Theodore Parker’s Letter Books: An Unrivaled Glimpse into Antebellum America

文/本杰明·E. Park, Sam Houston State University

It was in the Spring of 1855 when James 帕特森 happened to unknowingly encounter one of America’s most prominent celebrities. 帕特森, a Brown University student who was headed home to Ohio, boarded a train at Worcester and sat next to a man with a broad build and grey hair, 深思熟虑. The fellow passenger was furiously flipping through a large book while taking copious notes on its back page. 当他读完这本书的时候, the man took paper out of his carpet bag and maniacally scribbled for over an hour. 帕特森 had never seen such studious devotion on a train. 最终, 两人聊了起来, and the student was surprised by the man’s “温柔的 voice” and “kindly manner.”

帕特森 was so caught up in the invaluable advice that the older man dispensed—advice that would shape 帕特森’s life—that he forgot to even ask his name. It was not until later that he discovered the random seatmate was Theodore Parker, Boston’s foremost abolitionist minister during the era.

The starstruck student wrote Parker a letter, bearing his soul and narrating his own conversion to liberal religion. To his surprise, Parker responded. They then corresponded several more times over the next few years.

That Parker would exchange letters with a stranger was not uncommon. He once complained that he spent up to six hours a day responding to people across the globe, 从俄亥俄到加尔各答的纸条. But the complaint was a lie: he cherished the connections, 享受友谊, and was addicted to the art of letter-writing.

Shortly after Parker’s death in 1860, 他的妻子, 丽迪雅, became determined to enshrine this part of his legacy. 她和一位指定的传记作者, 大卫·韦斯, went through Theodore’s correspondence collection and wrote nearly everyone they could to ask for Parker’s letters. Many, like 帕特森, eagerly responded. “I shall never forget that lovely, 温柔的, 善良因而高尚, 白发男子,他写道, as the minister had “completely won my heart.” 帕特森 had even become a minister, just like his idol. He sent 丽迪雅 the only two remaining letters he could find—so long as she promised to send them back once she had copied their contents, so that he could keep them as relics.

书架上的书的彩色图像.
寄存于MHS的书信簿

丽迪雅 Parker and 大卫·韦斯 eventually collected enough incoming and outgoing correspondence to fill thirteen large volumes, all but two of which are housed at the 马萨诸塞州历史学会. (The other two are held in the Harvard Divinity School archives.)每卷, numbering between four hundred and eight hundred pages, features transcriptions of hundreds of letters. Interlocutors include Theodore Parker’s Harvard classmates, 竞争对手部长, 崇拜追随者, 以及忠实的评论家. He received letters from worshipful fans who wrote him about how his writings prompted their own spiritual or moral awakening; these converts to “Parkerism” ranged from an itinerant minister in upstate New York to Queen Victoria’s dressmaker in Buckingham Palace.

But perhaps the most revealing exchanges found in these packed volumes concern the intersections of religion, 废奴主义, and politics during the decade that America fractured into two. 虽然是个牧师, Parker became a prominent leader in the antislavery movement and corresponded with many of the central players in the new Republican Party. William Seward told Parker that he had done more in “the awakening of the spirit of Freedom in the Free States” than anyone else, and plotted with him on how best to oppose the “Slave Power.” Charles Sumner strategized with Parker, 他最喜欢的大臣, on how to consolidate opposition against the Democrats, and even wrote him mere days before his caning in 1856. William Herndon sent Parker weekly dispatches from the Lincoln/Douglas debates in Springfield. And John Brown coordinated with Parker concerning his attempted raid on Harper’s Ferry.

The Theodore Parker letter books are among the most important manuscript collections to understand the key issues that animated America during the mid-nineteenth century. They are among the most prized gems in 马萨诸塞州历史学会’s archives, and a testament to how documents can reveal the potency of the past to the present.

本杰明E. Park是《 American Nationalisms: Imagining Union in the Age of Revolutions, 1783-1833 (Cambridge University Press) and Kingdom of Nauvoo: The Rise and Fall of a Religious Empire on the American Frontier (Liveright). 他的下一本书, American Zion: A New History of Mormonism (Liveright), will appear in January 2024. He is currently working on a new project examining religion and the abolitionist movement, which was benefitted by an MHS research fellowship.

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