ContentsScope and Contents of the Collection Organization of the Collection Contents List Biographical Information, ca.1893-1923 Photographs, ca.1871, ca.1893-1907 |
Sprague papers, ca. 1871-1923 (bulk 1893-1923)Finding AidEncoding funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.© 2003
Biographical NoteViette Isabel Brown was born on February 12, 1846 in Newark, Wayne County, New York. She was the third of Hiram Leicester Brown and Hester Ann Bonker's ten children. She attended public school in Newark and then in Shortsville, New York. After graduating from Mount Holyoke Female Seminary in 1871 she taught school in Red Creek, New York; Muncie, Pennsylvania; and Emory, Ohio. In 1893 she went to China and married Reverend William P. Sprague in Tientsin. The Spragues then went to Kalgan in northern China to work at a missionary there. On June 11 in 1900 the Boxer Uprising forced them to flee the mission with a group of nineteen people including other American and Swedish missionaries and children. The group reached Urga, the capital of Mongolia, and then had to move on to Siberia, Moscow and finally St. Petersburg on September 18. The Spragues returned to New York for one furlough and then went back to Kalgan in 1902, staying there until 1910. William Sprague died in 1919 and Viette Brown Sprague spent the rest of her life in Shortsville, New York remaining involved in church activities, missionary organizations and choir. She died on November 2, 1923 at the age of seventy-seven. Return to the Table of Contents Scope and Contents of the CollectionThe Viette Isabel Brown Sprague papers consist of correspondence (original manuscripts or transcript copies), writings, biographical information, and photographs. Most of this material reflects Sprague's work as a missionary in Kalgan in northern China from 1900-1919. In letters written to her friend, Anna C. Edwards, she discusses her work in China as a missionary, as well as the social and political conditions in China during the time of the Boxer Uprising. Her writings include an article on her missionary work and two reports on women's work in Kalgan. In these writings she discusses growing anti-foot binding sentiments and the mission's progress. Her writings and letters are supplemented by more than thirty photographs relating to her work in China. Biographical information includes articles and notes relating to her time in China and two detailed obituaries. Material from this collection is available in an online digital format. Return to the Table of Contents Search TermsReturn to the Table of Contents Organization of the CollectionThis collection is organized into four series: Return to the Table of Contents Contents ListCorrespondence, 1900-1919 1 folderThis series consists of letters and two postcards written by Viette Brown Sprague between 1900-1919. The correspondence is addressed chiefly to Anna C. Edwards. Two letters have been transcribed by Edwards (one written to Sprague's Mount Holyoke classmate Frances Dean) and there is one photocopy of an original letter to Edwards (the original is in the photograph folder with photographs pasted to it). Four of the letters were written in Kalgan, China between 1900-1908 describing the Boxer Uprising, social and political conditions in China, China's relations with Japan and the opium trade, the life of missionaries in Kalgan, and Viette Sprague's work as a teacher there. One letter was written in Tabol, Mongolia in 1906 while the Spragues were on vacation with other missionaries, travelling in carts and sleeping in tents. The later letters were written from Shortsville, N.Y. between 1910-1919. One describes her trip back to the United States from China and the rest concern her family and friends in Shortsville. Arranged chronologically. Writings, 1905-1908 1 folderThis series consists of the article "Work in Kalgan" by Viette Brown Sprague published in "Life and Light" in October 1905 and two "Reports of Women's Work in Kalgan" from March 31, 1907 and May 31, 1908. "Work in Kalgan" is a brief description of missionary life in Kalgan, China that discusses growing anti-foot binding sentiments and the progress of the mission. In her two reports on women's work, Sprague describes the missionary work of her Swedish and American colleagues, controversy over binding feet, Bible study, a women's college in Peking and the lives of several Chinese women who work at the school with her in Kalgan. Arranged chronologically. Biographical Information, ca.1893-1923 1 folderThis information includes newspaper and magazine articles from 1903-1904 and biographical notes written by Anna C. Edwards from about 1893-1919. There are photocopies of two newpaper articles from around 1900 about the Boxer Uprising and the missionary policy in Kalgan, China towards binding feet. Of particular note are two articles from unidentified publications, "Restoration of Kalgan" by Viette Brown's husband Rev. William P. Sprague, 1903 and "Rebuilding of Kalgan" by an unknown author, 1904. The biographical information by Edwards includes excerpts from Viette Brown's letters and notes about the Spragues and their missionary work. There are also two detailed obituaries from 1923 newspapers describing Viette Brown Sprague's life and work. Arranged chronologically. Photographs, ca.1871, ca.1893-1907 1 folderThis series contains two formal photographs of Viette Brown, probably after her graduation from Mount Holyoke Female Seminary in 1871, and about thirty photographs taken during her years in China. There are no photographs taken during the Boxer Uprising in 1900, but several small, undated photographs of scenes from Kalgan, China might have been taken before 1900. The rest of the photographs are from 1902-1907. Particularly of note are photographs from Kalgan after the Sprague's return in 1902 of Chinese women in a classroom, several of the missionaries in front of the recently rebuilt missionary that stands on the ruins of the old one, a Chinese woman with bound feet standing with her family, a family moving, a blind beggar woman and a Russian caravan. Most of the photographs correspond with a descriptive letter written to Anna C. Edwards from Tabol, Mongolia in 1906. This group shows the missionaries traveling in carts and on horseback, Mongolians, landscapes and animals. Prints and photocopies have been made of the photographs from this trip because the originals are in poor condition. Arranged chronologically. Contents ListCorrespondence, 1900-1919 1 folder
Writings, 1905-1908 1 folder
Biographical Information, ca. 1893-1923 1 folder
Photographs, ca. 1871, ca. 1893-1907 1 folder
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