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Massachusetts Peace Society Records
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Held at: Swarthmore College Peace Collection [Contact Us]500 College Avenue, Swarthmore 19081-1399
This is a finding aid. It is a description of archival material held at the Swarthmore College Peace Collection. Unless otherwise noted, the materials described below are physically available in their reading room, and not digitally available through the web.
Overview and metadata sections
There were two periods in which there was an existing Massachusetts Peace Society, and the records of both groups have been put together here to form one archival collection.
The Massachusetts Peace Society was the second [third?] such society to form in America and was organized on December 28, 1815. It was founded primarily by Noah Worcester (1758-1837), a Unitarian minister. The membership list of the new Society included an array of clergymen and Boston merchants, as well as prominent men at Harvard University and in local and state government. The organization accepted persons who did not hold to a full pacifist position, attempting to unite all those who believed that war as a method of resolving conflict was both unchristian and inhumane. By 1819 the MPS had over 850 members, with branches established throughout the state and beyond. Membership fees and the sale of publications were the chief sources of financial support for the MPS, and the organization's main work was to enlighten public opinion through tracts and articles. Worcester, the Corresponding Secretary, established a periodical in 1816, entitled Friend of Peace, which was published at irregular intervals; by 1828, fifty numbers had been issued. In addition, Worcester published numerous tracts, with as many as 27,500 being distributed in 1828 alone. These were sent both to Americans and to foreigners. Support for the MPS dwindled during the 1820s and the retirement of Worcester in 1828 bled it of much of its vitality. With the New York Peace Society and other local peace societies, the MPS merged, into the newly formed American Peace Society in May 1828.
A new Massachusetts Peace Society was reorganized on April 27, 1911, upon the departure from Boston of the American Peace Society's offices to Washington, D.C. Samuel B. Capen was elected President and James Tryon as Secretary. It was possibly a branch of the American Peace Society. The MPS held monthly meetings with addresses by prominent men. It raised $4,000 in 1910 and had a series of Sunday afternoon talks in Tremont Temple during 1914-1915. In 1916, it purchased a stereopticon, and Secretary Tryon gave illustrated lectures on peace in many cities and towns of New England. U.S. entry into World War I put an end to the activities of the MPS.
[sources: Pacifism in the United States by Peter Brock (1968) and The American Peace Society: A Centennial History by Edson L. Whitney (1928)]
Much of the material in folder 1 of box 1 is duplicated in Noah Worcester's Friend of Peace (available in the SCPC Periodical Collection), and probably most other Massachusetts Peace Society items could be found through a close reading of this periodical and early serial publications of the American Peace Society.
Folder titles are arranged below under Massachusetts Peace Society [I] and Massachusetts Peace Society [II], which refers to the two different periods when the organization was in existence.
Correspondence of the 20th century Massachusetts Peace Society was donated by Mabel Call in January 1947. Correspondents (besides those listed below) include: Percy Bliss, Le Baron Russell Briggs, Marion L. Burton, J. Augustus Cadwallader, Arthur Deerin Call, Crystal Eastman, Edward A. Filene, Sidney L. Gulick, Lucia Ames Mead, George W. Nasmyth, Harry Clinton Phillips, L.S. Rowe, William H. Short, Benjamin F. Trueblood, Lyra D. Trueblood, James L. Tryon, and L. Hollingsworth Wood.
The files of the Massachusetts Peace Society are organized chronologically.
Guide to the Swarthmore College Peace Collection, 2nd ed., p. 40-41.
The Swarthmore College Peace Collection is the official repository for these records.
This collection, excluding scrapbook material, is available on microfilm (reels 77.1-77.11). Microfilm is available on-site by appointment and through interlibrary loan from the Swarthmore College Peace Collection.
Parts donated by the Massachusetts Peace Society and by Mabel Soule Call (American Peace Society).
Prepared by Peace Collection staff; revised by Anne Yoder, August 2005; This finding aid was prepared by Chloe Lucchesi- Malone, August 2009.
One scrapbook of newspaper clippings (1914-1917) about the Massachusetts Peace Society was removed to the Oversized Items Collection: Scrapbooks. This item was not included on the microfilm.
People
Organization
Subject
- Publisher
- Swarthmore College Peace Collection
- Access Restrictions
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The collection is open for research.
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All or part of this collection is stored off-site. Contact Swarthmore College Peace Collection staff at peacecollection@swarthmore.edu at least two weeks in advance of visit to request boxes.
- Copyright to the Massachusetts Peace Society records created by the organization has been transferred to the Swarthmore College Peace Collection. Copyright to all other materials is retained by the authors of items in these papers, or their descendants, as stipulated by United States copyright law.
- Use Restrictions
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None.
Collection Inventory
Microfilm reel 77.1
[3 copies; contains historical information about Massachusetts Peace Society]
The materials appear in reverse order on the microfilm.
The materials appear in reverse order on the microfilm.
The materials appear in reverse order on the microfilm.
[2 folders]
The materaisl are in reverse order on the microfilm.
Microfilm reel 77.4
Microfilm reel 77.4
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Microfilm reel 77.5
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Microfilm reel 77.5
[in reverse order on the microfilm]
Microfilm reel 77.5
[in reverse order on the microfilm]
Microfilm reel 77.5
[in reverse order on the microfilm]
Microfilm reel 77.6
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Microfilm reel 77.11
Microfilm reel 77.11
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Microfilm reel 77.11