Linda Bryan
Private
- Joined
- Jan 7, 2015
While all of you pros are scouring documents and such, if you encounter Rev. Sela Wright at Vicksburg during the war I'd love to learn more.
He was a chaplain--I believe to the Contraband--who had formerly been a missionary to the Ojibwe in northern Minnesota. He had worked within the Am. Missionary Assoc. (AMA) since 1843, mostly at Leech Lake.
A cadre of AMA people from the Minnesota missions volunteered through the AMA to work with Freedmen: Sela Wright, J.P Bardwell, and in time, Frederic and Elisabeth Ayer joined the AMA outreach to Freedmen also. Bardwell was sent elsewhere in Mississippi during the war and was attacked and nearly killed by angry whites. The Ayers went to Atlanta in fall 1865 on behalf of the AMA through the Freedmen's Bureau. I believe Wright returned to the Ojibwe.
Linda Louise Bryan [email protected]
He was a chaplain--I believe to the Contraband--who had formerly been a missionary to the Ojibwe in northern Minnesota. He had worked within the Am. Missionary Assoc. (AMA) since 1843, mostly at Leech Lake.
A cadre of AMA people from the Minnesota missions volunteered through the AMA to work with Freedmen: Sela Wright, J.P Bardwell, and in time, Frederic and Elisabeth Ayer joined the AMA outreach to Freedmen also. Bardwell was sent elsewhere in Mississippi during the war and was attacked and nearly killed by angry whites. The Ayers went to Atlanta in fall 1865 on behalf of the AMA through the Freedmen's Bureau. I believe Wright returned to the Ojibwe.
Linda Louise Bryan [email protected]