Bibliography of Diocesan Histories Author(S): John M

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Bibliography of Diocesan Histories Author(S): John M Bibliography of Diocesan Histories Author(s): John M. Kinney Source: Historical Magazine of the Protestant Episcopal Church , MARCH 1974, Vol. 43, No. 1 (MARCH 1974), pp. 69-100 Published by: Historical Society of the Episcopal Church Stable URL: http://www.jstor.com/stable/42974655 JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at https://about.jstor.org/terms Historical Society of the Episcopal Church is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Historical Magazine of the Protestant Episcopal Church This content downloaded from 24.208.41.117 on Thu, 10 Sep 2020 01:24:00 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms Bibliography of Diocesan Histories Compiled by John M. Kinney* tions of the Episcopal Church is intended to be comprehensive THIS through tions through bibliography 1972. However, of 1972. as the any Episcopal bibliographer However, knows, of this histories is prac- Church as any of bibliographer is dioceses intended and to knows, missionary be comprehensive this jurisdic- is prac- tically an impossible task; undoubtedly there are omissions, but after a five year on-again-off-again search it is time to draw a line. The bibliog- raphy includes full-length books, journal articles, theses, and unpublished papers. Ordinarily it includes only those writings intended as comprehen- sive retrospective histories, regardless of length or quality, rather than studies of various special aspects of a diocese's history or works which treat a diocese's history only incidentally. In a few instances, where a dio- cese's early days centered for many years in a single mission (e.g., Anvik, Alaska) , histories of that mission have been included as they are especially relevant to the development of the diocese. Where a work is a borderline case the sin of commission, rather than of omission, has usually been committed. General histories of the Episcopal Church, biographies of bishops, and parish histories have been excluded. The majority of the entries have been examined personally by the compiler. Each book entry contains the name of the author, title, place of publication, publisher, date of publication, and number of pages. (The latter information is often only approximate and is included only to give an indication of the amount of material one may expect to find - un- numbered pages such as introductory sections, indices, and appendices were not counted.) Also included is at least one library location, when known, for each entry. Each journal article entry includes the name of the author, article title, journal title, volume number, month, year, and inclusive page numbers. The HISTORICAL MAGAZINE OF THE PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL CHURCH has been shortened to "HIS- TORICAL MAGAZINE." Additional sources for diocesan histories, which were not ordinarily included in this bibliography, are state historical journals, biographies of bishops, parish histories, and journals of the annual diocesan Councils ♦Mr. Kinney is Director of the Archives Division of the Texas State Library, Austin. - Editor's Note. This content downloaded from 24.208.41.117 on Thu, 10 Sep 2020 01:24:00 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms 70 HISTORICAL MAGAZINE (especially the centennial and other special councils which often contain historical addresses and sermons). No study of a diocese can be complete without reference to the numerous news items, letters, and other material found in the SPIRIT OF MISSIONS, the official publication of the Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society of the Episcopal Church which began publication in 1836. The bibliography is arranged alphabetically by author or, if no au- thor, by title in three sections: (1) Domestic Dioceses (by state); (2) Foreign Missionary Dioceses (by country); (3) Miscellaneous (for his- tories covering areas larger than one state, such as provinces and the Confederate Sates). The arrangement by state is simpler than attempting to list by name of the diocese since over the years boundries have changed, names have changed, dioceses have been carved out of other jurisdictions, and dioceses have merged. In the few instances where a diocese crosses state lines cross-references have been provided. Austin, Texas John M. Kinney KEY TO LOCATION SYMBOLS CHS Church Historical Society CLSU University of Southern California CSdS San Diego State College CtY Yale University DCL Library of Congress DWP Public Library of the District of Columbia FTS Florida State University FU University of Florida GEU Emory University Mi Michigan State Library NN New York Public Library NNG General Theological Seminary OrHi Oregon Historical Society OU Ohio State University PPPD Divinity School of the Protestant Episcopal Church in Philadelphia TSewU-T University of the South, School of Theology Tx Texas State Library TxAuE Episcopal Theological Seminary of the Southwest TxU University of Texas at Austin WHi State Historical Society of Wisconsin WNa Nashotah House Theological Seminary This content downloaded from 24.208.41.117 on Thu, 10 Sep 2020 01:24:00 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms BIBLIOGAPHY OF DIOCESAN HISTORIES 71 BIBLIOGRAPHY OF DIOCESAN HISTORIES A. DOMESTIC DIOCESES ALABAMA 1 Cobbs, R. H. "How Our Church Came to Alabama." SPIRIT OF MISSIONS, 83 (June, 1918), 427-433. 2 Historical Records Survey. INVENTORY OF THE CHURCH ARCHIVES OF ALABAMA: PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL CHURCH. Historical Records Survey, 1939. 106 pp. WHi 3 McDowell, William G. "The Centennial of the Diocese of Ala- bama." HISTORICAL MAGAZINE, 1 (September, 1932), 165- 170. 4 Whitaker, Walter Claiborne. HISTORY OF THE PROTES- TANT EPISCOPAL CHURCH IN ALABAMA, 1763-1891. Bir- mingham, Ala.: Roberts & Son, 1898. 317 pp. CHS CtY NNG WHi ALASKA 5 [Alaska Number] SPIRIT OF MISSIONS, 77 (September, 1912). 6 Burke, Clara Heintz, "Twenty-five Years Above the Arctic Circle. SPIRIT OF MISSIONS, 97 (June, 1932), 349-355. 7 Chapman, Adelaide Seely. "Mrs. Chapman Recalls Early Anvick Days." SPIRIT OF MISSIONS, 97 (October, 1932), 633-636; (November, 1932), 693-696. 8 Chapman, John W. "Beginnings in Alaska." HISTORICAL MAG- AZINE, 7 (March, 1938), 97-102. 9 sions Publishing Company, 1931. (Also published in five parts in SPIRIT OF MISSIONS, beginning 96 (February, 1931), 77-80.) 10 OF MISSIONS, 63 (April, 1898), 166-170. 11 Chapman, May S. FROM KASHIME TO CHURCH. Hartford, Conn. : Church Missions Publishing Co., 1927. 12 sions Publishing Co., n.d. 13 Coates, Mary Felicia. "Anvik, The First Alaskan Mission of the Protestant Episcopal Church of the United States of America." Unpublished M.A. thesis, University of Texas, 1964. 78 pp. CHS TxU 14 "How the Church Went to Alaska, and What Has Been Done There." SPIRIT OF MISSIONS, 70 (April, 1905), 257-265. (Also, HOW THE CHURCH WENT TO ALASKA AND WHAT HAS BEEN DONE THERE. New York: Board of Missions, De- cember, 1910.) 15 "A New Mission Field." SPIRIT OF MISSIONS, 48 (August, 1883), 351-355; 48 (September, 1883), 395-401; 48 (October, 1883), 427-433. 16 Stuck, Hudson. THE ALASKAN MISSIONS OF THE EPISCO- PAL CHURCH. New York: Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society, 1920. 179 pp. CHS This content downloaded from 24.208.41.117 on Thu, 10 Sep 2020 01:24:00 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms 72 HISTORICAL MAGAZINE 17 Sunder, John E., ed. "The Reverend Octavius Parker's 'Journey from San Francisco ... to Anvik, Alaska, Taken at a Time When a Direct Journey Was Impracticable' (1888)." HISTORICAL MAGAZINE, 34 (December, 1965), 333-348. ARIZONA See also #193 18 Jenkins, James Rockwood. "The Beginnings of the Episcopal Church in Arizona." HISTORICAL MAGAZINE, 14 (December, 1945), 294-301. ARKANSAS 19 "Arkansas as a Mission Field." SPIRIT OF MISSIONS, 66 (Feb- ruary, 1901), 88-91; 66 (March, 1901), 150-154. 20 Chorley, E. Clowes. "The Church in Arkansas and Its Bishops, 1835-1946." HISTORICAL MAGAZINE, 15 (December, 1946), 318-354. 21 Shanks, Henry T. "Documents Relating to the Diocese of Arkan- sas, 1861-1865, and Bishop Henry C. Lay Papers." HISTORICAL MAGAZINE, 8 (March, 1939), 67-90. CALIFORNIA 22 Church, Frank H. "How Our Church Came to California." SPIR- IT OF MISSIONS, 81 (September, 1916), 631-638. 23 Clark, Stephen C. THE DIOCESE OF LOS ANGELES; A BRIEF HISTORY. [Los Angeles] Printed by the Committee on Diocesan Anniversaries, 1945. 92 pp. CHS CtY 24 Graves, Frederick D. "California's Back Yard : The Story of the Missionary District of San Joaquin from the Settlement of the Ter- ritory to 1944." HISTORICAL MAGAZINE, 22 (March, 1953), 45-68. (See also two volume manuscript by Louis Childs Sanford and Ferderick D. Graves, "California's Back Yard," in Church His- torical Society's library, MF28/922.) 25 Kelley, Douglas Ottinger. HISTORY OF THE DIOCESE OF CALIFORNIA FROM 1849 TO 1914 BY THE REVEREND D. O. KELLEY, HISTORIOGRAPHER OF THE DIOCESE, TOGETHER WITH SKETCHES OF THE DIOCESE OF SAC- RAMENTO AND LOS ANGELES AND OF THE DISTRICT OF SAN JOAQUIN FROM THEIR ORGANIZATION. San Francisco: Bureau of Information and Supply, [ca. 1915]. 471 pp. (Chapter XXI, "The Diocese of Sacramento," pp. 255-271; Chap- ter XXII, "History of the Diocese of Los Angeles, 1895-1914," pp. 273-318; Chapter XXIII, "District of San Joaquin," pp. 319- 323.) CHS CtY NNG TxAuE WHi 26 Marshall, Thomas Chalmers. INTO THE STREETS AND LANES; THE BEGINNINGS AND GROWTH OF THE SO- CIAL WORK OF THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH IN THE DIO- SESE OF LOS ANGELES, 1887-1947. Claremont, Calif.: Pub- lished for the Diocesan Department of Social Relations, 1948.
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