

She wrote of the labors of herself and other missionaries, Japanese customs, reforestation in that country, her attitude toward World War I and the Bolshevik revolution, and the large number of Russian refugees in Japan. There are a number of letters from Elizabeth Russell, a Methodist missionary in Nagasaki, Japan, to her friend, Emma Tolbert. He wrote that many refugees had come into the town after Gen. Military Railroad in the Division of the Miss. C., where he was with the Chief Engineer's Office, of U. In 1864 he was In Nashville, and by March, 1865, had been transferred to Newbern, N. White, a Baptist educator and preacher in North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia.Īt least during the latter part of the Civil War William E. Of particular interest is the exchange of letters between Bailey and John E. Pitt, editor Herald (Richmond, Va.) and Archibald Johnson, editor of Charity and Children. Newton, editor of the Christian Index (Atlanta, Ga.) Robert H. Other correspondents include the following: J. Also contains material on the organization and operation or the Biblical Recorder and correspondence of its editors Livingston Johnson, J. Arranged chronologically by day within each section.Ĭorrespondence related to The Baptist Church and Its Institutions In North Carolina includes letters to and from ministers and church officials as well as representatives of church-affiliated institutions such as Wake Forest University, Mars Hill College, and Chowan College. There may also be isolated letters from these individuals in other parts of the collection. A small folder of personal printed material (programs and other memorabilia) has been placed at the end of this main correspondence section.Īlphabetical correspondence includes letters to and from several individuals with whom Bailey corresponded frequently. Although some of these letters are of merely passing interest, others are quite detailed on subjects of research interest. For the pre-Senatorial period, there are Items from Bailey's friends and some personal correspondence of Edith Pou Bailey. Family correspondence consists largely of letters to and from family members.
