Contents


Collection Overview

Biographical Note

Scope and Contents of the Collection

Organization of the Collection

Search Terms

SERIES I. BIOGRAPHICAL MATERIAL, MEMORABILIA AND PHOTOGRAPHS

SERIES II. CORRESPONDENCE

SERIES III. WRITINGS

SERIES IV. TEACHING AND LECTURE MATERIAL

SERIES V. SUBJECTS

Teresina Rowell Havens Papers, 1891-1994

Finding Aid

Finding aid prepared by Susan Boone.

Encoding funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

2003

Collection Overview

Creator:Havens, Teresina R. (Teresina Rowell)
Title:Teresina R. Havens Papers
Dates: 1891-1994
Abstract: Professor of comparative religion; Founder, spiritual retreat Temenos, Shutesbury, MA. Included in the collection are scrapbooks from Japan and the coal mining town of Bradley, Ohio. Correspondence with family members provides insight into her personal and spiritual development. Havens' papers include dairies; Smith College student papers; published articles; teaching materials; and the papers of her mother, Teresina Peck Rowell.
Extent: 8 boxes(3.3 linear ft.)
Language: English.
Identification: MS 211

Biographical Note

Teresina Rowell Havens, undated

Teresina Rowell was born January 13, 1909, the daughter of Wilfrid Asa Rowell, a Congregational minister, and Teresina Peck Rowell (Smith 1894). Following her graduation from Smith College in 1929, Rowell went to Europe. She traveled during the summer and then studied comparative religion at the University of London. She returned to the United States in 1931 and began study at Yale under a fellowship awarded by the National Council of Religion in Higher Education. She received a Ph.D. in comparative religion from Yale in 1933. Between 1933 and 1936 Rowell taught Sociology of Religion at Carleton College, Northfield, Minnesota. In 1936 she visited Japan to investigate the relationship between Buddhism and the Imperial (Shinto) Cult. While there, she encountered the Itto-En sect, a group of Buddhist Christians who were practicing voluntary poverty. She gave up her traveling money to the founder of the order and became an apostle and missionary. She returned to the U.S. in 1937. In 1940 she became a Quaker after working as summer staff at the Quaker retreat and study center at Pendle Hill, Wallingford, Pennsylvania. Influenced by socialist Quakers and the journal of the Quaker, John Woolman, she lived with coal-miners' families in eastern Ohio in the late-1930s. In August 1942, with three other Pendle Hill students, she moved to the black ghetto of Chester, Pennsylvania, and set up a work and prayer commune where she did volunteer housework and other manual labor for families. In 1945, Joseph Durald Havens joined the commune and he and Teresina were married in January 1947. A daughter, Lucia, was born in 1947 and a son, Wilfrid Thwing, in 1951. She was also a staff member at Pendle Hill from 1942 to 1948.

Throughout the years Teresina Havens taught religion at various colleges and universities including Beloit College (1938); Smith College (1939-42); University of Southern California (1950-51); Wilmington College (Ohio) (1954-56) and Springfield College (Massachusetts) (1968-70). She also taught philosophy at Westfield State College (Massachusetts) (1966-67). In the 1970s she taught courses at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst in their semi-autonomous experimental Project 10, which was a series of seminars, workshops, and tutorials meant to explore different ways of learning.

In 1972 the Havens set out on a five-month odyssey across the United States, visiting a number of spiritual communities. Returning to the east they purchased land in Shutesbury, Massachusetts, where they created a spiritual retreat and conference center. They named the place Temenos, a Greek word for the sacred enclosed place surrounding a temple or altar. It was incorporated in 1981 under an advisory group with the Havens as founders and program directors. They retired and moved to Oregon in 1989 where Teresina died February 14,1992.

Return to the Table of Contents


Scope and Contents of the Collection

The Teresina Rowell Havens Papers consist of 3 1/3 linear feet of correspondence, photographs, diaries, writings, memorabilia, printed material, and one audiotape. They date from 1891 to 1994 with the bulk of the material beginning in the 1930s.

Included with these papers are travel diaries, a small amount of correspondence, and writings of her mother, Teresina Peck Rowell. The Teresina Rowell Havens Papers provide an excellent insight into one women's spiritual development as well as some of the experimental teaching methods of the 1970s. Teresina's life was intentionally unconventional and her papers reflect an alternative lifestyle spanning 50 years.

Return to the Table of Contents


Search Terms

Return to the Table of Contents


Organization of the Collection

This collection is organized into five series:

Return to the Table of Contents


SERIES I. BIOGRAPHICAL MATERIAL, MEMORABILIA AND PHOTOGRAPHS


Box

Folder

11
Curriculum vitae, n.d.

2
Interview by Dianne Hayter, 1987

3
Articles, 1948-94, n.d.

4-7
Scrapbooks from Japan, 1937

8
Correspondence and memorabilia from Bradley, OH, 1938


Memorabilia

9
Drawings made during worship at Temenos, n.d.

10
Miscellaneous, 1944, n.d.

11
Photographs, 1928-38, n.d.

SERIES II. CORRESPONDENCE


Box

Folder

21
Teresina Peck Rowell to family, 1913, n.d.


From Teresina Rowell Havens


Wilfrid and Teresina Peck Rowell

Box

Folder

22-14
1927-45

Box

Folder

31-5
1946-53, n.d.

6
Others, 1941-91, n.d.

7
Marjorie Kellogg (spiritual friend of the Universal Third Order), 1987-88

8
From friends to Teresina Rowell Havens, 1929-42, 1971-80, n.d.


From Joseph and Teresina Rowell Havens

Box

Folder

39-12
Lucia Havens, 1963-88, n.d.

Box

Folder

41
Wilfrid Thwing Havens and family, 1971-73, 1985, n.d.

2
Miscellaneous family, 1972-87

3
Friends (Christmas letters), 1973, 1990-91

4
To Joseph Havens from Gerry McFarland, 1979

5
Lucia Havens to Teresina and Joseph Havens, 1962-82

6
To Lucia Havens from others, 1963-64, n.d.

7
Wilfrid Thwing Havens to family 1963-85

SERIES III. WRITINGS



Diaries

Box



4
Teresina Peck Rowell, 1913, 1929, 1937


Teresina Rowell Havens

Box



5
1920-42

Box



6
1943-87


Other

Box

Folder

71
Teresina Peck Rowell, 1891-1938, n.d.


Teresina Rowell Havens

2
Smith College, 1926-28

3-5
Publications, 1931-88, n.d.

6
"Not a Proposition But a Method--Paradoxes of Buddhism in the Classroom" (a chapter for the Festschrift for Edwin Burtt), 1970

SERIES IV. TEACHING AND LECTURE MATERIAL



University of Massachusetts, Project 10

Box

Folder

81
Buddhism, 1970

2
Death and Rebirth, 1971

3
Learning Through Posture and Gesture, n.d.

4
Center for Interpretation of Academic and Meditative Disciplines, 1973-74

5
Miscellaneous, 1970, 1988

6
Inquiry Program, 1978-80

7
Friends Conference on Religion and Psychology (Haverford, PA), 1985

8
Miscellaneous, 1960-91, n.d.

9
Network On Alternative Teachings n.d.

10
Self-evaluations and contracts, 1976-79

SERIES V. SUBJECTS


Box

Folder

811
Lucia Havens, 1950

12
Quakers and Mt. Toby Friends Meeting, 1964-81, n.d.

13
Society for Religion in Higher Education, 1970, n.d.

14
Temenos, 1973-88, n.d.