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Charles Grandison Finney Presidential Papers

 Collection
Identifier: RG 02-002

Scope and Contents

The Finney papers are organized into the following record series, arranged to facilitate access to the collection's index and calendar: I. Correspondence, Incoming (calendared); II. Correspondence, Incoming and Outgoing (uncalendared); III. Miscellaneous Manuscripts; IV. Diaries and Commonplace book; V. Lectures; VI. Sermon Outlines; VII. Business Papers of Finney; VIII. Writings of Finney (Ms.); IX. Writings of Finney (Printed); and X. Late Accretions. Series II, Correspondence (uncalendared), and Series III, Miscellaneous Manuscripts, were united under the title "Letters and Papers" in the original arrangement scheme. The present arrangement separates them into consecutive series. Typically, records within series are arranged chronologically or alphabetically by type of material.

The papers of Charles Grandison Finney consist mainly of incoming, calendared correspondence (1817-1875) documenting Finney's revivalist activities in New York state (1817-1875) and in England (1850, 1859).  The correspondence is indispensable to a study of Finney's evangelism and of prevailing Presbyterian and Congregationalist controversies during the first half of the nineteenth century.  Twenty-four letters (1817-1871) are in Finney's own hand.  Correspondents include the Rev. Horace Bushnell (1802-1876), abolitionist Theodore Dwight Weld (1803-1895), English mill owner Potto Brown (1797-1871), lawyer John P. Cushman (1794-1848), the Rev. George Washington Gale (1789-1861), the Rev. Eliphalet Gilbert (1793-1853), Catharine Beecher (1800-1878), Oberlin Professor John Morgan (1802-1884), friend Herman Norton (1799-1850), metal merchant Anson G. Phelps (1781-1853), the Rev. George Redford (1785-1860), Boston businessman Willard Sears (1803-1880), and benefactor Lewis Tappan (1788-1873). Topics covered in the correspondence include evangelical Christian thought, revivalism, temperance, the anti-slavery movement, the role of women in evangelical Christianity, and the history of Oberlin College and of the town.

Finney's uncalendared correspondence includes twenty-three letters from Finney to Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Lamson of Boston describing his work in England (1860), reporting the death of Finney's second wife, Elizabeth Ford Atkinson (1863), and discussing the Evangelical Union.  Additional documentation created by Finney includes diaries (1814-19, 1829-41, 1857, 1860-70) containing brief, uninformative entries; lecture notes (1868-75) dating from his tenure as Professor of Pastoral Theology at Oberlin; and writings.  Writings by Finney include the manuscript draft of Finney's Memoirs (1876), in which Finney narrates the story of his career and defends his evangelical methods against the charges of Lyman Beecher and Asahel Nettleton.  Also in the collection are several miscellaneous signed manuscripts (n.d.); over six hundred sermon outlines (1853-75); printed religious tracts; articles in religious newspapers; and reprints of his addresses.  In their span and completeness, the sermon outlines, arranged by year, provide a valuable source for the analysis of Finney's biblical theology.

There is virtually no record in this collection of the Finney presidency at Oberlin (1851-65), or of Finney's service as a trustee (1846-51).  Consult the records of the Board of Trustees (Record Group 1) and the Office of the Treasurer (Record Group 7) for the administrative papers from the period 1846-65.

Within the Finney Papers, other materials relating to Finney's long association with Oberlin (1835-75) include various personal business papers, among them a copy of the so-called "Finney Compact" (1835); bank books issued by Oberlin banks; deeds of land in Oberlin; and a map showing the parcel of land on which Finney built his home, at the corner of Lorain and Professor streets (undated).

Dates

  • Creation: 1814-1878, undated
  • Other: Date acquired: 1966 October 10

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

Unrestricted. Original correspondence closed to researchers, microfilm use only. See microfilm note.

Conditions Governing Access

Original correspondence closed to researchers, microfilm use only. See microfilm note.

Biographical Sketch

Charles Grandison Finney, flamboyant evangelist of the Second Great Awakening, served as the second President of Oberlin College (1851-65). He was born in Warren, Connecticut on August 29, 1792 to Sylvester (1759-1842) and Rebecca Rice Finney (1759-1836). When Finney was two years old, his family joined the westward migration and settled in the frontier town of Hanover in Oneida County, New York. Finney is believed to have attended Oneida Academy in Clinton, where he developed his gifts for music and for sports. From 1808 to 1812, Finney taught in the district school at Henderson. For two years, he studied independently while living in Warren, Connecticut, preparing to enter Yale College. In 1814, he moved to New Jersey where, on his schoolmaster's advice, he began working through Yale's college curriculum. After two years, he entered the law office of Judge Benjamin Wright in Adams, New York. He was admitted to the bar in 1818.

On October 10, 1821 in Adams, Finney underwent a dramatic religious conversion, which altered the course of his life. Abandoning the practice of law, he transferred his oratorical skills, powers of reason, and belief in human accountability to the preaching of the Christian gospel. In 1823, Finney put himself under the care of the St. Lawrence Presbytery as a candidate for the ministry; he was ordained in July 1824. He left the Presbytery in 1836 and from then on identified himself as a Congregationalist.

For nearly a decade, from 1824 to 1833, Finney conducted unusual revivals in the Middle and Eastern states, but especially in the towns of New York: Rome, Rochester, Utica, Clinton, Antwerp, Evans' Mills, Western, and Gouverneur. In 1832, he became pastor of the Second Free Presbyterian Church, New York City.  In 1835, the wealthy silk merchant and benefactor Arthur Tappan (1786-1865) offered financial backing to the newly founded Oberlin Collegiate Institute (as Oberlin was known before 1850), and he invited Finney, on the recommendation of abolitionist Theodore Dwight Weld (1803-95), to establish its theological department. After much wrangling, Finney accepted, on the conditions that he be allowed to continue to preach in New York, that the school admit blacks, and that free speech be guaranteed at Oberlin.

At Oberlin Theological Seminary, Finney held the posts of Professor of Systematic Theology (1835-58) and Professor of Pastoral Theology (1835-75), teaching courses in Didactic and Polemic Theology, Pastoral Theology, and Mental and Moral Philosophy. He served simultaneously as pastor of Oberlin's First Congregational Church (1837-72) and was a member of the Oberlin College Board of Trustees from 1846 until 1851 when he was elected president. For much of the academic year, he carried on his immensely successful evangelistic work, visiting Great Britain in 1849-50 and again in 1859-60.  Through  the Oberlin Evangelist, established in 1839, he expressed his views on doctrinal and practical matters, collectively referred to as "Oberlin Theology" or "Oberlin Perfectionism." Finney taught that the individual has a limitless capacity for repentance.

He also taught that an exalted state of spirituality was attainable by leading a Christian life. These New School Calvinist views, opposed by conservative Calvinists, included prohibitions against tobacco, tea, coffee, and most popular amusements. Finney's brand of theological perfectionism placed Oberlin on the theological map for more than a century.

In 1869, Finney published The Character, Claims, and Practical Workings of Freemasonry, attacking the order of which he had once been a member. His Lectures on Systematic Theology were published in 1846 and 1847. Among his other works are:  Sermons on Important Subjects (3rd ed., 1836); Lectures to Professing Christians (1837); and Skeletons of a Course of Theological Lectures (1840).  In 1867, Finney began writing Memoirs of Rev. Charles G. Finney.  Edited by James Harris Fairchild and published in 1876, the memoirs deal chiefly with his evangelistic activities; they do not constitute an autobiography. Finney taught up until his eighty-third year, submitting his resignation from the presidency in 1865. He died in Oberlin in August 1875 following a heart ailment.

During his life, Finney had three wives. In 1824, he married Lydia Root Andrews (1804-47). They had six children: Helen C. Finney (b. 1828); Charles Grandison Finney (b. 1830); Frederick Norton Finney (b. 1832); Julia R. Finney (b. 1837); Sarah Sage Finney (1841-43), and Delia Andrews Finney (1844-52).  Finney's second wife was Elizabeth Ford Atkinson (1799-1863, m. 1848) and his third wife Rebecca Allen Rayl (1824-1907, m. 1865). All three women shared in Finney's revival work, accompanying him on his travels and even developing parallel ministries, as Elizabeth Ford Atkinson did during the two evangelistic trips in England. In Oberlin, they were active in various women's organizations, including the Maternal Association, the Infant School, and the Oberlin Female Moral Reform Society. Rebecca Rayl served as Assistant Principal of the Ladies Department at Oberlin College between 1856 and 1865, prior to her marriage.

Note written by Valerie S. Komor.

Extent

7.88 Linear Feet

Language of Materials

English

Method of Acquisition

The calendared correspondence, loose sermon outlines, printed tracts, and some miscellaneous printed materials were given to the Oberlin College Library in 1930 by Mr. Charles Monroe and Mrs. Emma Monroe Fitch, heirs of Finney's daughter, Julia Finney Monroe. These materials were transferred to the College Archives in 1968 and 1978. Additional accessions occurred in 1966 (family business papers, Lamson letters, and marriage licenses) and in 1982 (Marvin letters). Late accretions include a certificate, books, and letters transferred from Special Collections in 2009, 2012, and 2021.

Accruals and Additions

Accession Nos: 1, 31, 1978/35, 1982/15, 2012/070, 2021/003, 2021/004

Related Materials

One roll of microfilm (Correspondence, 1830-75) contains letters from Finney located in other collections in the College Archives. The papers of James Harris Fairchild (2/3) contain correspondence from Finney; consult the calendar and index for these papers in the College Archives. Consult faculty records on microfilm, the records of the Board of Trustees, and the records of the Office of the Treasurer for additional related materials.

See also the Finney Family Papers (30/236).

The papers of Richard Dupuis (30/77) contain his research in publishing The Memoirs of Charles G. Finney: The Complete Restored Text (1989). Dupuis thoroughly researched Finney's memoirs in the College Archives and located correspondence and other information elsewhere.

Related Publications

The Memoirs of Charles G. Finney: The Complete Restored Text. Edited by Garth M. Rosell and Richard A.G. Dupuis. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing House, 1989.

Other Descriptive Information

Microfilm Note

Finney papers on microfilm include the following:

    Calendared Correspondence, 1817-1875

    Correspondence, 1830-75

    Miscellaneous Manuscripts, 1835-60, undated

    Lectures (bound), 1868-75

    Sermon outlines, 1853-75, undated

    Memoirs of Charles Grandison Finney (original microfilm is faint)

A listing of the contents of individual rolls is available in the College Archives.

Processing Information

Processed by: Valerie S. Komor, September 26, 1991.

Title
Charles Grandison Finney Presidential Papers Finding Guide
Author
Valerie S. Komor
Date
1991 September 26
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin
Language of description note
English

Revision Statements

  • 1992 November 12: Revised by Archives staff.
  • 2004 April: Revised by May Tran.
  • 2005 April: Revised by Archives staff.
  • 2009 November: Revised by Archives staff.
  • 2021 January: Revised by Archives staff.
  • 2024 April: Revised by Louisa C. Hoffman.
  • 2024 November: Prepared for migration by Louisa C. Hoffman.

Repository Details

Part of the Oberlin College Archives Repository

Contact:
420 Mudd Center
148 West College Street
Oberlin OH 44074-1532 US
440-775-8014
440-775-8016 (Fax)