Eleazar Wheelock, letter, to John Brainerd, 1765 January 14

Author Wheelock, Eleazar

Date14 January, 1765

abstractWheelock writes to Brainerd about setting up a meeting with the Connecticut Board of Commissioners, and the proposed fundraising trip to England, which is complicated by a renewal of the Mason Land Case.

RepositoryRauner Special Collections Library, Dartmouth College.

Call Number765114.3

handwritingHandwriting is informal, which somewhat hinders legibility. There are several deletions, additions and abbreviations.

paperLarge sheet folded in half to make four pages is in fair condition, with moderate staining, creasing and wear.

inkBrown-black.

noteworthyAs is indicated on two verso, this document is a copy. On one recto, there is a note in a different, likely 19th-century, hand that reads “(not [illegible] in life of J. B. n.a.)." There is also a mark in red pencil.

layoutThe first page of the letter is on one recto, but the second page is on two verso, which is in landscape orientation. The trailer is on one verso, the address page is two recto.

Persistent Identifier

Access and Usage RightsCopyright 2014 Trustees of Dartmouth College. Publicly accessible for non-commercial use: these pages may be freely searched and displayed, but permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. Please see http://www.dartmouth.edu/~library/schcomm/copyright/rights.html for more information.

My very Dear Brother.

I have been writing and Endeavouring to
have a meeting of the Commissioners above a month, but
the Snow is So Deep on the Roads that there is no
possibility of it at present, wherefore I have preferred
A Memorial to your Board of Commissioners in my own
Name desiring they would Send you with another
Indian a begging for this School and the Support of
missionaries next Spring. and I make no Doubt
our Board will approve of what I have done and
cheerfully comply. but Supposing the worst that they
will not join the consequence will be that your Board
will have the lead Conduct, and Sole Patronage of the
affair of Sending missionaries and schoolmasters. but
there will be no difficulty the commissioners here
are generally in high Spirits to promote and further
the design —
I think I mentioned to you my thoughts of taking one
Chamberlain a valuable youth in his last Year at
Yale College into this School, with a view to fit him for
a missionary. he is now come to me with that view, and
I believe the commissioners will think best to Send him with
Mr. Titus Smith next Spring his Age, scholarship, Prudence,
and Piety, I think will invite them to it beyond any
other I now know of that may be had. —
I[illegible][guess (h-dawnd): ']ve heard nothing of My Son Since he left New Haven
President Clap writes me, that. he had concluded to receive
him on his return which I am glad of and rather hope
all things considered that they will not persuade him
to tarry at Nassau Hall. I want to hear what he
met with at Philadelphia
I was very glad to receive yours from New York, and of
the Intelligences therein given. I thank you sir. The
The Blow which Mr. Whitefield gave this School in Sending Mr. Occom
back from New York was beyond any it has received from the first
I find our Government are So incensed thereby # that I fear I shall find
no further Countenance in my Suit for an Incorporation which they
seemed just upon the Point to grant me. and which we shall find
to be of very great Importance If you Should go on the Errand
proposed — and which is the very thing he insisted upon in
order to his using Influence in favour of the School at Home.
It will not be best that any Mention Should be made of Mr. Occom's
going with you. It is doubtful whether our commissioners will think it
prudent to Send him Since there are Such jealousies in the Government.
and Since Mason is gone home to solicit the old Mason Affair as it
is called wherein Mr. Occom's Tribe are plaintiff against the:
Government. —* I write, in [illegible][guess (h-dawnd): haste] The Lord direct
us all to act for the Glory of his great Name and furtherance of
the Redeemers cause. accept armfuls of Love from
Your Brother etc. etc. etc.
Eleazar Wheelock

Copy.

Rev. John Brainerd.

# [gap: tear][guess (h-dawnd): ie by] what was in
consequence of it.

*I wish you could be here at Mr.
Smith
s ordination next Spring I will
endeavour to let you know when it will
be—


To Rev. John Brainerd
January. 14. 1765.
To The Rev.
Mr. John Brainerd Missionary
 In
 New Jersey
Loading...