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Adelia A. Field Johnston Papers

Overview

Scope and Contents

Administrative Information

Detailed Description

Biographical File

Correspondence

Travel Accounts and Diaries

Writings and Notebooks

Photographs of Adelia A. Field Johnston



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Adelia A. Field Johnston Papers, ca. 1856-1994 | Oberlin College Archives

By May Tran

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Collection Overview

Title: Adelia A. Field Johnston Papers, ca. 1856-1994Add to your cart.

Predominant Dates:ca. 1856-1911

ID: RG 30/019

Primary Creator: Johnston, Adelia A. Field (1837-1910)

Extent: 0.6 Linear Feet

Date Acquired: 07/30/1968. More info below under Accruals.

Subjects: Johnston, Adelia Antoinette Field, 1837-1910--Archives, Oberlin College--Faculty, Oberlin College--History--19th century--Sources, Oberlin Village Improvement Society, Women--Education--Ohio--Oberlin

Forms of Material: cabinet cards, cartes-de-visite, diaries, letters (correspondence), manuscripts, photographs - photographic prints, publications

Languages: English

Scope and Contents of the Materials

The Adelia A. Field Johnston papers are divided into the following five series: Series I. Biographical File, Series II. Correspondence, Series III. Travel Accounts and Diaries, Series IV. Writings and Notebooks, and Series V. Photographs.

Of importance to the Oberlin community is the correspondence series, which sheds valuable insight on the central role Johnston played in the establishment of the Oberlin Village Improvement Society. Filed under the subheading "Oberlin Community" is correspondence related to the local parks project that she had initiated. A receipt of the first photographic reproductions (heliotypes) acquired for the Art Department is filed under "Professional Correspondence."

The seven travel accounts and four personal diaries document Johnston's general impressions of European art and architecture over two decades. During her summer visits to Europe, she hosted academic field trips for her students and important members of the Oberlin College community, including Mary M. Wright, Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus Grandison Baldwin, and Dr. and Mrs. Lucien C. Warner.

The writing and notebooks series consists of two essays, a temperance speech, and a notebook of attendance and lecture notes kept during her career as Principal of Kinsman Academy in Kinsman, Ohio (1862-1865). Her short story entitled Two Sides of a Shield: A Story on the Civil War was published after her death in 1911. The modest amount of material in this series illustrates a lack of primary sources related to this famous late nineteenth century Oberlin figure.

The eight photographs in Series V are all portraits of Johnston. The three cartes-de-visite were likely taken as senior portraits, and thus date from ca. 1856. One cabinet card holds a reproduction of Johnston in a classroom, dated 1870. The remaining four photographs, three of which are identical, portray Johnston in academic regalia, ca. 1900-1907.

SERIES DESCRIPTIONS

Series I. Biographical File, c. 1899, c. 1908, 1910, 1936, 1972, 1994, undated

The biographical file includes several newspaper clippings and articles in reference to Johnston's academic influence on the Oberlin College community as a professor and dean, and her involvement in the rescue of fugitive slave John Price. Within the biographical file are also commemorative speeches and pamphlets from Johnston's funeral in 1910, and information concerning the Adelia A. Field Johnston Fellowship and dedication stone.

Series II. Correspondence, 1896, 1902-1910, undated (3f)

The correspondence file is divided into the following three subseries: Subseries I. Oberlin Community, Subseries II: Personal, and Subseries III: Professional. The bulk of the correspondence series consists of letters from members of the Oberlin community in reference to the Oberlin Village Improvement Society projects in that Johnston initiated.

Series III. Travel Accounts and Diaries, 1878, 1881-1882, 1888, c.1906, undated (12f)

This series consists of eight travel accounts from Algeria, London, Spain and Norway. Included, are also four personal diaries and one admission ticket to a lecture by Johnston.

Series IV. Writings and Notebooks, 1862-1874, 1911, undated (Sf)

The writings and notebooks series consists of two essays entitled "Architecture" and "Oberlin College," a temperance speech entitled "Ladies and Gentlemen of the Band of Hope" (photocopy - original retired), a short story entitled Two Sides of a Shield: A Story on the Civil War, and a notebook that Johnston used to keep attendance and classroom rules and regulations from her career as Principal of Kinsman Academy in Kinsman, Ohio.

Series V. Photographs, ca. 1856, 1870, ca. 1900-07 (8 photographs)

The photographs, all of Adelia A. F. Johnston, include three (3) cartes-de-visite, one copy print from a book illustration, and four (4) black and white prints of Johnston in regalia, ca. 1900-07.

Collection Historical Note

Adelia Antoinette Field Johnston (1837-1910), educator and activist, was born to Leonard Field (1809-1849) and Margaret Gridley (1813-1887) in Lafayette, Ohio on February 5, 1837. Her parents moved west to Lafayette from Rodman, Jefferson County, New York because her father was eager to “take up” land, and her mother was ready to develop a teaching career. Although they had never met in New York, they shared mutual interests in moving to the new colony, and eventually developed a life-long companionship. Upon her father's death in Chester, Ohio on September 12, 1849, Adelia moved to Oberlin with her mother and younger sister at the age of thirteen. At fifteen, she entered the preparatory side of the Ladies' Course at Oberlin College (1852-1856).

The young Adelia received a literary degree from Oberlin College in 1856, and shortly thereafter, left to pursue a teaching position at Mossy Creek in Tennessee. During a return visit to see her mother in Oberlin (September 1858), Adelia drove a buggy with her mother to purchase some books at James M. Fitch's (Sunday school superintendent) bookstore. There, she overheard Simeon Bushnell (clerk and printer) and Henry E. Peck (lawyer) discussing with Fitch the rescue of fugitive slave John Price. Adelia and her mother, Margaret, quickly drove to Wellington, and were the first women on the scene of the Oberlin-Wellington rescue. Freelance writer Nat Brandt has labeled Oberlin, "the town that started the civil war." Upon returning to Tennessee that year, she felt compelled to conceal the fact that she had been a witness of the rescue freeing John Price, and was careful not to send mail to her home address in Oberlin.

Following teaching appointments at the Black Oak Seminary in Mossy Creek, Tennessee (1856-1859), Orwell Academy in Orwell, Ohio (1859), Kinsman Academy in Kinsman, Ohio (1862-1865), and the Academy of Scituate in Rhode Island (1865-68), Adelia studied abroad in Germany for two years and then returned to Oberlin in 1870 to become Principal of the Women's Department (succeeding Mrs. Marianne P. Dascomb) on the condition she be allowed to teach. Through this arrangement, she was the first woman to receive full membership from the Oberlin faculty. Among the Oberlin staff, her sponsors were James H. Fairchild, and Mr. and Mrs. James Dascomb.

As early as 1880, Johnston began to collect photographs (heliotype reproductions) and other materials of illustration during her many trips abroad as an effort to spur a local interest in art among the college and community. Johnston traveled abroad extensively and also hosted summer trips to Europe with Mary M. Wright (1877), Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus Grandison Baldwin (1881-1882), and Dr. and Mrs. Lucien C. Warner (1888). Her sponsorship of academic field trips to Europe (1892, 1894, 1897, 1899) and a Winter Term in Egypt (1903), complemented her already "graphic and illuminating" Art History and Architecture courses. Johnston served the College as Dean of Women until 1900 and as professor of Late Medieval History until 1907.

Johnston's influence on Oberlin College transcended the classroom. It was through Johnston that the Severance and Allen families became interested in Oberlin College. Donations for Baldwin and Talcott Cottages, Sturges Hall, the Warner Musical building, Spear Library, Lord Cottage, and Rockefeller Skating Center were received by the college as a result of Johnston's stewardship activity. Dean Johnston was always successful in making donors feel the pleasure of giving such financial support to Oberlin.

She gave herself unreservedly to college work until her retirement in 1907. Johnston announced her retirement during a Commencement '07 evening prayer, when she expressed that she had been unable "to do what ought to have been done as a citizen of the town, but relieved from the labors of deanship, promoting the welfare of the town and beauty of the community was possible."

During the last ten years of her life, Johnston continued to give lectures and publish essays concerning the welfare of the college and community, signing them as Madame Johnston. One of her major contributions to the town of Oberlin was her role in organizing the Oberlin Village Improvement Society, as is fully documented by Barbara Christen in City Beautiful In a Small Town, in collaboration with Oberlin College trustee Charles Martin Hall. The objective of the Society, for which she served as president, was to make the city a place "worthy of the college" by cleaning Plum Creek, creating a park system, improving sanitary conditions and beautifying the town in general.

Adelia Antoinette Field married James M. Johnston (OC '58) when she returned to Rochester, Ohio in August 1859. She pursued advanced studies with James at the Orwell School, where he served as the Principal until his enlistment in the Civil War in 1861. She volunteered as a nurse in a hospital not far from where James was stationed at Harper's Ferry. After developing a sudden cold for two weeks, James developed severe health complications from which he died on January 3, 1862. Adelia A.F. Johnston died on July 22, 1910, due to a cerebral hemorrhage that she had suffered five weeks earlier. Her beloved students and colleagues established the Adelia A. F. Johnston Fellowship in her honor.

SOURCES CONSULTED

Adelia A. Field Johnston Faculty File (28/3)

Adelia A. Field Johnston Student File (28)

Brandt, Nat. The Town That Started the Civil War (Syracuse, N.Y.: Syracuse

            University Press, 1990).

Christen, Barbara. City Beautiful in a Small Town: the Early History of the Village

            Improvement Society in Oberlin (Elyria: Lorain County Historical Society,

            1994).

Keeler, Harriet L. The Life of Adelia A. Field Johnston (Cleveland: The Korner and

            Wood Co., 1912).

Subject/Index Terms

Johnston, Adelia Antoinette Field, 1837-1910--Archives
Oberlin College--Faculty
Oberlin College--History--19th century--Sources
Oberlin Village Improvement Society
Women--Education--Ohio--Oberlin

Administrative Information

Repository: Oberlin College Archives

Accruals: Accession No: 53, 1993/013, 2002/130

Access Restrictions: Unrestricted.

Acquisition Method: The Adelia A. Field Johnston papers were acquired in four accessions. Accession 53 was donated to the College Archives by Treasurer Karl Aughenbaugh and the Secretary's Office on July 30, 1968. Accessions 1993/013, 1994/030, and 2002/130 were purchased from Steven A. Cove by the College Archives on March 1, 1993, May 23, 1994, and October 11, 2002 respectively.

Related Materials: See Museum Items Collection (RG 35, Item 205) for Adelia A. Field Johnston plaque, 1937.  Two blueprints of the Johnston memorial tablet at the Allen Memorial Art Museum (1937 addition) are filed in Map Case I, Drawer 5.  See also the Office of Controller Papers (RG 8) for information on the Adelia A. F. Johnston Fellowship (1936-1953) and Professorship (1895-1973). For more information please see http://cdm15963.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/objects/id/160/rec/1.

Finding Aid Revision History: Processed by May Tran, April 2004. Revised by Anne Cuyler Salsich, May 2013, March 2020


Box and Folder Listing


Browse by Series:

[Series I: Biographical File, ca. 1899-1994, undated],
[Series II: Correspondence, 1896-1910, undated],
[Series III: Travel Accounts and Diaries, 1878-ca. 1906, undated],
[Series IV: Writings and Notebooks, 1862-1911, undated],
[Series V: Photographs of Adelia A. Field Johnston, ca. 1856-1907],
[All]

Series IV: Writings and Notebooks, 1862-1911, undatedAdd to your cart.
Box 1Add to your cart.
Folder 1: "Architecture", undatedAdd to your cart.
Typescript.
Folder 2: "Ladies and Gentlemen of the Band of Hope", 1862Add to your cart.
Photocopy. Original retired. Temperance speech.
Folder 3: Kinsman Academy for Women Notebook, 1863-1874Add to your cart.
Includes students' names, classroom rules and regulations, attendance, and recitation information.
Folder 4: "Oberlin College" Essay, 1874Add to your cart.
Folder 5: Two Sides of a Shield: A Story on the Civil War, 1911Add to your cart.
A short story with a limited print run of 300 copies. Two copies in file: unnumbered/300 and 198/300.

Browse by Series:

[Series I: Biographical File, ca. 1899-1994, undated],
[Series II: Correspondence, 1896-1910, undated],
[Series III: Travel Accounts and Diaries, 1878-ca. 1906, undated],
[Series IV: Writings and Notebooks, 1862-1911, undated],
[Series V: Photographs of Adelia A. Field Johnston, ca. 1856-1907],
[All]


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