Sprague, Viette Brown, 1846-1923

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Missionary. Born February 12, 1846 in Newark, Wayne County, New York, the third of Hiram Leicester Brown and Hester Ann Bonker's ten children. She attended public school in Newark and then in Shortsville, New York. After graduating from Mount Holyoke Female Seminary in 1871, she taught school in Red Creek, New York; Muncie, Pennsylvania; and Emory, Ohio. In 1893 she went to China and married Reverend William P. Sprague in Tientsin. The Spragues then went to Kalgan in northern China to work at a missionary there. On June 11, 1900 the Boxer Uprising forced them to flee the mission with a group of nineteen people including other American and Swedish missionaries and children. The group reached Urga, the capital of Mongolia, and then had to move on to Siberia, Moscow and finally St. Petersburg on September 18. The Spragues returned to New York for one furlough and then went back to Kalgan in 1902, staying there until 1910. William Sprague died in 1919 and Viette Brown Sprague spent the rest of her life in Shortsville, New York remaining involved in church activities, missionary organizations and choir. She died on November 2, 1923 at the age of seventy-seven.

From the description of Papers ca. 1871-1923 1893-1923. (Lewis & Clark Library). WorldCat record id: 43273043

Viette Isabel Brown was born on February 12, 1846 in Newark, Wayne County, New York. She was the third of Hiram Leicester Brown and Hester Ann Bonker's ten children. She attended public school in Newark and then in Shortsville, New York. After graduating from Mount Holyoke Female Seminary in 1871 she taught school in Red Creek, New York; Muncie, Pennsylvania; and Emory, Ohio. In 1893 she went to China and married Reverend William P. Sprague in Tientsin. The Spragues then went to Kalgan in northern China to work at a missionary there. On June 11 in 1900 the Boxer Uprising forced them to flee the mission with a group of nineteen people including other American and Swedish missionaries and children. The group reached Urga, the capital of Mongolia, and then had to move on to Siberia, Moscow and finally St. Petersburg on September 18. The Spragues returned to New York for one furlough and then went back to Kalgan in 1902, staying there until 1910. William Sprague died in 1919 and Viette Brown Sprague spent the rest of her life in Shortsville, New York remaining involved in church activities, missionary organizations and choir. She died on November 2, 1923 at the age of seventy-seven.

From the guide to the Sprague papers MS 0709., ca. 1871-1923, 1893-1923, (Mount Holyoke College Archives and Special Collections)

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
creatorOf Sprague papers MS 0709., ca. 1871-1923, 1893-1923 Mount Holyoke College Archives and Special Collections
creatorOf Sprague, Viette Brown, 1846-1923. Papers ca. 1871-1923 1893-1923. Mount Holyoke College, Williston & Miles-Smith Library
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith Edwards, Anna C. (Anna Cheney), 1835-1930 person
associatedWith Mount Holyoke Female Seminary corporateBody
associatedWith Mount Holyoke Female Seminary - Students. corporateBody
Place Name Admin Code Country
China - History - Boxer Rebellion, 1899-1901 - Personal narratives.
China - Social conditions - 1644-1912.
China
Zhangjiakou (China)
Zhangjiakou (China)
Subject
Footbinding
Missionaries
Missionaries
Voyages and travels
Women
Women
Women missionaries
Women missionaries
Occupation
Activity

Person

Birth 1846

Death 1923-11-02

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