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Thornton Chase

33°58′11″N 118°20′34″W / 33.969840°N 118.342881°W / 33.969840; -118.342881

Thornton Chase, c. 1900

Thornton Chase (February 22, 1847 – September 30, 1912) was a distinguished officer of the United States Colored Troops during the American Civil War, and the first western convert to the Baháʼí Faith.

Chase was born in Springfield, Massachusetts to parents of English background and Baptist religion. After being schooled for college by Rev. Samuel Francis Smith he instead enrolled as an officer in the American Civil War serving with two regiments of United States Colored Troops, mostly in South Carolina, where he was wounded. For his service Chase was included on the Wall of Honor of the African-American Civil War Memorial completed in 1997. After the war he worked as a businessman, performed as a singer, and was published as a writer of prose and poetry while living in several states after leaving Massachusetts. He married twice and fathered three children.

Long a seeker in religion, when he was nearly 50 he joined the Baháʼí Faith in 1894–1895—almost as soon as possible in America—and is commonly recognized as the first convert to the religion of the western world. After having organized concerts and businesses in his earlier days, he advanced the organization of communities of the religion especially in Chicago and Los Angeles, serving on early assemblies and publishing committees, the first national attempts at circulating news and guidance for the religion, and an elected national council. He also aided in the founding of other communities, gave talks for the religion in many places including Greenacre in Eliot, Maine, in the northeast and Seattle in the northwest, and authored early books on the religion including an account of his Baháʼí pilgrimage in 1907 and an introductory review of the religion in 1909. During his journeys to the West, ʻAbdu'l-Bahá, then head of the religion, singled Chase out and identified his gravesite as a place of religious visitation. Ultimately Chase was named a Disciple of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá. Collections of his papers began, posthumous articles by him were published, biographical articles about him appeared and his place in the history of the religion in America was contextualized. In 2002 a full biography on Chase was published by Robert H. Stockman and websites have had entries about him since. In 2020, a film on his life was produced by Misaq Kazimi and Sam Baldoni titled Steadfast.[1]

Early life Edit

He was born James Brown Thornton Chase on 22 February 1847 in Springfield, Massachusetts to parents who traced their family back to Britain, and Baptist religion. His father was Jonathan,[2] or Jotham,[3] G and mother Sarah C. G. S. (Thornton) Chase. His father was a singer, amateur scientist, and wealthy businessman,[4] and was a descendant of Aquila Chase who migrated from Chesham in 1630 and of many other colonial families (such as Thomas Dudley). Chase's mother, who was of similar pedigree, died about two weeks after he was born, an event that profoundly shaped Chase's subsequent development.[5] Chase's father remarried three years later and the couple adopted three girls. But instead of being raised at home the United States 1850 census shows that he was living with a foster family in West Springfield at the three years old.[6] Chase himself describes his childhood as "loveless and lonely,"[6] and from it he pursued a personal mystical relationship with God.

For four years, aged thirteen to sixteen, Chase lived in Newton, Mass., with the well known Baptist Rev. Samuel Francis Smith.[7] [8] In July 1863 Chase was accepted to Brown University but soon was off to serve in the Civil War.

Civil War service Edit

Just before his seventeenth birthday, in early 1864, Chase traveled to Philadelphia to attend the "Free School for Military Tactics", which was set up to graduate potential officers specifically for black infantry units.[9][10][11] He passed the government officer exams in April.[n 1]

 
The U. S. C. T. 26th on parade at Camp William Penn, Pa. 1865[12]

The school opened around December, 1863.[13] Attendance at the school was strictly segregated, but it did pass over 400 students through while 21 blacks attended an auxiliary school,[14] and received positive comments from Lincoln's secretary of war, Edwin McMasters Stanton.[15] The school also helped train troops - eleven African American regiments were raised in one year, and were supported by several abolitionists.[16]

By May, 1864 Chase was first lieutenant of Company K, second in charge under the captain, with 100 men. [n 2] of the 26th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops.[17] He claimed to be 19 years old, but was in fact only two months past his 17th birthday. A company would normally be 60 to 80 privates, a wagoner, 2 musicians, 8 corporals, 4 sergeants, 1 first sergeant, 1 second and 1 first lieutenants, and 1 captain.[18] About 1000 men, the regiment was mustered and practiced on Rikers and Hart Islands and would have received its "colors" (its flags) on March 26, 1864, however, a severe storm struck.[19] On July 5 and 7, the unit fought two battles south of Charleston, S.C. in and around John's Island, especially around Fort Pringle;[20][21] two officers were wounded during battles in South Carolina during this first deployment[19] – Chase was wounded by an exploding cannon, permanently injuring the hearing in his left ear,[20] and the other was the commander of the regiment who was killed December 17, 1864.[19] Chase is listed returning to New York in November as "James B Chase".[22]

Richard Walter Thomas, black scholar of race relations, observed that the relationship between white and black soldiers in the Civil War was an instance of what he calls "the other tradition": "… after sharing the horrors of war with their black comrades in arms, many white officers experienced deep and dramatic transformations in their attitudes toward blacks."[23] We do not know Chase's personal views, but in 1865 Chase started service in another black soldier unit. He was promoted to captain and commanded Company D of the 104th United States Colored Infantry.[24][25][n 3] That unit was organized at Beaufort, S. C., April–June, 1865, and did guard duty at various points in South Carolina through February, 1866.[26] Meanwhile news of the surrender of Lee and days later of the assassination of Lincoln arrived in late April.[27] Chase's resignation from the military was accepted November 7, 1865, in Beaufort, SC, and thus honorably discharged. However, because of the manner of his resignation from service, he was later denied pay for returning home which was restricted to being discharged from service by the military - though he was given "in kind" travel back to New York.[28]

Nearly two decades later, he contributed a poem to a magazine noting the dying off of the Civil War veteran, with the poem "Lo! The Ranks are Thinned and Thinning".[29] Lines of it were used in veteran memorials.[30] Robert Stockman, a scholar on Chase, draws attention to two stanzas of the poem as having a biographical tone to them:[31]

 
Names from the plaque on the African American Civil War Memorial of the 26th Regiment, USCI, James B. Chase on 13th line near left
Gettysburg and Vicksburg's trenches,
 
Names from the plaque on the African American Civil War Memorial of the 104th Regiment, USCI, James B. Chase on 10th line near left

At whose memory courage blenches,
And the dreadful Wilderness;
Carolina's swamps, and Georgia,
Like a hydra-headed Borgia,
Send their armies bodiless.

From the beds of rolling rivers,
From the woods where moaning quivers
Thro' the shivered, creaking trees;
From each battlefield and prison,
Myriad martyr-souls have risen,

Risen to an endless peace.

For his service in U. S. Colored Troops and U. S. Colored Infantry regiments, his name was included as "James B. Chase" among the 7000 white officers on the Wall of Honor at the African American Civil War Memorial.[32]

Marriage and employment Edit

Chase began to attend Brown University in September 1866, and was elected class secretary,[33] but left school before completing the second semester.[34] He returned to Springfield, where he worked for his father's lumber business – and joined the Mendelssohn club.[35] On 11 May 1870 he married Annie Elizabeth Allyn of Bristol, Rhode Island,[36] and they had two children: Sarah Thornton (1871–1908) and Jessamine Allyn (1874–1947). Chase's activities in work in society multiplied:[37] he started his own specialty lumber business, directed the choir of First Baptist Church, and served as an officer in one of Springfield's musical organizations, and performed in a local concert.[38]

In 1872 Chase's business failed.[39] Unemployed, he moved to Boston leaving his wife and children, where he obtained a meager and unsatisfying living as an actor and singer. In 1873, amidst the Panic of 1873 and subsequent Long Depression and its privations, Chase described having what he called a mystical experience of God's love, of love "unspeakable," of "absolute oneness," which set him on a path of renewed hope in a religious search.[40] Not finding sufficient work to support him and his family in Boston, Chase moved to Fort Howard (Green Bay, Wisconsin), where he taught school.[41] The first high school graduates of the city ever were in 1875.[42] He moved to Chicago briefly and then he moved to Kansas with teaching and music tutoring jobs[43] and was visible in the local newspapers in 1879 in a regional music convention.[44] However the school broke up.[43] Next Chase settled in Del Norte, Colorado as an early mining town but was not successful.[45] Meanwhile, Annie remained in Springfield living with her mother and their two daughters, waiting for her husband to provide his family support. However in March 1878 she moved back to Rhode Island and filed for divorce.[41] He wrote a certified letter responding,[46] and despite family pressure to reconcile, Annie persevered and the court granted the divorce.[47] Chase had little to do with the family after that. Annie lived the rest of her days in Newport, Rhode Island, dying in 1918.[47] Chase's older daughter, Sarah, married in 1895 and had five children before dying suddenly in 1908.[48] Chase's last daughter, Jessamine, never married and became a school teacher and musician; she died in 1947.[49] A letter from some family in New York looking for him was published looking for him some years later in South Dakota.[50] Meanwhile he met and married Eleanor Francesca Hockett Pervier on 6 May 1880 and they settled in Pueblo, Colorado.[51]

Once again he became active in music. He returned to Kansas for a concert in mid-February, 1881, held despite a blizzard stranding rail travelers.[52] He bought an advertisement for music students in the March.[53] In May Chase assisted in the production of two concerts in Pueblo,[54] and also took various jobs over the summer/winter,[55] while continuing in music performances.[56] He began to publish poetry in local newspapers and magazines; one poem focuses on Jesus's love for humanity, thereby highlighting Chase's devotion to Jesus.[57] He also had some success in mining. He invented and patented a prospector's pick in 1881.[58] In October 1883 newspaper articles mentioned his pursuing gold mining,[59] and in December he hoped to open a mining company named "Amity Company".[60] A mine of his was producing well decades later.[61]

In early 1882 Chase served on a city government committee investigation of setting up lead works in Pueblo as its secretary.[62] In later 1882 Chase moved to Denver and was noted contributing poems to local papers.[63] He was also visible singing at various events the end of that year and into the next,[64] known as a "leading basso".[65]

He was called one of the leading poets of Pueblo in 1884.[66] A brief mention in 1885 says both he and Mrs. Chase went into the mountains for the summer.[67] He joined the local Swedenborgian church in 1883,[68] attached to its emphasis of a metaphorical interpretation of the Bible and stressed a mystical approach to Jesus and Christianity and its sense of Christianity was much less doctrinal that the Baptist Church of Chase's childhood.[69] However he didn't like the church's view on the Virgin birth of Jesus, and the Denver church was wracked by doctrinal disputes five years later.[70] About that time Chase abandoned it and all other Christian churches.[71] He initiated a broader religious search and began to read a wide variety of books about religion; Chase read James Freeman Clarke's classic Ten Great Religions, later said he had taken an interest in Hinduism and for a time accepted the idea of reincarnation.[72]

In the summer of 1886 Chase was mentioned in theatrical productions in Denver.[73] In March 1887 he was hired by the Union Mutual Life Insurance Company as an agent[74] and soon promoted as manager for all of Colorado.[75][76] In June 1888 they promoted him again and moved him to their California office[74] where he was listed as "superintendent" for the company.[77] The move was noted back in Pueblo,[78] and his career lauded.[79] On 28 June 1889 Chase and Eleanor had a son, William Jotham Thornton Chase. Chase published a booklet called Sketches that explains why people should purchase life insurance for themselves, using biblical and religious stories to illustrate its major points.[80] According to Stockman, it reveals Chase as a religious seeker familiar with all the major religions.[81] His wife was visible in the Santa Cruz community up to 1892.[82] Thornton Chase was visible entertaining at a reception in April, 1893.[83]

Baháʼí life Edit

Chicago Edit

In June 1893 Union Mutual promoted Chase to superintendent of all agencies west of the Appalachians.[74] This necessitated a move to Chicago.[84] In May he was in Omaha, NE,[85] and Salt Lake, UT,[86] for business, and in early September the president of his company was killed in a train accident back east.[87] He may have been able to attend the first Parliament of the World's Religions held in Chicago in mid-September which was organized by a Swedenborgian. Stockman considers it likely Chase at least followed the reports in the newspapers which did include a quote of Baháʼu'lláh, the founder of the Baháʼí Faith, and Chase could have followed up with the then available books and journal articles by Edward Granville Browne available in the library.[88] The next president of the company was elected in October.[89] In early 1894 Chase was elected to the Insurance Underwriters Association there.[90] Stockman quotes Carl Scheffler offering an anecdote of how Chase learned of a teacher of the religion in Chicago:

While writing a poem about God one day he was interrupted by the visit of a business acquaintance who expressed an interest in his activity, perhaps because he was so busy typing. Mr. Chase read a portion of what he was writing and he was astounded when his friend told him that he had recently come upon a man who had declared that God had “walked upon the earth.” Immediately Mr. Chase expressed interest and asked to be conducted to this person.[91]

Chase was then put in touch with Ibrahim George Kheiralla, recently immigrated to the United States and the second Baháʼí in America after Anton Haddad.[92] A small group began to study the religion with Kheiralla.[93] Stockman indicates that 5 June 1894 was probably the day the class began.[94] A week later he was noted in Pueblo, CO,[95] and then attended a memorial observance for Bunker Hill back in Chicago.[96] Chase's status as a Baháʼí is accepted pointing to this time though several others accepted the new religion before him, but did not stay with the religion.[97] Thus Chase should be considered the first American to become and remain a Baháʼí, and not the first American Baháʼí chronologically.[98] In January 1897 his speech at an insurance agents convention was described as "beautiful…, bright and sublime in its imagery", about attaining to noble ideals above "killing time".[99] In February Chase used an editorial commending of the insurance agent association for "inviting men in various walks of life to its banquets to speak to the members on topics that inspire, elevate, and encourage",[100] and expands on the theme, quoting his words:

If we are only business seekers, traders, worshipers of the calf of gold, Caesar is our tax assessor and God to us is nothing; but if we are teachers and bearers of "good will to men," we shall keep the laws of humanity with heart and act, helping men to help themselves, teaching them the beauty and wisdom of unselfishness, of laboring for others, of providing a certain hope for their own futures, of protecting those dependent on them, even after earthly interests shall cease.

Let us hope that we may urge their minds so close to the border land of the life to come that they may look across the line of division between earthly affairs and eternal ones, and grasp ideals of the greater beauty and grander wisdom of striving for the fulfillment of God's promises to men, and of providing for a permanent home in the kingdom of their Creator.[100]

In early 1899 Chase submitted an essay to the association's competition,[101] and raised awareness of the religion in Cincinnati as well.[102] Baháʼís including Chase were also known to frequent a restaurant named "Kimballs' Restaurant" in Chicago.[103]

Classes on the Baháʼí Faith were organized in Chicago, and later in Enterprise, Kansas; Kenosha, Wisconsin; Ithaca, New York; New York City; Philadelphia; and Oakland, California.[94] By 1899 there were many hundreds of Baháʼís in Chicago itself and close to 1500 among those cites.[94] There had also begun to be some public attention to the point that it drew a public rebuke in the person of Stoyan Krstoff Vatralsky – and to whom Chase stood up in public to retort and there followed newspaper articles going back and forth.[104]

In 1899 other American Baháʼís went on pilgrimage to Akka, Palestine, where they met ʻAbdu'l-Bahá.[105] Chase was invited but could not go.[106] They brought knowledge of the Baháʼí organizational system to the United States but it took time to develop. Chase became one of the leading organizers of the Chicago community, being elected to its first council, then one of its officers in 1899, and then in a reformulated "Board of Council."[107] At the time it was thought the institution should be restricted to men, a position Chase accepted.[108] Meanwhile the very nature of organization and community was threatened as Kheiralla became increasingly alienated from the Baháʼís in 1899 and 1900. Chase made a leading effort to find bridges with Kheiralla but it became impossible and then Chase was a leader of the effort to distinguish Kheiralla from the religion.[109] Among those earliest Baháʼís who retained belief and membership in the unity with ʻAbdu'l-Bahá were Louisa A. Moore (known after marriage as Lua Getsinger), Howard MacNutt, Arthur P. Dodge and Helen S. Goodall.[106] However at the turn of the century the American Baháʼí community still lacked a coherence nationally.[110] This began to be addressed in 1900 and 1901 when ʻAbdu'l-Bahá sent ʻAbdu'l-Karím-i-Tihrání, Hájí Mírzá Hassan-i-Khurásání, Mírzá Asadu'lláh, and Mírzá Abu'l-Faḍl to the United States to more fully educate the Baháʼís on the teachings of the religion.[107] Chase arranged for their housing and himself moved into the Baháʼí center with some of them while his wife was away.[94] A third institution for Chicago was called for in May 1901, initially called the Chicago House of Justice and then the Chicago House of Spirituality.[94] By 1902 and through 1909 Chase was serving as chair,[94] and was noted for being a champion of the Baháʼí principle of consultation.[111] Chase's background in writing served the initial stages of developing Baháʼí literature in America. A publishing company for Baháʼís was started in 1900 with Chase among its members;[94] and in the quickly shifting situations legally incorporated as the "Bahai Publishing Society" in 1902.[112] It became the principal publisher of Baháʼí literature in the English-speaking world, and the standardization of the spelling of Middle Eastern Baháʼí names and terms.[94] Chase was the principal editor of the publisher's literature in this early period and one of its principal financial supporters.[94] In 1904 a letter of a pilgrim to Chase reported ʻAbdu'l-Bahá seeing the American community in a dream as lacking coherence and harmony and the community was characterized by scholar Gayle Morrison as "lacking a wide selection of sacred literature, the study of which forms the basis of individual spiritual responsibility, and without a functioning (national) administration… (and) remained individualistic, even idiosyncratic, in their communal relationships," (such as in race relations amidst a segregated America.)[110] About that time the House of Spirituality began to send out newsletters to Baháʼí communities throughout the United States and Canada, informing them of Baháʼí Holy Days and the fast, which began their observance in North America.[113] Scholar Marzieh Gail indicates her father, Ali Kuli Khan, asked individuals in 1906 if translations of letters to individuals could be copied and sent to Chase in particular so that they were then more widely circulated, (about 4 years before the first national periodical.)[106]

 
Thornton Chase (seated, second from right) among Baháʼís in Egypt.

Meanwhile Chase set out on further travels for the religion. In 1902 he went to Johnstown, NY,[114] and Manitoba, Canada,[115] as well as Louisville, KY, in 1903.[116] In 1904 and 1906 Chase presented at the Monsalvat School at Greenacre and other conferences there.[117]

In 1907 Chase went on Baháʼí pilgrimage though only for three days but still a pivotal experience for him[94] and he wrote a book about it.[118] ʻAbdu'l-Bahá, highly impressed by Chase's qualities, conferred on him the title thábit, "steadfast."[119] A picture of Chase in Egypt among Baháʼís was published in 1908.[120]

On returning home Chase presented again at Greenacre[117] and Cincinnati, about his 1907 pilgrimage.[121] In 1908 he joined an association to aid to the poor.[122]

During his pilgrimage, he had asked ʻAbdu'l-Bahá about the community building a temple and was directed to work with Corinne True, later appointed as a Hand of the Cause, as "complete directions" had been given to her.[108] This was a step in the process of implementing the Baháʼí teaching of the equality of women and men. A series of articles in the fall of 1908 including Chase among a set of women in several newspapers about the aim of the Baháʼís to build a House of Worship.[123] And a photograph including Chase in 1908 at the home of the Trues was published in 1976 – he's the tallest man in the picture.[124] This interaction led to the next development of a national sense of community: The election of the first national council of the religion, with delegates present from across the US and Canada, in the spring of 1909.[108] Thirty percent of the members elected were women; there was still some confusion over the issue of female membership until 1912.

 
Tent raised at the site of the future Baháʼí Temple near Chicago for the Feast of Ridván, noting especially Thornton Chase with the ✚ above him.

In February 1909 Chase addressed the University of Chicago International Club students on the imminence of the age outlining a number of expected changes coming: The downfall of nationalism/rise of internationalism, universal peace instead of battleships, and war becoming seen as a "deed of inhumanity",[125] and in March appeared listed as a Baháʼí publicly in Chicago.[126]

Chase then wrote an introductory book on the religion, The Bahai Revelation, in 1909.[127] According to Stockman "this work was one of the most comprehensive and accurate introductions to the Baháʼí Faith written by an early American Baháʼí."[94] The work emphasized the Baháʼí Faith and its teachings as a vehicle for personal spiritual transformation.[128]

Los Angeles Edit

The Union Mutual Life Insurance Company didn't like the publicity linking their company with Chase's publicity for the religion, and transferred him to Los Angeles.[129] Stockman says "Chase considered resigning from the company, but at the age of sixty-two he found it impossible to obtain another job, and he had to support his wife, his son in college, and his elderly mother-in-law, none of whom had become Baháʼí."[94] Chase still traveled for the religion. Indeed he reached Victoria, British Columbia in 1909.[115] In 1910 a talk entitled as his introductory book was offered in Los Angeles.[130] In 1911 Chase spoke to a public meeting of the religion in Portland, Oregon.[131] He helped to organize the Los Angeles Baháʼís; in 1910 they elected a five-member governing board that included Chase as a member,[132] which then included a majority of women, with a general community of some 30 people.[133] They also established their first monthly meetings. Though he could not attend the national convention of Baháʼís in 1910 he did send a letter.[134] In 1911 he was listed as the contact address for the assembly,[135] participated in attempts by the community to coordinate internationally,[136] and was credited with assisting to organize the Denver Baháʼí Assembly along with Corinne True.[137] That summer Chase received a copy of the proceedings of the First Universal Races Congress to which ʻAbdu'l-Bahá had sent a representative with a message.[138] Chase observed a distinction between ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's message of promoting spiritual unity as a higher calling than that of simply recognizing partisanship among nations vying for priority or advocacy of a race and stressed that the transformation of the time required accepting the influences of the "new heaven". In November he summarized the presence of the religion in California for the first major Baháʼí periodical of the country, Star of the West, noting excitement in San Francisco because of the visit of Dr. Fareed and Lua Getsinger in advance of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá coming west, regular meetings in Los Angeles as well, and the hospitality provided by Mrs. Goodall and Cooper in Oakland.[139] In May 1912 Chase was present at garden party observance of Ridván in San Francisco.[140] The San Francisco Assembly had been founded in 1910.[141] Stockman observed circa 1990 that Chase used to include mention of how many Baháʼí there were in the early days of the religion in his letters to people in a period well before the first accounting done inside the religion.[142]

Death Edit

 
Chase's grave in Inglewood Park Cemetery, Los Angeles as it appeared in 1920.

Thornton Chase died on 30 September 1912 in Los Angeles, age 65, of complications following unsuccessful surgery.[143][74] Chase managed a note to his friend John Bosch while in the hospital.[144] The surgery was not successful and Chase was in pain some 5 days before dying, probably of cancer. ʻAbdu'l Bahá was on a train en route to California at the time; He immediately changed his plans and went to Los Angeles to visit Chase's grave. There he praised Chase's qualities highly, instructed the Baháʼís to hold a commemoration of Chase annually at his grave, and encouraged Baháʼís to visit the gravesite. Many Baháʼís visited that year and a more permanent memorial has since been raised.[145] ʻAbdu'l-Bahá wrote a prayer for Chase that includes:

Verily he guided the people to Thine ancient pathway, and led them to Thy way of rectitude.
Verily he held the chalice of guidance in his right hand and gave unto those athirst to drink of the cup of favor."[146]

A letter from the Los Angeles community published in Star of the West in October noted his many meetings along the last trip he took along the coast perhaps as far as Vancouver and that signs of his illness had appeared during the trip.[147] The outline of his life offered by Frank G. Tyrrell included mention of being a student of Rev. Samuel F. Smith, joining the military at 17, his Civil War service and rising to Captain, but not the detail of it being with black regiments, did include briefly of his life in Colorado and then as an insurance agent. They had held a prayer vigil for him while he was in the hospital which transitioned directly into a memorial on hearing of his death. The funeral was held a few days later with contributions from some ministers as well as friends and a memorial a couple days after that. A friend outlined his life including his Civil War service and that he had not spoken of this as well, as well as his career. Mrs. Chase spoke at the memorial as well.

An obituary article was published in the Brown University Alumni periodical in Feb 1913 by Brown alumnus Alfred G. Langley,[148] it emphasizes his relationship with the Bahá´í Faith though it all but skips his military career in how quote of Chase's presents his life. Another mention came a month later by alumnus Wilfred H. Munro commenting on the incompleteness of a text of Brown university students who had served in the Civil war by adding that Chase was Captain of Company D of the 104th US Colored Infantry.[149]

Legacy Edit

Early period Edit

The October issue of Star of the West made room for remembering him while news continued of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's travels and speeches and dedication of the cite for the Baháʼí House of Worship near Chicago. It included a long poem Chase composed.[150] This poem arrived in Egypt and was read to ʻAbdu'l-Bahá July 4, 1913.[151] The Star of the West edition also published letters from various communities memorializing him. Tributes from Portland, OR and Chicago were also published,[152][153] followed in March, 1913, by one from Beirut which included remembrance of those who were on pilgrimage and met him in 1907.[154] A letter/poem/ode from him to ʻAbdu'l-Bahá was published in September, 1913 dated from August, 1912, published as a one year anniversary of the visit of ʻAbdu'l-Baha to his gravesite[155] and was re-printed in 1922.[156] The editors noted the observance held for what was called "The day of Thornton Chase". It also reported more of the words ʻAbdu'l-Bahá had said on the visit to the gravesite:"…During his lifetime he bore many trials and vicissitudes, but he was very patient and long-suffering. He had a heart most illuminated, a spirit most rejoiced; his hope was to serve the world of humanity; during the days of his life he strove as much as he could – he never failed…"[157] There was an article then published including a picture marking Chase among the people standing at a Ridván meeting in May, 1909, who lead the services that day and compared the tent raised as a precursor to the eventual building.[158] It also included a short article by Chase "The Greatest Name".[159] An account of that first anniversary followed in the November edition.[160] 10 Baháʼís attended the gravesite Sep 30th with flowers and prayers for an hour and a service was held the following Sunday in a hall which was also the anniversary of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's visit and the assemblage again returned to the gravesite at sunset. A memorial comment was then published from Thomas Kelly Cheyne.[161] In February 1914, an excerpt from Chase's book The Bahai Revelation was published in Star of the West.[162] The anniversary was noted again in 1914,[163] and then an article briefly reviewing the history of the religion in America by Chase was published in early 1915,[164] and again noted the anniversary in September.[165] A more enduring gravestone was placed in 1918.[166] A memoriam article in 1918 noted 21 Baháʼís attended the anniversary meeting which also saw the new stone marker. Mrs. Chase attended and shared anecdotes of his life.[167] A picture of the gravestone was published in 1920.[168]

In 1920 Martha Root refers to distributing Chase's book The Bahai Revelation in various libraries on her tour around South America.[169] Memorials of others began to be published in 1922 recalling the contact they had had with Chase.[170]

Later period Edit

The memorial meeting in 1924 noted that inquirers were informed of "the truth of the Oneness of Mankind and the fatherhood of God, for which Mr. Chase had given his heart and life."[171] The writer of the article, Willard Hatch, was requested to gather materials on the life of Chase in 1927.[172] He updated attendees at the national convention of Baháʼís over the next few years,[173] and was joined in the work by John Bosch.[174] Bosch was in fact an inheritor of Chases' literary material and a collection of some Baháʼí materials Chase had not already sent to Chicago for archival purposes.[175] A survey of the materials gathered was published in April 1930.[n 4] Then a previously unpublished letter of Chases' was published in Star of the West 1930.[176] Howard MacNutt, another very early Baháʼí, was photographed visiting the gravesite before his death in 1926.[177] In 1930 a dinner was held for the poor commemorating his death followed by a talk on his life.[178] A 5 page letter of Chase's was published in The Baháʼí World series for 1928–30, part of a major series of volumes covering world wide aspects of the religion, entitled Before Abraham was, I am; written in 1902 to a Christian.[179] Further scholarly work on Chase appeared in a 1932 article which included several excerpts from letters and papers of Chase,[180] and gathered materials were being sent to the national archives (and Hatch was perhaps on pilgrimage.)[181] A letter to Chase from ʻAbdu'l-Bahá was central to a question of Baháʼí involvement in the political rights and responsibilities of being a citizen and a Baháʼí communicated specifically in 1933 and was further discussed at the convention and lead to a fuller clarification in 1934.[182] Hatch held a meeting with African-Americans in August 1933 and there was the memorial meeting in September.[183] In 1935 there were several actions remembering Chase:

  • a personally owned copy of a book of Chase's was sold to raise money for the Baháʼí Fund,[184]
  • a Los Angeles area newsletter reproduced the notice of the first assembly-like institution in LA that elected Chase among the five members,[185]
  • more materials of Chases' were mentioned in the 1935 convention,[186]
  • and it was also established in 1935 that Chase was to be recognized as one of the Disciples of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá.[187]

In 1937 at the memorial service it was clarified by official translation that the commemoration of visiting the gravesite was on the anniversary of the death of Chase.[188] In 1938 some further materials Chase had had were given to the national archives of the Baháʼís including a seal and ring made with a gem given to him.[189] The certificate from the State of California of the incorporation of the Los Angeles Spiritual Assembly updated in 1938 notes ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's visit to Chase's gravesite in 1912 and the annual memorial for Chase as part of its mandate.[190] By 2005 it was noted the Bosches had donated 11 boxes of materials for the Chase collection of the US Baháʼí national archives.[191] The 1944 Centenary of the religion was observed partially with a text The Baháʼí Centenary which included Chase's early history of the religion incorporated into a broader summary – uncredited,[192] but noted in the second generation national Baháʼí newspaper, the Baháʼí News, that it was by Chase.[193]

In 1945 Chase was mentioned in the Pittsburgh Courier, a noted African-American newspaper, but only his status as the first American Baháʼí and his gravesite visited by ʻAbdu'l-Bahá.[194] Hatch was visible in May again at an interracial meeting and a brief comment was also made of the memorial meeting in the Baháʼí News,[195] followed by a picture of the memorial published soon after.[196] A further scholarly work on Chase was published in August 1945 in the World Order magazine of the religion.[197] In it Scheffler mentioned he had known and traveled with Chase including his pilgrimage but "I had then practically no knowledge of his early life." Scheffler comments on small experiences of Chase mentioning his early life but nothing about the civil war service was mentioned – though he did understand Chase was a singer some time in his early life. Scheffler mentions Chase's deep abiding interest in religion and his finding Swedenborgianism. Scheffler speaks also of some correction of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá of Chase's thought at the time. The memorial was the lead mention in the summary of activities in Los Angeles in 1948 published in the Baháʼí News.[198] In October 1949 Hatch received a clarification to a question he had addressed Shoghi Effendi, then head of the religion; it was clarified that the gravesite could be called a shrine but that it was not important what to call it or if the memorial meeting is held Sep 30 or Oct 1 (since Chase had died after sunset and Baha'i calendars mark the change of day on the sunset.)[199] Memorial observances continued to be published in the Baháʼí News over the years and the responsibility of maintaining the event shifted from Los Angeles to the Inglewood community and with broadening attendance (for example in 1963 it was reported there were some 70 adults and 15 children from a range of communities and in 1965 there were 350 attending.)[200] In 1966 a tree was donated to a nearby park and has been the site of a social reception after the memorial.[201]

In 1972 a review of pilgrimages noted Chase's across a few paragraph's in some detail taking from his In Galilee and Scheffler's comments.[202] In 1973 O. Z. Whitehead wrote a biographical article on Chase published in Baháʼí News.[203] The work identified him specifically as a Captain serving in the Civil War as well as his life as an insurance salesman and his singing voice, refers to Scheffler's essay, and in general to the process by which Chase came to the Baháʼí Faith, and adding an anecdote of Chase meeting John Bosch. In 1974 it was mentioned that John Bosch was Chase's "literary executor" and in general Chase's papers and collected material was willed to Bosch – including calligraphy by a Baháʼí specialist, Mishkin-Qalam, and noted that Mrs. Chase had burned some material before Bosch could arrive.[175] In November 1974 Hand of the Cause Dhikru'llah Khadem called Chase "the Mullá Husayn of the West",[204] (the first believer of the religion founded by the Báb and accepted as a precursor to the religion by Baháʼís.)[205] In 1974 the Pittsburgh Courier again notes Chase, this time in a profile of a major Baháʼí conference, noting he him as the first Baháʼí in America.[206] In 1979 Roger White, called a poet laureette of the religion, albeit unofficially,[207] published a volume of work called Another Song, Another Season: Poems and Portrayals which included a 7 page creative nonfiction story "Graveyards Are Not My Style; Thornton Chase 1847-1912" centering on that first graveside memorial visit with ʻAbdu'l-Bahá.[208] It was written from the point of view of a Catholic man in love with a Baháʼí and their struggle over unity being of different religions and their resolution at the interaction of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá, Thornton Chase's gravesite, and them.

Chase scholar Robert Stockman's 1985 book Baha'i Faith in America: Origins 1892–1900 acknowledged Chase had served in the Civil War (and as a teenager) though not that his service was with black Americans.[209] Neither did volume two in the series.[210] An excerpt from a forthcoming book by Stockman was published in 1987 in the Baháʼí News.[144] It noted Chase was 6' 2" and some 260lbs late in life, had suffered medical trouble some 20 years including a surgery in 1911 and held correspondence between Chase and Bosch. It also included a tribute by Stockman for Chase.[211] It noted Chase was "exceptionally even-tempered and mild-mannered…scrupulously avoided arguing…. His capacity to love anyone, especially those who disagreed with him, is especially demonstrated in his words and actions.… He is perhaps the only person before 1912 who had a thorough understanding of the Baháʼí concept of consultation.… was the prime mover behind many of the (local council)'s activities." Yet none of these refer to his Civil War service being with African Americans. In 1989 Bob Quigley, a Baháʼí television producer who had worked closely with Hand of the Cause William Sears from the 1960s was buried in a grave very near to Chase'.[212] So is that of Kazem Kazemzadeh, the first trustee of the Huququ'llah in the West, the father of Firuz Kazemzadeh.[213]

In 1994 several centennial observances were noted. In January it was announced, in the third generation of Baháʼí national news, The American Baháʼí, that a massive granite monument was placed at the gravesite after a 7 year fundraising campaign. As of June it had cost $26,000. Contributions were sent from Baháʼís all over the United States and from Amatu'l-Baha Ruhiyyih Khanum. The black granite was specially ordered from India and is engraved with gold lettering.[214] The architect who conceived and designed the monument was Arsalan Mottahedin then of Beverly Hills, California. The dedication and unveiling of the monument coincided with the annual memorial service for Thornton Chase. The sculptor for the eagle was Frederick ("Rik") Sargent,[215] a Baháʼí then from Littleton, Colorado. Firuz Kazemzadeh was the keynote speaker at the dedication. A choir directed by Russ Garcia performed. At a June reception on the centennial of the religion in the West the Baháʼís presented a "family album" video narrated by Sylvia B.P. Parmelee which publicly mentioned Chase had served in the Civil War as an officer of black soldiers.[216] The event was attended by over 500 people including dignitaries. A September centenary memorial at the gravesite of Chase's joining the religion was also advertised.[217]

In 2002 Stockman published Thornton Chase: First American Baháʼí and it mentions Chase's war service in detail and with African-American troops. In 2009 an encyclopedic article published by Baháʼís written by Stockman includes his service and addressed Stockman's views of Chase's importance as an early North American Baháʼí thinker, publicist, administrator, and organizer being still underappreciated and that in many ways Chase's death left a gap in the North American Baháʼí community that remained unfilled until the rise to prominence in the early 1920s of Horace Holley, the chief developer of Baháʼí organization in the United States and Canada and included the picture of the 26th Colored Troops on parade as above.[94]

A couple 2012 presentations recalled Chase's correspondence and activity in the religion,[218] one of which included very early picture of Chase from 1884 as well as a picture with his son in Los Angeles.[219] This presentation was republished separately in 2013.[220]

Bibliography Edit

Books Edit

  • Thornton Chase; Arthur S. Agnes (1985) [1908]. Galilee and In Wonderland. Kalimat Press.
  • Thornton Chase (1933) [1909]. The Bahai Revelation (2nd ed.). Baha'i Publishing Committee.

Shorter pieces Edit

  • Poem "Lo, the ranks are thinned and thinning"[30] 1882/1883
  • The Serpent (Chicago: n.p., 1900)
  • What Went Ye Out for to See? ([Chicago: Bahai Publishing Society], 1904).
  • Thornton Chase (Aug 1945). "The gift of God" (PDF). World Order. Vol. 11, no. 5. pp. 147–151. (PDF) from the original on 2017-09-16. Retrieved Sep 10, 2017. It was a chapter from Chase's The Bahai Revelation
  • excerpts from his letters published as Thornton Chase (1993). "Impressions of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá and His Station". World Order. Vol. 25, no. 1. pp. 12–23.

Posthumous publications Edit

  • Thornton Chase (Jan 19, 1915). Albert R. Windust; Gertrude Buikema; Zia M. Bagdadi (eds.). "A brief history of the American development of the Bahai movement". Star of the West. pp. 263, 5. from the original on 2017-09-14. Retrieved Sep 13, 2017. (republished in 1944.)[192][193]
  • Thornton Chase (1930). "Before Abraham was, I am". The Baháʼí World. Vol. 3. Baháʼí Publishing Trust. pp. 324–9.; written in 1902 to a Christian.

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Other students of the school who passed exams in DC the same week as Chase are:
    • Charles E. Behle, George Miller, Sammuel P. Coffan, John Locke, William R. Browne, Frederick W. Watkins, John H. Upham, Mathew H. Kolleck
    • John Cowgill, DeWitt C. Smith, (E?)dward Pyle, Benton Tuttle, John S. Appleton, John T. Sebering
    • as published in "Officers for colored troops". Dollar Newspaper. Philadelphia, PA. April 13, 1864. p. 2. Retrieved Sep 11, 2017.(subscription required)
  2. ^ Some of the others of Company K have been identified:
    • William Diggs, promoted to corporal, noted in Adrienne Shadd (14 December 2010). The Journey from Tollgate to Parkway: African Canadians in Hamilton. Dundurn. p. 160. ISBN 978-1-4597-1170-9.
    • Robert, Alexander, and Charles Deyo, noted by Bryan_C (Apr 22, 2016). "Company Muster Roll". The CivilWarTalk Network. from the original on 2017-09-13. Retrieved Sep 12, 2017.
    • John Reed noted at Dr. James P. Weeks; Linda A. Ries (January 2009). Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission guide to Civil War holdings (PDF) (2009 ed.). Pennsylvania, US: Pennsylvania Historical & Museum Commission. p. 59. (PDF) from the original on 2017-01-26. Retrieved Sep 12, 2017.
    • Abraham U. Vangelder was the Second Lieutenant when Chase arrived as First Lieutenant. Stockman, Thornton Chase, 39
    • Captain Pettit was assigned to Company K at least when in the South. Stockman, Thornton Chase, 44
  3. ^ Some names have been compiled for Company D 104th gathered from pension files who applied generally between 1890 and 1910. For the whole regiment some 504 applications for pensions were filed - survivors who had lived to do so. Noting claims were only for soldiers who could claim disability due to service in the war, this list is further filtered for those who were only enlisted soldiers, whose applications were successful, had descendants, and the applications included affidavits or depositions that gave some sense of biography. They names are:
    George Curry(1833-1916), Stephen Devoe(c1841-1906), Nero Dingle(c1843-1919), Sam Githers(1846-1907), Edward Gourdine(1841-1915), David Jimmerson(?-1909), Prince McIrchin(1847-1936), Wilson Phillips(1842-1902), and Billy Rambert(1842-1907). Additionally the company's 1st lieutenant was Edward Stoeber. See John Raymond Gourdin (1997). Voices from the Past: 104th Infantry Regiment - USCT, Colored Civil War Soldiers from South Carolina. Heritage Books. pp. xv–xvi, 63–8, 85–6, 89–90, 97–8, 121–4, 151–2, 159–60, 223. ISBN 978-0-7884-0718-5. In addition to those of company K it is noted that Louis Gregory's father, George Gregory, was First Sergeant in Company C of the 104th in 1866.Morrison, Gayle (2009). "Gregory, Louis George (1874-1951)". Baháʼí Encyclopedia Project. Evanston, IL: National Spiritual Assembly of the Baháʼís of the United States.
  4. ^ The summary is a bit unclear in some details. See Willard Hatch; John Bosch (Apr 1930). "Committee to compile letters and writings of Thornton Chase". Baháʼí News. pp. 17–8. from the original on 2017-09-14. Retrieved Sep 13, 2017.
    • 25 original letters from ʻAbdu'l-Bahá to Chase, some hair of Baháʼu'lláh and ʻAbdu'l-Bahá.
    • What is called a "unique chart" and or designs that he carried on his person.
    • What is called the "1st petition" of Chase to the Holy Land (for joining the Baha'i Faith?).
    • A list of 72 names of individuals who had passed through the class in 1895-7.
    • A short history written by Chase (perhaps the one published in 1915) and that a comment that none became Baha'is from the 1893 Fair.
    • 19 original letters from Chase to others
    • A 37 page work tracing religious history
    • Records of what ʻAbdu'l-Bahá said of Chase at various meetings after his death.
    • A drawing of Chase from an unknown artist.

References Edit

  1. ^ "Steadfast - the Thornton Chase Story - IMDb". IMDb.
  2. ^ Genealogy of the Cutts Family in America. J. Munsell's sons. 1892. p. 402.
  3. ^ Stockman 2002, p. 14.
  4. ^ Stockman 2002, p. 14-17.
  5. ^ Stockman 2002, p. 22.
  6. ^ a b Stockman 2002, p. 25.
  7. ^ Stockman 2002, p. 27.
  8. ^ J.H. Beers & Co (1901). Commemorative Biographical Record of Hartford County, Connecticut: Containing Biographical Sketches of Prominent and Representative Citizens, and of Many of the Early Settled Families. Beers. pp. 351–2.
  9. ^ Stockman 2002, p. 34.
  10. ^ Free Military School for Applicants for Commands of Colored Troops, No. 1210 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia (2 ed.). King & Baird, Printers. 1864. p. 43.
  11. ^ "Continental Hotel". Age. Philadelphia, PA. February 10, 1864. p. 3. Retrieved Sep 19, 2017.(subscription required)
  12. ^ * "The Beginnings of Camp William Penn". Historic la Mott. Chambres & Associates. 2017. Retrieved Oct 27, 2017.
    • "Civil War Photos Select Audiovisual Records at the National Archives". archives.gov. U.S. National Archives and Records Administration. April 13, 2017. Retrieved Oct 27, 2017.
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    • "The advisrory committee…". Weekly Miners' Journal. Pottsville, Pennsylvania. January 16, 1864. p. 3. Retrieved Sep 13, 2017.(subscription required)
  14. ^ * Hondon B. Hargrove (1 January 2003). Black Union Soldiers in the Civil War. McFarland. pp. 110–1. ISBN 978-0-7864-1697-4.
    • see also Paul T. Arnold (Jan 1910). William Abbat (ed.). "Negro soldiers in the United States Army". The Magazine of History, with Notes and Queries. Vol. 11, no. 1. W. Abbatt. p. 10.
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    • This pages notes the news arriving in April "St. Augustine in the Civil War (Page 6) 1861–1865". History of St. Augustine; St. Augustine in the Civil War (Page 4) 1861–1865. Gil Wilson. from the original on 2017-07-02. Retrieved Sep 11, 2017.
  28. ^ * United States Congressional serial set. 1912. pp. 219–20.
    • The law referenced is here: "United States Supreme Court; U S v. SWEET, (1903), No. 236". findlaw.com. April 27, 1903. from the original on September 11, 2017. Retrieved Sep 11, 2017.
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    • "Brilliant reception". The Wichita Beacon. Wichita, KS. 28 Mar 1885. p. 4. Retrieved Sep 10, 2017.
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    • "James B. Chase in the U.S. Civil War Soldiers, 1861–1865 (institutional url)". Ancestry.com. National Park Service. U.S. Civil War Soldiers, 1861–1865 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2007. 2007. Retrieved Sep 12, 2017.(subscription required)
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    • Note the first Western woman to the join the religion was Kate Ives. See Will C. van den Hoonaard (16 December 1996). The Origins of the Baháʼí Community of Canada, 1898--1948. Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press. p. 17. ISBN 978-0-88920-272-6.
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  107. ^ a b Stockman 2002, p. 158.
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    • the text itself is online at Gustav Spiller, ed. (1911). Papers on inter-racial problems, communicated to the first Universal Races Congress. University of London: London : P.S. King & son; Boston, U.S.A., The World's Peace Foundation. from the original on 2017-02-13.
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    • Munro is saying a text should be updated to reflect more service of two students including Chase. There are some dozen students noted who served with black regiments. See James Burrill Angell (1868). Henry Sweetser Burrage; John Larkin Lincoln (eds.). Brown University in the Civil War : a memorial. Providence, RI: Brown University. pp. 54, 349, 354, 357, 359, 372, 374.
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    • "Memorial to the first American believer". Baháʼí News. Dec 1970. p. 21. Retrieved Sep 14, 2017.
    • O. Z. Whitehead (Feb 1973). "Thornton Chase memorial service, Oct 1, 1972". Baháʼí News. p. 5. Retrieved Sep 14, 2017.
  201. ^ "The Thornton Chase memorial". Baháʼí News. Dec 1969. p. 14. Retrieved Sep 14, 2017.
  202. ^ Annamarie K. Hannold (Nov 1972). "Glimpses of early Baháʼí pilgrimages (part 2); The first American Baháʼís on pilgrimage". Baháʼí News. pp. 5–6. Retrieved Sep 14, 2017.
  203. ^ O. Z. Whitehead (Feb 1973). "Thornton Chase, first Baháʼí in the Western World". Baháʼí News. pp. 2–5. Retrieved Sep 14, 2017.
  204. ^ "United States: State teaching plan launched in Illinois". Baháʼí News. Nov 1974. pp. 3–5. Retrieved Sep 14, 2017.
  205. ^ Christopher Buck (August 2004). "The eschatology of globalization: the multiple-messiahship of Baháʼu'lláh revisited" (PDF). In Moshe Sharon; W. J. Hanegraaff; P. Pratap Kumar (eds.). Studies in Modern Religions and Religious Movements and the Babi/Baha'i Faiths. Mumen Book Series, Studies in the history of religions. Vol. CIV. Brill Academic Publishers. pp. 143–173. ISBN 9789004139046.
  206. ^ "World-wide Bahais (sic) meet in St. Louis this week". The Pittsburgh Courier. Pittsburgh, PA. 7 Sep 1974. p. 15. Retrieved Sep 16, 2017.
  207. ^ Robert Weinberg (1997). "Roger White: An Obituary: Writer and editor, "poet laureate" of the Baháʼí community (1929-1993)". Baháʼí Studies Review. London, UK: Association for Baha'i Studies English-Speaking Europe. 7. Retrieved Sep 23, 2017.
  208. ^ Roger White (1979). "Graveyards Are Not My Style Thornton Chase 1847-1912". Another Song, Another Season: Poems and Portrayals. G. Ronald. pp. 40–7. ISBN 978-0-85398-088-9.
  209. ^ Stockman, R. (1985). Baha'i Faith in America: Origins 1892–1900. Wilmette, Ill.: Baha'i Publishing Trust of the United States. pp. 33–6. ISBN 978-0-87743-199-2.
  210. ^ Chase is discussed across many pages – Preface (8 – 9, 11, 12), 4 – 6, 14 – 5, 19, 25 – 6, 33, 38, 44 – 7, 55, 59 – 60, 64 – 5, 70, 73, 75, unnumbered photographs on pages 1 and 5 after page 78, 79, 88 – 9, 103 – 6, 110 – 115, 122, 125, 127, 142, 172 – 3, 177, 179, 192 – 3, 198, 201, 230 – 3, 253 – 5, 276, 299, 301 – 4, 307 – 11, 320, 323 – 4, 328 – 9, 332 – 3, 352, 362 – 3, 378, 392, 395 – 6, 397 – 400: Stockman, R. (1985). Baha'i Faith in America, The: Early Expansion, 1900–1912 Volume 2. Wilmette, Ill.: George Ronald. ISBN 978-0-87743-282-1. from the original on 2017-09-16.
  211. ^ "Tribute to Thornton Chase; his services 'will ever be remembered'". Baháʼí News. Oct 1987. p. 9. from the original on 2017-09-14. Retrieved Sep 14, 2017.
  212. ^ Marguerite Reimer Sears (2003). Bill – A biography of Hand of the Cause of God William Sears. Desert Rose Publishing. p. 38. ISBN 0-9743979-0-3.
  213. ^ "Kazem Kazemzadeh, Trustee of Huququ'llah, dead at 91". The American Baha'i. Feb 1990.
  214. ^ * "New $50,000 Granite monument placed on grave of Thornton Chase after 7-year fund-raising effort". The American Baha'i. Jan 19, 1994.
    • "Article on Chase memorial in January issue contained inaccuracies, omissions". The American Baha'i. June 24, 1994.
  215. ^ "Monuments and Open Space Work". Rik Sargent Studios. from the original on 2017-06-29. Retrieved Sep 15, 2017.
  216. ^ Tom Mennillo (Aug 1, 1994). "Celebrating the Centenary: Chicago Banquet an opportunity to look back, forward". The American Baha'i.
  217. ^ "An open invitation". The American Baha'i. Aug 1, 1994.
  218. ^ Robert Sockett; Jonathan Menon (October 17, 2012). "The Last Days of Thornton Chase". 239Days.com. from the original on October 22, 2016. Retrieved Sep 13, 2017.
  219. ^ Robert Sockett (October 18, 2012). "Thornton Chase's Long Season of Suffering". 239days.com. Retrieved Sep 16, 2017.
  220. ^ Robert Sockett (Oct 22, 2013). "Thornton Chase's Long Season of Suffering". Bahaiteachings.org. Retrieved Sep 16, 2017.
  • Stockman, Robert H. (2002). Thornton Chase: First American Baháʼí. Baháʼí Pub. Trust. ISBN 978-0-87743-282-1.

Further reading Edit

  • Robert H. Stockman (2001). "Love's Odyssey: The Life of Thornton Chase; draft of a book later published as Thornton Chase: The First American Baháʼí". Bahai-library.com. Retrieved Sep 11, 2017.
  • Stockman, Robert H. (2009). "Chase, Thornton (1847–1912)". Baháʼí Encyclopedia Project. Evanston, IL: National Spiritual Assembly of the Baháʼís of the United States.

External links Edit

  • Works by or about Thornton Chase at Internet Archive
  • Works by Thornton Chase at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Robert Stockman (1985). "Notes on the Thornton Chase Papers". Bahai-library.com.

thornton, chase, 969840, 342881, 969840, 342881, 1900, february, 1847, september, 1912, distinguished, officer, united, states, colored, troops, during, american, civil, first, western, convert, baháʼí, faith, chase, born, springfield, massachusetts, parents, . 33 58 11 N 118 20 34 W 33 969840 N 118 342881 W 33 969840 118 342881 Thornton Chase c 1900Thornton Chase February 22 1847 September 30 1912 was a distinguished officer of the United States Colored Troops during the American Civil War and the first western convert to the Bahaʼi Faith Chase was born in Springfield Massachusetts to parents of English background and Baptist religion After being schooled for college by Rev Samuel Francis Smith he instead enrolled as an officer in the American Civil War serving with two regiments of United States Colored Troops mostly in South Carolina where he was wounded For his service Chase was included on the Wall of Honor of the African American Civil War Memorial completed in 1997 After the war he worked as a businessman performed as a singer and was published as a writer of prose and poetry while living in several states after leaving Massachusetts He married twice and fathered three children Long a seeker in religion when he was nearly 50 he joined the Bahaʼi Faith in 1894 1895 almost as soon as possible in America and is commonly recognized as the first convert to the religion of the western world After having organized concerts and businesses in his earlier days he advanced the organization of communities of the religion especially in Chicago and Los Angeles serving on early assemblies and publishing committees the first national attempts at circulating news and guidance for the religion and an elected national council He also aided in the founding of other communities gave talks for the religion in many places including Greenacre in Eliot Maine in the northeast and Seattle in the northwest and authored early books on the religion including an account of his Bahaʼi pilgrimage in 1907 and an introductory review of the religion in 1909 During his journeys to the West ʻAbdu l Baha then head of the religion singled Chase out and identified his gravesite as a place of religious visitation Ultimately Chase was named a Disciple of ʻAbdu l Baha Collections of his papers began posthumous articles by him were published biographical articles about him appeared and his place in the history of the religion in America was contextualized In 2002 a full biography on Chase was published by Robert H Stockman and websites have had entries about him since In 2020 a film on his life was produced by Misaq Kazimi and Sam Baldoni titled Steadfast 1 Contents 1 Early life 2 Civil War service 3 Marriage and employment 4 Bahaʼi life 4 1 Chicago 4 2 Los Angeles 5 Death 6 Legacy 6 1 Early period 6 2 Later period 7 Bibliography 7 1 Books 7 2 Shorter pieces 7 2 1 Posthumous publications 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life EditHe was born James Brown Thornton Chase on 22 February 1847 in Springfield Massachusetts to parents who traced their family back to Britain and Baptist religion His father was Jonathan 2 or Jotham 3 G and mother Sarah C G S Thornton Chase His father was a singer amateur scientist and wealthy businessman 4 and was a descendant of Aquila Chase who migrated from Chesham in 1630 and of many other colonial families such as Thomas Dudley Chase s mother who was of similar pedigree died about two weeks after he was born an event that profoundly shaped Chase s subsequent development 5 Chase s father remarried three years later and the couple adopted three girls But instead of being raised at home the United States 1850 census shows that he was living with a foster family in West Springfield at the three years old 6 Chase himself describes his childhood as loveless and lonely 6 and from it he pursued a personal mystical relationship with God For four years aged thirteen to sixteen Chase lived in Newton Mass with the well known Baptist Rev Samuel Francis Smith 7 8 In July 1863 Chase was accepted to Brown University but soon was off to serve in the Civil War Civil War service EditJust before his seventeenth birthday in early 1864 Chase traveled to Philadelphia to attend the Free School for Military Tactics which was set up to graduate potential officers specifically for black infantry units 9 10 11 He passed the government officer exams in April n 1 nbsp The U S C T 26th on parade at Camp William Penn Pa 1865 12 The school opened around December 1863 13 Attendance at the school was strictly segregated but it did pass over 400 students through while 21 blacks attended an auxiliary school 14 and received positive comments from Lincoln s secretary of war Edwin McMasters Stanton 15 The school also helped train troops eleven African American regiments were raised in one year and were supported by several abolitionists 16 By May 1864 Chase was first lieutenant of Company K second in charge under the captain with 100 men n 2 of the 26th Regiment Infantry U S Colored Troops 17 He claimed to be 19 years old but was in fact only two months past his 17th birthday A company would normally be 60 to 80 privates a wagoner 2 musicians 8 corporals 4 sergeants 1 first sergeant 1 second and 1 first lieutenants and 1 captain 18 About 1000 men the regiment was mustered and practiced on Rikers and Hart Islands and would have received its colors its flags on March 26 1864 however a severe storm struck 19 On July 5 and 7 the unit fought two battles south of Charleston S C in and around John s Island especially around Fort Pringle 20 21 two officers were wounded during battles in South Carolina during this first deployment 19 Chase was wounded by an exploding cannon permanently injuring the hearing in his left ear 20 and the other was the commander of the regiment who was killed December 17 1864 19 Chase is listed returning to New York in November as James B Chase 22 Richard Walter Thomas black scholar of race relations observed that the relationship between white and black soldiers in the Civil War was an instance of what he calls the other tradition after sharing the horrors of war with their black comrades in arms many white officers experienced deep and dramatic transformations in their attitudes toward blacks 23 We do not know Chase s personal views but in 1865 Chase started service in another black soldier unit He was promoted to captain and commanded Company D of the 104th United States Colored Infantry 24 25 n 3 That unit was organized at Beaufort S C April June 1865 and did guard duty at various points in South Carolina through February 1866 26 Meanwhile news of the surrender of Lee and days later of the assassination of Lincoln arrived in late April 27 Chase s resignation from the military was accepted November 7 1865 in Beaufort SC and thus honorably discharged However because of the manner of his resignation from service he was later denied pay for returning home which was restricted to being discharged from service by the military though he was given in kind travel back to New York 28 Nearly two decades later he contributed a poem to a magazine noting the dying off of the Civil War veteran with the poem Lo The Ranks are Thinned and Thinning 29 Lines of it were used in veteran memorials 30 Robert Stockman a scholar on Chase draws attention to two stanzas of the poem as having a biographical tone to them 31 nbsp Names from the plaque on the African American Civil War Memorial of the 26th Regiment USCI James B Chase on 13th line near leftGettysburg and Vicksburg s trenches nbsp Names from the plaque on the African American Civil War Memorial of the 104th Regiment USCI James B Chase on 10th line near leftAt whose memory courage blenches And the dreadful Wilderness Carolina s swamps and Georgia Like a hydra headed Borgia Send their armies bodiless From the beds of rolling rivers From the woods where moaning quivers Thro the shivered creaking trees From each battlefield and prison Myriad martyr souls have risen Risen to an endless peace For his service in U S Colored Troops and U S Colored Infantry regiments his name was included as James B Chase among the 7000 white officers on the Wall of Honor at the African American Civil War Memorial 32 Marriage and employment EditChase began to attend Brown University in September 1866 and was elected class secretary 33 but left school before completing the second semester 34 He returned to Springfield where he worked for his father s lumber business and joined the Mendelssohn club 35 On 11 May 1870 he married Annie Elizabeth Allyn of Bristol Rhode Island 36 and they had two children Sarah Thornton 1871 1908 and Jessamine Allyn 1874 1947 Chase s activities in work in society multiplied 37 he started his own specialty lumber business directed the choir of First Baptist Church and served as an officer in one of Springfield s musical organizations and performed in a local concert 38 In 1872 Chase s business failed 39 Unemployed he moved to Boston leaving his wife and children where he obtained a meager and unsatisfying living as an actor and singer In 1873 amidst the Panic of 1873 and subsequent Long Depression and its privations Chase described having what he called a mystical experience of God s love of love unspeakable of absolute oneness which set him on a path of renewed hope in a religious search 40 Not finding sufficient work to support him and his family in Boston Chase moved to Fort Howard Green Bay Wisconsin where he taught school 41 The first high school graduates of the city ever were in 1875 42 He moved to Chicago briefly and then he moved to Kansas with teaching and music tutoring jobs 43 and was visible in the local newspapers in 1879 in a regional music convention 44 However the school broke up 43 Next Chase settled in Del Norte Colorado as an early mining town but was not successful 45 Meanwhile Annie remained in Springfield living with her mother and their two daughters waiting for her husband to provide his family support However in March 1878 she moved back to Rhode Island and filed for divorce 41 He wrote a certified letter responding 46 and despite family pressure to reconcile Annie persevered and the court granted the divorce 47 Chase had little to do with the family after that Annie lived the rest of her days in Newport Rhode Island dying in 1918 47 Chase s older daughter Sarah married in 1895 and had five children before dying suddenly in 1908 48 Chase s last daughter Jessamine never married and became a school teacher and musician she died in 1947 49 A letter from some family in New York looking for him was published looking for him some years later in South Dakota 50 Meanwhile he met and married Eleanor Francesca Hockett Pervier on 6 May 1880 and they settled in Pueblo Colorado 51 Once again he became active in music He returned to Kansas for a concert in mid February 1881 held despite a blizzard stranding rail travelers 52 He bought an advertisement for music students in the March 53 In May Chase assisted in the production of two concerts in Pueblo 54 and also took various jobs over the summer winter 55 while continuing in music performances 56 He began to publish poetry in local newspapers and magazines one poem focuses on Jesus s love for humanity thereby highlighting Chase s devotion to Jesus 57 He also had some success in mining He invented and patented a prospector s pick in 1881 58 In October 1883 newspaper articles mentioned his pursuing gold mining 59 and in December he hoped to open a mining company named Amity Company 60 A mine of his was producing well decades later 61 In early 1882 Chase served on a city government committee investigation of setting up lead works in Pueblo as its secretary 62 In later 1882 Chase moved to Denver and was noted contributing poems to local papers 63 He was also visible singing at various events the end of that year and into the next 64 known as a leading basso 65 He was called one of the leading poets of Pueblo in 1884 66 A brief mention in 1885 says both he and Mrs Chase went into the mountains for the summer 67 He joined the local Swedenborgian church in 1883 68 attached to its emphasis of a metaphorical interpretation of the Bible and stressed a mystical approach to Jesus and Christianity and its sense of Christianity was much less doctrinal that the Baptist Church of Chase s childhood 69 However he didn t like the church s view on the Virgin birth of Jesus and the Denver church was wracked by doctrinal disputes five years later 70 About that time Chase abandoned it and all other Christian churches 71 He initiated a broader religious search and began to read a wide variety of books about religion Chase read James Freeman Clarke s classic Ten Great Religions later said he had taken an interest in Hinduism and for a time accepted the idea of reincarnation 72 In the summer of 1886 Chase was mentioned in theatrical productions in Denver 73 In March 1887 he was hired by the Union Mutual Life Insurance Company as an agent 74 and soon promoted as manager for all of Colorado 75 76 In June 1888 they promoted him again and moved him to their California office 74 where he was listed as superintendent for the company 77 The move was noted back in Pueblo 78 and his career lauded 79 On 28 June 1889 Chase and Eleanor had a son William Jotham Thornton Chase Chase published a booklet called Sketches that explains why people should purchase life insurance for themselves using biblical and religious stories to illustrate its major points 80 According to Stockman it reveals Chase as a religious seeker familiar with all the major religions 81 His wife was visible in the Santa Cruz community up to 1892 82 Thornton Chase was visible entertaining at a reception in April 1893 83 Bahaʼi life EditChicago Edit In June 1893 Union Mutual promoted Chase to superintendent of all agencies west of the Appalachians 74 This necessitated a move to Chicago 84 In May he was in Omaha NE 85 and Salt Lake UT 86 for business and in early September the president of his company was killed in a train accident back east 87 He may have been able to attend the first Parliament of the World s Religions held in Chicago in mid September which was organized by a Swedenborgian Stockman considers it likely Chase at least followed the reports in the newspapers which did include a quote of Bahaʼu llah the founder of the Bahaʼi Faith and Chase could have followed up with the then available books and journal articles by Edward Granville Browne available in the library 88 The next president of the company was elected in October 89 In early 1894 Chase was elected to the Insurance Underwriters Association there 90 Stockman quotes Carl Scheffler offering an anecdote of how Chase learned of a teacher of the religion in Chicago While writing a poem about God one day he was interrupted by the visit of a business acquaintance who expressed an interest in his activity perhaps because he was so busy typing Mr Chase read a portion of what he was writing and he was astounded when his friend told him that he had recently come upon a man who had declared that God had walked upon the earth Immediately Mr Chase expressed interest and asked to be conducted to this person 91 Chase was then put in touch with Ibrahim George Kheiralla recently immigrated to the United States and the second Bahaʼi in America after Anton Haddad 92 A small group began to study the religion with Kheiralla 93 Stockman indicates that 5 June 1894 was probably the day the class began 94 A week later he was noted in Pueblo CO 95 and then attended a memorial observance for Bunker Hill back in Chicago 96 Chase s status as a Bahaʼi is accepted pointing to this time though several others accepted the new religion before him but did not stay with the religion 97 Thus Chase should be considered the first American to become and remain a Bahaʼi and not the first American Bahaʼi chronologically 98 In January 1897 his speech at an insurance agents convention was described as beautiful bright and sublime in its imagery about attaining to noble ideals above killing time 99 In February Chase used an editorial commending of the insurance agent association for inviting men in various walks of life to its banquets to speak to the members on topics that inspire elevate and encourage 100 and expands on the theme quoting his words If we are only business seekers traders worshipers of the calf of gold Caesar is our tax assessor and God to us is nothing but if we are teachers and bearers of good will to men we shall keep the laws of humanity with heart and act helping men to help themselves teaching them the beauty and wisdom of unselfishness of laboring for others of providing a certain hope for their own futures of protecting those dependent on them even after earthly interests shall cease Let us hope that we may urge their minds so close to the border land of the life to come that they may look across the line of division between earthly affairs and eternal ones and grasp ideals of the greater beauty and grander wisdom of striving for the fulfillment of God s promises to men and of providing for a permanent home in the kingdom of their Creator 100 In early 1899 Chase submitted an essay to the association s competition 101 and raised awareness of the religion in Cincinnati as well 102 Bahaʼis including Chase were also known to frequent a restaurant named Kimballs Restaurant in Chicago 103 Classes on the Bahaʼi Faith were organized in Chicago and later in Enterprise Kansas Kenosha Wisconsin Ithaca New York New York City Philadelphia and Oakland California 94 By 1899 there were many hundreds of Bahaʼis in Chicago itself and close to 1500 among those cites 94 There had also begun to be some public attention to the point that it drew a public rebuke in the person of Stoyan Krstoff Vatralsky and to whom Chase stood up in public to retort and there followed newspaper articles going back and forth 104 In 1899 other American Bahaʼis went on pilgrimage to Akka Palestine where they met ʻAbdu l Baha 105 Chase was invited but could not go 106 They brought knowledge of the Bahaʼi organizational system to the United States but it took time to develop Chase became one of the leading organizers of the Chicago community being elected to its first council then one of its officers in 1899 and then in a reformulated Board of Council 107 At the time it was thought the institution should be restricted to men a position Chase accepted 108 Meanwhile the very nature of organization and community was threatened as Kheiralla became increasingly alienated from the Bahaʼis in 1899 and 1900 Chase made a leading effort to find bridges with Kheiralla but it became impossible and then Chase was a leader of the effort to distinguish Kheiralla from the religion 109 Among those earliest Bahaʼis who retained belief and membership in the unity with ʻAbdu l Baha were Louisa A Moore known after marriage as Lua Getsinger Howard MacNutt Arthur P Dodge and Helen S Goodall 106 However at the turn of the century the American Bahaʼi community still lacked a coherence nationally 110 This began to be addressed in 1900 and 1901 when ʻAbdu l Baha sent ʻAbdu l Karim i Tihrani Haji Mirza Hassan i Khurasani Mirza Asadu llah and Mirza Abu l Faḍl to the United States to more fully educate the Bahaʼis on the teachings of the religion 107 Chase arranged for their housing and himself moved into the Bahaʼi center with some of them while his wife was away 94 A third institution for Chicago was called for in May 1901 initially called the Chicago House of Justice and then the Chicago House of Spirituality 94 By 1902 and through 1909 Chase was serving as chair 94 and was noted for being a champion of the Bahaʼi principle of consultation 111 Chase s background in writing served the initial stages of developing Bahaʼi literature in America A publishing company for Bahaʼis was started in 1900 with Chase among its members 94 and in the quickly shifting situations legally incorporated as the Bahai Publishing Society in 1902 112 It became the principal publisher of Bahaʼi literature in the English speaking world and the standardization of the spelling of Middle Eastern Bahaʼi names and terms 94 Chase was the principal editor of the publisher s literature in this early period and one of its principal financial supporters 94 In 1904 a letter of a pilgrim to Chase reported ʻAbdu l Baha seeing the American community in a dream as lacking coherence and harmony and the community was characterized by scholar Gayle Morrison as lacking a wide selection of sacred literature the study of which forms the basis of individual spiritual responsibility and without a functioning national administration and remained individualistic even idiosyncratic in their communal relationships such as in race relations amidst a segregated America 110 About that time the House of Spirituality began to send out newsletters to Bahaʼi communities throughout the United States and Canada informing them of Bahaʼi Holy Days and the fast which began their observance in North America 113 Scholar Marzieh Gail indicates her father Ali Kuli Khan asked individuals in 1906 if translations of letters to individuals could be copied and sent to Chase in particular so that they were then more widely circulated about 4 years before the first national periodical 106 nbsp Thornton Chase seated second from right among Bahaʼis in Egypt Meanwhile Chase set out on further travels for the religion In 1902 he went to Johnstown NY 114 and Manitoba Canada 115 as well as Louisville KY in 1903 116 In 1904 and 1906 Chase presented at the Monsalvat School at Greenacre and other conferences there 117 In 1907 Chase went on Bahaʼi pilgrimage though only for three days but still a pivotal experience for him 94 and he wrote a book about it 118 ʻAbdu l Baha highly impressed by Chase s qualities conferred on him the title thabit steadfast 119 A picture of Chase in Egypt among Bahaʼis was published in 1908 120 On returning home Chase presented again at Greenacre 117 and Cincinnati about his 1907 pilgrimage 121 In 1908 he joined an association to aid to the poor 122 During his pilgrimage he had asked ʻAbdu l Baha about the community building a temple and was directed to work with Corinne True later appointed as a Hand of the Cause as complete directions had been given to her 108 This was a step in the process of implementing the Bahaʼi teaching of the equality of women and men A series of articles in the fall of 1908 including Chase among a set of women in several newspapers about the aim of the Bahaʼis to build a House of Worship 123 And a photograph including Chase in 1908 at the home of the Trues was published in 1976 he s the tallest man in the picture 124 This interaction led to the next development of a national sense of community The election of the first national council of the religion with delegates present from across the US and Canada in the spring of 1909 108 Thirty percent of the members elected were women there was still some confusion over the issue of female membership until 1912 nbsp Tent raised at the site of the future Bahaʼi Temple near Chicago for the Feast of Ridvan noting especially Thornton Chase with the above him In February 1909 Chase addressed the University of Chicago International Club students on the imminence of the age outlining a number of expected changes coming The downfall of nationalism rise of internationalism universal peace instead of battleships and war becoming seen as a deed of inhumanity 125 and in March appeared listed as a Bahaʼi publicly in Chicago 126 Chase then wrote an introductory book on the religion The Bahai Revelation in 1909 127 According to Stockman this work was one of the most comprehensive and accurate introductions to the Bahaʼi Faith written by an early American Bahaʼi 94 The work emphasized the Bahaʼi Faith and its teachings as a vehicle for personal spiritual transformation 128 Los Angeles Edit The Union Mutual Life Insurance Company didn t like the publicity linking their company with Chase s publicity for the religion and transferred him to Los Angeles 129 Stockman says Chase considered resigning from the company but at the age of sixty two he found it impossible to obtain another job and he had to support his wife his son in college and his elderly mother in law none of whom had become Bahaʼi 94 Chase still traveled for the religion Indeed he reached Victoria British Columbia in 1909 115 In 1910 a talk entitled as his introductory book was offered in Los Angeles 130 In 1911 Chase spoke to a public meeting of the religion in Portland Oregon 131 He helped to organize the Los Angeles Bahaʼis in 1910 they elected a five member governing board that included Chase as a member 132 which then included a majority of women with a general community of some 30 people 133 They also established their first monthly meetings Though he could not attend the national convention of Bahaʼis in 1910 he did send a letter 134 In 1911 he was listed as the contact address for the assembly 135 participated in attempts by the community to coordinate internationally 136 and was credited with assisting to organize the Denver Bahaʼi Assembly along with Corinne True 137 That summer Chase received a copy of the proceedings of the First Universal Races Congress to which ʻAbdu l Baha had sent a representative with a message 138 Chase observed a distinction between ʻAbdu l Baha s message of promoting spiritual unity as a higher calling than that of simply recognizing partisanship among nations vying for priority or advocacy of a race and stressed that the transformation of the time required accepting the influences of the new heaven In November he summarized the presence of the religion in California for the first major Bahaʼi periodical of the country Star of the West noting excitement in San Francisco because of the visit of Dr Fareed and Lua Getsinger in advance of ʻAbdu l Baha coming west regular meetings in Los Angeles as well and the hospitality provided by Mrs Goodall and Cooper in Oakland 139 In May 1912 Chase was present at garden party observance of Ridvan in San Francisco 140 The San Francisco Assembly had been founded in 1910 141 Stockman observed circa 1990 that Chase used to include mention of how many Bahaʼi there were in the early days of the religion in his letters to people in a period well before the first accounting done inside the religion 142 Death Edit nbsp Chase s grave in Inglewood Park Cemetery Los Angeles as it appeared in 1920 Thornton Chase died on 30 September 1912 in Los Angeles age 65 of complications following unsuccessful surgery 143 74 Chase managed a note to his friend John Bosch while in the hospital 144 The surgery was not successful and Chase was in pain some 5 days before dying probably of cancer ʻAbdu l Baha was on a train en route to California at the time He immediately changed his plans and went to Los Angeles to visit Chase s grave There he praised Chase s qualities highly instructed the Bahaʼis to hold a commemoration of Chase annually at his grave and encouraged Bahaʼis to visit the gravesite Many Bahaʼis visited that year and a more permanent memorial has since been raised 145 ʻAbdu l Baha wrote a prayer for Chase that includes Verily he guided the people to Thine ancient pathway and led them to Thy way of rectitude Verily he held the chalice of guidance in his right hand and gave unto those athirst to drink of the cup of favor 146 A letter from the Los Angeles community published in Star of the West in October noted his many meetings along the last trip he took along the coast perhaps as far as Vancouver and that signs of his illness had appeared during the trip 147 The outline of his life offered by Frank G Tyrrell included mention of being a student of Rev Samuel F Smith joining the military at 17 his Civil War service and rising to Captain but not the detail of it being with black regiments did include briefly of his life in Colorado and then as an insurance agent They had held a prayer vigil for him while he was in the hospital which transitioned directly into a memorial on hearing of his death The funeral was held a few days later with contributions from some ministers as well as friends and a memorial a couple days after that A friend outlined his life including his Civil War service and that he had not spoken of this as well as well as his career Mrs Chase spoke at the memorial as well An obituary article was published in the Brown University Alumni periodical in Feb 1913 by Brown alumnus Alfred G Langley 148 it emphasizes his relationship with the Baha i Faith though it all but skips his military career in how quote of Chase s presents his life Another mention came a month later by alumnus Wilfred H Munro commenting on the incompleteness of a text of Brown university students who had served in the Civil war by adding that Chase was Captain of Company D of the 104th US Colored Infantry 149 Legacy EditEarly period Edit The October issue of Star of the West made room for remembering him while news continued of ʻAbdu l Baha s travels and speeches and dedication of the cite for the Bahaʼi House of Worship near Chicago It included a long poem Chase composed 150 This poem arrived in Egypt and was read to ʻAbdu l Baha July 4 1913 151 The Star of the West edition also published letters from various communities memorializing him Tributes from Portland OR and Chicago were also published 152 153 followed in March 1913 by one from Beirut which included remembrance of those who were on pilgrimage and met him in 1907 154 A letter poem ode from him to ʻAbdu l Baha was published in September 1913 dated from August 1912 published as a one year anniversary of the visit of ʻAbdu l Baha to his gravesite 155 and was re printed in 1922 156 The editors noted the observance held for what was called The day of Thornton Chase It also reported more of the words ʻAbdu l Baha had said on the visit to the gravesite During his lifetime he bore many trials and vicissitudes but he was very patient and long suffering He had a heart most illuminated a spirit most rejoiced his hope was to serve the world of humanity during the days of his life he strove as much as he could he never failed 157 There was an article then published including a picture marking Chase among the people standing at a Ridvan meeting in May 1909 who lead the services that day and compared the tent raised as a precursor to the eventual building 158 It also included a short article by Chase The Greatest Name 159 An account of that first anniversary followed in the November edition 160 10 Bahaʼis attended the gravesite Sep 30th with flowers and prayers for an hour and a service was held the following Sunday in a hall which was also the anniversary of ʻAbdu l Baha s visit and the assemblage again returned to the gravesite at sunset A memorial comment was then published from Thomas Kelly Cheyne 161 In February 1914 an excerpt from Chase s book The Bahai Revelation was published in Star of the West 162 The anniversary was noted again in 1914 163 and then an article briefly reviewing the history of the religion in America by Chase was published in early 1915 164 and again noted the anniversary in September 165 A more enduring gravestone was placed in 1918 166 A memoriam article in 1918 noted 21 Bahaʼis attended the anniversary meeting which also saw the new stone marker Mrs Chase attended and shared anecdotes of his life 167 A picture of the gravestone was published in 1920 168 In 1920 Martha Root refers to distributing Chase s book The Bahai Revelation in various libraries on her tour around South America 169 Memorials of others began to be published in 1922 recalling the contact they had had with Chase 170 Later period Edit The memorial meeting in 1924 noted that inquirers were informed of the truth of the Oneness of Mankind and the fatherhood of God for which Mr Chase had given his heart and life 171 The writer of the article Willard Hatch was requested to gather materials on the life of Chase in 1927 172 He updated attendees at the national convention of Bahaʼis over the next few years 173 and was joined in the work by John Bosch 174 Bosch was in fact an inheritor of Chases literary material and a collection of some Bahaʼi materials Chase had not already sent to Chicago for archival purposes 175 A survey of the materials gathered was published in April 1930 n 4 Then a previously unpublished letter of Chases was published in Star of the West 1930 176 Howard MacNutt another very early Bahaʼi was photographed visiting the gravesite before his death in 1926 177 In 1930 a dinner was held for the poor commemorating his death followed by a talk on his life 178 A 5 page letter of Chase s was published in The Bahaʼi World series for 1928 30 part of a major series of volumes covering world wide aspects of the religion entitled Before Abraham was I am written in 1902 to a Christian 179 Further scholarly work on Chase appeared in a 1932 article which included several excerpts from letters and papers of Chase 180 and gathered materials were being sent to the national archives and Hatch was perhaps on pilgrimage 181 A letter to Chase from ʻAbdu l Baha was central to a question of Bahaʼi involvement in the political rights and responsibilities of being a citizen and a Bahaʼi communicated specifically in 1933 and was further discussed at the convention and lead to a fuller clarification in 1934 182 Hatch held a meeting with African Americans in August 1933 and there was the memorial meeting in September 183 In 1935 there were several actions remembering Chase a personally owned copy of a book of Chase s was sold to raise money for the Bahaʼi Fund 184 a Los Angeles area newsletter reproduced the notice of the first assembly like institution in LA that elected Chase among the five members 185 more materials of Chases were mentioned in the 1935 convention 186 and it was also established in 1935 that Chase was to be recognized as one of the Disciples of ʻAbdu l Baha 187 In 1937 at the memorial service it was clarified by official translation that the commemoration of visiting the gravesite was on the anniversary of the death of Chase 188 In 1938 some further materials Chase had had were given to the national archives of the Bahaʼis including a seal and ring made with a gem given to him 189 The certificate from the State of California of the incorporation of the Los Angeles Spiritual Assembly updated in 1938 notes ʻAbdu l Baha s visit to Chase s gravesite in 1912 and the annual memorial for Chase as part of its mandate 190 By 2005 it was noted the Bosches had donated 11 boxes of materials for the Chase collection of the US Bahaʼi national archives 191 The 1944 Centenary of the religion was observed partially with a text The Bahaʼi Centenary which included Chase s early history of the religion incorporated into a broader summary uncredited 192 but noted in the second generation national Bahaʼi newspaper the Bahaʼi News that it was by Chase 193 In 1945 Chase was mentioned in the Pittsburgh Courier a noted African American newspaper but only his status as the first American Bahaʼi and his gravesite visited by ʻAbdu l Baha 194 Hatch was visible in May again at an interracial meeting and a brief comment was also made of the memorial meeting in the Bahaʼi News 195 followed by a picture of the memorial published soon after 196 A further scholarly work on Chase was published in August 1945 in the World Order magazine of the religion 197 In it Scheffler mentioned he had known and traveled with Chase including his pilgrimage but I had then practically no knowledge of his early life Scheffler comments on small experiences of Chase mentioning his early life but nothing about the civil war service was mentioned though he did understand Chase was a singer some time in his early life Scheffler mentions Chase s deep abiding interest in religion and his finding Swedenborgianism Scheffler speaks also of some correction of ʻAbdu l Baha of Chase s thought at the time The memorial was the lead mention in the summary of activities in Los Angeles in 1948 published in the Bahaʼi News 198 In October 1949 Hatch received a clarification to a question he had addressed Shoghi Effendi then head of the religion it was clarified that the gravesite could be called a shrine but that it was not important what to call it or if the memorial meeting is held Sep 30 or Oct 1 since Chase had died after sunset and Baha i calendars mark the change of day on the sunset 199 Memorial observances continued to be published in the Bahaʼi News over the years and the responsibility of maintaining the event shifted from Los Angeles to the Inglewood community and with broadening attendance for example in 1963 it was reported there were some 70 adults and 15 children from a range of communities and in 1965 there were 350 attending 200 In 1966 a tree was donated to a nearby park and has been the site of a social reception after the memorial 201 In 1972 a review of pilgrimages noted Chase s across a few paragraph s in some detail taking from his In Galilee and Scheffler s comments 202 In 1973 O Z Whitehead wrote a biographical article on Chase published in Bahaʼi News 203 The work identified him specifically as a Captain serving in the Civil War as well as his life as an insurance salesman and his singing voice refers to Scheffler s essay and in general to the process by which Chase came to the Bahaʼi Faith and adding an anecdote of Chase meeting John Bosch In 1974 it was mentioned that John Bosch was Chase s literary executor and in general Chase s papers and collected material was willed to Bosch including calligraphy by a Bahaʼi specialist Mishkin Qalam and noted that Mrs Chase had burned some material before Bosch could arrive 175 In November 1974 Hand of the Cause Dhikru llah Khadem called Chase the Mulla Husayn of the West 204 the first believer of the religion founded by the Bab and accepted as a precursor to the religion by Bahaʼis 205 In 1974 the Pittsburgh Courier again notes Chase this time in a profile of a major Bahaʼi conference noting he him as the first Bahaʼi in America 206 In 1979 Roger White called a poet laureette of the religion albeit unofficially 207 published a volume of work called Another Song Another Season Poems and Portrayals which included a 7 page creative nonfiction story Graveyards Are Not My Style Thornton Chase 1847 1912 centering on that first graveside memorial visit with ʻAbdu l Baha 208 It was written from the point of view of a Catholic man in love with a Bahaʼi and their struggle over unity being of different religions and their resolution at the interaction of ʻAbdu l Baha Thornton Chase s gravesite and them Chase scholar Robert Stockman s 1985 book Baha i Faith in America Origins 1892 1900 acknowledged Chase had served in the Civil War and as a teenager though not that his service was with black Americans 209 Neither did volume two in the series 210 An excerpt from a forthcoming book by Stockman was published in 1987 in the Bahaʼi News 144 It noted Chase was 6 2 and some 260lbs late in life had suffered medical trouble some 20 years including a surgery in 1911 and held correspondence between Chase and Bosch It also included a tribute by Stockman for Chase 211 It noted Chase was exceptionally even tempered and mild mannered scrupulously avoided arguing His capacity to love anyone especially those who disagreed with him is especially demonstrated in his words and actions He is perhaps the only person before 1912 who had a thorough understanding of the Bahaʼi concept of consultation was the prime mover behind many of the local council s activities Yet none of these refer to his Civil War service being with African Americans In 1989 Bob Quigley a Bahaʼi television producer who had worked closely with Hand of the Cause William Sears from the 1960s was buried in a grave very near to Chase 212 So is that of Kazem Kazemzadeh the first trustee of the Huququ llah in the West the father of Firuz Kazemzadeh 213 In 1994 several centennial observances were noted In January it was announced in the third generation of Bahaʼi national news The American Bahaʼi that a massive granite monument was placed at the gravesite after a 7 year fundraising campaign As of June it had cost 26 000 Contributions were sent from Bahaʼis all over the United States and from Amatu l Baha Ruhiyyih Khanum The black granite was specially ordered from India and is engraved with gold lettering 214 The architect who conceived and designed the monument was Arsalan Mottahedin then of Beverly Hills California The dedication and unveiling of the monument coincided with the annual memorial service for Thornton Chase The sculptor for the eagle was Frederick Rik Sargent 215 a Bahaʼi then from Littleton Colorado Firuz Kazemzadeh was the keynote speaker at the dedication A choir directed by Russ Garcia performed At a June reception on the centennial of the religion in the West the Bahaʼis presented a family album video narrated by Sylvia B P Parmelee which publicly mentioned Chase had served in the Civil War as an officer of black soldiers 216 The event was attended by over 500 people including dignitaries A September centenary memorial at the gravesite of Chase s joining the religion was also advertised 217 In 2002 Stockman published Thornton Chase First American Bahaʼi and it mentions Chase s war service in detail and with African American troops In 2009 an encyclopedic article published by Bahaʼis written by Stockman includes his service and addressed Stockman s views of Chase s importance as an early North American Bahaʼi thinker publicist administrator and organizer being still underappreciated and that in many ways Chase s death left a gap in the North American Bahaʼi community that remained unfilled until the rise to prominence in the early 1920s of Horace Holley the chief developer of Bahaʼi organization in the United States and Canada and included the picture of the 26th Colored Troops on parade as above 94 A couple 2012 presentations recalled Chase s correspondence and activity in the religion 218 one of which included very early picture of Chase from 1884 as well as a picture with his son in Los Angeles 219 This presentation was republished separately in 2013 220 Bibliography EditBooks Edit Thornton Chase Arthur S Agnes 1985 1908 Galilee and In Wonderland Kalimat Press Thornton Chase 1933 1909 The Bahai Revelation 2nd ed Baha i Publishing Committee Shorter pieces Edit Poem Lo the ranks are thinned and thinning 30 1882 1883 The Serpent Chicago n p 1900 What Went Ye Out for to See Chicago Bahai Publishing Society 1904 Thornton Chase Aug 1945 The gift of God PDF World Order Vol 11 no 5 pp 147 151 Archived PDF from the original on 2017 09 16 Retrieved Sep 10 2017 It was a chapter from Chase s The Bahai Revelation excerpts from his letters published as Thornton Chase 1993 Impressions of ʻAbdu l Baha and His Station World Order Vol 25 no 1 pp 12 23 Posthumous publications Edit Thornton Chase Jan 19 1915 Albert R Windust Gertrude Buikema Zia M Bagdadi eds A brief history of the American development of the Bahai movement Star of the West pp 263 5 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 republished in 1944 192 193 Thornton Chase 1930 Before Abraham was I am The Bahaʼi World Vol 3 Bahaʼi Publishing Trust pp 324 9 written in 1902 to a Christian See also EditBenjamin F Randolph also in the 26th USCT and Martin Delany and Henry Wilson also in the 104th USCI Other white officers in other USCT regiments Walter Thorn Edward Winslow Hinks William Gould W G Raymond Charles Henry Howard was leader of the Beaufort SC training camp for new regiments organized there Bahaʼi Faith in North America Bahaʼi Faith in South CarolinaNotes Edit Other students of the school who passed exams in DC the same week as Chase are Charles E Behle George Miller Sammuel P Coffan John Locke William R Browne Frederick W Watkins John H Upham Mathew H Kolleck John Cowgill DeWitt C Smith E dward Pyle Benton Tuttle John S Appleton John T Sebering as published in Officers for colored troops Dollar Newspaper Philadelphia PA April 13 1864 p 2 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 subscription required Some of the others of Company K have been identified William Diggs promoted to corporal noted in Adrienne Shadd 14 December 2010 The Journey from Tollgate to Parkway African Canadians in Hamilton Dundurn p 160 ISBN 978 1 4597 1170 9 Robert Alexander and Charles Deyo noted by Bryan C Apr 22 2016 Company Muster Roll The CivilWarTalk Network Archived from the original on 2017 09 13 Retrieved Sep 12 2017 John Reed noted at Dr James P Weeks Linda A Ries January 2009 Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission guide to Civil War holdings PDF 2009 ed Pennsylvania US Pennsylvania Historical amp Museum Commission p 59 Archived PDF from the original on 2017 01 26 Retrieved Sep 12 2017 Abraham U Vangelder was the Second Lieutenant when Chase arrived as First Lieutenant Stockman Thornton Chase 39 Captain Pettit was assigned to Company K at least when in the South Stockman Thornton Chase 44 Some names have been compiled for Company D 104th gathered from pension files who applied generally between 1890 and 1910 For the whole regiment some 504 applications for pensions were filed survivors who had lived to do so Noting claims were only for soldiers who could claim disability due to service in the war this list is further filtered for those who were only enlisted soldiers whose applications were successful had descendants and the applications included affidavits or depositions that gave some sense of biography They names are George Curry 1833 1916 Stephen Devoe c1841 1906 Nero Dingle c1843 1919 Sam Githers 1846 1907 Edward Gourdine 1841 1915 David Jimmerson 1909 Prince McIrchin 1847 1936 Wilson Phillips 1842 1902 and Billy Rambert 1842 1907 Additionally the company s 1st lieutenant was Edward Stoeber See John Raymond Gourdin 1997 Voices from the Past 104th Infantry Regiment USCT Colored Civil War Soldiers from South Carolina Heritage Books pp xv xvi 63 8 85 6 89 90 97 8 121 4 151 2 159 60 223 ISBN 978 0 7884 0718 5 In addition to those of company K it is noted that Louis Gregory s father George Gregory was First Sergeant in Company C of the 104th in 1866 Morrison Gayle 2009 Gregory Louis George 1874 1951 Bahaʼi Encyclopedia Project Evanston IL National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahaʼis of the United States The summary is a bit unclear in some details See Willard Hatch John Bosch Apr 1930 Committee to compile letters and writings of Thornton Chase Bahaʼi News pp 17 8 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 25 original letters from ʻAbdu l Baha to Chase some hair of Bahaʼu llah and ʻAbdu l Baha What is called a unique chart and or designs that he carried on his person What is called the 1st petition of Chase to the Holy Land for joining the Baha i Faith A list of 72 names of individuals who had passed through the class in 1895 7 A short history written by Chase perhaps the one published in 1915 and that a comment that none became Baha is from the 1893 Fair 19 original letters from Chase to others A 37 page work tracing religious history Records of what ʻAbdu l Baha said of Chase at various meetings after his death A drawing of Chase from an unknown artist References Edit Steadfast the Thornton Chase Story IMDb IMDb Genealogy of the Cutts Family in America J Munsell s sons 1892 p 402 Stockman 2002 p 14 Stockman 2002 p 14 17 Stockman 2002 p 22 a b Stockman 2002 p 25 Stockman 2002 p 27 J H Beers amp Co 1901 Commemorative Biographical Record of Hartford County Connecticut Containing Biographical Sketches of Prominent and Representative Citizens and of Many of the Early Settled Families Beers pp 351 2 Stockman 2002 p 34 Free Military School for Applicants for Commands of Colored Troops No 1210 Chestnut Street Philadelphia 2 ed King amp Baird Printers 1864 p 43 Continental Hotel Age Philadelphia PA February 10 1864 p 3 Retrieved Sep 19 2017 subscription required The Beginnings of Camp William Penn Historic la Mott Chambres amp Associates 2017 Retrieved Oct 27 2017 Civil War Photos Select Audiovisual Records at the National Archives archives gov U S National Archives and Records Administration April 13 2017 Retrieved Oct 27 2017 Free military school advert Age Philadelphia Pennsylvania December 28 1863 p 3 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 subscription required The advisrory committee Weekly Miners Journal Pottsville Pennsylvania January 16 1864 p 3 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 subscription required Hondon B Hargrove 1 January 2003 Black Union Soldiers in the Civil War McFarland pp 110 1 ISBN 978 0 7864 1697 4 see also Paul T Arnold Jan 1910 William Abbat ed Negro soldiers in the United States Army The Magazine of History with Notes and Queries Vol 11 no 1 W Abbatt p 10 Thomas P Lowry 1 September 2003 Curmudgeons Drunkards and Outright Fools Courts Martial of Civil War Union Colonels U of Nebraska Press p 212 ISBN 0 8032 8024 6 Barker Abraham Biographical notes SNAC Social Networks and Archival Context Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities Retrieved Sep 16 2017 Stockman 2002 p 38 39 John Raymond Gourdin 1997 Voices from the Past 104th Infantry Regiment USCT Colored Civil War Soldiers from South Carolina Heritage Books p 220 ISBN 978 0 7884 0718 5 a b c Thomas C McCarthy Feb 2011 Rikers Island s 26th U S Colored Troops on parade CorrectionHistory org New York Correction History Society Archived from the original on 2016 07 07 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 a b Stockman 2002 p 41 42 James Harvey McKee 1903 Back in War Times History of the 144th Regiment New York Volunteer Infantry H E Bailey pp 167 175 205 223 In U S steam transport The New York Times New York NY 3 November 1864 p 8 Archived from the original on 10 September 2017 Retrieved Jul 2 2014 Richard Walter Thomas January 1996 John H Standfield II ed Understanding interracial unity a study of U S race relations Sage series on race and ethnic relations Vol 16 Sage Publications p 31 ISBN 978 0 8039 4602 6 Stockman 2002 p 45 Harry Bradshaw Matthews 2008 African American Freedom Journey in New York and Related Sites 1823 1870 Freedom Knows No Color Africana Homestead Legacy Pb p 320 ISBN 978 0 9799537 4 3 Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States Commandery of the State of Massachusetts 1906 Register of the Military order of the loyal legion of the United States Pub under the auspices of the commandery of the state of Massachusetts p 52 Battle Unit Details United States Colored Troops 104th Regiment United States Colored Infantry National Park Service US Department of the Interior Archived from the original on 2017 09 12 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 A website list the service of the 104th USCI among others Recruiting Black Regiments History of St Augustine St Augustine in the Civil War Page 4 1861 1865 Gil Wilson Archived from the original on 2017 07 02 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 who has some archival material texts online of the area This pages notes the news arriving in April St Augustine in the Civil War Page 6 1861 1865 History of St Augustine St Augustine in the Civil War Page 4 1861 1865 Gil Wilson Archived from the original on 2017 07 02 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 United States Congressional serial set 1912 pp 219 20 The law referenced is here United States Supreme Court U S v SWEET 1903 No 236 findlaw com April 27 1903 Archived from the original on September 11 2017 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 The Magazines The National Tribune Washington DC 21 June 1883 p 4 Archived from the original on 10 September 2017 Retrieved July 1 2014 a b Lo the ranks are thinned and thinning Decoration Day May 30 1883 Reading Times Reading PA 30 May 1883 p 5 Retrieved Sep 10 2017 Brilliant reception The Wichita Beacon Wichita KS 28 Mar 1885 p 4 Retrieved Sep 10 2017 Robert H Stockman 2001 Love s Odyssey The Life of Thornton Chase draft of a book later published as Thornton Chase The First American Bahaʼi Bahai library com Archived from the original on 2016 03 23 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 History amp Culture Lincoln s proclamation to establish a Bureau of Colored Troops National Park Service U S Department of the Interior 2017 Archived from the original on 2017 08 06 Retrieved Sep 12 2017 James B Chase in the U S Civil War Soldiers 1861 1865 institutional url Ancestry com National Park Service U S Civil War Soldiers 1861 1865 database on line Provo UT USA Ancestry com Operations Inc 2007 2007 Retrieved Sep 12 2017 subscription required Class organization Manufacturers and Farmers Journal Providence Rhode Island October 8 1866 p 2 Retrieved Sep 19 2017 subscription required Stockman 2002 p 48 51 The Mendelssohn union held Springfield Republican Springfield MA July 13 1869 p 4 Stockman 2002 p 52 Stockman 2002 p 54 55 Concert No 3 of the successful series Springfield Republican Springfield MA February 22 1871 p 8 Retrieved Sep 19 2017 subscription required Notice is hereby given Springfield Republican Springfield MA February 12 1872 p 1 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 subscription required Stockman 2002 p 58 a b Stockman 2002 p 63 History and Tradition Green Bay Area Public School District 2017 Archived from the original on 2017 09 12 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 a b Stockman 2002 p 65 Musical Convention Personals The Junction City Weekly Union Junction City KS 25 Jan 1879 p 5 Retrieved Sep 18 2017 The musical convention The Junction City Weekly Union Junction City KS 1 Feb 1879 p 5 Retrieved Sep 18 2017 Stockman 2002 p 66 Stockman 2002 p 68 a b Stockman 2002 p 69 Stockman 2002 p preface page 9 114 Stockman 2002 p preface page 9 74 A letter from New York The Black Hills Daily Times Deadwood SD 2 Aug 1888 p 4 Archived from the original on 2017 09 10 Retrieved Sep 10 2017 Stockman 2002 p 73 Opera house history the first entertainment Hiawatha Daily World Hiawatha KS 1 Nov 1912 p 16 Retrieved Sep 18 2017 B P Waggener is snow nound The Atchison Daily Champion Atchison KS 15 Feb 1881 p 4 Retrieved Sep 18 2017 B P Waggener has been The Atchison Daily Champion Atchison KS 18 Feb 1881 p 4 Retrieved Sep 18 2017 Personal multiple entries The Atchison Daily Champion Atchison KS 19 Feb 1881 p 4 Retrieved Sep 18 2017 Balie Waggener Atchison Daily Patriot 19 Feb 1881 p Atchison KS Retrieved Sep 18 2017 The recent storm The Leavenworth Times Leavenworth KS 20 Feb 1881 p 3 Retrieved Sep 18 2017 Card Colorado Daily Chieftain Pueblo CO March 6 1881 p 4 Archived from the original on September 12 2017 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 Card Colorado Daily Chieftain Colorado Daily Chieftain Pueblo CO March 8 1881 p 4 Archived from the original on September 12 2017 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 Two grand concerts will be given Colorado Daily Chieftain Pueblo CO May 12 1881 p 4 Archived from the original on September 12 2017 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 Mr and Mrs J B T Chase Colorado Daily Chieftain Pueblo CO September 20 1882 p 3 Retrieved Sep 19 2017 Stockman 2002 p 74 5 Mr J B Thornton Chase Colorado Daily Chieftain Pueblo CO July 2 1881 p 4 Archived from the original on September 12 2017 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 J B Thornton Chase is engaged Colorado Daily Chieftain Pueblo CO December 16 1881 p 3 Archived from the original on September 12 2017 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 The Philharmonic and Dramatic Colorado Daily Chieftain Pueblo CO September 28 1881 p 1 Retrieved Sep 19 2017 Emeralds Mr J B T Chase Colorado Daily Chieftain Pueblo CO February 18 1882 p 4 Retrieved Sep 19 2017 Last night s concert Colorado Daily Chieftain Pueblo CO March 21 1882 p 4 Retrieved Sep 19 2017 Stockman 2002 p 91 Stockman 2002 p 74 75 News of another big gold strikez Colorado Daily Chieftain Pueblo CO October 9 1883 p 8 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 Mr Thornton Chase Colorado Daily Chieftain Pueblo CO October 10 1883 p 8 Archived from the original on September 12 2017 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 Among the mining enterprises Colorado Daily Chieftain Pueblo CO December 13 1883 p 8 Archived from the original on September 12 2017 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 The many friends of Mr Thornton Chase Denver Rocky Mountain News Denver CO May 6 1883 p 2 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 subscription required Rico keeping up its lick Pueblo Chieftain Pueblo CO March 15 1917 p 7 Retrieved Sep 20 2017 subscription required The Lead Works Colorado Daily Chieftain Pueblo CO April 30 1882 p 3 Retrieved Sep 19 2017 The Denver Inter Ocean this week Rocky Mountain Sun Aspen CO September 23 1882 p 2 Archived from the original on September 12 2017 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 Tom Dowen s Ride is Fairplay Flume Fairplay CO October 5 1882 p 2 Archived from the original on September 12 2017 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 The Christmas number Rocky Mountain Sun Aspen CO December 30 1882 p 2 Archived from the original on September 12 2017 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 The Legion of Honor gave Denver Republican Denver CO December 8 1882 p 9 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 subscription required Forefathers day Denver Republican Denver CO December 23 1882 p 4 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 subscription required Bully Brittons Denver Republican Denver CO December 30 1882 p 6 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 subscription required Musical and literary entertainment Denver Rocky Mountain News Denver CO February 18 1883 p 10 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 subscription required Sons of America Hall advert Denver Rocky Mountain News Denver CO March 17 1883 p 4 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 subscription required At the Siont Street Cathedral Denver Rocky Mountain News Denver CO March 26 1883 p 4 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 subscription required A new Colorado book by a new author Colorado Daily Chieftain Pueblo CO September 10 1884 p 5 Archived from the original on September 12 2017 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 Del Norte Mr and Mrs Thornton Chase Denver Rocky Mountain News Denver CO April 19 1885 p 13 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 subscription required Stockman 2002 p 93 Stockman 2002 p 93 94 Kline Rebecca Nov 5 2011 At the Edge of a New Threshold Swedenborg Revelation and the New Church Harvard Divinity School class 2460 Crossing the Threshold of Divine Revelation Professor William J Abraham Cambridge Swedenborg Chapel Archived from the original on Dec 10 2007 Retrieved Apr 27 2008 Stockman 2002 p 97 Stockman 2002 p 97 99 Grand comic opera Carbonate Chronicle Leadville CO June 14 1886 p 3 Archived from the original on September 12 2017 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 Dots from Denver The Chiftain scribe Colorado Daily Chieftain Pueblo CO August 24 1886 p 2 Retrieved Sep 19 2017 a b c d The Insurance Press F Webster 1912 p 181 Stockman 2002 p 105 Union Mutual Life Insurance Company The Inter Ocean Chicago IL 7 March 1888 p 10 Archived from the original on 10 September 2017 Retrieved July 1 2014 Thornton Chase San Francisco Chronicle San Francisco CA 26 July 1888 p 8 Archived from the original on 10 September 2017 Retrieved July 1 2014 Thornton Chase The Los Angeles Times Los Angeles CA 26 Aug 1888 p 3 Archived from the original on 2017 09 10 Retrieved Sep 10 2017 The Rico News comes Colorado Daily Chieftain Pueblo CO July 3 1892 p 4 Archived from the original on September 12 2017 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 Paul Porchea 1889 The Musical History of Colorado Charles Westley pp 64 78 127 164 Thornton Chase Sketches Portland Maine Union Mutual Life Insurance Co 1893 Stockman 2002 p 110 Congregational Church Santa Cruz Sentinel Santa Cruz CA 20 Jan 1891 p 3 Archived from the original on 2017 09 10 Retrieved Sep 10 2017 The residences of the following Santa Cruz Sentinel Santa Cruz CA 5 Nov 1891 p 3 Archived from the original on 2017 09 10 Retrieved Sep 10 2017 The Rose Fair Santa Cruz Sentinel Santa Cruz CA 26 Apr 1892 p 3 Archived from the original on 2017 09 10 Retrieved Jul 1 2014 Sunshine villa The garden party a brilliant success Santa Cruz Sentinel Santa Cruz CA 10 Jul 1892 p 3 Archived from the original on 2017 09 10 Retrieved Sep 10 2017 In Southern California A pleasant evening PDF Los Angeles Herald Los Angeles CA Apr 29 1893 p 3 Retrieved Sep 16 2017 Stockman 2002 p 113 At the Murray Omaha World Herald Omaha NE May 4 1893 p 2 Retrieved Sep 11 2017 subscription required Thornton Chase superintendent The Salt Lake Tribune Salt Lake City UT 30 May 1893 p 3 Archived from the original on 10 September 2017 Retrieved July 1 2014 Insurance circles sudden accidental death of President John E DeWitt The Inter Ocean Chicago IL 2 Sep 1893 p 8 Archived from the original on 2017 09 10 Retrieved Sep 10 2017 Stockman 2002 p 115 118 New president for the Union Mutual The Inter Ocean Chicago IL 12 Oct 1893 p 10 Archived from the original on 2017 09 10 Retrieved Sep 10 2017 Life insurance men banquet The Inter Ocean Chicago IL 18 April 1894 p 8 Archived from the original on 10 September 2017 Retrieved July 1 2014 Stockman 2002 p 119 Candace Moore Hill 2010 Bahaʼi Temple Arcadia Publishing p 6 ISBN 978 0 7385 8421 8 Stockman 2002 p 120 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Stockman Robert H 2009 Chase Thornton 1847 1912 Bahaʼi Encyclopedia Project Evanston IL National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahaʼis of the United States Archived from the original on 2016 10 12 Pueblo pickings Colorado Daily Chieftain Pueblo CO June 17 1894 p 4 Retrieved Sep 20 2017 Tell of its glories Chicago Tribune Chicago IL 19 Jun 1894 p 8 Archived from the original on 2017 09 10 Retrieved Sep 10 2017 Stockman 2002 p 122 123 Stockman Robert H 2001 The Search Ends Thornton Chase First American Bahaʼi Wilmette Baha i Publishing Trust ISBN 978 0 87743 282 1 Archived from the original on 2016 12 20 Note the first Western woman to the join the religion was Kate Ives See Will C van den Hoonaard 16 December 1996 The Origins of the Bahaʼi Community of Canada 1898 1948 Wilfrid Laurier Univ Press p 17 ISBN 978 0 88920 272 6 Thornton Chase The Inter Ocean Chicago IL 29 January 1897 p 5 Archived from the original on 10 September 2017 Retrieved July 1 2014 a b Chase s words quoted The Inter Ocean Chicago IL 26 February 1897 p 4 Archived from the original on 10 September 2017 Insurance circles meeting of the Chicago Life Underwriters The Inter Ocean Chicago IL 24 May 1899 p 10 Archived from the original on 10 September 2017 Retrieved July 1 2014 Tarunjit Singh Butalia Dianne P Small 2004 Religion in Ohio Profiles of Faith Communities Ohio University Press p 351 ISBN 978 0 8214 1551 1 Bruce Whitmore Nov 1976 The education of an editor Albert Windust and Star of the West first of two parts Bahaʼi News p 12 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 William P Collins Apr 1977 Kenosha the history of the second Bahaʼi community in the United States part 1 Bahaʼi News pp 5 6 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 Stockman 2002 p 142 a b c Marzieh Gail 1991 Arches of the Years Ronald ISBN 978 0 85398 325 5 a b Stockman 2002 p 158 a b c Susan Maneck 1994 Women in the Bahaʼi Faith In Arvind Sharma ed Religion and Women SUNY Press pp 211 228 ISBN 978 0 7914 1689 1 Stockman 2002 p 153 a b Morrison Gayle 1982 To move the world Louis G Gregory and the advancement of racial unity in America Wilmette Ill Bahaʼi Publishing Trust pp 31 328 ISBN 0 87743 188 4 Stockman 2002 p 177 Stockman 2002 p 180 Stockman 2002 p 160 161 178 O Z Whitehead July 2 1996 Portraits of Some Baha i Women George Ronald p 145 ISBN 0853984034 a b Will C van den Hoonaard 30 October 2010 The Origins of the Bahaʼi Community of Canada 1898 1948 Wilfrid Laurier Univ Press p 1986 ISBN 978 1 55458 706 3 Friday Dec 4 Bahaism The Courier Journal Louisville KY 4 Dec 1903 p 4 Retrieved Sep 16 2017 a b Kenneth Walter Cameron 1980 Transcendentalists in Transition Transcendental Books pp 157 8 162 7 180 239 241 Thornton Chase 1908 In Galilee Chicago Bahai Pub Society Stockman 2002 p 208 Stanwood Cobb Mariam Haney eds May 1932 A Baha i Interracial group Cairo Egypt April 1907 caption Star of the West p 64 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Prominent Bahaist Coming The Cincinnati Enquirer Cincinnati OH 25 October 1908 p 28 Archived from the original on 10 September 2017 Retrieved Jul 1 2014 To aid children of poor The Inter Ocean Chicago IL 7 May 1908 p 7 Retrieved July 1 2014 President of Society that has raised a Fund to aid children The Inter Ocean Chicago IL 28 March 1909 p 10 Retrieved Jul 1 2014 From various of the articles the names include Geraldine Farrar Lillyan Shaffner Ragna Linne Nellie E Cox Susan R Moody Eva Russell Mrs A B Burrows Jane Mason Mrs Edgar Waite Mrs A R Windust Cecillia Harrison Mrs Albert Kirchner Thornton B Chase Mr and Mrs Marshall Roe and Mrs Flinn Plan temple to prophet The Inter Ocean Chicago IL 27 Sep 1908 p 11 Retrieved Sep 19 2017 New Chicago Church will cost 500 000 The Decatur Herald Decatur IL 28 Sep 1908 p 8 Retrieved Sep 19 2017 Persian prophet will have Chicago Temple Kalamazoo Gazette Kalamazoo MI October 25 1908 p 2 Retrieved Sep 20 2017 subscription required Women to build great temple with own hands St Louis Post Dispatch St Louis MO 1 Nov 1908 p 53 Retrieved Sep 19 2017 Persian prophet will have Chicago temple Greensboro Daily News Greensboro NC 12 Nov 1908 p 5 Retrieved Sep 19 2017 Temple to Bahai The Evening Star Independence KS 23 Nov 1908 p 8 Retrieved Sep 19 2017 Temple to Bahai The Evening Star Independence KS 24 Nov 1908 p 6 Retrieved Sep 19 2017 Bruce Whitmore Jan 1976 Mother of the Temple the story of Hand of the Cause of God Corinne Knight True Bahaʼi News p 5 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 Thinks Millennium is near Chicago Daily Tribune Chicago IL 19 February 1909 p 8 Bahais hold convention The Inter Ocean Chicago IL 21 March 1909 p 3 Archived from the original on 10 September 2017 Retrieved Jul 1 2014 Thornton Chase The Bahai Revelation Chicago Bahaʼi Publishing Society 1909 Stockman 2002 p 222 Stockman 2002 p 224 The Revelation of Baha o llah The Los Angeles Times Los Angeles CA 1 May 1910 p 88 Archived from the original on 13 September 2017 Retrieved Aug 16 2016 Thornton Chase to speak The Oregon Daily Journal Portland OR 2 May 1911 p 9 Archived from the original on 10 September 2017 Retrieved Sep 10 2017 Random remarks continued Morning Register Eugene OR 21 May 1911 p 16 Archived from the original on 10 September 2017 Retrieved Sep 10 2017 Mary M Rabb May 10 1910 Albert R Windust Gertrude Buikema eds News from the Occident Portland Ore Star of the West p 6 Archived from the original on September 14 2017 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Stockman 2002 p 229 F B Beckett Apr 9 1910 Albert R Windust Gertrude Buikema eds Los Angeles Star of the West p 7 Archived from the original on 2017 09 13 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Albert R Windust Gertrude Buikema eds May 17 1910 Record of the second annual convention of Bahai Temple Unity held April 25 and 26 1910 Star of the West pp 17 8 Archived from the original on September 13 2017 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Albert R Windust Gertrude Buikema eds Feb 7 1911 Assemblies in the Occident Star of the West p 10 Archived from the original on 2017 09 13 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Albert R Windust Gertrude Buikema eds Mar 21 1911 Orient Occident Unity Star of the West pp 6 7 Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 G N Clark June 5 1911 Albert R Windust Gertrude Buikema eds From the American field Denver Colo Star of the West p 8 Archived from the original on September 13 2017 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Thornton Chase Aug 20 1911 Albert R Windust Gertrude Buikema eds untitled Star of the West pp 7 8 Archived from the original on 2017 09 13 Retrieved Aug 16 2016 the text itself is online at Gustav Spiller ed 1911 Papers on inter racial problems communicated to the first Universal Races Congress University of London London P S King amp son Boston U S A The World s Peace Foundation Archived from the original on 2017 02 13 Thornton Chase Nov 23 1911 Albert R Windust Gertrude Buikema eds California News Star of the West pp 13 4 Archived from the original on 2017 09 13 Retrieved Aug 16 2016 Gleanings from the golden gate Morning Register Eugene OR 21 May 1912 p 17 Archived from the original on 10 September 2017 Retrieved Sep 10 2017 Albert Vail ed Nov 1922 A pioneer at the Golden Gate Star of the West pp 203 7 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Robert H Stockman Jul 15 2015 1991 Stephen Lambden ed The Baha Faith in the United States 1921 to the present PDF Baha i Studies Bulletin Hurqayla Publications Center for Shaykhi and Babi Baha i studies University of California at Merced see page 5 of the pdf Retrieved Sep 23 2017 Stockman 2002 p 265 a b Robert Stockman Oct 1987 ʻAbdu l Baha in America Passing of the first American Bahaʼi Bahaʼi News pp 4 8 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 Angeleno s tomb to be a world Mecca The Los Angeles Times Los Angeles CA 28 Dec 1913 pp 11 2 Archived from the original on 2017 09 10 Retrieved Sep 10 2017 Stockman 2002 p 261 262 Los Angeles Bahai Assembly Oct 16 1912 Mirza Ahmad Sohrab Zia M Bagdadhi eds Letter from Los Angeles California Star of the West pp 5 6 Archived from the original on 2017 09 13 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Alfred G Langley Feb 1913 Alumni 1870 n Brown Alumni Monthly Providence RI 13 7 190 1 Retrieved Sep 17 2013 Wilfred H Munro March 1916 The letter box Two more Brown veterans Brown Alumni Monthly Providence RI 16 8 219 Retrieved Sep 17 2017 Munro is saying a text should be updated to reflect more service of two students including Chase There are some dozen students noted who served with black regiments See James Burrill Angell 1868 Henry Sweetser Burrage John Larkin Lincoln eds Brown University in the Civil War a memorial Providence RI Brown University pp 54 349 354 357 359 372 374 Thornton Chase Oct 16 1912 Mirza Ahmad Sohrab Zia M Bagdadhi eds El Abha Star of the West pp 3 4 Archived from the original on 2016 04 16 Retrieved Aug 16 2016 ʻAbdu l Baha Mirza Ahmad Sohrab 1929 ʻAbdul Baha in Egypt J H Sears amp Co Inc pp 30 34 Archived from the original on 2017 02 23 Rev David Buchanan Oct 16 1912 Mirza Ahmad Sohrab Zia M Bagdadhi eds Tribute from Portland Oregon Star of the West p 6 Archived from the original on 2017 09 13 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Arthur S Agnew Oct 16 1912 Mirza Ahmad Sohrab Zia M Bagdadhi eds A tribute from Chicago Star of the West pp 6 7 Archived from the original on 2017 09 13 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Husein A Afnan Mar 2 1913 Mirza Ahmad Sohrab Zia M Bagdadhi eds In Remembrance Thornton Chase Star of the West pp 9 10 Archived from the original on 2017 09 13 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Thornton Chase Sep 27 1913 Albert R Windust Gertrude Buikema Zia M Bagdadi eds To the Center of the Covenant Abdul Baha Abbas Star of the West pp 187 8 Archived from the original on 2017 09 13 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Thornton Chase Mar 2 1922 Albert R Windust Gertrude Buikema Zia M Bagdadi eds Ode to the Center of the Covenant Star of the West pp 304 5 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Albert R Windust Gertrude Buikema Zia M Bagdadi eds Sep 27 1913 The anniversary of Abdu l Baha s visit to the grace of Thorning Chase October nineteenth Star of the West pp 188 90 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Albert R Windust Gertrude Buikema Zia M Bagdadi eds Sep 27 1913 The Mashrak el Azkar in America suggestions Star of the West p 193 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Thornton Chase Sep 27 1913 Albert R Windust Gertrude Buikema Zia M Bagdadi eds The Greatest Name Star of the West p 194 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 H C W Nov 4 1913 Albert R Windust Gertrude Buikema Zia M Bagdadi eds First anniversary of the passing of Thornton Chase Star of the West pp 225 6 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Thomas Kelly Cheyne Jan 19 1914 Albert R Windust Gertrude Buikema Zia M Bagdadi eds Allaho Abha sic Star of the West p 287 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Thornton Chase Feb 7 1914 Albert R Windust Gertrude Buikema Zia M Bagdadi eds Faith Knowledge Prayer Obedience Star of the West pp 299 300 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Albert R Windust Gertrude Buikema Zia M Bagdadi eds Sep 27 1914 In memorium Thornton Chase Star of the West p 169 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Thornton Chase Jan 19 1915 Albert R Windust Gertrude Buikema Zia M Bagdadi eds A brief history of the American development of the Bahai movement Star of the West pp 263 5 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Albert R Windust Gertrude Buikema Zia M Bagdadi eds Sep 27 1915 In memorium Thornton Chase Star of the West p 88 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Albert R Windust Gertrude Buikema Zia M Bagdadi eds June 24 1918 Letter from Charles Mason Remey Star of the West p 77 Archived from the original on September 14 2017 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Frank B Beckett June 24 1918 Albert R Windust Gertrude Buikema Zia M Bagdadi eds In Memoriam Thornton Chase Star of the West p 78 Archived from the original on September 14 2017 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Albert R Windust Gertrude Buikema Zia M Bagdadi eds Mar 2 1920 The grave of Thornton Chase caption Star of the West p 339 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 see pages 109 14 18 of compiled from letters by Martha Root Jul 13 1920 Albert R Windust Gertrude Buikema Zia M Bagdadi eds A Bahai pilgrimage to South America Star of the West pp 107 110 113 118 continued Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 and page 216 of Albert R Windust Gertrude Buikema Zia M Bagdadi eds Oct 16 1920 A Bahai pilgrimage to South America Star of the West pp 206 7 211 216 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Albert R Windust Gertrude Buikema Zia M Bagdadi eds Mar 2 1922 Obituary Dr George Davidson Buchannan BA PhD Star of the West pp 331 3 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Hooper Harris Mar 2 1922 Albert R Windust Gertrude Buikema Zia M Bagdadi eds Obituary William H Hoar Star of the West pp 310 2 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Albert Vail ed Nov 1922 A pioneer at the Golden Gate Star of the West pp 203 7 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 In memoriam Mrs Mary J Porter Bahaʼi News Mar 1926 p 8 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Horace Holley Jul 1926 Green Acre Star of the West pp 117 22 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Stanwood Cobb Mariam Haney eds Apr 1932 Seeking and Finding by one who has sought and found Star of the West pp 27 30 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Willard P Hatch Apr 1925 At the grave of Thornton Chase Star of the West pp 403 4 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Memorial to Thornton Chase Bahaʼi News Jan 1927 p 7 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Members of National Assembly meet with delegats of 1927 convention Bahaʼi News Mar 1928 pp 3 4 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Louis Gregory Jun 1928 A few impressions of the Twentied Annual Convention Bahaʼi News pp 1 3 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Committees of the national spiritual assembly 1928 1929 Bahaʼi News Jul 1928 p 2 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Committees of the national spiritual assembly 1929 1930 Bahaʼi News Jul 1929 p 4 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Committees of the national spiritual assembly 1930 31 Bahaʼi News Jul 1930 p 2 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 a b Marzieh Gail Jul 1974 For John with love personal memories of the illustrious John Bosch early Bahaʼi teacher pioneer and friend of ʻAbdu l Baha Bahaʼi News pp 9 18 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 Thornton Chase Dec 1930 Stanwood Cobb Mariam Haney eds What is truth Star of the West pp 267 9 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 The Bahaʼi World Vol 2 Bahaʼi Publishing Trust 1980 1928 p 218 Howard MacNutt at the graveside Bahaʼi News Apr 1974 p 21 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 Willard P Hatch Feb 1931 Thornton Chase memorial dinner Bahaʼi News p 10 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 The Bahaʼi World Vol 3 Bahaʼi Publishing Trust 1930 pp 324 9 probably Willard Hatch Apr 1932 Stanwood Cobb Mariam Haney eds Seeking and Finding by one who has sought and found Star of the West pp 27 30 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Willard P Hatch John D Bosch May 1932 Report of Thornton Chase memorial committee Bahaʼi News p 16 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Letter from the National Spiritual Assembly Bahaʼi News Apr 1933 p 4 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Charlette M Linfoot Jul 1933 The story of the convention Bahaʼi News pp 1 6 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 The non political character of the Baha i Faith Bahaʼi News Jan 1934 pp 2 3 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 News of the Cause The United States and Canada Los Angeles Bahaʼi News Feb 1934 p 7 Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Mrs Claudia Stuart Cole s Baha i book offered for sale Bahaʼi News Jan 1935 p 10 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 News from American communities Los Angeles Bahaʼi News Mar 1935 p 11 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Archives Bahaʼi News Jun 1935 pp 2 3 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Collecting tablets revealed to the Disciples of ʻAbdu l Baha Bahaʼi News Jul 1935 p 3 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Willar P Hatch for the Spiritual Assembly of the Bahaʼis of Los Angeles Dec 1937 The grave of Thornton Chase Bahaʼi News pp 7 8 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 Edwin W Mattoon May T Sheppler Mrs R D Pettit Julia Sobel C M Remey Apr 1938 Annual committee reports 1937 1938 Archives and History Bahaʼi News p 6 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 The Bahaʼi World Vol 7 Bahaʼi Publishing Committee 1939 pp 384 90 Compiled by the National Bahaʼi Archives of the National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahaʼis of the United States 2005 1983 Guidelines for Bahaʼi Archives 3rd ed National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahaʼis of the United States p 67 a b compiled by the National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahaʼis of the United States and Canada 1944 The Early years The Bahaʼi Centenary 1844 1944 Bahaʼi Publishing Committee pp 156 7 a b Centenary Book Bahaʼi News Feb 1945 p 4 Archived from the original on 2017 09 16 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 Ethel W Wright 17 Mar 1945 Looks at books A new world fate The Pittsburgh Courier Pittsburgh PA p 6 Retrieved Sep 16 2017 Local communities Current activities Los Angeles Bahaʼi News May 1945 p 11 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 Gathering at the Thornton Chase Memorial Bahaʼi News Feb 1946 p 3 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 Scheffler Carl Aug 1945 Thornton Chase First American Baha i PDF World Order Vol 11 no 5 pp 152 7 Archived PDF from the original on 2017 09 16 Retrieved Sep 10 2017 Southern California Bahaʼi News Sep 1948 p 12 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 Grave of Thornton Chase Bahaʼi News Feb 1950 p 4 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 Thorton Chase memorial Bahaʼi News Nov 1951 p 10 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 National news briefs Bahaʼi News Oct 1953 p 10 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 Thornton Chase memorial Bahaʼi News Oct 1954 p 14 Archived from the original on 2017 09 16 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 Thornton Chase Bahaʼi News Oct 1955 p 14 Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 Thornton Chase memorial meeting held Bahaʼi News Dec 1958 p 20 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 International news briefs Last September 30 Bahaʼi News Jan 1962 p 4 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 Memorial rights for first American Baha i conducted Bahaʼi News Dec 1963 p 11 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 Annual Thornton Chase Memorial Bahaʼi News Dec 1965 p 20 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 A memorial service Bahaʼi News Dec 1966 p 23 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 Memorial to first American believer Bahaʼi News Feb 1968 p 17 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 58th Thornton Chase memorial program Bahaʼi News Aug 1970 p 2 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 Memorial to the first American believer Bahaʼi News Dec 1970 p 21 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 O Z Whitehead Feb 1973 Thornton Chase memorial service Oct 1 1972 Bahaʼi News p 5 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 The Thornton Chase memorial Bahaʼi News Dec 1969 p 14 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 Annamarie K Hannold Nov 1972 Glimpses of early Bahaʼi pilgrimages part 2 The first American Bahaʼis on pilgrimage Bahaʼi News pp 5 6 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 O Z Whitehead Feb 1973 Thornton Chase first Bahaʼi in the Western World Bahaʼi News pp 2 5 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 United States State teaching plan launched in Illinois Bahaʼi News Nov 1974 pp 3 5 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 Christopher Buck August 2004 The eschatology of globalization the multiple messiahship of Bahaʼu llah revisited PDF In Moshe Sharon W J Hanegraaff P Pratap Kumar eds Studies in Modern Religions and Religious Movements and the Babi Baha i Faiths Mumen Book Series Studies in the history of religions Vol CIV Brill Academic Publishers pp 143 173 ISBN 9789004139046 World wide Bahais sic meet in St Louis this week The Pittsburgh Courier Pittsburgh PA 7 Sep 1974 p 15 Retrieved Sep 16 2017 Robert Weinberg 1997 Roger White An Obituary Writer and editor poet laureate of the Bahaʼi community 1929 1993 Bahaʼi Studies Review London UK Association for Baha i Studies English Speaking Europe 7 Retrieved Sep 23 2017 Roger White 1979 Graveyards Are Not My Style Thornton Chase 1847 1912 Another Song Another Season Poems and Portrayals G Ronald pp 40 7 ISBN 978 0 85398 088 9 Stockman R 1985 Baha i Faith in America Origins 1892 1900 Wilmette Ill Baha i Publishing Trust of the United States pp 33 6 ISBN 978 0 87743 199 2 Chase is discussed across many pages Preface 8 9 11 12 4 6 14 5 19 25 6 33 38 44 7 55 59 60 64 5 70 73 75 unnumbered photographs on pages 1 and 5 after page 78 79 88 9 103 6 110 115 122 125 127 142 172 3 177 179 192 3 198 201 230 3 253 5 276 299 301 4 307 11 320 323 4 328 9 332 3 352 362 3 378 392 395 6 397 400 Stockman R 1985 Baha i Faith in America The Early Expansion 1900 1912 Volume 2 Wilmette Ill George Ronald ISBN 978 0 87743 282 1 Archived from the original on 2017 09 16 Tribute to Thornton Chase his services will ever be remembered Bahaʼi News Oct 1987 p 9 Archived from the original on 2017 09 14 Retrieved Sep 14 2017 Marguerite Reimer Sears 2003 Bill A biography of Hand of the Cause of God William Sears Desert Rose Publishing p 38 ISBN 0 9743979 0 3 Kazem Kazemzadeh Trustee of Huququ llah dead at 91 The American Baha i Feb 1990 New 50 000 Granite monument placed on grave of Thornton Chase after 7 year fund raising effort The American Baha i Jan 19 1994 Article on Chase memorial in January issue contained inaccuracies omissions The American Baha i June 24 1994 Monuments and Open Space Work Rik Sargent Studios Archived from the original on 2017 06 29 Retrieved Sep 15 2017 Tom Mennillo Aug 1 1994 Celebrating the Centenary Chicago Banquet an opportunity to look back forward The American Baha i An open invitation The American Baha i Aug 1 1994 Robert Sockett Jonathan Menon October 17 2012 The Last Days of Thornton Chase 239Days com Archived from the original on October 22 2016 Retrieved Sep 13 2017 Robert Sockett October 18 2012 Thornton Chase s Long Season of Suffering 239days com Retrieved Sep 16 2017 Robert Sockett Oct 22 2013 Thornton Chase s Long Season of Suffering Bahaiteachings org Retrieved Sep 16 2017 Stockman Robert H 2002 Thornton Chase First American Bahaʼi Bahaʼi Pub Trust ISBN 978 0 87743 282 1 Further reading EditRobert H Stockman 2001 Love s Odyssey The Life of Thornton Chase draft of a book later published as Thornton Chase The First American Bahaʼi Bahai library com Retrieved Sep 11 2017 Stockman Robert H 2009 Chase Thornton 1847 1912 Bahaʼi Encyclopedia Project Evanston IL National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahaʼis of the United States External links EditWorks by or about Thornton Chase at Internet Archive Works by Thornton Chase at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Robert Stockman 1985 Notes on the Thornton Chase Papers Bahai library com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thornton Chase amp oldid 1177439957, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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