Hartwell family.

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Jesse Boardman Hartwell, founder of this Baptist missionary family, was born in Buckland, Massachusetts, on May 2nd, 1795. Little is known of hls parents, Jesse and Jerusha Hartwell, except that his father was active in the ministry for over sixty-six years.

Baptized by his father in 1815, Jesse B. Hartwell received a license to preach the gospel the following year, and entered Brown University with the goal of becoming a missionary to India. Although he never reached the foreign field, Hartwell maintained a life-long interest in missions. He remained in Providence, R. I. after graduating with the Class of 1819 and undertook a three year pastorale at the Second Baptist Church. During this period he married Maria Thayer, who died within a few years, although the exact date of her death is unknown. The couple had one child.

Due to failing health, Hartwell moved to Charleston, South Carolina, in 1822 and married Margaret Forman Brodie two years later. At least seven children were born of this marriage, including a son, J. Boardman Hartwell, Jr., in 1835. (The following are children of Jesse B. Hartwell: Ann Hartwell Alison, Charles M. Hartwell - d. l857, (Edward?) Hartwell, Elizabeth Hartwell - d. l852, Ellen C. Hartwell Edwards (Mrs. Robert G.), Jesse Boardman Hartwell, Jr. - b. l835 - d. 1912, Maria R. Hartwell Haynes (Mrs. Edward), and Mary Helen Hartwell Gibbs. One child, possibly Maria Haynes, was born during Hartwell's marriage to Maria Thayer. His second wife, Margaret Forman Brodie Hartwell, is the mother of the other children.)

Between l822-1836, the elder Jesse Hartwell served at various local churches in South Carolina and became a professor at "Furman Theological Institution" (now Furman University, Greenville, S.C.) In December 1836, the family moved to Alabama, where he was elected President of the Baptist State Convention three years later. His approximately nine years in office were particularly critical ones, for Baptists from the North and South clashed over the subject of abolition and the refusal of Northern Boards to appoint slaveholders to foreign or domestic mission fields. In l845, he and James C. Crane served jointly as first secretary of the Southern Baptist Convention. The University of Alabama conferred the D.D. degree upon him the same year.

In addition to his other activities, Hartwell became Professor of Theology at Howard College, Marion, Alabama, in 1844 and President of the Domestic Mission Board, Southern Baptist Convention.

In 1848, the Hartwells moved to the Arkansas frontier where Jesse Hartwell conducted the Camden Female Institute until becoming President and Professor of Theology at Mt. Lebanon University in 1857. During his two years at Mt. Lebanon, he also served as President of the Louisiana Baptist Convention. He died in September 1859.

When Jesse Hartwell came to Mt. Lebanon University, his son, J. Boardman Hartwell, had already been appointed Professor of Mathematics at the same institution. An 1855 graduate of Furman University,Greenville, S.C., young Hartwell achieved his father's goal by becoming a missionary in 1858. (Furman University later awarded J. Boardman Hartwell the D.D. degree.) Before sailing for the Orient, he married Eliza Jewett of Macon, Georgia. The couple spent their first year in Shanghai,

moved to Chefoo in 1860, and then settled in Tung Chow, where Hartwell remained until 1875.

It is interesting to note that during this time:

"Mr. Hartwell baptized the first man in Shantung province; he organized the first Protestant church in China north of Shanghai;...perhaps the first foreign contribution ever made to missionary work came in 1869 to the Southern Baptist Convention from his North Street Church in Tung Chow." (Annual Minutes of the Baptist State Convention, South Carolina Baptist Convention, 1912, p. 110.)

During the Tai Ping rebellion (1851-1864), Hartwell devoted himself to the Chinese people: "At one time for nearly six weeks he had on his premises one hundred refugees, to whom he acted as surgeon, nurse, and preacher; dangers beset him and his; more than once he was forced to put himself under the protection of the United States Consul, and on one occasion he and his family were forced to flee on horseback to save their lives." (Ibid. p. 110.)

In 1870, Hartwell was left a widower with four children, including infant twins. (The children of J. Boardman and Eliza Jewett Hartwell are: Anna B. Hartwell (b.1870-d.1961), Carrie Hartwell (b.d. c.1861-1864), Jesse George Hartwell (b.1860-d.1932), John Holzendorf Hartwell (b.1870d. c. 1871), Maggie Hartwell (b.d. 1870), "Nellie" Edwards Hartwell Beattie (b.1863-?). Anna and John Hartwell were twins. "Nellie's" first name is probably "Ellen". The children of J. Boardman and Charlotte Norris Hartwell are: Charles Norris Hartwell (b.1884-d.1927), "Lottie" Hartwell Ufford (b.1882-?), "Lottie" may be a nickname for "Charlotte". Two other children, Claude Hartwell (b. c. 1893-d. before 1927) and Jane Hartwell (b. c. 1890) may be the offspring of Charlotte W. Norris Hartwell by a previous marriage.) He returned briefly to America the following year, and married Julia Jewett, the sister of his first wife. Widowed again eight years later, Hartwell became a missionary to the Chinese community in San Francisco, California. He was appointed superintendent for Chinese missions on the Pacific Coast by the American Baptist Home Mission Society, married Charlotte W. Norris the next year, and returned to China in l893. He died in China in 1912, after fifty-four years of foreign and domestic missionary service.

The Hartwell missionary tradition continued through a third generation, as four of J. Boardman Hartwell's children worked in China. Nellie Hartwell married Presbyterian missionary Andrew Beattie, and the couple served together until 1908. Anna Burton Hartwell graduated from the Baptist Missionary Training School in Chicago in 1891, and worked briefly among the Chinese in San Francisco, California, before being appointed to China by the Baptist Foreign Mission Board in l892. She performed evangelical and educational work at Canton, Tengchow, and Hwangheien. Lottie Hathaway Hartwell graduated from Wellesley College, Wellesley, Massachusetts, and married A. Frank Ufford, a graduate of the University of Vermont and Andover Newton Theological Seminary. From 1908 to 1941, the Uffords worked together under the auspices of the American Baptist Foreign Mission Society in Shaohing and Hangchow, Cheking Province. Mr. Ufford was engaged in promotional work for the Society in New York City from 1942 to 1946. The couple returned to China in 1946 for two years of special service. Mr. Ufford died sometime in the mid 1950's.

Charles Norris Hartwell was born in San Francisco, California, but grew up in Tung Chow and prepared for college at the China Inland Mission Schools, Chefoo. He graduated from the State University of Missouri, taught in the United States for several years, and married Elizabeth ("Bessie") Hartwell. He was appointed by the Southern Baptist Convention to its North China Mission in 1909, and immediately became principal of the Boys' High School in Hwanghsien. At the time of his death in 1927 he was Dean of North China Baptist College.

The following additional biographical information is contained in the material given by Lottie Hartwell Ufford in 1976.

Charlotte Elizabeth Norris, born in Baltimore July 19, 1849, married Jesse Hartwell in 1881 while Mr. Hartwell was the superintendent for the Chinese Mission in San Francisco's Chinatown. Charlotte, third wife Jesse Boardman Hartwell, and mother of Lottie Hathaway, Charles Norris, Claude and Jane, died in 1903 having been in China for ten years.

The four children, born in San Francisco, went to China with their parents 1892. Lottie finished school at the China Inland Mission School in Chefoo before coming to the United States with her brother Charles for a preparatory year at Mrs. Potter's Private School for Girls in Everett, Massachusetts. The summer before she went to Wellesley College, while working as a waitress, she received word that Claude had died of ptomaine poisoning in China in 1902. (Box 22, Folder 12. Photographs re. Family.)

While attending a missionary rally in Boston, Lottie was "impressed" with chairman, A. Frank Ufford, who had volunteered to go to China during the Boxer Rebellion. Lottie and Frank Ufford were married in 1906 and sailed for China in 1908. One daughter was born to them, Nina (later called Betty), who married Herbert Dean. (Box 19, Folder 2. Biographical material.)

An additional biographical fact which has come to light from the added material is: John Holzendorf Hartwell, twin brother of Anna B. Hartwell, "grew to manhood and went to Australia. Died there." (Box 21, Folder 12. Photographs re. Family.)

From the guide to the Hartwell Family Papers, 1846-1975, (Yale University Divinity School Library)

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creatorOf Hartwell Family Papers, 1846-1975 Yake University Divinity School Library
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