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Archive for the ‘Gest Fellows’ Category

2009 Gest Fellow: Christian Gonzales

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

Gest Fellow Christian Gonzales is a Ph.D. candidate in United States History at the University of California, San Diego.  His research is on “Anglo-Indian Antiremoval Collaboration, 1819-1859.”

Christian Gonzales 2009 Gest Fellow

Christian Gonzales 2009 Gest Fellow

I came to Haverford to research material for the final chapter of my dissertation, which investigates Native and Anglo American groups that opposed the removal of the Indians from the eastern United States during the 1820s and 30s. I was specifically interested in the joint efforts of the Seneca and the Orthodox Quakers of the Philadelphia Yearly Meeting to prevent Seneca removal and to stop ratification of the 1838 Treaty of Buffalo Creek.

To my delight, the documents in the Special Collections Library were richer than I expected. They clearly illuminated the relationship between the Seneca and the Philadelphia Yearly Meeting, and revealed in great detail their combined political efforts to thwart removal. The documents of most help were those of the Philadelphia Yearly Meeting’s Indian Committee. The papers and letters of Friends such as Joseph Elkinton, Ebenezer Worth, and Solomon and Sarah Lukens, all of whom lived for years among the Seneca of the Allegheny reservation, helped reveal Seneca perspectives on removal, explained why Friends opposed removal, and clearly detailed Friends’ efforts to acculturate Seneca through formal schooling and projects designed to persuade Natives to pursue Anglo-American agriculture. Other papers in the PYMIC collection painted interesting pictures of Seneca daily life, and gave moving insight into the emotions Friends experienced living with the Natives. For instance, the letters of Susannah Wood described a performance of the Green Corn Dance, recorded the procedures of a Seneca Council meeting, and gave touching accounts of Seneca children playing in the snow. They also communicated her feelings of homesickness, and revealed the depth of sorrow she endured from the loss of her two year old son, Francis. Susannah taught with her husband John at the Tunesassah Boarding School for a year before her sudden death in 1853.

Other resources were also extremely helpful. The Dictionary of Quaker Biography and the necrology card file allowed me to reconstruct the major life events of Friends who worked with the Indians. And the copies of The Friend, in the periodicals collection, detailed the reasons why several yearly meetings, including Philadelphia, New York, Ohio, Baltimore, and New Jersey, participated in the national antiremoval campaign of 1829-30, which sought to stop the forced removal of the Cherokee.

I would like to thank the staff, John, Diana, Ann, and David, for the instrumental help they provided while I was in residence at Haverford. Their insight and knowledge were vital to the success of my research.

Tags: Gest Fellows, Philadelphia Yearly Meeting, Susannah Wood
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2009 Gest Fellow: Michael E. McGuire

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

From time to time, we will be posting profiles of our Gest Fellows. Michael E. McGuire is a Ph.D. candidate in History at Boston University.  His research is on “Quaker NGOs That Offered Humanitarian Aid to France During and After World War I.”

Michael E. McGuire 2009 Gest Fellow

Michael E. McGuire 2009 Gest Fellow

I am researching the work of American non-governmental organizations (NGOs) formed to aid French civilians during World War I, and to assist France’s postwar reconstruction, to see whether such NGOs affected Franco-American relations. These NGOs include large umbrella organizations like the American Red Cross, and smaller NGOs like the American Friends’ Reconstruction Unit, which trained at Haverford before deploying to France. I am particularly interested in how American Friends were selected and trained for their work in France, how they integrated with existing English Friends’ operations, how the Friends cooperated with similarly-concerned governments and NGOs, how American Friends overcame the language barrier (many tried to brush up or learn French on the voyage or on the job), how both French and American cultures interacted when American Friends entered and remained in parts of France, and how both Friends and French people commemorated NGO work after it largely ceased in 1920.

Tags: France, Gest Fellows, NGOs, WWI
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Maurice Jackson to speak at the Library Company

Monday, February 2nd, 2009

Past Haverford Gest Fellow, Maurice Jackson, will speak at the Library Company on Thursday, February 5, 2009, 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm.  Jackson’s new biography of Quaker abolitionist Anthony Benezet will be the subject of his talk entitled "Let This Voice Be Heard: Anthony Benezet, Father of Atlantic Abolitionism." Jackson is Assistant Professor of History at Georgetown University. RSVP acceptances only to 215-546-3181 or email lpropst@librarycompany.org.

 

Tags: Anthony Benezet
Posted in Events, Gest Fellows, Publications | No Comments »

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