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George H. Atkinson Collection, 1852-1887

Overview of the Collection

Creator
Atkinson, George H., 1819-1889
Title
George H. Atkinson Collection
Dates
1852-1887 (inclusive)
Quantity
0.5 cubic foot, (1 box)
Collection Number
MS.26
Summary
George Henry Atkinson was an early Oregon missionary and educator who founded Pacific University. He was also involved in the creation of the public school system in Oregon. The collection consists of Atkinson's incoming and outgoing correspondence, along with several of his publications.
Repository
Pacific University, Archives
Pacific University Archives
2043 College Way
Forest Grove, OR
97116
Telephone: 5033521400
archives@pacificu.edu
Access Restrictions

Collection is open for research.

Languages
English
Sponsor
Sponsored by a grant from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission
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Biographical Note

George Henry Atkinson was an early Oregon missionary and educator who founded Pacific University. He was also involved in the creation of the public school system in Oregon.

Atkinson was born on May 10, 1819 in Newburyport, Massachusetts. He graduated from Dartmouth College in 1843 and from Andover Theological Seminary in 1846. He married his wife, Nancy Bates, the same year. One year later, they travelled as missionaries to the Oregon Territory via ship around Cape Horn. The Atkinsons initially settled in Oregon City, where he helped to organize and build its Congregationalist Church. He would serve as its minister for 15 years. There he would help to found the Clackamas Female Seminary, an early women's college that survived for a few years before shutting down due to lack of funds. At the same time, Atkinson was involved in developing public education in Oregon. He authored the state's first school law in 1849, modelling its organization on New England schools. Atkinson would later serve as the first superintendent of schools in Clackamas County, and then as the superintendent for Multnomah County.

In 1849, Atkinson helped to write the charter for Tualatin Academy in Forest Grove, along with co-founders Tabitha Brown and Harvey Clark. Tualatin Academy was a secondary school open to both male and female students; mostly the children of pioneers from the Oregon Trail. Atkinson was instrumental in adding a post-secondary wing named Pacific University to the school several years later. He continued to work in the interests of Tualatin Academy and Pacific University for the rest of his life. As a member of the Board of Trustees, he helped to recruit and hire much of its faculty, including its first president, Sidney Harper Marsh.

In his later years, Atkinson worked to retain an off-reservation boarding school for Native American children in Forest Grove. The Indian Industrial Training School, which opened in 1880, housed children who were taken from tribes in Washington, Alaska, and other areas of the Pacific Northwest. The children were taught trades such as farming, blacksmithing and domestic work, and were taught to talk and dress like white Americans. Atkinson attempted to keep the school, which was under the control of the Indian Affairs section of the Department of the Interior, near Pacific University, which supported its operations. Ultimately, the school was moved to a location near Salem in 1885, where it was renamed the Chemawa Indian School.

George Atkinson died on February 25, 1889.

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Content Description

The collection mostly consists of Atkinson's incoming and outgoing correspondence. Most of the letters are professional in nature, and concern the administration of Tualatin Academy and Pacific University. Several of the letters from the 1850s concern the hiring of Pacific's first president, Sidney Harper Marsh. A group of letters from the mid-1870s relate to divisions over whether Pacific should align itself more closely with the Congregationalist Church, as well as the search for a new president to replace Sidney Harper Marsh. Another group of letters dating from 1880-1885 concern the Forest Grove Indian Industrial Training School, which was an off-reservation boarding school for Native American children. The letters reflect the work that Atkinson did to convince the Department of the Interior to keep the school in Forest Grove, and provide his assessment of its accomplishments. The original letters are accompanied by typed transcripts created by Pacific University students in 2002.

The collection also includes several original publications by Atkinson, including a sermon, a treatise on railroad routes in the Northwest, and "Reminiscences" about Reverend Elkanah Walker, who was a fellow missionary, educator and friend. A file of material about Atkinson is present at the end of the collection.

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Use of the Collection

Preferred Citation

George H. Atkinson Collection, Pacific University Archives, Forest Grove, Oregon.

Restrictions on Use

Pacific University owns the copyright to some, but not all, of the materials housed in its archives. Copyright for materials authored or otherwise produced as official business of Pacific University is retained by Pacific University and requires its permission for publication. Copyright status for other collection materials varies. Transmission or reproduction of materials protected by U.S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C.) beyond that allowed by fair use requires the written permission of the copyright owners. Works not in the public domain cannot be commercially exploited without permission of the copyright owners. Responsibility for any use rests exclusively with the user.

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Administrative Information

Arrangement

The collection was arranged during the transcription project in 2002. The order imposed during at that time has been maintained in this guide.

Bibliography

Sevetson, Donald J. Atkinson: pioneer Oregon educator. Portland, Or.: D.J. Sevetson, 2011.

Related Materials

Other material by and about Atkinson is present in other collections at the Pacific University Archives; please ask the archivist for assistance. Several of his personal letters and his 1847-1858 diaries are housed in a collection at the Oregon Historical Society.

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Detailed Description of the Collection

  • Correspondence

  • Publications

    • Description: "$1,200 needed now, and $3,000 this year from us: To the Congregational churches and ministers of Oregon and Washington." [Printed circular fundraising letter.] Portland: 1883.
      Dates: 1883
      Container: Folder 10
    • Description: "The first day sabbath: its law." Portland, Oregon: D. H. Stearns & Co. ..., 1879.

      3 copies.

      Dates: 1879
      Container: Folder 10
    • Description: "Memorial sketch of Tualatin Academy and Pacific University during forty years."

      Photocopy. Speech read at the fortieth annual meeting of the school on June 19, 1888.

      Dates: 1888
      Container: Folder 10
    • Description: "The Northwest coast, including Oregon, Washington and Idaho, a series of articles upon the N. P. R. R. in its relations to the basins of the Columbia and of Puget's Sound." First published in the Oregonian. Second edition. Portland, Oregon: A. G. Walling ..., 1878.

      2 copies. Handwritten note: Congregational Association of Oregon. Includes a foldout map showing the railroads and wagon routes in Western Oregon, and the rail routes to Oregon from the Eastern United States.

      Dates: 1878
      Container: Folder 10
    • Description: "Reminiscences of Rev. E. Walker ... Funeral discourse by Rev. G. H. Atkinson, D. D." Portland: George H. Himes, [1877].
      Dates: 1877
      Container: Folder 10
  • Research Files about Atkinson

    Additional research files about Atkinson are available in the "subject files" at Pacific University Archives.

    • Description: Clippings about Atkinson
      Dates: undated
      Container: Folder 11
    • Description: Engraved portait of Atkinson
      Dates: Circa 1880?
      Container: Folder 11
    • Description: "George Henry Atkinson: a pioneer builder." Forest Grove: Pacific University, 1944.

      Offprint from the Pacific University Bulletin, originally issued as in Vol. 40: 7 (June, 1944).

      Dates: 1944
      Container: Folder 11
    • Description: Sevetson, George. "George Henry Atkinson of Oregon." Bulletin of the Congregational Library, Vol. 5:1 (Summer, 2008).
      Dates: 2008
      Container: Folder 11
    • Description: Transcribed extracts from Atkinson's diary, 1848-1858

      Transcription by Frances Warren Holt in 1939. Accompanied by a letter signed by her.

      Dates: 1848-1858
      Container: Folder 11

Names and SubjectsReturn to Top

Subject Terms

  • Indian Industrial School (Forest Grove, Or.)
  • Off-reservation boarding schools--Oregon
  • Pacific University
  • Tualatin Academy
  • Universities and colleges--Oregon

Form or Genre Terms

  • Correspondence

Occupations

  • Education administrators, postsecondary
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