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William Speer (minister)

William Speer (1822–1904) was an American pioneer Presbyterian missionary and author. He was missionary to the Chinese in Canton (1847–1850), where he helped establish the first Presbytery in Canton, and to the Chinese in California (1852–1857), where he founded the first Chinese Protestant church outside of China and became a strong advocate for the Chinese in California. Later (1865–1876) he served in Pennsylvania as the Secretary of the Presbyterian Board of Education.[1][2]

Rev. Dr.
William Speer
Photo from "History of the Presbytery of Washington (Pennsylvania)", Philadelphia (1889) p.70
Born(1822-04-24)April 24, 1822
New Alexandria, Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, US
DiedFebruary 16, 1904(1904-02-16) (aged 81)
Washington, Washington County, Pennsylvania, US

Missionary to the Chinese in Canton and in California edit

 
Speer sailed to Macao (December 1846), moved on to Canton (Spring 1847), and sailed back to New York (1850). Almost all the Chinese he ministered to in California (1852-1857) emigrated from the Pearl River Delta districts west of Canton and Macao.

After three years of medical studies and after being licensed to preach in 1846, Speer was sent by the Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions as a medical missionary to establish a mission in Canton (now Guangzhou) in the Pearl River Delta in southern China, where he served from the end of 1846 to the end of 1849. Describing his new surroundings in the Pearl River Delta, he later wrote: "Towns embowered in bamboo, a species of banyan and other trees meet the eye on every hand. The level portion of the soil is cultivated as only the Chinese know how to do in order to obtain the utmost possible returns from Nature. The view appears like a great garden bounded by ranges of hills. The narrow streets of the towns are densely crowded with men following every trade and means of procuring a subsistence which the necessities of human nature can suggest."[3]: 472 

Learning the Cantonese language, Speer (phoneticized in Cantonese: 施比爾)[4] worked alongside Dr. Peter Parker at the Canton Hospital. He also helped organize the first Presbytery in Canton in February 1849, which he commemorated 50 years later.[5] Due to ill health, he departed Canton and sailed to the U.S. in 1850.

Speer was later sent in 1852 by the Presbyterian Board of Missions to San Francisco, California to minister to the Chinese immigrants there. He was fluent in Cantonese and knew the Chinese culture well. In January 1853, through an article in The Princeton Review, he advanced the thesis that, not only should emigrant Chinese be welcomed in California, but also their presence is providential "provision for the necessities" of the vast unimproved West, from agriculture to fisheries, from infrastructure to mining, which would "in time advance California to an equality with the proudest portions of our land".[6]: 14–17 

Beginning February 1853, he leased and used the second floor of a store front as a temporary chapel, where he preached regularly in Cantonese to a group of thirty or so.[7] To raise awareness of and money for his ministry, he gave lectures in English on Chinese culture, from Confucius at the Mercantile Library to Chinese Farmer at the agricultural fair, all of which attracted much attention from the non-Chinese public.[8][9] As Speer continued to speak in sermons and lectures, defending the Chinese and explaining their culture and civilization, he reported in 1853 that some Chinese asked him to be their "chief in this country", to act on their behalf, to shield them from acts of injury or plunder.[7]

On November 6, 1853, he held the first church meeting for the Chinese, in which he preached in Cantonese followed by a brief English version for the assembled congregation at the First Presbyterian Church.[10] In so doing, together with four Chinese church members (Atsun, Lai Sam, A-tsen, and Hi Cheong Kow), Speer founded the first Chinese Protestant church outside of China—the Chinese Mission Chapel in 1853,[11] now the Presbyterian Church in Chinatown.[12]

The brick Chinese Chapel building, two stories plus basement at the northeast corner of Stockton and Sacramento Streets in San Francisco's Chinatown, was erected for $18,000, which was largely raised from San Franciscans of all denominations.[13] It was dedicated June 1854.[14][15] In the basement Speer started an evening English school. For the Chinese immigrants who suffered illnesses from the long voyage to San Francisco, Speer opened a dispensary in the basement, at which Dr. Ayres, Dr. Coon and Dr. Downer gave gratuitous services. On the main level, he held two Sunday services and a Wednesday evening prayer meeting, as well as distributing tracts. In August 1854, there were 40 or more in the services and 17 pupils in the evening English school.[7][16] He moved his residence into the upper level of the chapel building in 1855.

In January 1855, as founder and editor, Speer published the first English/Chinese newspaper, The Oriental (東涯新錄 traditional; 东涯新录 simplified), which had a circulation of 20,000 copies the first year and was the second Chinese-language newspaper in North America.[17][18] In the inaugural issue, he made the prophetic observation that the Chinese, who were hard working with experience building large projects, would become builders of the proposed transcontinental railroad across the United States.[19]

"the boundless plateaus of the Western half of this continent ... will be scattered with busy lines of Chinese builders of iron roads, that shall link the two oceans, and add to the wealth and comforts of the dwellers upon either shore." - William Speer (January 4, 1855)[19]

After the California Supreme Court ruled in December 1854 that the Chinese had no rights to testify against whites, Speer responded in the 18 January 1855 issue, "The principles of the Magna Carta, the prerogatives of juries, the rights of judges and advocates, Republicanism and Christianity, and common humanity are all outraged by this iniquitous decision of the Supreme Court of California".[20]: 22 

In the 8 February 1855 issue, Speer pointed out that Chinese living in the Pearl River Delta "were better acquainted with other countries than any other portion of the Chinese. ... When the news of the discovery of gold ... reached them, it was natural that they, above all other Chinese, should rush to California." Speer's insight regarding 19th-century Chinese emigration is supported by the modern research of historian Yong Chen.[21]: 13, 23 

The Oriental ceased publication after about two years; upon its discontinuance in December 1856, Ze Too Yune (司徒源) took up the mantle and founded the Chinese Daily News in Sacramento.[18] According to biographer W. C. Covert, Speer's bilingual newsletter "did much to soften the racial antipathy that made the life for the Chinese almost intolerable."[1] Historian Kevin Starr stated that "As editor of The Oriental, Speer broke his health campaigning against oppression of the Chinese".[22]: 71 

Speer was an early advocate of fair treatment for Chinese immigrants in California. Historian M. L. Stahler called him the "champion of California's Chinese".[23] According to historian R. Seager, Rev. Speer was "the first champion of the persecuted Chinese in America".[24]: 49  Historian K. Starr saw him as "a lonely champion", who "could not offset the tale of exploitation, exclusion, disenfranchisement, and murder, which characterized the Chinese experience in California."[22]: 109 

In an 1856 pamphlet directed to the California legislature, Speer argued against the tide of anti-Chinese legislation, from the foreign miners' tax to the head tax. Using statistical evidence, he pointed to the benefits of Chinese immigration to the state treasury, that it was in the state's interests "to 'forbid a policy calculated to exclude or debase Chinese immigration'." The foreign miners' tax was reduced and Speer was commended by General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church.[25]

Statesman William H. Seward, then a U.S. Senator, applauded Speer saying, "accept assurances of the sincere respect with which you have inspired me by your resolute assertion of the principles of human freedom and political justice."[26]: 297 

Speer protested discrimination against the Chinese, lobbied on their behalf in Sacramento, and published in 1857 a pamphlet to the California legislature: An answer to the common objections to Chinese testimony: and an earnest appeal to the Legislature of California, for their protection by our law.[27] His activities established precedents for those clergy who came after him; they also defended the Chinese from harassment and discrimination.[28]

With his health failing, Speer delivered a farewell address in July 1857 and departed California.[23]: 128  Two years later, in September 1859, Rev. A. W. Loomis arrived to resume the mission work Speer started in San Francisco.[16] According to historian J. Yung, when the school Speer founded in the Chinese Mission basement in 1853 started to receive public funds in 1859, it became the first public school in the United States for Chinese students.[29] Following Speer's precedents, others established schools for the Chinese, not only in San Francisco, but also in Oakland, Sacramento, Stockton, and other California communities.[28]

Secretary of the Presbyterian Board of Education edit

From January 1866 to July 1876, Speer was back in his home state Pennsylvania serving as the Corresponding Secretary of the Presbyterian Board of Education.[30] In 1866 he was conferred the D.D. degree.[31]

In a note introducing his article Democracy of the Chinese in the November 1868 Harper's Magazine, the editors wrote: "We believe that there are not five men, European or American, who are as thoroughly acquainted as Dr. Speer with the Chinese in their own country. We think there is no other man so fully conversant with the Chinese in California."[32]

In September 1869, Speer journeyed to the West coast overland, via the newly completed transcontinental railroad, visiting the State agricultural fair in Sacramento[3]: 510  on his way to resume work, along with his successor, Rev. Loomis, campaigning on behalf of the Chinese on the coast.[33] Before returning in October to the East, he addressed the joint synods of California, as one from the old school Presbyterian Board of Education, noting that the time had come for the establishment of a theological seminary in California for the ministerial needs of the West and not rely on the seminaries in the East. Two years later, Rev. W. A. Scott, who had helped Speer dedicate the Chinese Chapel in 1854,[15] founded the San Francisco Theological Seminary.[34]: 315 

"The Chinese upon our Pacific coast have proved themselves admirable miners. When the hostility of white foreigners has driven them out of the better mining regions, ... they have still toiled patiently and diligently. ... Thus districts which had been almost abandoned have revived and all classes of the population been directly benefited." --William Speer (1870)[3]: 524–525 

In 1870, Speer published a book, The Oldest and the Newest Empire: China and the United States. An early look at China from an American perspective, the book placed China's long history side by side with the history of trade with Europe and the United States, and Chinese immigration to the United States. Notably, it touted the "glory of America" and an embrace of Christianity as the path for the future of China. Unlike many Americans of his era, Speer saw Chinese immigration as a positive good for both nations. This social vision drew from his faith and aspirations that Chinese immigrants would bring Christianity back to China.[3]

He published another book, The Great Revival of 1800, in 1872.[35]

Personal life edit

William Speer was born April 24, 1822, in New Alexandria, Pennsylvania, the first of seven children, to Dr. James Ramsey and Hetty (Morrow) Speer. He was the grandson of the Rev. William and Sarah (Ramsey) Speer and of Paul and Hettie (Guthrie) Morrow.[36] His father was a surgeon and the first ophthalmologist in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. His paternal grandfather and namesake, Rev. William Speer 1764–1829, was a Presbyterian minister at Greensburg, Pennsylvania; the first chaplain at the seat of the new government of the Northwest Territory, Chillicothe, Ohio; and uncle of President James Buchanan.

After growing up in Pittsburgh and after attending nearby Jefferson College for a short time, William Speer left Pennsylvania for Kenyon College in Ohio, where he graduated in 1840 at age 18. He then studied medicine under his father for three years, and in 1843 at age 21 he was elected resident physician at Wills Hospital in Philadelphia. Heeding a call to the ministry, he studied theology at the Allegheny Seminary and was licensed to preach on April 21, 1846, just a few days shy of his 24th birthday.[26]

He married Cornelia Brackenridge from Allegheny, Pennsylvania, on May 7, 1846.[36] Although he had three other ministry opportunities, they heeded the call to China from the Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions and sailed from New York on July 20, 1846, to the Pearl River Delta in southern China. En route, Cornelia Speer suffered hemorrhages from the lungs; they landed at Macao on December 26, 1846.[37] After losing his wife and baby in Macao in 1847[38] and after learning the language (Cantonese) and laboring under adverse conditions in Canton,[39] William Speer was beset with disorders of the liver and digestive organs[26]: 296  and was sent back, courtesy of Captain Abbott of the Carrington, arriving in New York on March 29, 1850.[40]

 
Mrs. Elizabeth B. Speer (1827-1921). Photo from "History of the Presbytery of Washington (Pennsylvania)", Philadelphia (1889) p. 194

Back in western Pennsylvania as an agent of the Board of Education,[41] Speer regained his health and married Elizabeth Breading Ewing from Washington, Pennsylvania on April 20, 1852.[1] On October 5, 1852, he and his wife sailed from New York to Panama, crossing the Isthmus by rail, boat, and mule pack; they arrived in San Francisco on November 6, 1852.[42]

In San Francisco, they had three children. Exhausted from campaigning against oppression of the Chinese all day and often much of the night, Speer sought rest in Mariposa visiting Rev. W. A. Scott (October 1955) and then in Hawaii (April–September 1856), a longer stay where he preached in Cantonese to the Chinese there. In summer 1857 he and his young family left California for a furlough in the East, hoping to return and resume his work; but after more than a year, he resigned from California, compelled by the progress of disease in his lungs,[26]: 297  which he ascribed "to error and imprudence in overtaxing bodily strength".[42]: 58–59 

In the Midwest, two children born to Rev. William and Elizabeth in 1860 and 1863 died in 1863. Their last child, Breading Speer, was born in 1865 in Minnesota.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Covert, William C. (1935). "William Speer (Apr. 24, 1822 - Feb. 15, 1904)". archive.org. The Dictionary of American Biography: Vol.17, p.442-443.
  2. ^ Forrest, Earle R. (1961). Clifford, Henry H. (ed.). Dr. William Speer: Missionary to the Chinese in China and San Francisco. Los Angeles, California: The Westerners Brand Book: Book Nine.
  3. ^ a b c d William Speer (1870), The Oldest and the Newest Empire: China and the United States National Publishing Company, Chicago, IL.
  4. ^ Tiedemann, R. G. (2010). Handbook of Christianity in China. Volume Two: 1800 to the Present. Leiden: Brill NV. p. 157. ISBN 9789004114302.
  5. ^ Speer, William (October 1899). "First Stones in the Foundation of the Synod of China" (PDF). The Chinese Recorder & Missionary Journal. Vol. XXX, no. 10. pp. 472–480.
  6. ^ Speer, William (January 1853). "China and California". archive.org. The Princeton Review.
  7. ^ a b c Woo, Wesley S. (1990). "Presbyterian Mission: Christianizing and Civilizing The Chinese in Nineteenth Century California". American Presbyterians. 68 (3). Presbyterian Historical Society: American Presbyterians Vol. 68, No. 3 (Fall 1990), pp. 167-178: 167–178. JSTOR 23332664.
  8. ^ "MERCANTILE LIBRARY ASSOCIATION". cdnc.ucr.edu. Daily Alta California, Volume 4, Number 209, 9 August 1853.
  9. ^ "AGRICULTURAL LECTURE". cdnc.ucr.edu. Daily Alta California, Volume 4, Number 271, 20 October 1853.
  10. ^ "First Chinese Church in California". The Presbyterian Magazine - Volume 4 (No. 2) - Page 92. February 1854.
  11. ^ Choy, Philip P. (2008), The Architecture of San Francisco Chinatown (Chinese Historical Society), p.32
  12. ^ Chua, Christopher Viboon (2014). "The Sacredness of Being There: Race, Religion, and Place-Making at San Francisco's Presbyterian Church in Chinatown". UC Berkeley eScholarship. Retrieved 10 October 2020. Established in 1853, the Presbyterian Church in Chinatown (PCC) in San Francisco, CA is the oldest Asian church of any Christian denomination in North America and the first Chinese Protestant church outside China.
  13. ^ Soulé, Frank; Gihon, John H.; Nisbet, James (1854). The Annals of San Francisco. New York: Appleton & Co. p. 699.
  14. ^ "Dedication of a Chinese Chapel". cdnc.ucr.edu. Sacramento Daily Union, Volume 7, Number 1000. 7 June 1854. From the Daily Alta California
  15. ^ a b California: dedication of the Mission House in San Francisco for the Chinese. Philadelphia: The Home and Foreign Record of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America. September 1854. p. 280.
  16. ^ a b "THE MISSION AMONG THE CHINESE OF CALIFORNIA". cdnc.ucr.edu. Sacramento Daily Union, Volume 26, Number 4012, 30 January 1864. Rev. A. W. Loomis gives, in the last Evangel, an account ... of the mission work among the Chinese of this State.
  17. ^ Yang, Tao (January 2009). "Press, Community, and Library: A Study of the Chinese-language Newspapers Published in North America" (PDF). Retrieved 10 October 2020.
  18. ^ a b Cui, Jane (27 October 2021). "Three Earliest Chinese Newspapers and Three Persons (三份早期华文报纸和三位办报人)". American and Chinese History (美华史记), Association of Chinese Americans for Social Justice. Retrieved 23 December 2023.
  19. ^ a b Chinn, Thomas W.; Lai, H. Mark; Choy, Philip P. (1969). "A History of the Chinese in California: The Railroads". cprr.org. Chinese Historical Society of America.
  20. ^ McClain, Charles J. (1994). In Search for Equality: The Chinese Struggle against Discrimination in Nineteenth-Century America. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-20514-6.
  21. ^ Chen, Yong (2000). Chinese San Francisco, 1850-1943: A trans-Pacific community. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0804736053.
  22. ^ a b Starr, Kevin (1973). Americans and the California dream, 1850-1915. Oxford University Press, New York. ISBN 978-0195042337. A lonely champion like William Speer could not offset the tale of exploitation, exclusion, disenfranchisement, and murder which characterized the Chinese experience in California.
  23. ^ a b Stahler, Michael L. (1970). "William Speer: Champion of California's Chinese, 1852—1857". Journal of Presbyterian History (1962-1985). 48 (2): 113–129. ISSN 0022-3883. JSTOR 23327321.
  24. ^ Seager, Robert (February 1959). "Some Denominational Reactions to Chinese Immigration to California, 1856-1892". Pacific Historical Review. 28 (1). University of California Press: 49–66. doi:10.2307/3636239. JSTOR 3636239.
  25. ^ William Speer (1856), "An Humble Plea. Addressed to the Legislature of California in Behalf of the Immigrants from the Empire of China to this State." The Office of The Oriental, San Francisco. As quoted in Seager, Robert (1959), "Some denominational reactions to Chinese immigration to California, 1856-1892." Pacific Historical Review 28, no. 1: 49-50
  26. ^ a b c d "SPEER, WILLIAM". The Princeton Review, Index Volume from 1825 to 1868; Part II: Authors - biographical notes by the editor and friends. Philadelphia (1871). 1871. pp. 295–298.
  27. ^ Speer, William (1857). "An answer to the common objections to Chinese testimony: and an earnest appeal to the Legislature of California, for their protection by our law". Chinese Mission House, San Francisco.
  28. ^ a b Wollenberg, Charles M. (1978). All Deliberate Speed: Segregation and Exclusion in California Schools, 1855-1975. University of California Press. p. 34. ISBN 9780520317031.
  29. ^ Yung, Judy (2006). San Francisco's Chinatown. San Francisco, CA: Arcadia Publishing. p. 36. ISBN 0738531308.
  30. ^ "Biographical Index of Missionaries -- SPEER, Rev. & Mrs. William". phcmontreat.org. Retrieved 21 August 2021.
  31. ^ "SPEER, William. missionary". archive.org. Appleton's Cyclopedia of American Biography, Vol. 5: PICKERING to SUMTER, edited by James Grant Wilson and John Fiske. New York: D. Appleton and Company. 1888. Retrieved 22 April 2022. In 1865 he was called to Philadelphia, to be corresponding secretary of the Presbyterian board of education, which he aided in reorganizing, a measure that resulted from the reunion of the two branches of the church, which took place in 1869. ... The degree of D.D. was conferred upon him in 1866.
  32. ^ Speer, William (November 1868). "Democracy of the Chinese". Harper's Magazine. Retrieved 10 October 2020.
  33. ^ "A private letter from the Rev. William Speer, D.D., dated Philadelphia, August 20th, advising of his expected departure for the scene of his former labors upon this coast, as a missionary to the Chinese". cdnc.ucr.edu. Sacramento Daily Union, Volume 37, Number 5753, 4 September 1869. Retrieved 22 April 2022.
  34. ^ Drury, Clifford M. (1967). William Anderson Scott: No ordinary man. Glendale, California: Arthur H. Clark Company.
  35. ^ William Speer (1872), The Great Revival of 1800[1] Presbyterian Board of Publication, Philadelphia.
  36. ^ a b Brown, John Howard (1903). "SPEER, William - missionary". Lamb's biographical dictionary of the United States, Vol. VII, Seaton -- Zueblin. Federal Book Company, Boston. p. 163.
  37. ^ Lowrie, John C. (1895). "Mrs. Cornelia Speer". reprinted in Rankin, William (1895). Philadelphia, Presbyterian Board of Publication: Memorials of Foreign Missionaries of the Presbyterian Church U.S.A., pp. 344-348. Author J.C.L. quoted extensively the narrative of Rev. William Speer.
  38. ^ Ride, Lindsay; Ride, May (1996). An East India Company Cemetery: Protestant Burials in Macao. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press. pp. 228–229. ISBN 9622093841. 140. CORNELIA BRACKENRIDGE SPEER and MARY CORNELIA SPEER: Americans
  39. ^ "Canton Mission". New York: The 11th Annual Report of the Board of Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America(1848). 1838. pp. 33–36.
  40. ^ "CHINA: CANTON MISSION". New York: The 13th Annual Report of the Board of Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. (May 1850) pp. 39-41. 1850.
  41. ^ "Board of Education Annual Report for 1851". Philadelphia: Minutes of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. (1851). 1851. Agents: ...the Board have secured... the services of Rev. William Speer for Western Pennsylvania and Ohio.
  42. ^ a b Rankin, William (January 1892). "Mission to the Chinese in California". reprinted in Rankin, William (1893). "Handbook and Incidents of Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian Church U.S.A." Newark, NJ. pp. 56–61.

External links edit

  • THE FIRST NIGHT AT CANTON: A recollection 12 years hence by Rev. William Speer. The Foreign Missionary: containing particular accounts of Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian Church, Vol. XVII, No. IX (February 1859) pp. 275–278.
  • MEMOIR OF MRS. WILLIAM SPEER, Missionary Register (June 1848) A memoir by John C. Lowrie, quoting extensively a narrative by Rev. William Speer of the last weeks of Mrs. Cornelia Speer, his wife, who died at Macao on the 16th of April, 1847.
  • CHINA AND CALIFORNIA; THEIR RELATIONS, PAST AND PRESENT. (1853) A lecture, in conclusion of a series in relation to the Chinese people, delivered in the Stockton Street [First] Presbyterian Church, San Francisco, June 28, 1853, by the Rev. William Speer, Missionary to the Chinese in California.
  • MISSION TO THE CHINESE IN CALIFORNIA: Report of the Rev. W. Speer (December 31, 1853) The Home and Foreign Record of the Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A., Vol. V, No. 4 (April 1854) pp. 112–115.
  • Letter from William Speer (August 16, 1854). A four-page handwritten letter from Rev. William Speer to Rev. John C. Lowrie (1808-1900), the Corresponding Secretary of the Board of Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian Church of the U.S.A.
  • MISSION TO THE CHINESE IN CALIFORNIA. Letter from the Rev. W. Speer (Sept. 13, 1854): Sickness among the Chinese in San Francisco. The Home and Foreign Record of the Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A., Vol. V, No.12 (December 1854) pp. 373–374.
  • MISSION TO THE CHINESE IN CALIFORNIA: Journal of the Rev. W. Speer (March 8 to September 3, 1855) The Home and Foreign Record of the Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A., Vol. VI, No. 11 (November 1855) pp. 338–341.
  • CHINESE IN CALIFORNIA: Letter from the Rev. William Speer. Mariposa, 17th Oct., 1855. The Home and Foreign Record of the Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A., Vol. VII, No. 1 (January 1856) p. 14.
  • William Speer (1822-1904) A collection and reprints of his writings, curated by Log College Press.

william, speer, minister, this, article, needs, additional, more, specific, categories, please, help, adding, categories, that, listed, with, similar, articles, december, 2020, william, speer, 1822, 1904, american, pioneer, presbyterian, missionary, author, mi. This article needs additional or more specific categories Please help out by adding categories to it so that it can be listed with similar articles December 2020 William Speer 1822 1904 was an American pioneer Presbyterian missionary and author He was missionary to the Chinese in Canton 1847 1850 where he helped establish the first Presbytery in Canton and to the Chinese in California 1852 1857 where he founded the first Chinese Protestant church outside of China and became a strong advocate for the Chinese in California Later 1865 1876 he served in Pennsylvania as the Secretary of the Presbyterian Board of Education 1 2 Rev Dr William SpeerPhoto from History of the Presbytery of Washington Pennsylvania Philadelphia 1889 p 70Born 1822 04 24 April 24 1822New Alexandria Westmoreland County Pennsylvania USDiedFebruary 16 1904 1904 02 16 aged 81 Washington Washington County Pennsylvania US Contents 1 Missionary to the Chinese in Canton and in California 2 Secretary of the Presbyterian Board of Education 3 Personal life 4 References 5 External linksMissionary to the Chinese in Canton and in California edit nbsp Speer sailed to Macao December 1846 moved on to Canton Spring 1847 and sailed back to New York 1850 Almost all the Chinese he ministered to in California 1852 1857 emigrated from the Pearl River Delta districts west of Canton and Macao After three years of medical studies and after being licensed to preach in 1846 Speer was sent by the Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions as a medical missionary to establish a mission in Canton now Guangzhou in the Pearl River Delta in southern China where he served from the end of 1846 to the end of 1849 Describing his new surroundings in the Pearl River Delta he later wrote Towns embowered in bamboo a species of banyan and other trees meet the eye on every hand The level portion of the soil is cultivated as only the Chinese know how to do in order to obtain the utmost possible returns from Nature The view appears like a great garden bounded by ranges of hills The narrow streets of the towns are densely crowded with men following every trade and means of procuring a subsistence which the necessities of human nature can suggest 3 472 Learning the Cantonese language Speer phoneticized in Cantonese 施比爾 4 worked alongside Dr Peter Parker at the Canton Hospital He also helped organize the first Presbytery in Canton in February 1849 which he commemorated 50 years later 5 Due to ill health he departed Canton and sailed to the U S in 1850 Speer was later sent in 1852 by the Presbyterian Board of Missions to San Francisco California to minister to the Chinese immigrants there He was fluent in Cantonese and knew the Chinese culture well In January 1853 through an article in The Princeton Review he advanced the thesis that not only should emigrant Chinese be welcomed in California but also their presence is providential provision for the necessities of the vast unimproved West from agriculture to fisheries from infrastructure to mining which would in time advance California to an equality with the proudest portions of our land 6 14 17 Beginning February 1853 he leased and used the second floor of a store front as a temporary chapel where he preached regularly in Cantonese to a group of thirty or so 7 To raise awareness of and money for his ministry he gave lectures in English on Chinese culture from Confucius at the Mercantile Library to Chinese Farmer at the agricultural fair all of which attracted much attention from the non Chinese public 8 9 As Speer continued to speak in sermons and lectures defending the Chinese and explaining their culture and civilization he reported in 1853 that some Chinese asked him to be their chief in this country to act on their behalf to shield them from acts of injury or plunder 7 On November 6 1853 he held the first church meeting for the Chinese in which he preached in Cantonese followed by a brief English version for the assembled congregation at the First Presbyterian Church 10 In so doing together with four Chinese church members Atsun Lai Sam A tsen and Hi Cheong Kow Speer founded the first Chinese Protestant church outside of China the Chinese Mission Chapel in 1853 11 now the Presbyterian Church in Chinatown 12 The brick Chinese Chapel building two stories plus basement at the northeast corner of Stockton and Sacramento Streets in San Francisco s Chinatown was erected for 18 000 which was largely raised from San Franciscans of all denominations 13 It was dedicated June 1854 14 15 In the basement Speer started an evening English school For the Chinese immigrants who suffered illnesses from the long voyage to San Francisco Speer opened a dispensary in the basement at which Dr Ayres Dr Coon and Dr Downer gave gratuitous services On the main level he held two Sunday services and a Wednesday evening prayer meeting as well as distributing tracts In August 1854 there were 40 or more in the services and 17 pupils in the evening English school 7 16 He moved his residence into the upper level of the chapel building in 1855 In January 1855 as founder and editor Speer published the first English Chinese newspaper The Oriental 東涯新錄 traditional 东涯新录 simplified which had a circulation of 20 000 copies the first year and was the second Chinese language newspaper in North America 17 18 In the inaugural issue he made the prophetic observation that the Chinese who were hard working with experience building large projects would become builders of the proposed transcontinental railroad across the United States 19 the boundless plateaus of the Western half of this continent will be scattered with busy lines of Chinese builders of iron roads that shall link the two oceans and add to the wealth and comforts of the dwellers upon either shore William Speer January 4 1855 19 After the California Supreme Court ruled in December 1854 that the Chinese had no rights to testify against whites Speer responded in the 18 January 1855 issue The principles of the Magna Carta the prerogatives of juries the rights of judges and advocates Republicanism and Christianity and common humanity are all outraged by this iniquitous decision of the Supreme Court of California 20 22 In the 8 February 1855 issue Speer pointed out that Chinese living in the Pearl River Delta were better acquainted with other countries than any other portion of the Chinese When the news of the discovery of gold reached them it was natural that they above all other Chinese should rush to California Speer s insight regarding 19th century Chinese emigration is supported by the modern research of historian Yong Chen 21 13 23 The Oriental ceased publication after about two years upon its discontinuance in December 1856 Ze Too Yune 司徒源 took up the mantle and founded the Chinese Daily News in Sacramento 18 According to biographer W C Covert Speer s bilingual newsletter did much to soften the racial antipathy that made the life for the Chinese almost intolerable 1 Historian Kevin Starr stated that As editor of The Oriental Speer broke his health campaigning against oppression of the Chinese 22 71 Speer was an early advocate of fair treatment for Chinese immigrants in California Historian M L Stahler called him the champion of California s Chinese 23 According to historian R Seager Rev Speer was the first champion of the persecuted Chinese in America 24 49 Historian K Starr saw him as a lonely champion who could not offset the tale of exploitation exclusion disenfranchisement and murder which characterized the Chinese experience in California 22 109 In an 1856 pamphlet directed to the California legislature Speer argued against the tide of anti Chinese legislation from the foreign miners tax to the head tax Using statistical evidence he pointed to the benefits of Chinese immigration to the state treasury that it was in the state s interests to forbid a policy calculated to exclude or debase Chinese immigration The foreign miners tax was reduced and Speer was commended by General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church 25 Statesman William H Seward then a U S Senator applauded Speer saying accept assurances of the sincere respect with which you have inspired me by your resolute assertion of the principles of human freedom and political justice 26 297 Speer protested discrimination against the Chinese lobbied on their behalf in Sacramento and published in 1857 a pamphlet to the California legislature An answer to the common objections to Chinese testimony and an earnest appeal to the Legislature of California for their protection by our law 27 His activities established precedents for those clergy who came after him they also defended the Chinese from harassment and discrimination 28 With his health failing Speer delivered a farewell address in July 1857 and departed California 23 128 Two years later in September 1859 Rev A W Loomis arrived to resume the mission work Speer started in San Francisco 16 According to historian J Yung when the school Speer founded in the Chinese Mission basement in 1853 started to receive public funds in 1859 it became the first public school in the United States for Chinese students 29 Following Speer s precedents others established schools for the Chinese not only in San Francisco but also in Oakland Sacramento Stockton and other California communities 28 Secretary of the Presbyterian Board of Education editFrom January 1866 to July 1876 Speer was back in his home state Pennsylvania serving as the Corresponding Secretary of the Presbyterian Board of Education 30 In 1866 he was conferred the D D degree 31 In a note introducing his article Democracy of the Chinese in the November 1868 Harper s Magazine the editors wrote We believe that there are not five men European or American who are as thoroughly acquainted as Dr Speer with the Chinese in their own country We think there is no other man so fully conversant with the Chinese in California 32 In September 1869 Speer journeyed to the West coast overland via the newly completed transcontinental railroad visiting the State agricultural fair in Sacramento 3 510 on his way to resume work along with his successor Rev Loomis campaigning on behalf of the Chinese on the coast 33 Before returning in October to the East he addressed the joint synods of California as one from the old school Presbyterian Board of Education noting that the time had come for the establishment of a theological seminary in California for the ministerial needs of the West and not rely on the seminaries in the East Two years later Rev W A Scott who had helped Speer dedicate the Chinese Chapel in 1854 15 founded the San Francisco Theological Seminary 34 315 The Chinese upon our Pacific coast have proved themselves admirable miners When the hostility of white foreigners has driven them out of the better mining regions they have still toiled patiently and diligently Thus districts which had been almost abandoned have revived and all classes of the population been directly benefited William Speer 1870 3 524 525 In 1870 Speer published a book The Oldest and the Newest Empire China and the United States An early look at China from an American perspective the book placed China s long history side by side with the history of trade with Europe and the United States and Chinese immigration to the United States Notably it touted the glory of America and an embrace of Christianity as the path for the future of China Unlike many Americans of his era Speer saw Chinese immigration as a positive good for both nations This social vision drew from his faith and aspirations that Chinese immigrants would bring Christianity back to China 3 He published another book The Great Revival of 1800 in 1872 35 Personal life editWilliam Speer was born April 24 1822 in New Alexandria Pennsylvania the first of seven children to Dr James Ramsey and Hetty Morrow Speer He was the grandson of the Rev William and Sarah Ramsey Speer and of Paul and Hettie Guthrie Morrow 36 His father was a surgeon and the first ophthalmologist in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania His paternal grandfather and namesake Rev William Speer 1764 1829 was a Presbyterian minister at Greensburg Pennsylvania the first chaplain at the seat of the new government of the Northwest Territory Chillicothe Ohio and uncle of President James Buchanan After growing up in Pittsburgh and after attending nearby Jefferson College for a short time William Speer left Pennsylvania for Kenyon College in Ohio where he graduated in 1840 at age 18 He then studied medicine under his father for three years and in 1843 at age 21 he was elected resident physician at Wills Hospital in Philadelphia Heeding a call to the ministry he studied theology at the Allegheny Seminary and was licensed to preach on April 21 1846 just a few days shy of his 24th birthday 26 He married Cornelia Brackenridge from Allegheny Pennsylvania on May 7 1846 36 Although he had three other ministry opportunities they heeded the call to China from the Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions and sailed from New York on July 20 1846 to the Pearl River Delta in southern China En route Cornelia Speer suffered hemorrhages from the lungs they landed at Macao on December 26 1846 37 After losing his wife and baby in Macao in 1847 38 and after learning the language Cantonese and laboring under adverse conditions in Canton 39 William Speer was beset with disorders of the liver and digestive organs 26 296 and was sent back courtesy of Captain Abbott of the Carrington arriving in New York on March 29 1850 40 nbsp Mrs Elizabeth B Speer 1827 1921 Photo from History of the Presbytery of Washington Pennsylvania Philadelphia 1889 p 194 Back in western Pennsylvania as an agent of the Board of Education 41 Speer regained his health and married Elizabeth Breading Ewing from Washington Pennsylvania on April 20 1852 1 On October 5 1852 he and his wife sailed from New York to Panama crossing the Isthmus by rail boat and mule pack they arrived in San Francisco on November 6 1852 42 In San Francisco they had three children Exhausted from campaigning against oppression of the Chinese all day and often much of the night Speer sought rest in Mariposa visiting Rev W A Scott October 1955 and then in Hawaii April September 1856 a longer stay where he preached in Cantonese to the Chinese there In summer 1857 he and his young family left California for a furlough in the East hoping to return and resume his work but after more than a year he resigned from California compelled by the progress of disease in his lungs 26 297 which he ascribed to error and imprudence in overtaxing bodily strength 42 58 59 In the Midwest two children born to Rev William and Elizabeth in 1860 and 1863 died in 1863 Their last child Breading Speer was born in 1865 in Minnesota References edit a b c Covert William C 1935 William Speer Apr 24 1822 Feb 15 1904 archive org The Dictionary of American Biography Vol 17 p 442 443 Forrest Earle R 1961 Clifford Henry H ed Dr William Speer Missionary to the Chinese in China and San Francisco Los Angeles California The Westerners Brand Book Book Nine a b c d William Speer 1870 The Oldest and the Newest Empire China and the United States National Publishing Company Chicago IL Tiedemann R G 2010 Handbook of Christianity in China Volume Two 1800 to the Present Leiden Brill NV p 157 ISBN 9789004114302 Speer William October 1899 First Stones in the Foundation of the Synod of China PDF The Chinese Recorder amp Missionary Journal Vol XXX no 10 pp 472 480 Speer William January 1853 China and California archive org The Princeton Review a b c Woo Wesley S 1990 Presbyterian Mission Christianizing and Civilizing The Chinese in Nineteenth Century California American Presbyterians 68 3 Presbyterian Historical Society American Presbyterians Vol 68 No 3 Fall 1990 pp 167 178 167 178 JSTOR 23332664 MERCANTILE LIBRARY ASSOCIATION cdnc ucr edu Daily Alta California Volume 4 Number 209 9 August 1853 AGRICULTURAL LECTURE cdnc ucr edu Daily Alta California Volume 4 Number 271 20 October 1853 First Chinese Church in California The Presbyterian Magazine Volume 4 No 2 Page 92 February 1854 Choy Philip P 2008 The Architecture of San Francisco Chinatown Chinese Historical Society p 32 Chua Christopher Viboon 2014 The Sacredness of Being There Race Religion and Place Making at San Francisco s Presbyterian Church in Chinatown UC Berkeley eScholarship Retrieved 10 October 2020 Established in 1853 the Presbyterian Church in Chinatown PCC in San Francisco CA is the oldest Asian church of any Christian denomination in North America and the first Chinese Protestant church outside China Soule Frank Gihon John H Nisbet James 1854 The Annals of San Francisco New York Appleton amp Co p 699 Dedication of a Chinese Chapel cdnc ucr edu Sacramento Daily Union Volume 7 Number 1000 7 June 1854 From the Daily Alta California a b California dedication of the Mission House in San Francisco for the Chinese Philadelphia The Home and Foreign Record of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America September 1854 p 280 a b THE MISSION AMONG THE CHINESE OF CALIFORNIA cdnc ucr edu Sacramento Daily Union Volume 26 Number 4012 30 January 1864 Rev A W Loomis gives in the last Evangel an account of the mission work among the Chinese of this State Yang Tao January 2009 Press Community and Library A Study of the Chinese language Newspapers Published in North America PDF Retrieved 10 October 2020 a b Cui Jane 27 October 2021 Three Earliest Chinese Newspapers and Three Persons 三份早期华文报纸和三位办报人 American and Chinese History 美华史记 Association of Chinese Americans for Social Justice Retrieved 23 December 2023 a b Chinn Thomas W Lai H Mark Choy Philip P 1969 A History of the Chinese in California The Railroads cprr org Chinese Historical Society of America McClain Charles J 1994 In Search for Equality The Chinese Struggle against Discrimination in Nineteenth Century America Berkeley California University of California Press ISBN 0 520 20514 6 Chen Yong 2000 Chinese San Francisco 1850 1943 A trans Pacific community Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0804736053 a b Starr Kevin 1973 Americans and the California dream 1850 1915 Oxford University Press New York ISBN 978 0195042337 A lonely champion like William Speer could not offset the tale of exploitation exclusion disenfranchisement and murder which characterized the Chinese experience in California a b Stahler Michael L 1970 William Speer Champion of California s Chinese 1852 1857 Journal of Presbyterian History 1962 1985 48 2 113 129 ISSN 0022 3883 JSTOR 23327321 Seager Robert February 1959 Some Denominational Reactions to Chinese Immigration to California 1856 1892 Pacific Historical Review 28 1 University of California Press 49 66 doi 10 2307 3636239 JSTOR 3636239 William Speer 1856 An Humble Plea Addressed to the Legislature of California in Behalf of the Immigrants from the Empire of China to this State The Office of The Oriental San Francisco As quoted in Seager Robert 1959 Some denominational reactions to Chinese immigration to California 1856 1892 Pacific Historical Review 28 no 1 49 50 a b c d SPEER WILLIAM The Princeton Review Index Volume from 1825 to 1868 Part II Authors biographical notes by the editor and friends Philadelphia 1871 1871 pp 295 298 Speer William 1857 An answer to the common objections to Chinese testimony and an earnest appeal to the Legislature of California for their protection by our law Chinese Mission House San Francisco a b Wollenberg Charles M 1978 All Deliberate Speed Segregation and Exclusion in California Schools 1855 1975 University of California Press p 34 ISBN 9780520317031 Yung Judy 2006 San Francisco s Chinatown San Francisco CA Arcadia Publishing p 36 ISBN 0738531308 Biographical Index of Missionaries SPEER Rev amp Mrs William phcmontreat org Retrieved 21 August 2021 SPEER William missionary archive org Appleton s Cyclopedia of American Biography Vol 5 PICKERING to SUMTER edited by James Grant Wilson and John Fiske New York D Appleton and Company 1888 Retrieved 22 April 2022 In 1865 he was called to Philadelphia to be corresponding secretary of the Presbyterian board of education which he aided in reorganizing a measure that resulted from the reunion of the two branches of the church which took place in 1869 The degree of D D was conferred upon him in 1866 Speer William November 1868 Democracy of the Chinese Harper s Magazine Retrieved 10 October 2020 A private letter from the Rev William Speer D D dated Philadelphia August 20th advising of his expected departure for the scene of his former labors upon this coast as a missionary to the Chinese cdnc ucr edu Sacramento Daily Union Volume 37 Number 5753 4 September 1869 Retrieved 22 April 2022 Drury Clifford M 1967 William Anderson Scott No ordinary man Glendale California Arthur H Clark Company William Speer 1872 The Great Revival of 1800 1 Presbyterian Board of Publication Philadelphia a b Brown John Howard 1903 SPEER William missionary Lamb s biographical dictionary of the United States Vol VII Seaton Zueblin Federal Book Company Boston p 163 Lowrie John C 1895 Mrs Cornelia Speer reprinted in Rankin William 1895 Philadelphia Presbyterian Board of Publication Memorials of Foreign Missionaries of the Presbyterian Church U S A pp 344 348 Author J C L quoted extensively the narrative of Rev William Speer Ride Lindsay Ride May 1996 An East India Company Cemetery Protestant Burials in Macao Hong Kong Hong Kong University Press pp 228 229 ISBN 9622093841 140 CORNELIA BRACKENRIDGE SPEER and MARY CORNELIA SPEER Americans Canton Mission New York The 11th Annual Report of the Board of Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America 1848 1838 pp 33 36 CHINA CANTON MISSION New York The 13th Annual Report of the Board of Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian Church in the U S A May 1850 pp 39 41 1850 Board of Education Annual Report for 1851 Philadelphia Minutes of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the U S A 1851 1851 Agents the Board have secured the services of Rev William Speer for Western Pennsylvania and Ohio a b Rankin William January 1892 Mission to the Chinese in California reprinted in Rankin William 1893 Handbook and Incidents of Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian Church U S A Newark NJ pp 56 61 External links editTHE FIRST NIGHT AT CANTON A recollection 12 years hence by Rev William Speer The Foreign Missionary containing particular accounts of Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian Church Vol XVII No IX February 1859 pp 275 278 MEMOIR OF MRS WILLIAM SPEER Missionary Register June 1848 A memoir by John C Lowrie quoting extensively a narrative by Rev William Speer of the last weeks of Mrs Cornelia Speer his wife who died at Macao on the 16th of April 1847 CHINA AND CALIFORNIA THEIR RELATIONS PAST AND PRESENT 1853 A lecture in conclusion of a series in relation to the Chinese people delivered in the Stockton Street First Presbyterian Church San Francisco June 28 1853 by the Rev William Speer Missionary to the Chinese in California MISSION TO THE CHINESE IN CALIFORNIA Report of the Rev W Speer December 31 1853 The Home and Foreign Record of the Presbyterian Church in the U S A Vol V No 4 April 1854 pp 112 115 Letter from William Speer August 16 1854 A four page handwritten letter from Rev William Speer to Rev John C Lowrie 1808 1900 the Corresponding Secretary of the Board of Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian Church of the U S A MISSION TO THE CHINESE IN CALIFORNIA Letter from the Rev W Speer Sept 13 1854 Sickness among the Chinese in San Francisco The Home and Foreign Record of the Presbyterian Church in the U S A Vol V No 12 December 1854 pp 373 374 MISSION TO THE CHINESE IN CALIFORNIA Journal of the Rev W Speer March 8 to September 3 1855 The Home and Foreign Record of the Presbyterian Church in the U S A Vol VI No 11 November 1855 pp 338 341 CHINESE IN CALIFORNIA Letter from the Rev William Speer Mariposa 17th Oct 1855 The Home and Foreign Record of the Presbyterian Church in the U S A Vol VII No 1 January 1856 p 14 William Speer 1822 1904 A collection and reprints of his writings curated by Log College Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Speer minister amp oldid 1212581149, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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