Log In | Contact Us| View Cart (0)
Browse: Collections Digital Content Subjects Creators Record Groups

Silas F. Millikan Papers

Overview

Scope and Contents

Administrative Information

Detailed Description

Biographical Material

Correspondence



Contact us about this collection

Silas F. Millikan Papers, 1814-1960, undated | Oberlin College Archives

By Rebecca Deeb

Printer-friendly Printer-friendly | Email Us Contact Us About This Collection

Collection Overview

Title: Silas F. Millikan Papers, 1814-1960, undatedAdd to your cart.

Predominant Dates:1830s-1864

ID: RG 30/084

Primary Creator: Millikan, Silas F. (1834-1915)

Extent: 0.4 Linear Feet

Date Acquired: 07/16/1974. More info below under Accruals.

Forms of Material: hymnals, lecture notes, letters (correspondence), manuscripts, photographs - photographic prints, publications

Languages: English

Scope and Contents of the Materials

The papers of Silas F. Millikan primarily document the lives of his immediate family and relatives. The bulk of the material, especially the correspondence, concerns Silas’ parents, Daniel and Aurelia Millikan, and his mother’s family, the Peases. The first series, Biographical Material, contains the bulk of the information about Silas F. Millikan, particularly in a biographical sketch of the minister. The biography, written by an unknown author, includes quotes by Millikan, as well as substantial excerpts from papers that he wrote. The biography also mentions his involvement in the Oberlin-Wellington slave rescue. Also in this series is an article about Silas and Mary’s 50th wedding anniversary that includes biographical information concerning their six children.

Series 2, Correspondence, contains letters written by, and regarding, the Pease and Millikan families. Some of the letters were hand-copied by Marjorie (Millikan) Johnson. Among the letters are correspondence discussing the early death of S. Aurelia Pease’s brother Phineas and a letter from Silas Millikan’s mother to all of her children, scolding them for their quarrelling. Later letters from the 1950s and 1960s briefly discuss the genealogies and histories of the Franklin (by way of the Millikans), Millikan, and Andrews families. Series 3, Writings, contains a variety of writings, most notable of which is an essay about 100 years of co-education at Oberlin College. This piece, written by an unknown author, was hand-copied by Marjorie Millikan and is an interesting summary of the early years of Oberlin College’s education of women.

The fourth series, Miscellaneous, includes lecture notes made by Silas Millikan during his years at Oberlin College from lectures about physiology by Dr. James Dascomb, moral philosophy by President Charles G. Finney, mineralogy by Professor George N. Allen, and a French class. An annotated copy of Silas’ hymnbook from his pastorate in Crete, Illinois, is also in this series. This book and biographical information represent the extent of the documentation concerning his ministry. Series 5, Photographs, contains pictures of Mary Andrews Millikan and a photograph of the Pease family house in Stockbridge, Massachusetts.

The collection is divided into 5 series: 1. Biographical Material, 2. Correspondence, 3. Writings, 4. Miscellaneous, and 5. Photographs.

SERIES DESCRIPTIONS

Series 1. Biographical Material, 1853, 1914, c. 1950, 1958, n.d.

This series contains materials relating to the life and family history of Silas F. Millikan. Consists of the congregational index of the Stockbridge, Massachusetts Congregational Church with the Pease family members marked, an article about Mr. and Mrs. Silas F. Millikan’s 50th wedding anniversary, an article about the founding of Oberlin that mentions the Pease family, and a biographical sketch of Silas F. Millikan that includes quotations from him.

Series 2. Correspondence, 1814-1960 (span), n.d.

Consists of correspondence of the Pease and Millikan families. Includes letters to Phineas Pease regarding the death of his son Phineas (Aurelia’s brother) and correspondence by the Pease sisters and the Millikan family describing journeys and family matters. Also extends to Silas’ children, including Robert A. Millikan (Oberlin College, A.B. 1891).

Series 3. Writings, c. 1937, n.d.

Series consists of an essay, “A Century of Co-education,” regarding the centennial celebration of co-education at Oberlin College, a copy of inscriptions in Daniel Franklin’s Bible, a poem copied by Silas’ brother Robert D. Millikan, and an essay written by Martha A. Millikan.

Series 4. Miscellaneous, 1855, 1857

This series is comprised of various materials of Silas and Mary Millikan. Includes a bound notebook of lecture notes by Silas F. Millikan. Also includes Silas’ annotated copy of a hymnbook and a ribbon presented to Mary Jane Andrews (Millikan) from her grammar school classmates.

Series 5. Photographs, 1864, n.d.

This series consists of two photographs of Mary Andrews Millikan and a photograph of the Pease house in Stockbridge, Massachusetts.

INVENTORY

Series 1. Biographical Material, 1853, 1914, c. 1950, 1958, n.d.

Box 1

            “Historical Sketch” of the Congregational

                        Church in Stockbridge, Mass., 1853

            “The Oak Park, Illinois, Event,” re: Mr. & Mrs.

                        Silas F. Millikan’s 50th Wedding

                        Anniversary, 1914

            “The Literary Spotlight” column, re: “The

                        Autobiography of Dr. Robert A.

                        Millikan,” c. 1950

            “Shipherd’s Rocket: In Orbit for 125 Years,

                        Has Oberlin Failed?” unknown

                        author, c. 1958

            Biographical sketch of Silas F. Millikan,

                        unknown author, n.d.

Series 2. Correspondence, 1814-1960 (span), n.d.

Box 1 (cont.)

            Pease family letters, 1814-18

                        Various acquaintances of his son

                                    Phineas to Phineas Pease,

                                    hand copy, 1818

                        Phineas Pease, to his family, excerpts of

                                    letters, hand copy, 1814-17

            Letters from Pease sisters to S. Aurelia Millikan

                        and Family, 1830s-1851, n.d.

                        Amanda Pease to “My dear Friends”

                                    (Daniel F. Millikan Family), 2 hand

                                    copies, 1832

                        Martha Pease to “My dear sister” (Aurelia

                                    Pease Millikan), hand copy, 1830s

                        Amanda (Pease) Patterson to “My Dear

                                    Sister,” 1837, with later letter on

                                    back: To “My Dear Child” from

                                    “A.M.” (Aurelia Millikan?), her

                                    mother, original and copy, n.d.

                        Unknown author to “Dear Sister,” original,

                                    1848

                        Amanda P. Patterson to “My Dear Sister”

                                    (Aurelia Pease Millikan),

                                    original, 1851

                        Amanda P. Patterson to “My Dear Sister

                                    Aurelia (Millikan),” original, n.d.

            Letters from S. Aurelia Pease Millikan, 1819-1863

                        Acrostic to Daniel F. Millikan, original and

                                    copy, 1819

                        “Dear cousin”—Noah, original and

                                    copy, 1819

                        Daniel F. Millikan, hand copy, 1833

                        Children of Daniel & Aurelia Millikan,

                                    original, 1863

            Miscellaneous Millikan correspondence,

                        1855-1960, n.d.

                        Martha (Millikan?) to “My Dear Father,”

                                    original and copy, 1855

                        “Frank” to unknown addressee, partial letter,

                                    and quotation from Mary Sweeney,

                                    original, 1859

                        Unknown author (Silas F. Millikan’s sister)

                                    to “My Dear Parents” (Daniel &

                                    Aurelia Millikan), original, 1859

                        “Mother” (niece of Mary J. Millikan on

                                    Andrews side) to “Dear Howard”

                                    (C. Howard Hall), original, 1915

                        Postcard, unknown author to Mrs.

                                    Robert E. Brown, 1916

                        “Aunt Sarah” to “Dear Niece” (Martha

                                    Whallon), probably re: Mary Jane

                                    Millikan’s death, original, 1918

                        Robert A. Millikan to “Dear Mable”—Mrs.

                                    Robert E. Brown (Mabel [Millikan]

                                    Brown), original, 1924

                        Robert A. Millikan to “Dear Cousin

                                    Jennie”—Mrs. Jennie (Andrews)

                                    Hall, original, 1950

                        A. Ross Eckler (descendent of Franklin

                                    family) to “Dear Mrs. Brown” (Mabel

                                    Millikan Brown), original, 1960

                        A. Ross Eckler to “Dear Mrs. Brown” (Mabel

                                    Millikan Brown), original, 1960

                        “Quotations from father’s letters to mother”

                                    (Silas to Mary Millikan), hand

                                    copy, n.d.

                        Marjorie (Millikan) Johnson to unknown

                                    addressee, partial, original, n.d.

Series 3. Writings, 1937, n.d.

Box 1 (cont.)

            “A Century of Co-education,” unknown author, c. 1937

            Inscription in the Daniel Franklin Bible, hand copy, n.d.

            “The scar of Lexington,” poem by H.F. Goud, Robert D.

                        Millikan’s copy, n.d.

            “The stream of Death,” essay by Martha A. Millikan, n.d.

Series 4. Miscellaneous, 1855, 1857

Box 1 (cont.)

            Lecture notes, probably by Silas F. Millikan,

                        1855, 1857

            100th Edition of the Golden Wreath, belonged to

                        Silas F. Millikan, 1857

            Ribbon, 17.5” x 2.5”, white, “Presented to Miss M.J.

                        Andrews by the following members of her

                        Grammar Class. Oberlin, Aug. 21, 1857”

Series 5. Photographs, 1864, n.d.

Box 1 (cont.)

            Mary Andrews Millikan, 1864

            Mary Andrews Millikan, n.d.

            Pease house, n.d.

Collection Historical Note

Silas Franklin Millikan, son of Daniel Franklin and Sally Aurelia (Pease) Millikan, was born 8 February 1834, in Freedom, Ohio. His mother Aurelia was the sister of Peter Pindar Pease, the first colonist of Oberlin. The Pease and Millikan families originating in Stockbridge, Massachusetts, were closely associated by the shoemaking apprenticeship of Daniel Franklin Millikan to Aurelia’s father, Phineas Pease.

The Millikan family moved from Freedom, Ohio, to Lyndon, Illinois, in 1838. Their home was a station on the Underground Railroad. According to a biographical sketch included in the collection, this influenced Silas’ participation in the Oberlin-Wellington slave rescue as one of the men who went from Oberlin to Wellington to rescue a slave from his captors in 1858. At age fifteen, Silas entered Knox College. He studied there for two years, then transferred to Oberlin College in 1853. He received his A.B. degree from Oberlin in 1855, earned an M.A. in 1858, and in 1859 he graduated from the Seminary. During his time at Oberlin, Silas enrolled in courses taught by Dr. James Dascomb and George Nelson Allen. President Charles G. Finney, John Morgan, and James H. Fairchild were also at the College during that time.

Millikan was ordained a minister of the Congregational Church in Crete, Illinois, in 1860, and subsequently held pastorates in Illinois, Iowa, and Kansas. He published only one paper, and, according to his answer for the Alumni Catalogue Survey of 1899, his publications were “[S]ermons. More sermons! More sermons!” The 1936 Alumni Catalogue notes that he was a strong supporter of “the missionary, anti-slavery, temperance and social purity causes.”

In 1864 he married Mary Jane Andrews (Oberlin College, Lit. 1857) in Rochester, New York. Mary was Principal of the Ladies Department of Olivet College in Michigan until their marriage. The couple had six children, and Silas and Mary were intent on giving the children the best education possible. Silas’ income as a pastor and money earned by the children financed each child’s education. The older children, after graduating, helped support the education of their younger siblings. All of the Millikan children graduated from Oberlin College: Allan Fairchild, Ph.B. 1890; Robert Andrews, A.B. 1891, A.M. 1893, Sc.D. 1911; Max Frank, A.B. 1894; Mary Grace (Behr), A.B. 1895; Marjorie Avis (Johnson), A.B. 1898; and Mabel Aurelia (Brown), A.B. 1901. Robert A. Millikan became a physicist and won the 1923 Nobel Prize in Physics. Mabel Millikan married Rev. Robert E. Brown (Oberlin College, A.B. 1901), who was a member of the Board of Trustees, 1920-29, and an Oberlin College professor, 1929-38.

Silas Millikan retired in 1905 after 46 years of ministerial work and lived with his children in Iowa until his death in 1915 in Rochester, NY.

SOURCES CONSULTED

Student File and Papers (RG 30/84) of Silas F. Millikan. “Family Trails and Tales” by Mabel Millikan Brown, Oberlin Alumni Magazine (Feb. 1965): 18-21.

Administrative Information

Repository: Oberlin College Archives

Accruals: Accession No: 240.

Access Restrictions: Unrestricted.

Acquisition Method: The Silas F. Millikan Papers were received from the Oberlin College Library on 16 July 1974 [accession 240].

Related Materials: See Silas F. Millikan’s student file (RG 28), and Mabel Millikan Brown’s “Family Trails and Tales” in the Oberlin Alumni Magazine (Feb. 1965): 18-21.  Also see the Student File and Papers (RG 30/40) of Robert E. Brown, and the Student File of Robert A. Millikan.

Finding Aid Revision History: Processed by Rebecca Deeb, June 2001.


Box and Folder Listing


Browse by Series:

[Series I: Biographical Material, 1853-ca. 1958, undated],
[Series II: Correspondence, 1814-1960, undated],
[All]

Series I: Biographical Material, 1853-ca. 1958, undatedAdd to your cart.
Box 1Add to your cart.
Folder 1: "Historical Sketch" of the Congregational Church in Stockbridge, Mass., 1853Add to your cart.
Folder 2: "The Oak Park, Illinois, Event," Regarding Mr. & Mrs. Silas F. Millikan's 50th Wedding Anniversary, 1914Add to your cart.
Folder 3: "The Literary Spotlight" Column, "The Autobiography of Dr. Robert A. Millikan", ca. 1950Add to your cart.
Folder 4: "Shipherd's Rocket: In Orbit for 125 Years, Has Oberlin Failed?", ca. 1958Add to your cart.
Unknown author.
Folder 5: Biographical Sketch of Silas F. Millikan, undatedAdd to your cart.
Unknown author.


Page Generated in: 0.091 seconds (using 244 queries).
Using 7.23MB of memory. (Peak of 7.51MB.)

Powered by Archon Version 3.21 rev-3 beta
Copyright ©2017 The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign