Guide to the George Earl Church family collection, 1866-1980
(bulk 1891-1911)
John Hay Library, University Archives and Manuscripts
Box A
Brown University
Providence, RI 02912
Telephone: Manuscripts: 401-863-3723; University Archives: 401-863-2148
Email: Manuscripts: hay@brown.edu; University Archives: archives@brown.edu
Published in 2020
Collection Overview
Title: |
George Earl Church family collection |
Date range: |
1866-1980, (1891-1911) |
Creator: |
Church, George Earl |
Extent: |
1.25 Linear Feet 3 document boxes, 1 oversize box
|
Abstract: |
The materials in this collection relate
to the family and personal life of George Earl Church and were sent to Brown University by
descendants of Church. |
Language of materials: |
Spanish; Castilian |
Repository: |
John Hay Library, University Archives and Manuscripts
|
Collection number: |
MS.2016.012 |
Scope & content
The materials in this collection relate to the family and personal life of George Earl
Church and were sent to Brown University by descendants of Church.
Series 1. Margarita Palacios Lopez Videla (A2016.032). The original letters and documents
in this series are all in Spanish. There are 59 letters written by George Earl Church to his
daughter Margarita and her fiance Daniel Lopez Videla during 1891-1909. There are 12
documents sent to Margarita regarding the settlement of the estate of George Earl Church and
her inheritance dating from 1910-1911. The estate documents are all in Spanish with the
exception of one document.
Series 2. Nora Church Pedrazzoli (A2016.33). These documents are all photocopies. It
contains a copy of the Last Will and Testament of George Earl Church dated 1909 in which he
leaves money to his surviving children. It also contains 4 letters written in English by
George Earl Church to Nora and her fiance Antonio Pedrazzoli dating from 1897-1898. There
are also copies of a Genealogy chart of the Church family, death certificate for George Earl
Church, death certificate for Olivia Sconzia Church, and an affadavit from Nora Church
Pedrazzoli about her parents George Earl Church and Olivia Sconzia.
Series 3. Biographical materials (A2013.052). This contains 2 original letters written to
Church in 1889, a photocopy of a Church Family Genealogy prepared in 1975, photograph of a
train engine "Colonel Church" and accompanying letter dated 1980.
Series 4. Research materials. These items were interfiled with the published books owned by
George Earl Church. They were transferred to the manuscripts portion of his collection in
2019. They include newspapers articles he collected relating to politics, history,
railroads, and silver mines in Central America and South America. He also collected an
important set of images of indigenous people specifically the Aymara Indians and Quechua
Indians.
Access Points
Subject Names
Subject Topics
Geographical Names
Arrangement
Arranged in 3 series.
- Series 1. Margarita Palacios Lopez Videla (A2016.032)
- Series 2. Nora Church Pedrazzoli (A2016.33)
- Series 3. Biographical materials (A2013.052)
- Series 4. Research materials
Biographical / Historical
George Earl Church was born in New Bedford, Massachusetts, on December 7, 1835. He was the
son of George Washington Church—a direct descendant of Captain Benjamin Church who fought in
the King Philip War—and Margaret Fisher Church—from a Yorkshire family later involved in the
steam railway industry in England. Through his background he acquired a taste for the
combined careers of engineer, explorer, soldier, author and scholar.
At the age of three, Church moved to Providence, Rhode Island, with his widowed mother. He
entered high school in 1849 and seven years later, having learned the rudiments of
engineering from his tutors, he was employed on the Hoosac tunnel of the Boston & Maine
Railroad.
In 1857, at the age of 22, he traveled to Buenos Aires to serve as chief engineer on a new
railway project—later postponed—for the Argentine Republic. While the project was on hold,
Church took the opportunity to join a scientific commission to explore the southwestern
border of Argentina and propose plans for its defense against marauding native tribes. The
commission lasted nine months and covered 7,000 miles. Following this expedition he began
work for the Argentine Great Northern Railway—his initial assignment.
Civil war broke out in the United States and Church returned to Providence to join the 7th
Rhode Island Infantry. In February 1863, he was appointed colonel of the 11th Rhode Island
Regiment, and after its term expired in December 1864, was named colonel of the 2nd Rhode
Island Regiment. While his last regiment was being recruited, he acted as chief engineer for
the Fall River railway extension of Providence, Warren, and Bristol.
His interest in the French intervention in Mexico led him to write an article entitled "An
Historical Review of Mexico and its Revolutions", printed in the New York Herald on May 25,
1866. Having concluded his service in the Civil War, the U.S. State Department made
arrangements for Church to travel to Mexico as a war correspondent for the Herald. The U.S.
government needed secure and reliable reports of the conflict, and Church's findings could
provide them the necessary information. Church reached the Mexican patriot army, and
eventually became one of the principal military advisers of President Juarez. He served in
the last two campaigns against the Maximilian Empire, 1866-67, yet when Juarez won his
decisive victory, Church tried unsuccessfully to reach Washington to save the life of the
ill-fated emperor.
In 1868, the Bolivian government invited Church to undertake a project that would provide
the landlocked country a means of communication to the Atlantic. Church accepted the
invitation and proceeded to Bolivia via Buenos Aires. From the Argentine capital, he rode
overland 2,000 miles to La Paz where he was granted the required concession for the
navigation of Bolivian rivers. He returned to New York via Panama, but soon after his
arrival, he traveled back to La Paz, at the request of the Bolivian government. Thence he
proceeded to Rio de Janeiro, via the Strait of Magellan, to obtain from the Brazilian
government the right to construct a railway to avoid the falls of the river Madeira. Church
explored a region of some 250 miles on the upper Amazon, 1,600 miles from the ocean. Once
the Brazilian concession was granted, Church returned to New York and in June 1870, under
charter from the U.S. government, he organized the National Bolivian Navigation Company.
Church became president of the company and began to encounter many legal obstacles. His
competitors - merchants of the Pacific coast - sought to ensure that his engineering and
financial plans to open Bolivia to trade by way of the Amazon and its tributaries would
never come to fruition. After five years of fighting his opponents in the English courts,
the House of Lords settled the question by declaring the enterprise impracticable. Church
abandoned the project and left Bolivia in 1879.
The U.S. government sought Church's expertise for an assignment that brought him back to
the southern continent. In 1880, he reported on the political, financial and trade
conditions of Ecuador, an investigation he combined with two English commissions concerning
bonds linked to Ecuadorian foreign debt and the construction of a railway line.
He returned to Argentina in 1889 with another railroad project in hand and became an
advisor for English investors venturing in Central and South America. In 1895 he spent time
in Costa Rica, negotiating on behalf of bondholders of the national debt, and preparing a
report on the Costa Rican railroad, involving investigation of the banana industry.
During his last 30 years, Church resided mostly in London, devoting much time to literary
pursuits and to scientific societies. He became a valued contributor to The Times, a
vice-president of the Royal Geographic Society, a councilor of the Hakluyt Society and a
fellow of the Royal Geographical Society—the first non-British subject to be elected a
member of its council. Toward the end of his life, he traveled frequently to North America
where he studied the conditions and prospects for a new transcontinental railroad in
Canada.
Church fell in love with Natalia Palacios in La Paz, Bolivia. According to family lore he
invited Natalia to move with him to London but she decided to stay in La Paz. She
subsequently gave birth to a daughter named Margarita Palacios who later married Daniel
Lopez Videla. Church did not know about the existence of Margarita until 1891 after which
time he wrote to her and provided for her financially. He then met Olivia Sconzia (alias
Gofforth), a well-regarded musician and composer with whom he had two daughters - Blanche
Church Pedrazzoli, born in Paris, France, on May 18, 1874, and Nora Church Pedrazzoli, born
in Florence, Italy, on February 2, 1878. Church married Alice Helena Carter in 1882.
Following Carter's death in 1898, he married Anna Marion Chapman, daughter of Sir Robert
Harding. He died in London on January 4, 1910.
Access & Use
Access to the collection: |
There are no restrictions on access, except that the collection can only be seen by prior
appointment. Some materials may be stored off-site and cannot be produced on the same day on
which they are requested. |
Use of the materials: |
Although Brown University has physical ownership of the collection and the materials contained therein, it does not claim literary rights. Researchers should note that compliance with copyright law is their responsibility. Researchers must determine the owners of the literary rights and obtain any necessary permissions from them. |
Preferred citation: |
George Earl Church papers, Ms.2016.012, Brown University Library. |
Contact information: |
John Hay Library, University Archives and Manuscripts Box A Brown University Providence, RI 02912 Telephone: Manuscripts: 401-863-3723; University Archives: 401-863-2148
Email: Manuscripts: hay@brown.edu; University Archives: archives@brown.edu
|
Administrative Information
ABOUT THE COLLECTION |
Acquisition: |
The materials in Series 1 (A2016-032) were a gift from Javier Lopez Videla and Hugo Lopez
Videla, direct descendants of Margarita Palacios de Lopez Videla. The materials in Series 2
(A2016.033) were a gift from Lesley Church Graham, a direct descendant of Nora Church
Pedrazzoli. The materials in Series 3 (A2013.052) include a gift from George Earl Church
(b.1924) of the photo of the train engine and accompanying letter while the original letters
from 1889 were removed from books that are part of the George Earl Church collection and
transferred to manuscripts. The materials in Series 4 were originally interfiled with the
books that are part of the George Earl Church collection. They were transferred to the
manuscripts portion of his collection in 2019. |
|
|
|
|
ABOUT THE FINDING AID |
Author: |
Karen Eberhart. |
Encoding: |
This finding aid was produced using ArchivesSpace on 2020-03-02. |
Descriptive rules: |
Describing Archives: A Content Standard |
Additional Information
Related material: |
Related MaterialsSee also: Ms.45.32 Manuel M. (Manuel María) de Peralta to Colonel George Earl Church, 1896
July 17 |
Inventory
Series 1. Margarita Palacios de Lopez Videla (A2016.032)
Box [31236073615182] 1, Folder 1 |
|
George Earl Church letters to Margarita and her fiance Daniel Lopez
Videla Contents Note: 59 letters all written in Spanish.
|
|
1891-1909 |
Box [31236073615182] 1, Folder 1 |
|
Estate of George Earl Church Contents Note: 11 documents in Spanish and 1 document in English.
|
|
1910-1911 |
Series 2. Nora Church Pedrazzoli (A2016.033)
Box [31236073615182] 1, Folder 2 |
|
Last Will and Testament of George Earl Church
|
|
1909 |
Box [31236073615182] 1, Folder 2 |
|
Genealogy Chart of Church family showing descent to Lesley Church
Graham
|
|
|
Box [31236073615182] 1, Folder 2 |
|
George Earl Church letters to Nora and her fiance Antonio
Pedrazzoli
|
|
1897-1898 |
Box [31236073615182] 1, Folder 2 |
|
Newspaper article: Brazil has abandoned 'railroad to hell'
|
|
|
Box [31236073615182] 1, Folder 2 |
|
Affadavit by Nora Church Pedrazzoli about her parents
|
|
1938 |
Box [31236073615182] 1, Folder 2 |
|
Copy of Death Certificate of George Earl Church, died January 4,
1910
|
|
1959 |
Box [31236073615182] 1, Folder 2 |
|
Copy of Death Certificate of Olivia Sconzia, died June 23, 1916
|
|
1959 |
Box [31236073615182] 1, Folder 2 |
|
In Memoriam: George Earl Church
|
|
1910 |
Series 3. Biographical materials (A2013.052)
Box [31236073615182] 1, Folder 3 |
|
Charles Makey to George Earl Church
|
|
1889 December 4 |
Box [31236073615182] 1, Folder 3 |
|
W.R. Sullivan to George Earl Church
|
|
1889 December 15 |
Box [31236073615182] 1, Folder 3 |
|
Church Family Genealogy: 1608 to 1975
|
|
1975 |
Box [31236073615182] 1, Folder 3 |
|
Photograph of train engine "Colonel Church" in Porto Velho, Brazil with
accompanying letter from W.A. Senten to George Earl Church (b.1924)
|
|
1980 May 30 |
Box [31236075006679] 2, Folder 1 |
|
Biographical material relating to Colonel George Earl Church
|
|
1870-1908 |
Series 4. Research materials
Box [31236075006679] 2, Folder 2 |
|
Arica - photographs Contents Note: Photographs made by Ricardo Villaalba. Views of Arica after the earthquake of August
13, 1868. In 1868 Arica was part of Peru. Includes image of beached boats USS
"Wateree" and of the Peruvian corvette "America" in the background after the tsunami
caused by the earthquake.
|
|
1868,
undated |
Box [31236075006679] 2, Folder 3 |
|
Argentine finance - "The Statist"
|
|
1890 |
Box [31236075006679] 2, Folder 4 |
|
Argentine Republic - newspaper clippings
|
|
1886 |
Box [31236075006679] 2, Folder 5 |
|
Aymara Indians (Bolivia) - carte-de-visite photographs Contents Note: 3 photographs by Ricardo Villaalba. 2 photographs by Rodrigo Y Cia (Carlos E. Rodrigo
from Tacna, Peru). 2 photographs by unidentified photographer. See also "South
American views" for additional images of indigenous people.
|
|
undated |
Box [31236075006679] 2, Folder 6 |
|
Babylon - newspaper clippings
|
|
1887 |
Box [31236075006679] 2, Folder 7 |
|
Baillairge, C.P.F. - articles extracted from various periodicals
|
|
1896-1908 |
Box [31236075006679] 2, Folder 8 |
|
Bolivia - newspaper clippings
|
|
1882-1905 |
Box [31236075006679] 2, Folder 9 |
|
Brazil - Treaty of November 17, 1903 with Bolivia
|
|
1903-1904 |
Box [31236075006679] 2, Folder 10 |
|
Brazil and Don Pedro II - newspaper clippings
|
|
1889 |
Box [31236075006679] 2, Folder 11 |
|
Brazil: Revolution 19 November 1889-3 December 1889 - letters and newspaper
clippings
|
|
1889 |
Box [31236075006687] 3X, Folder 1 |
|
Central American Unity - newspaper clippings
|
|
1907 |
Box [31236075006679] 2, Folder 12 |
|
China - newspaper clippings
|
|
1895-1902 |
Box [31236075006679] 2, Folder 13 |
|
Clayton-Bulwer and Hay Paunceforte Treaties - newspaper clippings
|
|
1902 |
Box [31236075006687] 3X, Folder 2 |
|
Colombia - newspaper clippings
|
|
1907 |
Box [31236075006679] 2, Folder 14 |
|
Columbus - newspaper clippings
|
|
1904 |
Box [31236075006679] 2, Folder 15 |
|
Costa Rica - newspaper clippings
|
|
1895 |
Box [31236075006679] 2, Folder 16 |
|
De Lesseps, death of - newspaper clippings
|
|
1894 |
Box [31236075006679] 2, Folder 17 |
|
El Tratado Boliviano-Brasileno - newspaper clippings
|
|
1904 |
Box [31236075006679] 2, Folder 18 |
|
The Guayaquil and Quito railway of Ecuador (published in The Railway
Age)
|
|
1902 |
Box [31236075006679] 2, Folder 19 |
|
George Earl Church - Old Homestead of the Churches, (Rochester,
MA)
|
|
c. 1892 |
Box [31236075006679] 2, Folder 20 |
|
Quechua Indians of Peru (Quichua or Kechua) - carte-de-visite
photographs Contents Note: 8 carte-de-visite black and white photographs by photographers Ricardo Villaalba and
Rodrigo Y Cia (Carlos E. Rodrigo from Tacna, Peru). See also "South American views"
for additional images of indigenous people.
|
|
undated |
Box [31236075006679] 2, Folder 21 |
|
Nicaragua and Panama Canal - newspaper clippings and
correspondence
|
|
1893-1900 |
Box [31236075006679] 2, Folder 22 |
|
The Nicaragua Canal - newspaper clippings
|
|
1895 |
Box [31236075006679] 2, Folder 23 |
|
Philippines - newspaper clippings
|
|
1904 |
Box [31236075006687] 3X, Folder 3 |
|
Mexico and Argentina - photographs and prints Contents Note: Includes panoramic photograph of Great Mines of Fresnillo Mountains in Zacatecas,
Mexico, west of San Luis Potosí. The lithographs are from Argentina and were made by
Juan Leon Palliere, born in Brazil but a French national living in Buenos Aires
(around 1855).
|
|
1866, undated |
Box [31236075006687] 3X, Folder 4 |
|
River Coura Branch of Orinoco
|
|
1900-1902 |
Box [31236075006679] 2, Folder 24 |
|
Silver mines of Mexico - pen and ink drawings Contents Note: Drawings of the silver mine known as Santa Eulalia, in the Mexican State of
Chihuahua.
|
|
undated |
Box [31236075006679] 2, Folder 25 |
|
Simon Bolivar - newspaper clippings
|
|
1883 |
Box [31236075006679] 2, Folder 26 |
|
South American Views - carte-de-visite photographs Contents Note: These images are primarily of indigenous people from South America. 9 photographs by
Ricardo Villaalba. 10 photographs by Rodrigo Y Cia (Carlos E. Rodrigo from Tacna,
Peru). 7 photographs with no photographer identified includes: General Tomas Mejia
(Mexico); Bolucos [Botocudos] from Brazil; "Dwarf in Escobeda's liberal army". 2
photograhs by The London Stereoscopic and Photographic Company including: "The Hairy
Tribe - they inhabit the Andamann Islands about two days sail from Rangoon". 1
photograph by C. Leuzinger titled "Turtle shooting on the Medeira River".
|
|
undated |
Box [31236075006679] 2, Folder 27 |
|
Venezuela - newspaper clippings
|
|
1900-1905 |