exhibited by the Board To a greater or lesser extent education medicine and social concerns supplemented the preaching efforts by missionaries Schools provided ready made audiences for preachers Free or Lancasterian schools provided numerous students Boarding students in missionary homes allowed them to witness Christian life in the intimacy of the family Education empowered indigenous people Mostly later than 1840 it enabled them to develop their own church leaders and take a greater role in their communities Board missionaries established some form of education at every station A number of Board missionaries also received some medical training before leaving for the field Some like Ida Scudder were trained as physicians but ordained as missionaries and concentrated on the task of preaching Others such as Peter Parker sought to practice both the callings of missionary and medical practitioner ABCFM in China EditAfter the London Missionary Society and the Netherlands Missionary Society the Americans were the next to venture into the mission field of China The Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions representing the Congregational Churches of the United States sent out Revs David Abeel and Elijah Coleman Bridgman in 1829 They were received in February 1830 by Dr Robert Morrison These men worked first among the Chinese and Malays of the Straits Settlements From 1842 to his death in 1846 Mr Abeel devoted himself to establishing a mission in Amoy modern Xiamen View of ABCFM compound in Fuzhou ca 1911 1918 The American Board followed with many other appointments in rapid succession Revs Ira Tracy and Samuel Wells Williams 1812 1884 followed in 1833 settling at Singapore and Macau In the same year Revs Stephen Johnson missionary and Samuel Munson went to Bangkok and Sumatra There were four great centers from which smaller stations were maintained These were Fuzhou in connection with which were fifteen churches North China embracing Beijing Kalgan Tianjin Tengzhou and Baoding with smaller stations in the various districts of the center missions Hong Kong and Shanxi with two stations in the midst of districts filled with opium cultivation and staffed by missionaries of the Oberlin Band of Oberlin College At Tengzhou missionaries established a college over which Dr Calvin Mateer presided Tengzhou was one of the centers for Chinese literary competitive examinations Mateer believed that the light of modern science shown in contrast with superstition would prove effective He and his wife taught astronomy mathematics natural philosophy and history He trained young men to be teachers all over North China The young men whom he had trained in Biblical instruction began native ministry Drs John Livingstone Nevius and Hunter Corbett 1862 1918 co operated in this latter work by giving a theological education to candidates for ministry during a portion of each year at Yantai At its principal stations in China the Society maintained large medical dispensaries and hospitals boarding schools for boys and girls colleges for native students and other agencies for effecting the purposes of the mission It also helped create the Canton Hospital As of 1890 it had twenty eight missionaries sixteen lady agents ten medical missionaries four ordained native ministers one hundred and five unordained native helpers nearly one thousand communicants and four hundred and fifty pupils in its schools 31 ABCFM in the Middle East EditThe ABCFM founded many colleges and schools in the Ottoman Empire and the Balkans 32 For example the American College of Sofia in Bulgaria is the successor to a Boys School founded by the ABCFM in 1860 in Plovdiv and a Girls School in Stara Zagora in 1863 They were combined in Samokov Bulgaria in 1871 and moved to Sofia in the late 1920s 33 Missionaries sponsored by ABCFM listed by location EditAfrica Edit Theresa Robinson Buck 1912 1965 nurse missionary in Southern Rhodesia Mary Floyd Cushman 1870 1965 Chilesso Angola 1922 to 1953 James Bennett McCord 1870 1950 Durban KwaZulu Natal South Africa William Cullen Wilcox 1850 1928 with wife Ida Belle Clary Wilcox 1858 1940 Inanda KwaZulu Natal South Africa 1881 to 1887 they arranged for Black South Africans to own land and as a result they were driven out of South Africa in 1918 Europe Edit Jonas King 1792 1869 Athens Greece Reuben H Markham 1887 1949 Samokov in Sofia Bulgaria Mary Louisa Matthews 1864 1950 Bitola Monastir Albania North Macedonia formally European Turkey 1888 to 1920 34 Western Asia Edit Caroline C Bush 1847 1919 Harpoot Ottoman Empire 35 Thomas Davidson Christie 1843 1931 Central Turkey 1877 to 1920 Joseph Gallup Cochran 1817 1871 with wife Deborah Wilson Plumb Urmia and Seir Qatar Iran 36 Oliver Crane 1822 1896 Turkey Nancy Jane Dean 1837 1926 Urmia Qajar Iran Wilson Amos Farnsworth 1822 1912 with wife Caroline Elizabeth Palmer 1825 1913 Cesearea Ottoman Empire 1854 to 1903 37 38 Fidelia Fisk 1816 1864 Urmia Qajar Iran William Goodell 1792 1867 Beirut Lebanon Syria Mary Louise Graffam 1871 1921 Sivas Ottoman Empire Asahel Grant 1807 1844 with wife Judith Grant Urmia Qajar Iran 1835 to the first American to reside in Iran Justin Perkins 1805 1869 with wife Charlotte Bass mission to Urmia Qajar Iran 1835 to the first American to reside in Iran Benjamin Schneider Bursa 1834 to 1849 and Aintab to 1877 Ottoman Empire 39 40 Corinna Shattuck 1848 1910 Urfa Turkey Ottoman Empire Clarence Ussher 1870 1955 Van Ottoman Empire Mary E Van Lennep 1821 1844 Istanbul Constantinople Ottoman Empire George E White 1861 1946 Marsovan Ottoman Empire Southern Asia Edit Dan Beach Bradley 1804 1873 Thailand Siam Cynthia Farrar 1795 1862 Mumbai Bombay and Ahmednagar India 1827 to 1862 Gordon Hall 1784 1826 Mumbai Bombay Asa Hemenway 1810 1892 with wife Lucia Hunt Hemenway 1810 1864 Thailand Siam 1839 to 1850 41 42 Adoniram Judson August 9 1788 April 12 1850 first U S missionary to Myanmar Burma John Scudder Sr 1793 1855 patriarch of the Scudder family of missionaries in India Miron Winslow 1789 1864 Sri Lanka Eastern Asia Edit William Scott Ament 1851 1909 controversial missionary to China 1851 to 1909 Elijah Coleman Bridgman 1801 1861 first U S missionary to China Peter Parker physician 1804 1888 Canton China 1834 to 1847 Dyer Ball 1796 1866 Singapore 1838 to 1841 Hong Kong 1843 to 1845 Canton China 1845 to 1866 Mary Frances Buckhout McVay 1910 2010 Wen Shan Girls School IngTai Yongtai China 1939 to 1941 43 Sidney Lewis Gulick 1860 1945 Kyoto Japan James Hudson Roberts 1851 1945 Beijing and Zhangjiakou China Arthur Henderson Smith 1845 1932 54 years in China Daniel Vrooman 1818 1895 Canton China 1852 to 1866 Charles Daniel Tenney 1857 1930 China Lucy Bement 1868 1940 China Charles Robert Hager 1851 1917 Hong Kong Canton China 1883 to 1910 Charles Adolous Nelson 1860 1951 Canton China 1892 to 1922 North Pacific Ocean Edit Lorrin Andrews 1795 1868 Lahaina Hawaii Richard Armstrong 1805 1860 Maui and Oahu Hiram Bingham I 1789 1869 Honolulu Hawaii Titus Coan 1801 1882 Haili Church Hilo Hawaii Charles McEwen Hyde 1832 1899 Honolulu Oahu David Belden Lyman 1803 1884 Haili Church Hilo Hawaii Lorenzo Lyons 1807 1886 Imiola Church Hawaii Betsey Stockton c 1798 1865 former slave Lahaina Maui Sandwich Islands 1822 to 1825 Asa Thurston 1787 1868 Kailua Kona Hawaii North American Indians Edit Daniel Sabin Butrick 1789 1851 Cherokee Nation 1810s to 1850s John Dunbar 1804 1857 Pawnee Indians William Montague Ferry 1796 1867 Michigan Territory Stephen Return Riggs 1812 1883 Dakota people 1837 to 1883 Cephas Washburn 1793 1860 Cherokee Nation 1818 to 1850 Marcus Whitman 1802 1847 with wife Narcissa Prentiss Whitman 1808 1847 Flathead Nez Perce Cayuse nations Oregon Samuel Worcester missionary to Cherokee Nation 1820s 50sIndigenous workers affiliated with the Board EditBabajee b 1791 Liang Fa 1789 1855 David Malo 1795 1853 Henry Opukahaia c 1792 1818 also known as ʻŌpukahaʻia Puaaiki c 1785 1844 Asaad Shidiak c 1797 c 1832 also known as Asaad Esh Shidiak Joel Hulu Mahoe 1830 1890 second full Hawaiian to be ordained Henry Blatchford of the Ojibwe mission did translations and lay preaching beginning at Pokegama Minnesota in 1836 was ordained eventually and worked at the Odanah mission until he died in the late 19th century Abdullah Abdul Kadir 1797 1854 known as Munshi Abdullah was a Malayan scholar and translator under the employ of Alfred North an ABCFM missionary stationed in Singapore See also EditAmerican Ceylon Mission Dan Beach Bradley Siam 1834 resigned 1847 Haystack Prayer Meeting History of Christian missions Oberlin Band China Protestant missionary societies in China during the 19th Century List of American Board missionaries in China List of Missionaries to HawaiiReferences Edit a b American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions archives 1810 1961 Guide Houghton Library Harvard College Library Harvard University Cambridge Massachusetts 02138 US July 7 2016 Archived from the original on September 6 2016 Retrieved August 25 2016 After some secessions due to the slavery issue and the formation by the Presbyterian Church of its own foreign mission board the ABCFM was left as a Congregationalist body after 1870 Maxfield Charles A 2001 THE FORMATION AND EARLY HISTORY of the AMERICAN BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS FOR FOREIGN MISSIONS Charles A Maxfield 1995 Dissertation Retrieved August 25 2016 The ABCFM held its first meeting on 5 September 1810 and elected Samuel Worcester corresponding secretary The Prudential Committee the Executive Committee of the ABCFM Maxfield Charles A 2001 THE FORMATION AND EARLY HISTORY of the AMERICAN BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS FOR FOREIGN MISSIONS Charles A Maxfield 1995 Dissertation Retrieved August 25 2016 Jeremiah Evarts corresponding secretary of the ABCFM from 1821 to 1831 The Missionary Herald Volume XVIII No 11 November 1822 ed Boston Samuel T Armstrong 1822 p 338 Retrieved September 9 2016 The Board then made choice of the following officers for the ensuing year Maxfield Charles A 2001 THE FORMATION AND EARLY HISTORY of the AMERICAN BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS FOR FOREIGN MISSIONS Charles A Maxfield 1995 Dissertation Retrieved August 25 2016 Elias Cornelius 1794 1832 accepted the position of corresponding secretary late in December 1831 left almost immediately on a fund raising tour and died at Hartford 12 February 1832 Maxfield Charles A 2001 THE FORMATION AND EARLY HISTORY of the AMERICAN BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS FOR FOREIGN MISSIONS Charles A Maxfield 1995 Dissertation Retrieved August 25 2016 Maxfield Charles A 2001 THE FORMATION AND EARLY HISTORY of the AMERICAN BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS FOR FOREIGN MISSIONS Charles A Maxfield 1995 Dissertation Retrieved August 25 2016 From 1835 to 1846 the Board had a period of stable leadership under the direction of Anderson Greene and Armstrong In the division of labor of three co equal secretaries Rufus Anderson was foreign secretary Benjamin Wisner and then William Armstrong were domestic secretaries and David Greene was secretary for American Indian missions and editor of the Missionary Herald Missionary Herald Volume 39 Boston Press of Crocker and Brewster 1843 p 429 Retrieved August 25 2016 The New York State Register for 1858 New York City John Disturnell 1858 p 179 Retrieved September 9 2016 N A The Missionary Herald Vol 62 Boston ABCFM June 1866 p 2 Retrieved August 25 2016 Public Opinion A Comprehensive Summary of Press Throughout the World on All Important Current Topics Vol 20 New York City The Public Opinion Company January 16 1896 p 83 In 1866 he was appointed foreign secretary of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions a position which he retained until October 1894 Ishii Noriko Kawamura March 1 2004 American Women Missionaries at Kobe College 1873 1909 Routledge pp 31 36 ISBN 9781135936204 Retrieved August 25 2016 Ishii Noriko Kawamura March 1 2004 American Women Missionaries at Kobe College 1873 1909 Routledge p 36 ISBN 9781135936204 Barton James Levi 1855 1936 History of Missiology Boston University School of Theology Retrieved August 26 2016 He was elected president of Euphrates College Harpoot in 1892 but when his wife s ill health prevented continuing residence in Turkey Barton became foreign secretary of the ABCFM First among equals on the board staff Barton believed that the primary need of indigenous Christian communities was well trained leadership Before his retirement in 1927 The Congregational Year book Boston Congregational sunday School and Publishing Society 1899 p 42 Retrieved August 25 2016 Shavit David 1988 The United States in the Middle East a historical dictionary Greenwood Press ISBN 9780313253416 Riggs graduated and was ordained in 1910 president of Euphrates College from 1910 to 1921 child welfare director of the Near East Relief in 1920 1921 and associate secretary and corresponding secretary of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions ABCFM from 1921 to 1932 Goodsell Fred Field 1959 You Shall be My Witnesses An Interpretation of the history of the American Board 1810 1960 Library of Congress Card Catalog Number 59 15355 ed ABCFM p viii Retrieved August 26 2016 the Board s first Executive Vice President Dr Fred Field Goodsell When the Constitution of the Board was revised to provide that among its secretaries one should be first among equals a sort of Prime Minister That man was Dr Goodsell he was called back to Boston to lead the Board For nineteen years Goodsell Fred Field 1880 1976 Papers 1928 1972 bulk History Matters Congregational Library amp Archives Retrieved August 26 2016 In 1930 he moved to Boston where he was made the first Executive Vice President of the ABCFM After his retirement in 1948 Timeline of Mission Global Ministries Global Ministries Retrieved August 26 2016 1961 ABCFM merges with Board of International Missions to form the United Church Board for World Ministries UCBWM RG 30 385 Carleton Family Papers 1808 1853 1973 1985 Oberlin College Archives Archived from the original on July 28 2016 Retrieved August 26 2016 After serving as president of Aleppo College for seventeen years Dr Carleton returned to the United States to serve as executive vice president of the ABCFM His first major task was to guide the Congregational Church in a merger with the Evangelical and Reformed Church creating the United Church of Christ Resulting from this merger the ABCFM formerly a branch of the Congregational Church became the United Church Board of World Ministries He served as executive vice president of the board from 1954 to 1970 Finding Aid prepared by Brigette C Kamsler September 2011 American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions archives 1810 1961 Guide Houghton Library Harvard College Library Harvard University Cambridge Massachusetts Archived from the original on September 6 2016 Retrieved August 26 2016 On 29 June 1961 the ABCFM was formally concluded becoming part of the United Church Board for World Ministries UCBWM an instrumentality of the new denomination On 1 July 2000 the UCBWM became Wider Church Ministries one of the four covenanted ministries of the UCC Maxfield Charles A 2001 THE FORMATION AND EARLY HISTORY of the AMERICAN BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS FOR FOREIGN MISSIONS Charles A Maxfield 1995 Dissertation Retrieved August 25 2016 In 1826 the UFMS and the ABCFM merged in effect the UFMS was absorbed by the American Board At its annual meeting that year the ABCFM added twenty six new members to the Board ABCFM 200 Exhibits Congregational Library Maxfield Charles A 1995 The Formation and Early History of the American Board of Commissioners For Foreign Missions The Reflex Influence of Missions The Domestic Operations of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions 1810 1850 Archived from the original on February 4 2012 Retrieved June 20 2006 Andrew John A III 1992 From Revivals to Removal Jeremiah Evarts the Cherokee Nation and the Search for the Soul of America Athens Georgia University of Georgia Press ISBN 0820314277 Did You Know Christian History amp Biography 90 3 Spring 2006 William Buell Sprague ed 1857 Elias Cornelius D D 1816 1832 Annals of the American Pulpit Trinitarian Congregational Robert Carter amp Brothers pp 633 643 Corr Donald Philip The Field Is the World Proclaiming Translating and Serving by the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions 1810 40 Pasadena William Carey Library Dissertation Series 2009 Burke Library Archives Columbia University retrieved February 18 2013 PDF Archived from the original PDF on December 21 2012 Retrieved January 18 2013 ABCFM 1855 Missionary Herald Vol 51 Boston T R Marvin pp 2 14 Retrieved May 11 2017 Townsend 1890 233 234 American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions The Annual Report 1917 full text pp 62 95 History The American College of Sofia Retrieved May 30 2020 Mary Matthews Biography A Mount Holyoke Woman in Macedonia Mary Matthews and the American School for Girls 1888 to 1920 Digital Exhibits of the Archives and Special Collections ascdc mtholyoke edu Retrieved February 1 2022 The Missionary Herald at Home and Abroad Volumes 116 117 American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions General Council of the Congregational and Christian Churches of the United States Missions Council General Council of the Congregational and Christian Churches of the United States Board of Home Missions Congregational Churches 1920 p 23 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Anderson Gerald H Stowe David M 1999 Cochran Joseph Gallup 1817 1871 Biographical Dictionary of Christian Missions Wm B Eerdmans Publishing p 140 ISBN 978 0 8028 4680 8 Memorial records for Wilson A Farnsworth Digital Library for International Research American Board Retrieved March 5 2019 Memorial records for Caroline E P Farnsworth Digital Library for International Research American Board Retrieved March 5 2019 Good James Isaac Life of Rev Benjamin Schneider D D A Missionary of the Reformed Church in the United States Through the American Board at Brossa and Aintab Turkey 1834 1877 Board of foreign missions Reformed church in the United States Missionary Herald Volume 85 American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions 1889 pp 184 186 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Shavit David 1990 The United States in Asia A Historical Dictionary Greenwood Publishing Group p 229 ISBN 978 0 313 26788 8 Missionary Herald Volume 36 American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions 1840 p 24 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Mary Frances Buckhout McVay Obituary 1910 2010 Legacy com The Republican February 5 2010 Retrieved February 1 2022 Further reading EditBliss Edwin Munsell ed The Encyclopaedia of missions Descriptive historical biographical statistical With a full assortment of maps a complete bibliography and lists of Bible version missionary societies mission stations and a general index online vol 1 1891 724pp online vol 2 1891 726pp Conroy Krutz Emily Christian Imperialism Converting the World in the Early American Republic Ithaca NY Cornell University Press 2015 Phillips Clifton Jackson Protestant America and the pagan world the first half century of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions 1810 1860 Harvard University Press 1969 Putney Clifford writer of introduction and editor with Burlin Paul The Role of the American Board in the World Bicentennial Reflections on the Organization s Missionary Work 1810 2010 Eugene Or Wipf and Stock 2012 Strong William Ellsworth The Story of the American Board 1910 online Varg Paul A Missionaries Chinese and Diplomats The American Protestant Missionary Movement in China 1890 1952 Princeton UP 1958 Publications EditAmerican Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions 1838 Report Volume 29 s n Retrieved April 24 2014 American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions 1836 Annual Report Volumes 27 31 Retrieved April 24 2014 American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions 1840 Annual Report American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions Volumes 31 33 Retrieved April 24 2014 Idris YUCEL An Overview of Religious Medicine in the Near East Mission Hospitals of the American in Asia Minor 1880 1923 Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies Vol 14 Issue 40 Spring 2015 Idris YUCEL A Missionary Society at the Crossroad American Missionaries on the Eve of the Turkish Republic Journal of Modern Turkish History Vol 8 Issue 15 Spring 2012 Idris YUCEL An Overview of Religious Medicine in the Near East Mission Hospitals of the American Board in Asia Minor 1880 1923 Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies Vol 14 Issue 40 Spring 2015 Idris YUCEL Anadolu da Amerikan Misyonerligi ve Misyon Hastaneleri 1880 1934 TTK Yayinevi Ankara 2017 Idris YUCEL Kendi Belgeleri Isiginda Amerikan Board in Osmanli Ulkesindeki Teskilatlanmasi Erciyes Universitesi Yuksek Lisans Tezi 2005External links EditYale Library note Ricci Institute page on the ABCFM in China Bilkent University ABCFM project ABCFM records Usurped at Nebraska State Historical Society American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions ABC 1 91 at Houghton Library Harvard University ABCFM Collection overview at Congregational Library and Archives Santee Normal Training School Woonspe Wankantu 1881 1882 1884 1885 American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions Rev William Jessup Armstrong Find a Grave Retrieved August 26 2016 Died in the wreck of the Steamer Atlantic age 50 He labored long in the fields of central Virginia where he gathered a church Born in Mendham NJ son of the minister Dr A Armstrong He died on one of his monthly returns to Boston Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions amp oldid 1127900913, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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