Eleazar Wheelock, letter, to Moses Peck, 1766 November 5

Author Wheelock, Eleazar

Date5 November, 1766

abstractWheelock writes, for possible publication, to correct assertions made by the New England Company about its relationship to, and support of, Occom.

RepositoryRauner Special Collections Library, Dartmouth College.

Call Number766605.3

handwritingHandwriting is not Wheelock's. It is small, somewhat scrawling and frequently difficult to decipher. The trailer is in a different, unknown hand.

paperLarge single sheet is in fair-to-poor condition, with moderate-to-heavy staining, creasing and wear that results in some loss of text.

inkDark-brown ink bleeds through paper, but is washed out in spots.

noteworthyAs is marked on one verso, this document is a copy. The contents are nearly identical to those of manuscript 766605.2

Persistent Identifier

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Sir.
I am favoured with a Copy of Mr. Whitakers Letter to you. and by that I have
an account of Mr. Olivers Letter to Governor Mauduit. and it Seems a Little Strange
that the Honourable Board in whose name he wrote So long accounted Mr. Occom
to be in their pay, and yet after all Should make So many mistakes in their
history of him, and that too when it is the result of a meeting, and designed
as their testimony of Facts, Sent to the Honourable Society in London to certify
them So circumstantially, as that they might not be imposed upon by Deceivers.
Some defects in their Narrative may be Seen by comparing the following par
ticulars with what they assert —
  • 1.Mr. Occom (as well as many Other of that Tribe) was undoubtedly a pagan
    'til he was about Sixteen years old. and had never So much as heard that
    there was Such a person as Jesus Christ.
  • 2.none ever Said anything to me about taking Mr. Occom under my
    instruction, or was ever any way moving in that matter. that I ever knew of.
    but his Mother, before he Came to live with me upon Trial.
  • 3.Mr. Pomeroy never had any Concern, but only as a friend when my Fam
    =ily were unable to bear the Bu[gap: tear][guess (h-dawnd): rden] of the School, by Reason of sickness, he
    did at my desire take the School, with my son in Law (Mr. Maltby) the master
    of it to his house, where it Continued, as I Remember the bigger part of a
    year, but he Depended upon me to Support Mr. Occom, and it was at my
    risk as much as ever. —
  • 4.Mr. Occom had been long confined by Sore sickness before he Came to
    me, and was then, and all the time he was with me a low State of health, although in
    in the Main mending, until he went from me, to Serve them as schoolmaster and public
    Teacher at Montauk, on Long Island, and he was in as Good State of Health when
    he went away as I ever knew to be. and it was by the Importunity of Mr. Horton
    missionary of the Honourable Society in Scotland, that I was persuaded to let Mr. Occom go to
    his place there.
  • 5.Mr. Occom after he had Some time officiated as a Preacher there, was Ordained
    By the Presbytery of Suffolk County on said Island, and Still continues to be a mem
    ber of the Same.
  • 6.The ministers of this Government had no hand in Sending Mr. Occom on his
    first mission to the Six Nations. See the account of that in Mr. Bostwicks Letter to the
    Praeses of Directory etc. printed at the End of Mr. Randals Sermon before the Society
    in Scotland
    January 3. 1763.—
  • 7.Mr. Occom was as much in the pay of the Boston Commissioners before the New
    York Commissioners
    Sent Him on their mission as he was afterwards So far I ever knew
    and his circumstances was as needy 'til he was Relieved by that public Contribution
    at New York as ever I know them to be, nor did I ever understand that the
    New York Commissioners ever asked the consent of the Boston Board to Send him.
  • 8.the Boston Commissioners paid only part of his debts when Application was made
    to them after his Return from that mission. —
  • 9.He Could not have continued in their Service nor in any other, if he had received
    no Other Support but that which he had from them.
  • 10.As to the Report that he was a Mohawk etc. and that large Contributions
    were Made Me on that Account I have never Yet heard that there been Such
    A Report in this Country, but only what has Come from the aforesaid Commissioners
    and how a report that he was a Mohawk etc. Came to be published in England and
    transmitted here In the public prints, I Can Only guess—
as to their resigning
him to Me and putting him out of their Hands, When they had him in their
Service as well as pay, Only on My telling th[gap: hole][guess (h-dawnd): em] I Could employ him better abund
antly evidences their high Esteem of My Goo[gap: tear][guess (h-dawnd): d] Judgment and fidelity, at least
before I So unhappily cracked my Credit, by Declaring publicly in the most
populous Towns in that and the neighbouring Governments that he was a
Mohawk lately Emergent out of gross paganism etc. in Order to get large contri
butions for this School.
 These
These Hints So far as I know are true. and I thought proper you
Should have them, and make Such Improvement of them as Your
Prudence Shall direct. and if you think it necessary you may publish
them or any part of them, though I confess the entering into public
Quarrel with those Gentlemen is So unnatural and incongruous to the
design of building up and enlarging the peaceable Kingdom of Christ
which we all profess to have in view, that I Exceedingly Dread it,
if the Glory of God and the interests of the Redeemers Cause Dont
evidently require it —
a Copy.
Mr. Pecks copy of
Mr. Wheelocks Letter in
answer to my Copy of [gap: stain][guess (h-dawnd): Mr. ]
Oliver 's letter
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