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The Presence of the Dead among U.S. Protestants, 1800–1848

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 August 2019

Abstract

Historians have long known that antebellum American Protestants were fascinated by death, but they have overlooked Protestant relationships with the dead. Long before the advent of séance Spiritualism in 1848, many mourners began to believe—contrary to mainstream Protestant theology—that the souls of the dead turned into angels, that the dead could return to earth as guardian angels, and that in graveyards one could experience communion with the spirits of the departed. The version of Protestantism these mourners developed was therefore, to use Robert Orsi's term, a religion of “presence,” a religion in which suprahuman beings—in addition to God—played an important role. Based on diaries and popular sentimental literature written mostly by women, this article brings to light an unexplored facet of antebellum Protestant lived religion: that the dead were “present with us tho’ invisible,” as one young woman wrote about her deceased sister.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of Church History 2019 

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Footnotes

For valuable comments and suggestions, the author wishes to thank Peter Marshall, Robert Orsi, Alexandra Walsham, Doug Winiarski, Victoria Wolcott, and an anonymous Church History reader.

References

1 Anna Eliza Heath Diary, Massachusetts Historical Society (hereafter MHS), 18 March 1825.

2 Ibid., 7 April 1825.

3 Ibid., 19 April 1825.

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9 On how these ideas combined to form an antebellum “cult of the dead,” see Seeman, Erik R., Speaking with the Dead in Early America (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, forthcoming 2019)Google Scholar, chaps. 7 and 8.

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28 “Wrote, on the Annaversay [sic] of My Dear Parent's Death (A Day, never to be forgot by me),” Hannah Griffitts Papers, Box 1, Folder 12, 13 February 1759, Historical Society of Pennsylvania. See also Griffitts's 1763 elegy to her mother, Box 1, Folder 36.

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32 Examples include “The Little Girl's Answer to Her Baby Cousin,” Juvenile Miscellany (Boston) 2, no. 3 (July 1827): 106; and “Lines, on Hearing a Mother Bid Farewell to Her Little Daughter,” New York Evangelist 7, no. 31 (30 July 1836): 124.

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45 Sarah Brown Ruggles Eaton Diary, Rhode Island Historical Society, 19 July and 19 August 1833.

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55 Upton, Another City, 217–221, quotation at 219; and Sloane, Last Great Necessity, 29–34.

56 On the rise of the “democratic family,” see Steven Mintz and Susan Kellogg, Domestic Revolutions: A Social History of American Family Life (New York: Free Press, 1988), chap. 3.

57 Many thanks to my Buffalo colleague Neil Coffee for help with the Latin. He points out that familiares includes unrelated household members such as servants and slaves and could even extend to friends. I use it, however, only for blood relations.

58 Sloane, Last Great Necessity, 42; and Upton, Another City, 221–223, quotation at 223.

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60 Catherine Henshaw Diary, AAS, 14 April 1805.

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64 Reprinted or excerpted: “Life,” Ladies’ Literary Cabinet (New York) 2, no. 14 (12 August 1820): 106–107; Christian Advocate and Journal and Zion's Herald (New York) 5, no. 2 (10 September 1830): 8; and “The Village Graveyard,” Youth's Companion (Boston) 5, no. 17 (14 September 1831): 67–68. Read to students: Mary Ware Allen Johnson Diary, 26 March 1838.

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66 Unknown artist, Memorial for S. C. Washington, c.1789. Watercolor, chopped hair, gold wire, and pearls on ivory. Yale University Art Gallery, ILE1999.3.18.

67 All items held by the Victoria and Albert Museum, London. Museum numbers 918–1888 (ring), 920–1888 (brooch), 925–1888 (locket).

68 Linden-Ward, Silent City on a Hill, chap. 6; and Sloane, Last Great Necessity, 34–43.

69 Quoted in Linden-Ward, Silent City on a Hill, 168.

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73 “Untitled,” New-York Mirror 11, no. 34 (22 February 1834): 270. See also, for example, J. G. Percival, “Death: (An Extract),” The Knickerbocker; or, New York Monthly Magazine 7, no. 6 (June 1836): 572; and “Our Parents Sleep There,” Every Youth's Gazette (New York) 1, no. 27 (24 December 1842): 398.

74 “Laurel Hill Cemetery,” Episcopal Recorder (Philadelphia) 24, no. 2 (28 March 1846): 5.

75 W. Nixon, “Miniature Sketches: Laurel Hill Cemetery, Philadelphia,” Ladies Repository and Gatherings of the West (Cincinnati) 6, no. 11 (November 1846): 336. See also “Laurel Hill Cemetery,” New-York Evangelist 8, no. 29 (15 July 1837): 116; and Mrs. B., “Laurel Hill Cemetery,” The Subterranean (New York) 4, no. 35 (23 January 1847): 4.

76 Sarah Brown Ruggles Eaton Diary, 21 October 1837. On tourism in Laurel Hill, see Aaron Vickers Wunsch, “Parceling the Picturesque: ‘Rural’ Cemeteries and Urban Context in Nineteenth-Century Philadelphia” (PhD diss., University of California, Berkeley, 2009), 99, 115–118.

77 Adelia M. Beckley Lamb Diary, 17 July 1842.

78 Sarah Brown Ruggles Eaton Diary, 6 March and 13 April 1834.

79 Louisa Jane Trumbull Diary, 9 February 1833. Sentence crossed out in original.

80 Eliza M. Spencer Diary, typescript, MHS, 10 September 1832.

81 Ibid., 4 August 1833.

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