Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rdxmf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T04:51:09.293Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Parvin-Brigham Mission to Spanish America, 1823–1826

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2009

J. Orin Oliphant
Affiliation:
Bucknell University, Lewisburg, Pa.

Extract

Slowly during the years just preceding our War of 1812, and rapidly during the decade that followed the Peace of Ghent, the vast reaches of Latin America swam within the ken of the people of the United States. Of this “discovery” of our southern neighbors and of our relations with Latin America before 1830, we have learned much from a volume recently brought out by a distinguished historian of the United States, Professor Arthur P. Whitaker. Professor Whitaker's informing study was intended to be nothing less than a well-rounded history of the impact of Latin America upon the United States to 1830; and such it has proved to be—with one exception. Professor Whitaker completely overlooked the religious phase of the subject he otherwise treated so skillfully. Upon this neglected part of the history of our early relations with Latin America this paper will endeavor to throw some light.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of Church History 1945

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Whitaker, Arthur P., The United States and the Independence of Latin, America, 1800–1880 (Baltimore, 1941).Google Scholar

2 On this subject see Oliphant, J. Orin, “The American Missionary Spirit, 1828–1835,” Church History, VII (06, 1938), 125137.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

3 See especially Whitaker, , Latin America, chaps. 5 and 6.Google Scholar

4 Typical of many expressions of Protestant opinion in the United States at that time is the following: “The revolution, in South America has already greatly weakened the power of the pope in that country, and from the following remarks of the Rev. Mr. Brigham, in the last number of the Missionary Herald, it seems probable that a blow will soon be given, which will sever the Western Continent forever from his dominion. Let our Bible and Tract Societies be well supported, and the emancipation of the southern republics will soon be completed. …” Editorial, “Popery in South America,” New York Observer, 11 11, 1826.Google Scholar

5 During the decade of the 1820's, Christians in the United States were much less interested in Brazil than in Spanish America. The probable reasons therefor may be stated as follows: (1) Brazil, unlike Spanish America, was not subjected to a long struggle for liberation, a struggle that could be likened to the war the English colonies fought for their liberation; and (2), from the standpoint of Christian patriots in the United States, Brazil did not actually become “emancipated”, for after its separation from Portugal a member of the House of Braganza still ruled as Emperor Pedro I of Brazil. Brazil, therefore, though it was in the Americas, was very definitely not of the family of American republics. Consequently, in those years expressions of dislike of “despotic” Brazil appeared not infrequently in religious periodical publications in the United States; and the belief was voiced again and again that, even though Pedro I might not go the way of Iturbide in Mexico, nevertheless, in the words of Ashbel Green, “eventually and before long” there would be “no emperor on the American continent.” Christian Advocate, III (07, 1825), 336.Google Scholar Observe also the following expressions of opinion on this subject: “This enemy to civil liberty, Don Pedro I will, in all probability, also, be the last crowned head on our continent.” Magazine of the Reformed Dutch Church, I (06, 1826), 72.Google Scholar “It is but a few days since the news arrived of a splendid victory gained by the patriots of the Banda Oriental over the arms of despotic Brazil.” Boston Recorder& Telegraph, 12 30, 1825.Google Scholar

6 The Reports of the British and Foreign Bible Society, from 1807 through the decade of the 1820's, contain much information on this subject. These Reports also, after 1808, contain much information on the activities of the earliest Bible societies in the United States.

7 Schermerhorn, John F. and Mills, Samuel J., A Correct View of that Part of the United States which Lies West of the Allegany Mountains, with Regard to Religion and Morals (Hartford, 1814)Google Scholar, and Mills, Samuel J. and Smith, Daniel, Report of a Missionary Tour through that Part of the United States which Lies West of the Allegany Mountains … (Andover, 1815).Google Scholar Some account of the observations of Schermerhorn and Mills may be found in the “Report of the Trustees” of the Massachusetts Missionary Society, Panoplist X (06, 1814), 281285.Google Scholar On the Mills-Smith mission, see ibid., XI (May and June, 1815), 224–233, 273–284.

8 British and Foreign Bible Society, Tenth Report, 1814, in Reports of the British and Foreign Bible Society, III (London, 1815), appendix, p. 140.

9 On Mills's efforts in this cause, see, in general, Spring, Gardiner, Memoirs of the Rev. Samuel J. Mills … (New York, 1820).Google Scholar See also the sketch of Mills in the Dictionary of American Biography, XIII, 1516.Google Scholar

10 Acletes, “On the part which America is to take in evangelizing the world,” Panoplist, n.s., IV, (02, 1812), 399400Google Scholar; N., “General Bible Society,” ibid., X, (March, 1814), 120.

11 American Bible Society, Third Report, 1819 (New York, 1819), 12.Google Scholar

12 A. B. S., Seventh Report, 1823 (New York, 1823), 8.Google Scholar

13 Ibid., 26.

14 Green, Ashbel, Presbyterian Missions, with Supplemental Notes by John C. Lowrie (New York, c. 1893), 39.Google Scholar See also Spring, Memoirs of the Rev. Samuel J. Mills, chap. 6.

15 Gardiner Spring asserts that Samuel J. Mills had planned to make a tour of South America, and Spring regrets that Mills did not undertake such a mission. “We hope,” Spring continues, “that the time is not far distant, when two or More men will traverse the whole of this dreary wilderness, and return with a report that will wake up the American Church to a sympathy for the miseries of her perishing neighbours.” Memoirs of the Rev. Samuel J. Mills, 105.Google Scholar

16 “Survey of Missionary Stations,” Missionary Herald, XX (01, 1824), 4.Google Scholar

17 American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Report, 1823 (Boston, 1823), 129130.Google Scholar

18 Ibid., 130.

19 Missionary Herald, XX (0312, 1824)Google Scholar, passim; “Mr. Brigham's Remarks on Buenos Ayres,” ibid., XXI (February—April, 1825), 43–48, 72–78, 109–110; ibid., XXI (June, 1825), 176–177; A. B. C. F. M., Report, 1824 (Boston, 1824), 127128.Google Scholar

20 A. B. C. F. M., Report, 1824 (Boston, 1824), 128.Google Scholar

21 Missionary Herald, XXII, (0203, 1826), 42, 79Google Scholar; A. B. C. F. M., Report, 1826 (Boston, 1826), 100301.Google Scholar

22 A. B. S., Tenth Report, 1826 (New York, 1826), p. viGoogle Scholar; Missionary Herald, XXII, (06, 1826), 192193.Google Scholar

23 Copious extracts from letters Brigham wrote to the American Bible Society between March 20, 1825, and March 17, 1826, are published in A. B. S., Tenth Report, 1826 (New York, 1826), 4851.Google Scholar

24 From the text as published in Tenth Anniversary of the American Bible Society, No. 47 (08, 1826), 17.Google Scholar

25 “Mr. Brigham's Report Respecting the Religious State of Spanish America. To the Prudential Committee of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions,” Missionary Herald, XXII (1011, 1826), 297302, 337344.Google Scholar

26 A. B. C. F. M., Report, 1826 (Boston, 1826), 101.Google Scholar

27 Missionary Herald, XXII (11, 1826), 341.Google Scholar

28 The act of incorporation is reproduced in [Anderson, Rufus], Memorial Volume of the First Fifty Tears of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions (Boston, 1861), 405407.Google Scholar

29 Rufus Anderson, the learned senior secretary of the American Board, bypassed this issue years later when he wrote as follows: “Perhaps the Board might properly have extended its missions into some of the more benighted parts of the Roman Catholic world. It did no more, however, than explore a considerable portion of South America in the years 1823–1826.” Ibid., 80.

30 A. B. C. F. M., Report, 1826 (Boston, 1826), 99101.Google Scholar

31 See the brief sketch of Rodney in the Dictionary of American Biography, XVI, 8283.Google Scholar

32 Christian Advocate, IV (02, 1826), 9495.Google Scholar

33 ibid., 95.

34 New York Observer, 04 28, 1827Google Scholar, quoting from the Philadelphian; Christian Advocate, V (01, 1827), 38.Google Scholar

35 “R. B.”, in the Christian Advocate, V (01, 1827), 39.Google Scholar

36 “The Christian Gazette states, that several Ladies, in Philadelphia, have associated, for the purpose of aiding the mission to South America.” Boston Recorder, 05 8, 1824.Google Scholar See especially the matter pertaining to the Board of Missions of the General Assembly, in 1827 and 1828, in the Christian Advocate, V (09, 1827), 475Google Scholar, and ibid., VI (April-November, 1828), 183–184, 262, 420–422, 476, 516.

37 A very brief history of this mission may be found in Green, Ashbel, Presbyterian Missions, 8589.Google Scholar

38 Missionary Herald, XX (12, 1824), 377.Google Scholar

39 In the “Survey of Missionary Stations,” Missionary Herald, XXIII (01, 1827), 11Google Scholar, it is said of Brigham that a “particular account of his whole tour is preparing for publication in a separate volume.” If such a volume was ever published, the present writer has found no trace of it.

40 Brigham, Juan C.Morse, Y S. E., Nuevo Sistemade Geographia, Antigua y Moderna, con diez y ocho Laminas y cuatro Mapas (Nueva York, 1827).Google Scholar The sketch of Morse, S. E. in the Dictionary of American Biography, XIII, 251252Google Scholar, makes no mention of Morse's having collaborated with Brigham in bringing but the above-mentioned volume.

41 A. B. S., Minutes of the Board of Managers [Ms.], III, 302.

42 See the remarks on Brigham in A. B. S., Forty-Seventh Annual Report (New York, 1863)Google Scholar, in Annual Reports of the American Bible Society …, III, 795–796.

43 Adams, William, Life and Services of Rev. John C. Brigham, D. D., Late Corresponding Secretary of the American Bible Society… (New York, 1863), 1819.Google Scholar

44 The favorable reports that came from Buenos Aires seemed to confirm favorable views of the situation in another part of South America. For example, a correspondent of the New York Religious Chronicle affirmed that “the way is almost as well prepared for the introduction of missionaries from North America to the Republic of Colombia, as from the Atlantic to the Western States.” Boston Recorder, 04 17, 1824.Google Scholar

45 Missionary Herald, XXIII (01, 1827), 17.Google Scholar

46 The effect produced on the churches in the eastern part of the United States by the Parvin-Brigham mission to Spanish America was not unlike that produced on these same churches by the earlier missions of Schermerhorn, Mills, and Smith to our own West and Southwest. See the references cited in Note 7, supra.

47 On the significance of anti-Catholic feeling in the home missionary movement in the United States, see Billington, Ray A., “Anti-Catholic Propaganda and the Home Missionary Movement, 1800–1860,” Mississippi Valley Historical Review, XXII (12, 1935), 361384.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

48 Not all the publicity this mission received derived from communications of Parvin or Brigham to the American Board or to the American Bible Society. For example, a letter from Parvin to the Philadelphia Mite Society, dated at “Buenos Ayres, Sept. 3, 1824,” was published in the Philadelphia Christian Gazette and reprinted in part in the Boston Recorder of 04 2, 1825Google Scholar; and a letter from William Torrey to a minister in New Castle was reprinted from the Philadelphian in the New York Observer of 04 28, 1827.Google Scholar

49 Boston Recorder, 02Google Scholar 7, April 3, and September 18, 1824, April 2, 1825, March 10 and December 8, 1826, and September 28, 1827. In some of these issues the Recorder reprinted material that had appeared in the Philadelphia Christian Gazette, the New York Observer, or the New York Christian. Herald. See also references cited in Note 56, infra.

50 This magazine ran through twelve volumes, 1823–1834.

51 Christian Advocate, II (11, 1824), 522Google Scholar; IV (February, 1826), 94–95; VI (January and April, 1828), 41–42, 183–184.

52 See his article entitled “Southern America,” Christian Advocate, IV (12, 1826), 562563.Google Scholar

53 See his monthly “View of Publick Affairs,” Christian Advocate, 18231834.Google Scholar

54 Christian Advocate, V (09, 1827), 474475.Google Scholar

55 Green, Ashbel, Presbyterian Missions, 89.Google Scholar

56 For example, the Baptist Latter Day Luminary, VI (02, 1825), 53Google Scholar, contains an account of the Parvin-Brigham mission. Also, the American Baptist Magazine, VII (04, 1827), 109116Google Scholar, reprinted from the Missionary Herald a considerable portion of Brigham's final report to the Prudential Committee of the American Board, and this same magazine had published earlier, V (April, 1825), 125, a brief notice of an edition of the Spanish Bible, recently printed for the American Bible Society. Furthermore, it should be remembered that the persons responsible for the affairs of one missionary society regularly read the publications of other missionary societies.

57 Latter Day Luminary, IV (06, 1823), 182183Google Scholar, and V (June, 1824), 172–173; Baptist General Convention, Proceedings of the Fifth Triennial Meeting, 1826 (Boston, 1826), 23Google Scholar, and Proceedings of the Sixth Triennial Meeting, 1829 (Boston, 1829), 30.Google Scholar

58 Perry, William Stevens, Journals of the General Convention of the Protestant Episcopal Church, in the United States, 1785–1835 (Claremont, N. H., 1874), II, 179180, 321Google Scholar; Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America, Proceedings of the Board of Directors …, together with the Report of the Executive Committee, 1828 (Philadelphia, 1828), 1718Google Scholar; Episcopal Watchman (Hartford, Conn.), 04 2 and April 9, 1827Google Scholar, February 4 and February 11, 1828, and May 16 and June 20, 1829.

59 “Proceedings of General Conference [1828],” Methodist Magazine, XI (07, 1828), 272.Google Scholar

60 An enthusiastic picture of “an extensive harvest whitening before the reaper's eye” in South America and an expression of belief that that land should be taken, possession of “by the gospel of Christ” appeared in the Magazine of the Reformed Dutch Church, II (11, 1827), 254.Google Scholar

61 A. B. S., Twelfth Annual Report, 1828 (05, 1828), 34Google Scholar, and Thirteenth Annual Report, 1829 (New York, 1829), 48.Google Scholar

62 Lee, Elizabeth M., and Wasson, Alfred W., The Latin American Circuit (New York, c. 1942), 59.Google ScholarCf. “Datos referentes a los comienzos del culto protestante en Buenos Aires,” Milne, por Andres M., in Milne, Inés, Desde el Cabo de Hornos hasta Quito con la Biblia (Buenos Aires, 1944), 6.Google Scholar

63 Ibid., passim.

64 The book by Inés Milne, cited above, contains much information about Milne and his work. There is a brief tribute to the labors of Milne in A. B. S., Ninety-Second Annual Report, 1908 (New York, 1908), 25.Google Scholar

65 Bible Society Record, LXXXIX (11, 1944).Google Scholar See inside back cover.