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Potter (William James) Papers
mssPotterwj  
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Table of contents What's This?
  • Conditions Governing Access
  • Conditions Governing Use
  • Preferred Citation
  • Immediate Source of Acquisition
  • Biographical / Historical
  • Scope and Contents
  • Processing Information
  • Arrangement
  • General

  • Contributing Institution: The Huntington Library
    Title: William James Potter papers
    Creator: Potter, William J. (William James), 1829?-1893
    Identifier/Call Number: mssPotterwj
    Physical Description: 12.87 Linear Feet (11 boxes)
    Date (inclusive): 1846-1949
    Date (bulk): 1846-1876
    Abstract: The papers of the American Unitarian clergyman, editor, and writer William James Potter.
    Language of Material: Materials are in English.

    Conditions Governing Access

    Open for use by qualified researchers and by appointment. Please contact Reader Services at the Huntington Library for more information.

    Conditions Governing Use

    The Huntington Library does not require that researchers request permission to quote from or publish images of this material, nor does it charge fees for such activities. The responsibility for identifying the copyright holder, if there is one, and obtaining necessary permissions rests with the researcher.

    Preferred Citation

    [Identification of item]. William James Potter papers, The Huntington Library, San Marino, California.

    Immediate Source of Acquisition

    Gifts of Mrs. Stedman Hoar, 1969 and 1976.

    Biographical / Historical

    William James Potter (1829?-1893) was an Unitarian clergyman, theologian, and author, one of the founders of the Free Religious Association and the editor of The Index. William James Potter was the son of William and Anna (Aiken) Potter, a Quaker family of North Dartmouth, Massachusetts; Potter was educated at the Friends School in Providence, Rhode Island. In the late 1840s, he taught school in Dartmouth and Bridgeport, Massachusetts. In 1850, Potter entered Harvard College and upon his graduation in 1854, he briefly taught at Cambridge High School, and in 1856 entered the Harvard Divinity School though he left before graduation. Potter then traveled to Germany, Italy, and Switzerland before returning to the United States and, in December 1859, was ordained and installed as minister of the First Congregational Society in New Bedford, Massachusetts; he remained with his New Bedford congregation until his retirement in 1892. As an ardent abolitionist, Potter was a strong supporter of the Civil War; when he was drafted in 1863, he refused an offer to let wealthy parishioners pay a substitute. Potter was detailed as inspector of military hospitals and was later appointed chaplain to the Convalescent camp (later Camp Distribution), near Alexandria, Virginia. Potter was discharged in August 1864, and returned to New Bedford. In September 1863, William James Potter married Elizabeth (Lizzie) Claghorn Babcock (-1879), daughter of Spooner Babcock and Lydia Delano Babcock; Lizzie was a teacher and member of the congregation. The couple had two children: Anna Aiken (1864-) (mother of Conrad Aiken), and Alfred Claghorn (1865-1940), author and Librarian at Harvard College. Lizzie's brother Joseph Babcock was a successful shipping entrepreneur and a first cousin, Warren Delano II (1809-1898), was one of the nation's wealthiest men.

    Scope and Contents

    A collection of approximately 489 items from 1846 to 1949, it consists of personal and family papers of William James Potter, accumulated by Elizabeth Babcock Potter. The collection includes journals, correspondence, a letter book, commonplace book, poems, manuscripts, and ephemera. William James Potter's journals document his early career, preceding his New Bedford ministry; the chaplain's notebook that he kept in 1863 contains records of inspections of hospitals and military prisons, names, cases, and addresses of the inmates. Correspondence includes the letters exchanged between William J. Potter and Elizabeth Potter written between 1860 and 1870. There is also Elizabeth Potter's 1859-1860 letter book and letters from Elizabeth Potter to her mother Lydia Delano Babcock written during her visit to Algonac, the Delano estate, near Newburg, in Orange County, New York, in the summer and fall of 1856; as well as letters written during her stay with William James Potter at Camp Distribution, near Alexandria, Virginia, from November 1863 through May 1864. Also included are the Potters' correspondence with his sisters Mary Ann Potter Howland, Ruth Potter Almy, and Ruby H. Potter Tillinghast. William James Potter's correspondence with his friends, includes correspondents John Albee, Henry W. Brown, and George W. Bartlett (the latter discusses Maine Civil War politics), and letters from Elizabeth's numerous friends and colleagues. Also included is a group of letters from Elizabeth's brother, James Delano Babcock who was engaged in the shipping business and China trade, written from San Francisco, Singapore, Yokohama, and Sitka (Alaska) between 1856 and 1876. Elizabeth Babcock Potter's manuscripts include her commonplace book from 1858 to 1865, a 1851 autograph book, her poetry, mostly religious, and a notebook where she recorded stories of her children from 1869 to 1875. There is also a small group of fragments containing a collection of excerpts from sermons of Andrew Preston Peabody; various notes for sermons, religious poetry, some by Elizabeth Babcock Potter, fragments of letters to her and her parents, including a description of a trip to Scotland (probably by her brother James) and a vivid account of Morgan's first raid to Kentucky in July 1862 and Perryville campaign, written by a friend of Elizabeth's, a Kentucky teacher.

    Processing Information

    Processed by Olga Tsapina in 2006. In 2020, Gayle Richardson created an electronic finding aid derived from the earlier finding aid.

    Arrangement

    Arranged alphabetically by author.

    General

    Individual call numbers included in the collection: mssHM 37115-37536, mssHM 44040-44060, and mssHM 48939. The collection is made up of the original 1969 gift and the 1976 addenda.

    Subjects and Indexing Terms

    Brothers and sisters -- New England
    Clergy -- New England
    Military chaplains -- New England
    Female friendship -- New England -- History -- 19th century
    Mothers and daughters -- New England
    Perryville, Battle of, Perryville, Ky., 1862
    Religious poetry, American
    Sailors -- Massachusetts -- New Bedford
    Spouses of clergy -- New England
    Travelers' writings, American -- 19th century
    Unitarians -- New England
    Women -- New England
    Alaska -- Description and travel
    Germany -- Description and travel
    Italy -- Description and travel
    Japan -- Description and travel
    Maine -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865
    New Bedford (Mass.) -- History -- 19th century
    New England -- Intellectual life -- 19th century
    New England -- Church history -- 19th century
    New England -- History -- 19th century
    Singapore -- Description and travel
    United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Chaplains
    United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Religious aspects
    United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Women
    Commonplace books -- New England -- 19th century
    Family papers -- New England -- 19th century
    Journals (accounts) -- United States -- 19th century
    Letters (correspondence) -- United States -- 19th century
    Letters (correspondence) -- United States -- Civil War, 1861-1865
    Personal papers -- New England -- 19th century
    Poems -- United States -- 19th century
    Albee, John, 1833-1915
    Almy, Ruth Potter
    Babcock, James Delano
    Babcock, Lydia Delano
    Bartlett, George W., -1864
    Brown, H. W. (Henry W.)
    Howland, Mary Ann Potter
    Potter, Alfred Claghorn, 1867-1940
    Potter, Elizabeth Babcock, 1832-1879