Jeremiah Halsey, letter, to Eleazar Wheelock, 1768 April 25

Author Halsey, Jeremiah

Date25 April, 1768

Call Number768275.2

abstractHalsey writes that he has seen a document in which Whitaker vastly overestimates the number of Indians in America, and that people unfriendly to the design will take advantage of the opportunity to ridicule the school.

handwritingHandwriting is small and informal, yet mostly clear and legible. The trailer is in an unknown hand.

paperLarge sheet folded in half to make four pages is in fair condition, with moderate staining, creasing and wear. There is evidence of old repair work at the top of the central vertical crease.

inkBlack.

signatureThe signature is abbreviated.

Modernized Version Deletions removed; additions added in; modern spelling and capitalization added; unfamiliar abbreviations expanded.

Persistent Identifier

 Rev. and Dear Sir
I have been lately at Boston. There I had full
opportunity of observing the spirit that prevails res
pecting your school; I saw plainly that some gentle
men (for reasons best known to themselves) would
not be displeased if the whole affair should drop
into non existence. Mr. Mairhead, who seems to be
a sincere friend of yours, communicated to me the
Scots magazine for June 1767; in the beginning of this
I observed a memorial of Dr. Whitaker's to the
Scots society for propagating Christian knowledge
in foreign parts
; there to impress the gentlemen
of the society with the importance of his mission,
he asserts the number of Indians in the conti:
nent (the northern continent of America he must
mean, for he know we had no connections with the
southern) to be supposed to be twenty millions.
This number is undoubtedly twenty, if not forty
times too large. Nobody to the westward supposes that Indians in all
those parts of the continent to which we have any
access, to exceed five hundred thousand, if they come
anything near to that number. This I think must
be given up as a mistake: and you know, Sir very
well the wretched improvement that some will
make of it; the more candid will impute it to
Dr. Whitaker's ignorance, but I fear too many will
call it a pious fraud. This has given me much  uneas
iness: I cannot but look upon it as a most

 unhappy blunder. We have no reason to expect any
thing else from the temper some men have manifested, [illegible]
but that they will do all the mischief they can with it. If
your friends on the other side the water find that there
has not been given a true representation of facts either
by yourself or Dr. Whitaker, they will naturally grow
suspicious of the whole affair, and your trust, to whom
you have conveyed such ample powers) may think it un
safe to trust the many on this side the water. We may
certainly depend upon it that persons will not be wanting
to sow the seeds of prejudice and [illegible][guess: raise] them up to the
most enormous height. Prejudices you know, if they once
take place, are not easily eradicated, especially if they res
pect the management of public monies; the greater part
of mankind are villains in heart; their own conscien
ces tell them that if they had an opportunity of defraud;
ing, they should defraud. Hence they will not readily see
how another man can be honest in like circumstances;
for few bad men are willing to believe there are any better
than themselves. Therefore I cannot but think it of
great importance that this mistake should be rectified as
soon as possible. Mr. Whitaker had better candidly confess
it by something published in the same magazine. It
certainly will not answer to attempt to maintain it;
because you doubtless know that it can never be shown
to be consistent with truth; such an attempt will surely
be regarded by the world as betraying either great ignorance
or great impudence. Your school may be easily represented

in a sufficiently important light without exaggerat:
ing the number of the Indians. It is evidently the
happiest scheme that ever was contrived to engage the af:
fections of the Indians, and so to prevent indian wars, and pro;
mote the rapid extension of our settlements, and finally to
establish the pure religion of Jesus in these uncultivat;
ed deserts. Excuse dear Sir, the freedom I have used: [illegible][guess: impart]
it to a tender concern lest so interesting and benevolent a
design should be in anywise [illegible][guess: burdened ] or obstructed.

I am Dear Sir ever yours
 most affectionately

 Jeremiah Halsey
P.S. My kindest regards to Mr. Kirtland. Tell him
though absent in body, I am often present with him in
spirit. My love to your Son: and to your worthy neighbour
Mr. Lockwood, to all enquiring friends in your parts.
Mr. Jeremiah Halsey's
 April 25th 1768

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