Divinity students

A Closer Look

Divinity students were those men attending the newly founded Seabury Divinity School in preparation for service as Episcopal priests and missionaries. In 1858, Mary Whipple wrote in a letter to her sister:

“[They] occupy a new building to the north east of us, but so near… we can almost step into their kitchen. Said family consists of Miss West as matron, eight divinity students, seven Indian children and one Irish servant… five of the students lodge in a pretty rough little house with porches and dormer windows, nestled among the trees, just on the brink of the ravine to the south-east of us.”

A pretty rough little house, with porches and dormer windows...
"A pretty rough little house, with porches and dormer windows..." This picture, taken in 1860, shows the Breck's home on the right. The chapel and the mission school that are so close to Mary's house are on the left. Look closely to find the white horse and carriage. Photo courtesy of the Minnesota Historical Society.

In another letter at about the same time, Mary wrote of one divinity student:

“Mr. B[arnhart] by the way is my assistant in the school — is as good and dull and stupid and obliging as it is necessary for a divinity student to be.”

Mary’s husband George was also later a divinity student at Seabury. Do you think she changed her opinion about divinity students?

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Alexander Faribault

Beaver
Buffalo
Children
Farming
Faribault's French House
Fur Trade
Making the Town Grow
Request
Site of the Bluffs
Trading Post
Translated

Mary Whipple

Bed Bugs
Divinity Students
Emma and Eva Havens
Emma Willard School
Eva's Death
Hastings to Faribault
Hawaiian Fever
Learning
Letters
Letter of August 25, 1862
Longed to Travel
Mary's Wedding
Muhlenberg
Pets
Sandwich Islands
Soap to Sausages
Some Clothing
Sound of Bells

Taopi

Baptism
Big Woods
Fort Snelling
Ginseng
Injuries
Map
Saving Others
When it Started

Henry Whipple

Back Home
Bad Teeth
Bashaw
Correspondence
East to School
Enmegahbowh
Frozen
Gull Lake
Loved to Fish
Six Children
Time of Crisis
Treatment of Indians
Underwear
Youngest Child


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