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Whitman Controversy Clippings, 1895-1903

Overview of the Collection

Creator
Day, Jerome, 1876-1941
Title
Whitman Controversy Clippings
Dates
1895-1903 (inclusive)
Quantity
1 cubic feet  :  Oversized item.
Collection Number
MG 229
Summary
This collection contains letters to John Fiske by H.W. Parker, William I. Marshall, and Stephen B.L. Penrose; and newspaper clippings chiefly of articles by Marshall, William A. Mowry, and others, and concerning Marcus Whitman's Ride to Save Oregon.
Repository
University of Idaho Library, Special Collections and Archives
Special Collections and Archives
University of Idaho Library
875 Perimeter Drive
MS 2350
Moscow, ID
83844-2350
Telephone: 2088850845
libspec@uidaho.edu
Access Restrictions

Collection is open for research.

Languages
English
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Historical Note

Marcus Whitman was an American physician and missionary who led American settlers across the Oregon Trail, unsuccessfully attempting to Christianize the Cayuse Indians. Due to a misunderstanding, Whitman and other settlers were subsequently killed by the Cayuse Indians in an event known as the 1847 Whitman Massacre, resulting in the beginning of the Cayuse War (1847-1855). Whitman's alleged political influence over the United States' claim to the Oregon Country, as well as his purported leadership role in the emigration of settlers to the region, were greatly exaggerated in the decades following his death, leading to great controversy in popular and academic literature. Whitman was born 4 September 1802 in Federal Hollow, New York. He married Narcissa Prentiss. Both were killed on 29 November 1847.

Jerome James Day, the youngest son of Henry and Ellen Day, was born in Truckee, California, in 1876. He was working as a union miner when his wealth from the Hercules Mine thrust him into business and politics. He studied at Gonzaga College and the University of Idaho, taking an accelerated program in mining when the Hercules Mine began to turn a profit. He married Lucy Mix of Moscow, Idaho, in 1902 and fathered one son, Jerome James, Jr., born 1911, and one daughter, Bernice Eugenia, born 1904. Day and his wife lived in Moscow for approximately fourteen years. He became president of the Moscow State Bank and president and major stockholder of the Idaho National Harvester Company, a venture with his in-laws. He was state senator from Latah County for three terms, 1909-1912.

Although the most socially active of the Days, he never cast off the sorrow of his son's drowning death at seventeen, the result of a boating accident while at prep school in the Seattle area. His daughter was married twice, the first time in 1925 to an Alaskan by the name of John Fuller Malony, the second time to a man named Sharkey about whom little is known.

Day remained closely connected with the Day mining companies and in 1912 became president of the Tamarack and Custer Consolidated Co. Day moved to Northport, WA, after purchasing the old Northport smelter and becoming its president; he also organized a bank at Northport. Day was president of the Idaho Mining Association, 1919-1922, and for twenty years he was a leading spokesman for the Idaho mining industry.

Day was prominent in the Idaho Democratic Party, served on the Idaho State Board of Education, and was a regent of the University if Idaho from 1933 until his death in Phoenix, Arizona, on March 9, 1941. He established several scholarships at the University of Idaho. His library of English classics and western Americana was donated to the University of Idaho.

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Content Description

The Whitman controversy: collection, 1895-1903 contains letters to John Fiske by H.W. Parker (Apr. 2 and May 27, 1901), William I. Marshall (Mar. 28, 1895), and Stephen B.L. Penrose (Nov. 29, 1895, and Jan. 30, 1901); and newspaper clippings (1897-1903) chiefly of articles by Marshall, William A. Mowry, and others, and concerning Marcus Whitman's Ride to Save Oregon.

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Use of the Collection

Preferred Citation

FOR PHOTOS Photographer, "Title," date. Collection name, object ID. University of Idaho Library Special Collections and Archives, Moscow, ID.

FOR DOCUMENTS Author, Description or "Title" of item, date. Collection name, collection number, box, folder. University of Idaho Library Special Collections and Archives, Moscow, ID.

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Administrative Information

Acquisition Information

Materials were donated by Jerome Day.

Processing Note

Materials in this collection, including images, language, or other content, may be offensive or disturbing to some viewers. Care has been taken to clearly document the sources of these records, so that viewers may consider the historical context in which they were produced. To maintain historical accuracy, the materials appear as they were originally created. They do not reflect the current views of the University of Idaho. For more information about how we treat materials with offensive or disturbing content, please see the University of Idaho Library, Special Collections and Archives Offensive Content Policy. Offensive Content Policy.

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Detailed Description of the Collection

  • Series 1:

    • Description: Whitman controversy clippings collection, 1895-1903
      1 item : Letters, chiefly of articles newspapers clippings by John Fiske, H.W. Parker, Spephen B.L. Penrose, William A. Mowry concerning Marcus Whitman's Ride to Save Oregon"
      Dates: 1895-1903
      Container: Object 1

Names and SubjectsReturn to Top

Subject Terms

  • Correspondence

Personal Names

  • Whitman, Marcus, 1802-1847

Geographical Names

  • Northwest, Pacific
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