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Asa Bowen Smith

Asa Bowen Smith, also known as A.B. Smith (July 16, 1809 – February 10, 1886), was a Congregational missionary posted in Oregon Country and Hawaii with his wife Sarah Gilbert White Smith. In 1840, Smith wrote the manuscript for the book Grammar of the Language of the Nez Perces Indians Formerly of Oregon, U.S.. He conducted the first census of the Nez Perce. After eight years as a missionary, he returned to the Northeastern United States where he was a pastor of the Buckland Congregational Church in Massachusetts and of the Congregational Church in Southbury, Connecticut.

Reverend

Asa Bowen Smith
Asa Bowen Smith, miniature portrait, 1837, Missionary Album
Born(1809-07-16)July 16, 1809
DiedFebruary 10, 1886(1886-02-10) (aged 76)
Burial placeBuckland, Massachusetts, U.S.
Other namesA.B. Smith
EducationMiddlebury College, Andover Theological Seminary, Yale Theological Seminary
Occupation(s)Minister, missionary
Years active1838–1886
Known forMissionary, creator of Nez Perces grammar
Spouse(s)Sarah Gilbert White Smith, Harriet E. Smith
Parent(s)Asa and Polly Waller Smith
ChurchCongregational Church
Ordained1836
WritingsGrammar of the Language of the Nez Perces Indians Formerly of Oregon, U.S.

He attended Middlebury College, Andover Theological Seminary, and Yale Theological Seminary and was ordained in 1837.

Early life and education edit

Asa Bowen Smith was born in Williamstown, Vermont, on July 16, 1809.[1][2] His parents were Asa and Polly Waller Smith[3][4] and four of his twelve siblings were Laura, Marcia, Lucia, and John Curtis Bowen Smith.[2][5] There were only six children that made it into Smith's adulthood.[5] They grew up on the family farm in Middlebury, Vermont.[4] Smith worked on the farm until he was 21 years of age. From 18 to 21, he prepared for college by studying at home and reciting to a local lawyer.[6]

 
Yale Theological Seminary

He first attended the University of Vermont,[2] and taught school to pay for his education.[7] He joined the Congregationalist Church in 1831 and was inspired to become a preacher. He encouraged his three sisters and two of his brothers to convert to the Congregational Church. He received a scholarship from the American Education Society to become a minister.[8] He transferred to Middlebury College, a Congregational-supported school, in 1832 and he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1834.[2][8] He attended Andover Theological Seminary (1834–1836) and Yale Theological Seminary, graduating in 1837.[2][9] Believing that it would be helpful as a missionary to have medical training, he studied medicine as well at three medical schools.[10] While away at college and the seminaries, he began livelong correspondence with his brother and sisters, which are archived at the Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library of the Yale University Library.[11] In the spring of 1837, he preached at the Congregationalist Church in Woodbridge, Connecticut, five miles northwest of New Haven.[2][12] He lived a spartan lifestyle. For a time, he ate crackers soaked in warm water and molasses. He walked where he needed to go, like to medical school and to the family home. He had a number of walks between 20 and 100 miles. Friends helped with expenses, like room and board and books. He also worked as a carpenter building furniture.[13]

Sarah Gilbert White Smith edit

 
Sarah Gilbert White Smith, 1837, Missionary Album

Smith met Sarah Gilbert White in the fall of 1835.[14][a] She wanted to become a missionary.[1][2] Her parents, Sarah Gilbert and Alfred White of West Brookfield, Massachusetts,[15] had been missionaries.[1][2] Her older sister Adeline was a missionary stationed in Singapore, where she married Ira Tracy. Both of them were missionaries of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions.[16] Sarah had a brother Samuel and another sister Roxanna. The family lived at the White homestead, now known as the Salem Cross Inn.[14]

Sarah studied at a seminary in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, in 1835. In 1836, she attended Murdock Place Seminary in New Haven, Connecticut, while Smith attended the seminary at Yale. She had been a school teacher and became an engaged woman by March 3, 1837.[17] On March 13, 1838, she was appointed as a missionary.[18][b]

 
Oregon Trail along the Sweetwater River

Smith married Sarah Gilbert White on March 15, 1838.[1][2] Sarah kept a diary of her experiences from March 10, 1838, through September 14, 1839,[21] which narrated the Smith's journey from Springfield, Massachusetts, to the Whitman Mission in Waiilatpu in present-day Washington. They and others joined missionary Marcus Whitman.[15]

While in the Sandwich Islands (Hawaii), they took in three orphaned girls, Lucy, Martha and Mary.[22][23] Their parents were Edwin Locke (1813–1843) and Martha Laurens Rowell Locke (1812–1842) of the Eight company of missionaries.[22][23][c] The Smiths adopted Lucy and Martha.[25] Martha, also known as Maude, married G.M. Hubbard of New York City.[26][25] Lucy Maria Locke Smith married Rev. Elijah Harmon. She died in June 1871, and Smith continued to have a relationship with his son-in-law. He was named in Smith's will, along with Martha.[25][26][d] Mary Sabin Locke was adopted by her uncle Dr. Samuel Newell Bowell of Malta, New York.[28] She married a man named Wilson, lived in San Francisco, and had a son who was a missionary in Hawaii.[25]

Sarah died of consumption (tuberculosis)[29] on May 27, 1855.[2][30] She was buried in Buckland, Massachusetts.[5]

Missionary edit

 
A map of the Oregon Country within present-day United States in the early 19th century Pacific Northwest.

He was ordained on November 1, 1837, and decided to become a missionary.[2][22] Soon after, the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions appointed him as a missionary to Oregon Country.[1] On March 15, 1838, the same day that they were married, the Smiths traveled across the American continent towards the Pacific Ocean.[5] They travelled west with other missionaries—Cushing Eells, Elkanah Walker, and William H. (W.H.) Gray—and their wives.[2][e]

Whitman Mission, Waiilatpu edit

 
Whitman Mission Station along the Oregon Trail at Waiilatpu, from How Marcus Whitman Saved Oregon by O. W. Nixon

They were initially at Waiilatpu in present day Washington. After a falling out with Marcus Whitman, Smith stated that if he was to be stationed with Whitman, he would leave the mission.[34] The missionaries had a difficult time establishing themselves with the local Native Americans, due to language barriers and vast differences in religious concepts. Among the missionaries, there were philosophical differences in approach. Smith thought that the missionaries should learn their language and work amongst them to develop relationships.[33] Smith was against evangelization of Native Americans and forced resettlement. This was at odds with the approach of Henry H. Spalding of the Oregon missions.[1][2][f] Smith felt that the natives should not acquire the white people's way of life, concerned that they would become "worldly minded".[35] He was unsure of his usefulness at the Whitman mission and pessimistic that the mission would be successful.[36]

The mission established a farm, blacksmith shop, printing press, and mills.[36] Smith conducted the first census of the Nez Perce people.[37] In the Smith's letters and diaries, they wrote in great detail about the lives of the Nez Perce people. This provided a "wealth of new information not only upon the customs, traditions, and manner of life of the Nez Perces, but also upon the difficulties which the pioneer missionaries faced in their isolated stations."[38] Sarah's mental and physical health were very poor and Smith took care of the farm and the housekeeping.[33] Smith had a Hawaiian laborer named Jack.[36][g]

Kamiah edit

 
Nez Perce people

About early May 1839, the Smiths went to Kamiah, south of Lapwai in present-day Idaho, which was the heart of Nez Perce country. They lived in a make-shift shelter, in an "open house" without windows or a floor. Initially he was there to learn the Nez Perce language, but after some time, a new mission station was opened at Kamiah. By November 11, a cabin was built for them on the north bank of the Clearwater, near their former shelter, and their belongings were brought to the village for the cabin. Smith preached on Sundays, and taught, although there was no official school. He also ran his farm. Sarah's health was poor beginning about August 1839. Smith described her condition as feeble in a letter.[40] She took mercurial remedies for her liver.[41][42]

Nez Perce grammar edit

Smith learned the Nez Perce language from Hol-lol-sote-toot. Mountain men called him "Lawyer" because of his astuteness. Lawyer knew two native languages, that of his father Chief Twisted Hair and his mother a Flathead woman—as well as some English.[43] Lawyer, from Kamiah, was their guide and assistant.[44]

Smith developed a Nez Perce grammar by adapting the missionary alphabet used in Hawaiian missions.[2] In 1840, Smith wrote the manuscript for the book Grammar of the Language of the Nez Perces Indians Formerly of Oregon, U.S.. It is written in Nez Perce language and English.[45]

Leaving the Whitman mission edit

Insinmalakin and Inmtamlaiakin, subchiefs of the Nez Perce at Kamiah, ordered Smith to leave the village on October 14, 1840. The natives resented that the whites were encroaching on their land and lives without their permission. They wanted Smith to pay for the land where his house and farm were established.[46] The Smiths left the mission on April 19, 1841.[29][47] By that time, both of the Smiths were in poor health, Sarah so much so that the only way that they could leave the mission was in a canoe. They first went to Fort Walla Walla and then went to Vancouver where they convalesced. Needing a better climate, they went to the Sandwich Islands, arriving on January 25, 1842, where the couple's health improved significantly.[29]

Hawaii edit

At his request, Smith was transferred to the Sandwich Islands (Hawaiian) Mission in 1842[1][2] and stayed there until October 1845.[2] They were stationed at Waialua on the island of Oahu. They adopted three girls who were the orphaned daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Locke.[22] Smith's voice failed in 1845 and they left the islands, traveling a seven-month journey to Canton, China and around Cape Horn, and then to Massachusetts.[25][29] His voice recovered in 1846.[25]

Congregational minister edit

He was the pastor of a church in South Amherst, Massachusetts, in 1847, and then of the Buckland Congregational church in March 1848 in Massachusetts.[25][29][h] There was a controversy that arose in 1859, which was investigated by the Congregational ecclesiastical committee. Smith was cleared of the complaints, but it was recommended that he find another church.[24] He left in August 1859.[29] He was the pastor of the Congregational Church in Southbury, Connecticut, from January 1860 to May 1871.[2][24][29] The Smiths moved to Rocky Hill, Connecticut.[24]

Marriage to Harriet E. Nutting edit

In June 1856, Smith married Miss Harriet E. Nutting of Amherst, Massachusetts.[24][29] She had been a teacher in Ohio and other places. She was also described as a scholar.[25] Harriet had poor health that prevented the Smiths from going to Minnesota for the American Home Missionary Society.[29] She was living at the time of his death.[3][26]

Later years and death edit

Smith lived in Rocky Hill, Connecticut, until 1884 when he moved to Sherwood, Tennessee.[2] He organized a church there[24] and was its minister until his death of pneumonia on February 10, 1886.[3][48][i] He was initially buried in Sherwood and later moved next to Sarah at a cemetery in Buckland, Massachusetts.[25][48] Harriet died in Rocky Hill on May 22, 1886, at the age of 60.[49]

Papers regarding his position with the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions are among the collection of the Research Library of the Oregon Historical Society.[21][50]

Notes edit

  1. ^ There are differing dates of birth for Sarah. Her tombstone says that she was born April 14, 1813, but that is considered an error. Per correspondence, it is believed she was born September 14, 1813.[5] (i.e., 9/14/1813 vs. 4/14/1813)
  2. ^ The wedding was delayed because the American Board was short of funds in 1837 due to a recession. Once there was an assignment for them, they were married.[19] They had hoped to be placed in Siam so that they would be nearer to Adeline and Ira Tracy in Singapore, but the American Board had no plans for opening a station there at the time.[20]
  3. ^ The Smiths were said to have had four children.[24] which may have been because the Lockes had four children, but their eldest, a son, died in 1841.[23]
  4. ^ After Lucy's death, Harmon married Eunice Morse Smith on March 4, 1872. Eunice, Smith's niece, was the daughter of John Curtis Bowen Smith and Mary Snell Smith. Eunice died on August 14, 1872. John and Mary were missionaries who had left their five oldest children with family members and friends in the United States when they returned to Ceylon (present-day Sri Lanka) in 1860.[27]
  5. ^ The couples met in New York City on March 20th. From there they traveled by boat for 30 miles and then rode railroad trains to Philadelphia and then Chambersburg, Pennsylvania. From there, they began their exhausting and treacherous ride on stage coach. They arrived in Pittsburgh and took a steamer up the Ohio River to St. Louis, Missouri.[31] The group traveled on a steamboat to Independence, Missouri, where they prepared for their overland journey. The women made two tents for two couples each. They purchased flour, sugar, and rice. Twenty five horses were purchased; the women were trained to ride the horses and the horses were trained to carry women in side saddles. A one-horse wagon was purchased, as well as twelve cattle. They bought guns and hunting knives for self-protection.[32] They started their frontier travel on horseback from Independence on April 20th. It had taken them one month to get to the Mississippi River and would take four months to get to the Whitman mission in the Pacific Northwest.[32] During that time, "Christian forbearance had been put to too great a test." The journey was made over rough trails and across streams that were difficult to ford. They were in danger due to wild animals and hostile Native Americans. The weather was bad and the missionaries were often ill. They had no privacy; the couples slept in a tent with another couple.[33]
  6. ^ Five years after the Smiths left Oregon Country, the Whitmans and some other missionaries were killed during the Whitman massacre of 1847.[33]
  7. ^ The Hudson's Bay Company felt that Hawaiians were good laborers and by 1810 they had imported them to the Pacific Northwest.[39]
  8. ^ He was also said to have gone to Buckland in 1846.[1]
  9. ^ An obituary printed in the Vermont Watchman and State Journal stated that he died on February 10, 1886. It was published on February 24, 1886.[3] A biography by the National Park Service stated that he died on February 16, 1886.[2]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h "Smith, Asa Bowen, 1809–1886". Social Networks and Archival Context. Retrieved 2021-11-04.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s "Nez Perce National Historical Park". National Park Service. Retrieved 2021-11-04.
  3. ^ a b c d "Rev. Asa B. Smith died". Vermont Watchman and State Journal. 1886-02-24. p. 5. Retrieved 2021-11-04.
  4. ^ a b Stevens, Elizabeth C. (2008). "Smith Family Biographies" (PDF). Yale University Library. pp. 1–2, 8. Retrieved 2021-11-04.
  5. ^ a b c d e Smith, Smith & Drury 1999, p. 25.
  6. ^ Smith, Smith & Drury 1999, pp. 25, 26.
  7. ^ Smith, Smith & Drury 1999, p. 26.
  8. ^ a b Smith, Smith & Drury 1999, p. 27.
  9. ^ Smith, Asa Bowen (1832). Asa Bowen Smith correspondence. OCLC 702138474. Retrieved 2021-11-04 – via WorldCat.
  10. ^ Smith, Smith & Drury 1999, pp. 29–30, 39.
  11. ^ "Asa Bowen Smith correspondence, 1832–1859". Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University Library. Retrieved 2021-11-04.
  12. ^ Smith, Smith & Drury 1999, pp. 42.
  13. ^ Smith, Smith & Drury 1999, pp. 29–32.
  14. ^ a b Smith, Smith & Drury 1999, p. 33.
  15. ^ a b "Collection: Sarah Gilbert White Smith Diary". Denver Public Library Archives. Retrieved 2021-11-04.
  16. ^ Whitman 1997, p. 273.
  17. ^ Smith, Smith & Drury 1999, pp. 33–34.
  18. ^ Smith, Smith & Drury 1999, pp. 39–41.
  19. ^ Smith, Smith & Drury 1999, pp. 42–45.
  20. ^ Spalding, Smith & Drury 1958, pp. 33–34.
  21. ^ a b "Smith, Asa Bowen, 1809–1886 – Resources". Social Networks and Archival Context. Retrieved 2021-11-04.
  22. ^ a b c d Hawaiian Mission Children's Society 1901, p. 80.
  23. ^ a b c Locke, John Goodwin (1853). Book of the Lockes: A Genealogical and Historical Record of the Descendants of William Locke, of Woburn. J. Munroe & Company.
  24. ^ a b c d e f Smith, Smith & Drury 1999, p. 227.
  25. ^ a b c d e f g h i The Washington Historian. Washington State Historical Society. 1899. p. 136.
  26. ^ a b c "Will of Rev. Asa B. Smith". Hartford Courant. 1886-03-05. p. 2. Retrieved 2021-11-04.
  27. ^ Stevens, Elizabeth C. (2008). "Smith Family Biographies" (PDF). Yale University Library. pp. 1–2, 8. Retrieved 2021-11-04.
  28. ^ "New Haven Colony Historical Society – Manuscripts" (PDF). New Haven Museum. July 1976. p. 2. Retrieved 2021-11-07.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g h i Eells, Rev Myron (1909). Marcus Whitman Pathfinder and Patriot.
  30. ^ Whitman 1997, p. 21.
  31. ^ Spalding, Smith & Drury 1958, pp. 40–43.
  32. ^ a b Spalding, Smith & Drury 1958, pp. 43–50.
  33. ^ a b c d Nichols, Roy F. (1959). "Review of The Diaries and Letters of Henry H. Spalding and Asa Bowen Smith relating to the Nez Perce Mission, 1838—1842". Journal of the Presbyterian Historical Society (1943–1961). 37 (4): 259–261. ISSN 0147-3735. JSTOR 23325282.
  34. ^ Whitman 1997, p. 275.
  35. ^ Spalding, Smith & Drury 1958, p. 102.
  36. ^ a b c Spalding, Smith & Drury 1958, p. 94.
  37. ^ Spalding, Smith & Drury 1958, p. 15.
  38. ^ Spalding, Smith & Drury 1958, pp. 15, 93.
  39. ^ Spalding, Smith & Drury 1958, pp. 97, 299.
  40. ^ Whitman 1997, pp. 275–276.
  41. ^ Spalding, Smith & Drury 1958, pp. 111–112.
  42. ^ See also: Mercury poisoning
  43. ^ Spalding, Smith & Drury 1958, p. 93.
  44. ^ Spalding, Smith & Drury 1958, p. 99.
  45. ^ Smith, Asa Bowen; Tingley, Sylvanus (1840). Grammar of the Language of the Nez Perces Indians Formerly of Oregon, U.S.: From the manuscript of Rev. A.B. Smith dated Sept. 28, 1840. Now in archives of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Boston, Mass. Volume 138. OCLC 39088111. Retrieved 2021-11-04 – via WorldCat.
  46. ^ Spalding, Smith & Drury 1958, p. 26, 195.
  47. ^ Spalding, Smith & Drury 1958, pp. 15, 195.
  48. ^ a b Smith, Smith & Drury 1999, p. 229.
  49. ^ "Obituary for Harriet E. Smith (Aged 60)". Hartford Courant. 1886-05-24. p. 2. Retrieved 2021-11-04.
  50. ^ Smith, Asa Bowen; Hodges, A. C (1838). Asa Bowen Smith Papers. OCLC 32315716. Retrieved 2021-11-04 – via WorldCat.

Sources edit

  • Hawaiian Mission Children's Society (1901). Portraits of American Protestant Missionaries to Hawaii. Hawaiian Gazette Company.
  • Smith, Sarah Gilbert White; Smith, Asa Bowen; Drury, Clifford Merrill (1999). "Biographical Sketches of Asa Smith and Sarah White". The Mountains We Have Crossed: Diaries and Letters of the Oregon Mission, 1838. University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8032-6621-6.
  • Spalding, Henry H.; Smith, Asa Bowen; Drury, Clifford Merrill (1958). The Diaries and Letters of Henry H. Spalding and Asa Bowen Smith Relating to the Nez Perce Mission, 1838-1842. Northwest historical series,4. Arthur H. Clark Company. hdl:2027/mdp.39015001662900.
  • Whitman, Narcissa Prentiss (1997-01-01). Where Wagons Could Go: Narcissa Whitman and Eliza Spalding. University of Nebraska Press. p. 273. ISBN 978-0-8032-6606-3.

Further reading edit

  • Hodges, A. C. (1889). Memorial sketches of Rev. Asa B. Smith, Sarah G. Smith, and Harriett E. Smith. Boston: Beacon Press. OCLC 904788589. – online ebook resource


bowen, smith, also, known, smith, july, 1809, february, 1886, congregational, missionary, posted, oregon, country, hawaii, with, wife, sarah, gilbert, white, smith, 1840, smith, wrote, manuscript, book, grammar, language, perces, indians, formerly, oregon, con. Asa Bowen Smith also known as A B Smith July 16 1809 February 10 1886 was a Congregational missionary posted in Oregon Country and Hawaii with his wife Sarah Gilbert White Smith In 1840 Smith wrote the manuscript for the book Grammar of the Language of the Nez Perces Indians Formerly of Oregon U S He conducted the first census of the Nez Perce After eight years as a missionary he returned to the Northeastern United States where he was a pastor of the Buckland Congregational Church in Massachusetts and of the Congregational Church in Southbury Connecticut ReverendAsa Bowen SmithAsa Bowen Smith miniature portrait 1837 Missionary AlbumBorn 1809 07 16 July 16 1809Williamstown Vermont U S DiedFebruary 10 1886 1886 02 10 aged 76 Rocky Hill Connecticut U S Burial placeBuckland Massachusetts U S Other namesA B SmithEducationMiddlebury College Andover Theological Seminary Yale Theological SeminaryOccupation s Minister missionaryYears active1838 1886Known forMissionary creator of Nez Perces grammarSpouse s Sarah Gilbert White Smith Harriet E SmithParent s Asa and Polly Waller SmithChurchCongregational ChurchOrdained1836WritingsGrammar of the Language of the Nez Perces Indians Formerly of Oregon U S He attended Middlebury College Andover Theological Seminary and Yale Theological Seminary and was ordained in 1837 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Sarah Gilbert White Smith 3 Missionary 3 1 Whitman Mission Waiilatpu 3 2 Kamiah 3 3 Nez Perce grammar 3 4 Leaving the Whitman mission 3 5 Hawaii 4 Congregational minister 5 Marriage to Harriet E Nutting 6 Later years and death 7 Notes 8 References 9 Sources 10 Further readingEarly life and education editAsa Bowen Smith was born in Williamstown Vermont on July 16 1809 1 2 His parents were Asa and Polly Waller Smith 3 4 and four of his twelve siblings were Laura Marcia Lucia and John Curtis Bowen Smith 2 5 There were only six children that made it into Smith s adulthood 5 They grew up on the family farm in Middlebury Vermont 4 Smith worked on the farm until he was 21 years of age From 18 to 21 he prepared for college by studying at home and reciting to a local lawyer 6 nbsp Yale Theological SeminaryHe first attended the University of Vermont 2 and taught school to pay for his education 7 He joined the Congregationalist Church in 1831 and was inspired to become a preacher He encouraged his three sisters and two of his brothers to convert to the Congregational Church He received a scholarship from the American Education Society to become a minister 8 He transferred to Middlebury College a Congregational supported school in 1832 and he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1834 2 8 He attended Andover Theological Seminary 1834 1836 and Yale Theological Seminary graduating in 1837 2 9 Believing that it would be helpful as a missionary to have medical training he studied medicine as well at three medical schools 10 While away at college and the seminaries he began livelong correspondence with his brother and sisters which are archived at the Beinecke Rare Book amp Manuscript Library of the Yale University Library 11 In the spring of 1837 he preached at the Congregationalist Church in Woodbridge Connecticut five miles northwest of New Haven 2 12 He lived a spartan lifestyle For a time he ate crackers soaked in warm water and molasses He walked where he needed to go like to medical school and to the family home He had a number of walks between 20 and 100 miles Friends helped with expenses like room and board and books He also worked as a carpenter building furniture 13 Sarah Gilbert White Smith edit nbsp Sarah Gilbert White Smith 1837 Missionary AlbumSmith met Sarah Gilbert White in the fall of 1835 14 a She wanted to become a missionary 1 2 Her parents Sarah Gilbert and Alfred White of West Brookfield Massachusetts 15 had been missionaries 1 2 Her older sister Adeline was a missionary stationed in Singapore where she married Ira Tracy Both of them were missionaries of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions 16 Sarah had a brother Samuel and another sister Roxanna The family lived at the White homestead now known as the Salem Cross Inn 14 Sarah studied at a seminary in Pittsfield Massachusetts in 1835 In 1836 she attended Murdock Place Seminary in New Haven Connecticut while Smith attended the seminary at Yale She had been a school teacher and became an engaged woman by March 3 1837 17 On March 13 1838 she was appointed as a missionary 18 b nbsp Oregon Trail along the Sweetwater RiverSmith married Sarah Gilbert White on March 15 1838 1 2 Sarah kept a diary of her experiences from March 10 1838 through September 14 1839 21 which narrated the Smith s journey from Springfield Massachusetts to the Whitman Mission in Waiilatpu in present day Washington They and others joined missionary Marcus Whitman 15 While in the Sandwich Islands Hawaii they took in three orphaned girls Lucy Martha and Mary 22 23 Their parents were Edwin Locke 1813 1843 and Martha Laurens Rowell Locke 1812 1842 of the Eight company of missionaries 22 23 c The Smiths adopted Lucy and Martha 25 Martha also known as Maude married G M Hubbard of New York City 26 25 Lucy Maria Locke Smith married Rev Elijah Harmon She died in June 1871 and Smith continued to have a relationship with his son in law He was named in Smith s will along with Martha 25 26 d Mary Sabin Locke was adopted by her uncle Dr Samuel Newell Bowell of Malta New York 28 She married a man named Wilson lived in San Francisco and had a son who was a missionary in Hawaii 25 Sarah died of consumption tuberculosis 29 on May 27 1855 2 30 She was buried in Buckland Massachusetts 5 Missionary edit nbsp A map of the Oregon Country within present day United States in the early 19th century Pacific Northwest He was ordained on November 1 1837 and decided to become a missionary 2 22 Soon after the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions appointed him as a missionary to Oregon Country 1 On March 15 1838 the same day that they were married the Smiths traveled across the American continent towards the Pacific Ocean 5 They travelled west with other missionaries Cushing Eells Elkanah Walker and William H W H Gray and their wives 2 e Whitman Mission Waiilatpu edit nbsp Whitman Mission Station along the Oregon Trail at Waiilatpu from How Marcus Whitman Saved Oregon by O W NixonThey were initially at Waiilatpu in present day Washington After a falling out with Marcus Whitman Smith stated that if he was to be stationed with Whitman he would leave the mission 34 The missionaries had a difficult time establishing themselves with the local Native Americans due to language barriers and vast differences in religious concepts Among the missionaries there were philosophical differences in approach Smith thought that the missionaries should learn their language and work amongst them to develop relationships 33 Smith was against evangelization of Native Americans and forced resettlement This was at odds with the approach of Henry H Spalding of the Oregon missions 1 2 f Smith felt that the natives should not acquire the white people s way of life concerned that they would become worldly minded 35 He was unsure of his usefulness at the Whitman mission and pessimistic that the mission would be successful 36 The mission established a farm blacksmith shop printing press and mills 36 Smith conducted the first census of the Nez Perce people 37 In the Smith s letters and diaries they wrote in great detail about the lives of the Nez Perce people This provided a wealth of new information not only upon the customs traditions and manner of life of the Nez Perces but also upon the difficulties which the pioneer missionaries faced in their isolated stations 38 Sarah s mental and physical health were very poor and Smith took care of the farm and the housekeeping 33 Smith had a Hawaiian laborer named Jack 36 g Kamiah edit nbsp Nez Perce peopleAbout early May 1839 the Smiths went to Kamiah south of Lapwai in present day Idaho which was the heart of Nez Perce country They lived in a make shift shelter in an open house without windows or a floor Initially he was there to learn the Nez Perce language but after some time a new mission station was opened at Kamiah By November 11 a cabin was built for them on the north bank of the Clearwater near their former shelter and their belongings were brought to the village for the cabin Smith preached on Sundays and taught although there was no official school He also ran his farm Sarah s health was poor beginning about August 1839 Smith described her condition as feeble in a letter 40 She took mercurial remedies for her liver 41 42 Nez Perce grammar edit Smith learned the Nez Perce language from Hol lol sote toot Mountain men called him Lawyer because of his astuteness Lawyer knew two native languages that of his father Chief Twisted Hair and his mother a Flathead woman as well as some English 43 Lawyer from Kamiah was their guide and assistant 44 Smith developed a Nez Perce grammar by adapting the missionary alphabet used in Hawaiian missions 2 In 1840 Smith wrote the manuscript for the book Grammar of the Language of the Nez Perces Indians Formerly of Oregon U S It is written in Nez Perce language and English 45 Leaving the Whitman mission edit Insinmalakin and Inmtamlaiakin subchiefs of the Nez Perce at Kamiah ordered Smith to leave the village on October 14 1840 The natives resented that the whites were encroaching on their land and lives without their permission They wanted Smith to pay for the land where his house and farm were established 46 The Smiths left the mission on April 19 1841 29 47 By that time both of the Smiths were in poor health Sarah so much so that the only way that they could leave the mission was in a canoe They first went to Fort Walla Walla and then went to Vancouver where they convalesced Needing a better climate they went to the Sandwich Islands arriving on January 25 1842 where the couple s health improved significantly 29 Hawaii edit Further information List of missionaries to Hawaii Tenth company At his request Smith was transferred to the Sandwich Islands Hawaiian Mission in 1842 1 2 and stayed there until October 1845 2 They were stationed at Waialua on the island of Oahu They adopted three girls who were the orphaned daughters of Mr and Mrs Locke 22 Smith s voice failed in 1845 and they left the islands traveling a seven month journey to Canton China and around Cape Horn and then to Massachusetts 25 29 His voice recovered in 1846 25 Congregational minister editHe was the pastor of a church in South Amherst Massachusetts in 1847 and then of the Buckland Congregational church in March 1848 in Massachusetts 25 29 h There was a controversy that arose in 1859 which was investigated by the Congregational ecclesiastical committee Smith was cleared of the complaints but it was recommended that he find another church 24 He left in August 1859 29 He was the pastor of the Congregational Church in Southbury Connecticut from January 1860 to May 1871 2 24 29 The Smiths moved to Rocky Hill Connecticut 24 Marriage to Harriet E Nutting editIn June 1856 Smith married Miss Harriet E Nutting of Amherst Massachusetts 24 29 She had been a teacher in Ohio and other places She was also described as a scholar 25 Harriet had poor health that prevented the Smiths from going to Minnesota for the American Home Missionary Society 29 She was living at the time of his death 3 26 Later years and death editSmith lived in Rocky Hill Connecticut until 1884 when he moved to Sherwood Tennessee 2 He organized a church there 24 and was its minister until his death of pneumonia on February 10 1886 3 48 i He was initially buried in Sherwood and later moved next to Sarah at a cemetery in Buckland Massachusetts 25 48 Harriet died in Rocky Hill on May 22 1886 at the age of 60 49 Papers regarding his position with the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions are among the collection of the Research Library of the Oregon Historical Society 21 50 Notes edit There are differing dates of birth for Sarah Her tombstone says that she was born April 14 1813 but that is considered an error Per correspondence it is believed she was born September 14 1813 5 i e 9 14 1813 vs 4 14 1813 The wedding was delayed because the American Board was short of funds in 1837 due to a recession Once there was an assignment for them they were married 19 They had hoped to be placed in Siam so that they would be nearer to Adeline and Ira Tracy in Singapore but the American Board had no plans for opening a station there at the time 20 The Smiths were said to have had four children 24 which may have been because the Lockes had four children but their eldest a son died in 1841 23 After Lucy s death Harmon married Eunice Morse Smith on March 4 1872 Eunice Smith s niece was the daughter of John Curtis Bowen Smith and Mary Snell Smith Eunice died on August 14 1872 John and Mary were missionaries who had left their five oldest children with family members and friends in the United States when they returned to Ceylon present day Sri Lanka in 1860 27 The couples met in New York City on March 20th From there they traveled by boat for 30 miles and then rode railroad trains to Philadelphia and then Chambersburg Pennsylvania From there they began their exhausting and treacherous ride on stage coach They arrived in Pittsburgh and took a steamer up the Ohio River to St Louis Missouri 31 The group traveled on a steamboat to Independence Missouri where they prepared for their overland journey The women made two tents for two couples each They purchased flour sugar and rice Twenty five horses were purchased the women were trained to ride the horses and the horses were trained to carry women in side saddles A one horse wagon was purchased as well as twelve cattle They bought guns and hunting knives for self protection 32 They started their frontier travel on horseback from Independence on April 20th It had taken them one month to get to the Mississippi River and would take four months to get to the Whitman mission in the Pacific Northwest 32 During that time Christian forbearance had been put to too great a test The journey was made over rough trails and across streams that were difficult to ford They were in danger due to wild animals and hostile Native Americans The weather was bad and the missionaries were often ill They had no privacy the couples slept in a tent with another couple 33 Five years after the Smiths left Oregon Country the Whitmans and some other missionaries were killed during the Whitman massacre of 1847 33 The Hudson s Bay Company felt that Hawaiians were good laborers and by 1810 they had imported them to the Pacific Northwest 39 He was also said to have gone to Buckland in 1846 1 An obituary printed in the Vermont Watchman and State Journal stated that he died on February 10 1886 It was published on February 24 1886 3 A biography by the National Park Service stated that he died on February 16 1886 2 References edit a b c d e f g h Smith Asa Bowen 1809 1886 Social Networks and Archival Context Retrieved 2021 11 04 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Nez Perce National Historical Park National Park Service Retrieved 2021 11 04 a b c d Rev Asa B Smith died Vermont Watchman and State Journal 1886 02 24 p 5 Retrieved 2021 11 04 a b Stevens Elizabeth C 2008 Smith Family Biographies PDF Yale University Library pp 1 2 8 Retrieved 2021 11 04 a b c d e Smith Smith amp Drury 1999 p 25 Smith Smith amp Drury 1999 pp 25 26 Smith Smith amp Drury 1999 p 26 a b Smith Smith amp Drury 1999 p 27 Smith Asa Bowen 1832 Asa Bowen Smith correspondence OCLC 702138474 Retrieved 2021 11 04 via WorldCat Smith Smith amp Drury 1999 pp 29 30 39 Asa Bowen Smith correspondence 1832 1859 Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library Yale University Library Retrieved 2021 11 04 Smith Smith amp Drury 1999 pp 42 Smith Smith amp Drury 1999 pp 29 32 a b Smith Smith amp Drury 1999 p 33 a b Collection Sarah Gilbert White Smith Diary Denver Public Library Archives Retrieved 2021 11 04 Whitman 1997 p 273 Smith Smith amp Drury 1999 pp 33 34 Smith Smith amp Drury 1999 pp 39 41 Smith Smith amp Drury 1999 pp 42 45 Spalding Smith amp Drury 1958 pp 33 34 a b Smith Asa Bowen 1809 1886 Resources Social Networks and Archival Context Retrieved 2021 11 04 a b c d Hawaiian Mission Children s Society 1901 p 80 a b c Locke John Goodwin 1853 Book of the Lockes A Genealogical and Historical Record of the Descendants of William Locke of Woburn J Munroe amp Company a b c d e f Smith Smith amp Drury 1999 p 227 a b c d e f g h i The Washington Historian Washington State Historical Society 1899 p 136 a b c Will of Rev Asa B Smith Hartford Courant 1886 03 05 p 2 Retrieved 2021 11 04 Stevens Elizabeth C 2008 Smith Family Biographies PDF Yale University Library pp 1 2 8 Retrieved 2021 11 04 New Haven Colony Historical Society Manuscripts PDF New Haven Museum July 1976 p 2 Retrieved 2021 11 07 a b c d e f g h i Eells Rev Myron 1909 Marcus Whitman Pathfinder and Patriot Whitman 1997 p 21 Spalding Smith amp Drury 1958 pp 40 43 a b Spalding Smith amp Drury 1958 pp 43 50 a b c d Nichols Roy F 1959 Review of The Diaries and Letters of Henry H Spalding and Asa Bowen Smith relating to the Nez Perce Mission 1838 1842 Journal of the Presbyterian Historical Society 1943 1961 37 4 259 261 ISSN 0147 3735 JSTOR 23325282 Whitman 1997 p 275 Spalding Smith amp Drury 1958 p 102 a b c Spalding Smith amp Drury 1958 p 94 Spalding Smith amp Drury 1958 p 15 Spalding Smith amp Drury 1958 pp 15 93 Spalding Smith amp Drury 1958 pp 97 299 Whitman 1997 pp 275 276 Spalding Smith amp Drury 1958 pp 111 112 See also Mercury poisoning Spalding Smith amp Drury 1958 p 93 Spalding Smith amp Drury 1958 p 99 Smith Asa Bowen Tingley Sylvanus 1840 Grammar of the Language of the Nez Perces Indians Formerly of Oregon U S From the manuscript of Rev A B Smith dated Sept 28 1840 Now in archives of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions Boston Mass Volume 138 OCLC 39088111 Retrieved 2021 11 04 via WorldCat Spalding Smith amp Drury 1958 p 26 195 Spalding Smith amp Drury 1958 pp 15 195 a b Smith Smith amp Drury 1999 p 229 Obituary for Harriet E Smith Aged 60 Hartford Courant 1886 05 24 p 2 Retrieved 2021 11 04 Smith Asa Bowen Hodges A C 1838 Asa Bowen Smith Papers OCLC 32315716 Retrieved 2021 11 04 via WorldCat Sources editHawaiian Mission Children s Society 1901 Portraits of American Protestant Missionaries to Hawaii Hawaiian Gazette Company Smith Sarah Gilbert White Smith Asa Bowen Drury Clifford Merrill 1999 Biographical Sketches of Asa Smith and Sarah White The Mountains We Have Crossed Diaries and Letters of the Oregon Mission 1838 University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 6621 6 Spalding Henry H Smith Asa Bowen Drury Clifford Merrill 1958 The Diaries and Letters of Henry H Spalding and Asa Bowen Smith Relating to the Nez Perce Mission 1838 1842 Northwest historical series 4 Arthur H Clark Company hdl 2027 mdp 39015001662900 Whitman Narcissa Prentiss 1997 01 01 Where Wagons Could Go Narcissa Whitman and Eliza Spalding University of Nebraska Press p 273 ISBN 978 0 8032 6606 3 Further reading editHodges A C 1889 Memorial sketches of Rev Asa B Smith Sarah G Smith and Harriett E Smith Boston Beacon Press OCLC 904788589 online ebook resource Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Asa Bowen Smith amp oldid 1188175955 Sarah Gilbert White Smith, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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