Samuel Fallows Papers, 1856-1922


Summary Information
Title: Samuel Fallows Papers
Inclusive Dates: 1856-1922

Creator:
  • Fallows, Samuel, 1835-1922
Call Number: Wis Mss FG

Quantity: 6.6 c.f. (32 archives boxes)

Repository:
Archival Locations:
Wisconsin Historical Society (Map)

Abstract:
Papers of Bishop Fallows of Chicago consisting of twenty-seven boxes of letters received and copies of letters sent by him, 1860-1922, concerning his widespread activities as a clergyman, reformer, civic leader, educator, Civil War veteran, and University of Wisconsin alumnus.

Language: English

URL to cite for this finding aid: http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/wiarchives.uw-whs-wis000fg
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Scope and Content Note

This collection is comprised of chronologically arranged correspondence, speeches, lectures, and sermons; and notebooks containing diaries and other notes.

Routine army life, chiefly as an officer in the 49th Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry, is described in letters from Fallows to his wife, Lucy. Other letters in this period come from his brother-in-law, William E. Huntington, while attending the University of Wisconsin and Boston University in the late 'sixties and early 'seventies and later while president of the latter university.

Other correspondence concerns Fallows' activities while State Superintendent of Public Instruction in Wisconsin, 1870-1873; president of Illinois Wesleyan University at Bloomington, 1874-1875; editor in 1877 of The Appeal, a religious publication; president and presiding bishop of the Reformed Episcopal Church during most of the period beginning with the early years of that church in 1877 and extending to Fellows' death; president of the Board of Managers of the Illinois State Reformatory at Pontiac, 1891-1913; member and officer of the University of Wisconsin Club of Chicago; state and national officer of the Grand Army of the Republic, 1907-1909 and 1914-1915; commissioner sent to inspect the Philippine Islands, 1913-1914; president of the Illinois Commission to Commemorate the Half-Century Anniversary of Negro Freedom, 1913-1915; president of the Army of the Tennessee, 1915-1922; chairman of the Grant Memorial Commission at Washington, 1921-1922; and member and officer of numerous other patriotic, religious, and reform organizations.

There are letters from Grenville M. Dodge, Augustus L. Chetlain, James Tanner, Mrs. John A. Logan, and others concerning the activities of Civil War veteran organizations; John McElroy while editor of the National Tribune at Washington; Harold L. Ickes, Franklin McVeagh, William Hale Thompson, Jenkin Lloyd Jones, and others concerning Chicago charities and World War I work; his relative, Bishop Frederick Dan Huntington of the Protestant Episcopal Church; various members of the Ulysses S. Grant family; Bishop Charles E. Cheney and other less prominent members of the Reformed Episcopal Church; Frances E. Willard during the latter 'eighties and 1895; his personal friends, Elizabeth A. Reed, famed Orientalist, and her daughter, Myrtle Reed, popular novelist; Flinders Petrie while secretary of the Victoria Institute in London; Henry Wade Rogers while president of Northwestern University; and from numerous other statesmen, newspapermen, women suffragists, and reformers of wide range.

Other letters deal with the fire at Hinckley, Minnesota; selling “Bishop's Beer” at a temperance saloon in 1895; New York politics, in which his son Edward was interested; divorce and divorce laws; trade unionism; the Iroquois Theater fire in Chicago; the management of the periodical The World Today, 1904-1910; his advocacy of divine healing and the use of sour milk to promote longevity; simplified spelling; the management of a farm at Itabo, Cuba; speaking engagements throughout the nation; and his prominence in World War I patriotic activities, owing especially to his having been breveted a brigadier general in 1865.

Two boxes contain Fallows' lectures on health and pychology, some sermons, and many notes for speeches and sermons. There are also notes on observations made while in the Philippines in 1913.

One box contains thirty small volumes of notebooks including a list of members and miscellaneous information concerning the Summerfield Methodist Episcopal of Milwaukee kept during Fellows' pastorate, 1858-1865; a list of contributors of money to the People's Institute of Chicago in 1872; and numerous, sketchy diaries, 1864-1906, chiefly listing engagements, accounts, and miscellaneous information.

Administrative/Restriction Information
Acquisition Information

Received in 1922. One item presented by Victor Gassere, Blue River, Wisconsin, February 7, 1960.


Contents List
Correspondence
Box   1
1856-1873
Box   2
1874-1878 May
Box   3
1878 June-1881 June
Box   4
1881 July-1889
Box   5
1890-1892
Box   6
1893-1895
Box   7
1896-1900 June
Box   8
1900 July-1902 July
Box   9
1902 August-1903 October
Box   10
1903 November-1904
Box   11
1905-1906
Box   12
1907-1908 April
Box   13
1908 May-December
Box   14
1909 January-June 15
Box   15
1909 June 16-December
Box   16
1910 January-October
Box   17
1910 November-1911 July
Box   18
1911 August-1912 February 15
Box   19
1912 February 16-September
Box   20
1912 October-1913 May
Box   21
1913 June-1914 March 15
Box   22
1914 March 16-1915 April
Box   23
1915 May-1916 May
Box   24
1916 June-1917 March
Box   25
1917 April-1918 June
Box   26
1918 July-1920 January
Box   27
1920 February-1921 March
Box   28
1921 April-1922 March
Box   29
1922 April-June; undated
Box   30-31
Speeches, lectures, sermons
Box   32
Notebook and Diaries, 1858-1913