
Isaac Robson journals, 1864-1871
Using These Materials
- Restrictions:
- The collection is open for research.
Summary
- Creator:
- Robson, Isaac, 1800-1885
- Abstract:
- The collection includes two journals kept by Isaac Robson while traveling as a Quaker minister. One records his observations while touring France and Italy in 1864 to visit Quakers, Vaudois, and Protestants, and the other documents his trip to Canada and the United States from 1870 to 1871 to attend Quaker meetings. Seven letters, principally written by Isaac Robson to his wife Sarah while he was in America, are at the end of the collection.
- Extent:
- 2 volumes
- Language:
- English
- Authors:
- Collection processed and finding aid created by Jayne Ptolemy, January 2018
Background
- Scope and Content:
-
The collection includes two journals kept by Isaac Robson while traveling as a Quaker minister. One records his observations while touring France and Italy in 1864 to visit with Quakers, Vaudois, and Protestants, and the other documents his trip to Canada and the United States from 1870 to 1871 to attend Quaker meetings. Seven letters, principally written by Isaac Robson to his wife Sarah while he was in America, are at the end of the collection.
The journal Isaac Robson kept while in France and Italy spans from August 20, 1864, to November 11, 1864. Robson traveled through Southern France and Italy as a Quaker minister with his colleague Charles Fox of Falmouth, visiting Quakers and attending to Vaudois (Waldenses) and Protestant congregations. Robson commented on Catholics, priests, Protestants and anti-Protestant prejudice, and general religious practice and feeling throughout the region. He distributed religious tracts and observed local customs, reflecting on labor, education, and good will engendered by the prior visit of Quaker minister William Forster. This journal includes both original manuscript writings and carbon copies in different hands, with some variance in content.
Robson's American journal is a carbon copy, beginning as he boarded the Java in May 1870, headed to New York for a tour of Canadian and American Quaker meetings, and ending upon his arrival in Philadelphia at the end of March 1871. Robson's itinerary took him through New England, portions of Southern Canada, several mid-Western states, including Ohio, Indiana, and Iowa, and the border states of Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Arkansas. Robson's principal object was to visit Quaker meetings, attending both isolated local meetings and larger Yearly Meetings. He frequently visited Friends' schools and commented extensively on local Quakers' lifestyles, labor, and religious practices. Robson visited with Wilburite and Hicksite meetings and reflected on the persisting schisms in American Quakerism.
While passing through Canada, Robson described frontier communities, Canadian attitudes toward England and the United States, and social and religious practices. He included three small drawings of a "shanty," a "Log house," and a "Frame house" to illustrate dwellings in southern Ontario (page 33). In the United States, Robson's interest in social matters drew his attention to African Americans, Native Americans, women, religious revivalism, schools, and penitentiary systems.
Robson commented on his encounters with African Americans and Quakers' interactions with them throughout his tour. He regularly wrote about African American religion, education, labor, and changing relationships in the South between planters and those they formerly enslaved. While in Arkansas, he visited with Friends Calvin and Alida Clark, and he discussed their work with African Americans at the Southland College and the white community's hostile reactions to them (pages 119-122). Throughout his journal Robson also noted the lasting physical, social, and economic impacts of the Civil War.
Robson mentioned information about the Quaker's Indian Affairs Committee and other Quaker involvement with Native Americans (pages 89 and 22), and he also wrote passing details relating to North American Indians in general. He included a sketch of Pilot Mountain, North Carolina, "so called from its having been used as a guiding mark by the Indians" (page 100). While in Iowa, Robson visited Lawrie Tatum (1822-1900), a Quaker Indian agent to the Kiowa and Comanche at Fort Sill, and he recorded some of Tatum's reflections on Native American civilization, religion, and morality (pages 55, 129, 131).
Other notable figures encountered or discussed by Robson include: Clinton B. Fisk (1828-1890) of the Freedmen's Bureau (page 6); John Parker Hale (1806-1873), U.S. minister to Spain (page 7); Joseph Gould (1808-1886), Canadian political figure (page 39); Anna Dickinson (1842-1932), orator, abolitionist, and women's rights advocate (page 157); William Forster (1784-1854), British Quaker abolitionist buried in Tennessee (pages 79, 112, 117, 140); George Dixon and Alfred Jones, superintendents of a Freedmen school in Danville, Virginia (pages 96, 98); Yardley Warner (1815-1885), Quaker who founded Warnersville, a free black community (pages 98, 113); and Daniel Drew, a former slave who attended the Southland Institute and became a Quaker minister in Arkansas (pages 119-121).
The loose correspondence consists of seven letters, six written from Isaac Robson to his wife Sarah Robson during his American tour, 1870-1871, with reflections on Reconstruction, Quaker meetings, prisons, and other topics. One letter from William Harvey to Joshua Wheeler Robson written from Leeds, England, in 1885 mentions financial charity for immigrant Mennonites.
- Biographical / Historical:
-
Isaac Robson was born on October 20, 1800, to Thomas Robson (1768-1852) and Elizabeth (Stephenson) Robson (1771-1843) in Darlington, England. His parents were members of the Religious Society of Friends, and Elizabeth visited America as a traveling minister from 1824 to 1828, alone, and from 1838 to 1842 with her husband Thomas. Isaac Robson worked as a tea dealer and later as the owner of Isaac Robson & Sons, a bleaching and dyeing factory in Huddersfield. In 1830 he married Sarah Wheeler (1799-1885) and together they had three children, Joshua Wheeler (1831-1917), Mary (b. 1834), and Thomas (b. 1836). The family settled in Huddersfield, where Isaac Robson was active among the Quakers and in reform movements, including temperance, education, and tract, Bible, and peace societies. In 1844 Robson became a Quaker minister, and in that capacity he undertook several foreign tours. In 1847 he visited Ireland. In 1864 he toured portions of France and Italy with Charles Fox to minister to Quakers, Vaudois, and Protestants. Robson and Thomas Harvey visited Russian Mennonites in 1867, and in 1870 Robson began a ministerial tour of Quaker meetings in Canada and the United States. Robson authored multiple books relating to religion, music, and his time in Russia. Robson died on May 25, 1885, in Dalton, England.
- Acquisition Information:
- 2016. M-6027 .
- Arrangement:
-
The journals are arranged chronologically, with loose correspondence located at the end of the collection.
- Rules or Conventions:
- Finding aid prepared using Describing Archives: A Content Standard (DACS)
Related
- Additional Descriptive Data:
-
Related Materials
Isaac Robson briefly mentions Elizabeth Comstock in the American Journal (page 90). The William L. Clements Library holds the Elizabeth Rous Comstock Papers.
University of Leeds Special Collections' Quaker Collection includes Isaac Robson: Itinerary and diary for tours in Ireland, and to the west of England, 1847, 1850.
The Library of the Religious Society of Friends contains several collections related to the Robson family, including original and transcribed copies of Elizabeth and Thomas Robson's diaries, some of which detail their travels in America. The Library also holds letters written to Isaac Robson from various Americans.
Bibliography
The Annual Monitor for 1886, or Obituary of the Members of the Society of Friends in Great Britain and Ireland, for the Year 1885. London: 1885.
Green, Joseph J. "Elizabeth Robson," Journal of the Friends Historical Society 14, no. 2 (1917): 75-78.
"Isaac Robson in Italy," Friends' Review. A Religious, Literary and Miscellaneous Journal 18, no. 13 (1864): 200-201.
"Isaac Robson on the Continent," Friends' Review. A Religious, Literary and Miscellaneous Journal 18, no. 9 (1864): 138.
Kennedy, Thomas C. A History of Southland College: The Society of Friends and Black Education. Fayetteville: University of Arkansas Press, 2009.
"Return of Isaac Robson," Friends' Review. A Religious, Literary and Miscellaneous Journal 18, no. 18 (1864): 280-281.
Roberts, Helen E. Researching Yorkshire Quaker History: A Guide to Sources. University of Hull Brynmor Jones Library, 2007.
Robinson, William, ed. Friends of a Half Century; Fifty Memorials with Portraits of Members of the Society of Friends, 1840-1890. London: Edward Hicks, 1891.
Robson, Isaac, and Thomas Harvey. Narrative of the Visit of Isaac Robson and Thomas Harvey to the South of Russia, &c. London: R. Barrett and Sons, 1868.
Subjects
Click on terms below to find any related finding aids on this site.
- Subjects:
-
African Americans--Religion.
Catholics--Italy.
Education--Italy.
Freedmen--Education.
Indians of North America.
Prisons.
Reconstruction (U.S. history, 1865-1877)
Society of Friends--Canada.
Society of Friends--Charities.
Society of Friends--Education.
Society of Friends--France.
Society of Friends--United States.
Waldenses--Italy.
Dwellings.
Log Cabins.
Diaries.
Letters (correspondence)
Sketches. - Names:
-
Hicksites.
Southland College (Helena, Ark.)
Dickinson, Anna E. (Anna Elizabeth), 1842-1932.
Dixon, George.
Drew, Daniel.
Fisk, Clinton Bowen, 1828-1890.
Forster, William, 1784-1854.
Gould, Joseph, 1808-1886.
Hale, John P. (John Parker), 1806-1873.
Jones, Alfred.
Lawrie, Tatum.
Warner, Yardley, 1815-1885.
Harvey, William. - Places:
-
Canada--Description and travel.
Italy--Description and travel.
United States--Description and travel.
Pilot Mountain (Surry County, N.C.)
Contents
Using These Materials
- RESTRICTIONS:
-
The collection is open for research.
- USE & PERMISSIONS:
-
Copyright status is unknown
- PREFERRED CITATION:
-
Isaac Robson Journals, William L. Clements Library, The University of Michigan