Eells, Myron, 1843-1907

Variant names
Dates:
Birth 1843
Death 1907

Biographical notes:

Reverend Myron Eells (1843-1907), youngest son of Reverend Cushing Eells, was missionary to Indians at Skokomish.

From the description of Letters : to Honorable A. Hinman / by Myron Eells, 1891. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 702127639

From the description of Notes, [after 1884]. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 702127641

From the description of Letters : to Honorable A. McKinlay / by Myron Eells, 1885. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 702127640

Born in Spokane County, in 1843, Reverend Eells lived in the Willamette Valley, graduated from Pacific University and Hartford Theological Seminary and became ordained in the Congregational Church. He returned to the northwest and spent most of his years in the Puget Sound region as a missionary to the tribes and white settlers until his death in 1907.

From the guide to the Myron Eells Collection, 1848-1998, (Whitman College and Northwest Archives)

Myron Eells was born to pioneer missionaries Cushing and Myra Eells in 1843. He was born near what is now Spokane, Washington, but the family relocated to the Willamette Valley after the Whitman Massacre in 1849. In 1859, Cushing Eells and his family returned to eastern Washington Territory and founded what is now Whitman College, in honor of Marcus and Narcissa Whitman.

Myron Eells returned to Oregon to attend Pacific University, and graduated in 1866 with his A.M. He then went home to Walla Walla to work on his father’s farm, but after two years went to the Northeast to study for the ministry. He graduated from Hartford Theological Seminary in Connecticut in 1871. He returned to the Northwest upon graduation, and led the Congregational Church in Boise, Idaho for a few years. In 1874, Eells moved to the Skokomish Reservation on the Olympic Peninsula in Washington Territory, and he lived there the rest of his life, working as a missionary and documenting the cultures and languages of the tribes he worked with in Washington. He wrote many articles, books, and pamphlets on the subject, and obtained a large collection of Native American artifacts and books on Northwest history.

Eells served on the Board of Trustees for both Whitman College and his alma mater, Pacific University. At the end of his life, he donated most of his personal papers and his personal library to Whitman College, which provided vital support to the institution his father founded.

From the guide to the Myron Eells Papers, 1850-1897, (Pacific University Archives)

Links to collections

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Subjects:

  • Slavery
  • Anthropology
  • Christian universities and colleges
  • Universities and colleges
  • Universities and colleges
  • Indians of North America
  • Missions
  • Native Americans
  • Pacific University

Occupations:

  • Teachers
  • Missionaries
  • Printers
  • Printers

Places:

  • Hawaii (as recorded)
  • Northwest, Pacific (as recorded)
  • Hawaii (as recorded)
  • Idaho (as recorded)
  • Idaho (as recorded)
  • Washington (State) (as recorded)
  • Washington (States) (as recorded)