Historic Pelham

Presenting the rich history of Pelham, NY in Westchester County: current historical research, descriptions of how to research Pelham history online and genealogy discussions of Pelham families.

Thursday, November 24, 2016

An Important Thanksgiving Sermon Delivered in 1865 at Christ Church at the Close of the Civil War



"Teach your children well, 
Their father's hell did slowly go by."

-- "Teach Your Children Well," Song Performed by Crosby,
Stills, Nash & Young from the Album "Déjà Vu" Released
March 11, 1970.  Song Lyrics by Graham Nash.

It is Thanksgiving Day in Pelham and throughout our beloved nation.  It is a day to give thanks for many blessings.

By Presidential Proclamation signed by President Andrew Johnson on October 28, 1865, Thanksgiving Day was celebrated that year on Thursday, December 7.  That day in Pelham, many local residents gathered in the sanctuary of Christ Church in Pelham Manor to give thanks and to hear a sermon preached by their Rector, Edward W. Syle.  Reverend Syle served as the Rector of Christ Church from 1864 until 1868.

According to Reverend Syle, Pelhamites assembled in the church that Thanksgiving day to give thanks for the "cessation of that stupendous outburst of war" known as the American Civil War.  The patriotic and optimistic sermon Reverend Syle delivered that Thanksgiving was tempered with warnings that the entire nation had a responsibility to use every day, every opportunity, every institution, and every moment to teach all children and grandchildren the difference between right and wrong so that terrible events like those that precipitated the American Civil War would never happen again.  

It was the first Thanksgiving after the end of the War, the most terrible tragedy yet to befall the young Republic.  The sermon Reverend Syle delivered that day was profoundly moving to many.  It so moved members of the Parish that a committee approached the Reverend and asked his permission to publish the sermon and to have the Reverend agree to deliver it again three days later during regular Sunday services.  Reverend Syle agreed.  He delivered the sermon again three days later.  The sermon was published as a booket within a matter of weeks.

Considered solely in its historical context, the Thanksgiving sermon delivered by Reverend Syle provides an important and fascinating glimpse into the minds of the citizens of Pelham at the conclusion of the Civil War.  It reveals much about their fears, their hopes, their patriotism, their sense of the Union's accomplishment, and their optimistic expectation that the Republic would continue in perpetuity.  Indeed, the Reverend entitled his sermon "The Perpetuity of National Life."

A large part of Reverend Syle's words delivered to his Pelham flock that Thanksgiving Day 151 years ago evokes the simple words of Graham Nash penned 105 years later and quoted above:  "Teach your children well, their fathers' hell did slowly go by."  

Edward W. Syle was born in England on February 17, 1817.  He came to the United States and graduated from Virginia Theological Seminary. He married Rebbecca Janet Cunningham in Baltimore, Maryland in 1845.  That year, he was sent with his wife to Shanghai to accompany Bishop Boone as a missionary to assist the Chinese.  He returned to the United States in 1853 for health reasons and soon was posted to the New York region to work with "destitute Chinese in New York City."   

After the onset of the Civil War, Syle became Rector of Christ Church in Pelham Manor in 1864.  During the final two years of the Civil War he worked with Union soldiers and Rebel prisoners on nearby David's Island where a military hospital was located and, in 1865, held weekly services for rebel prisoners of war on Hart Island.  He served as Rector of the church until 1868.  Late in his life Syle returned to his native Great Britain where, on October 5, 1890 he died.  

The words of the Thanksgiving sermon by Reverend Syle are poignant and piercing.  They are well worth reading this Thanksgiving Day.  It is easy to see ourselves and our society today in the mirror of Reverend Syle's words written and delivered more than 150 years ago.  Indeed, his words should be recommended reading for those in Pelham celebrating this Thanksgiving Day, 2016.  




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The entire text of the Thanksgiving sermon "The Perpetuity of National Life" delivered by Reverend Edward W. Syle at Christ Church on Thanksgiving Day, Thursday, December 7, 1865, appears immediately below.  It is followed by a citation and link to its source.

[Title Page]

The Perpetuity of National Life.
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A SERMON DELIVERED ON THANKSGIVING DAY, THURSDAY, DEC. 7, 1865, IN CHRIST CHURCH, PELHAM, N. Y., BY THE REV. E. W. SYLE, A. M., RECTOR.
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PRINTED BY REQUEST. 
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New York:
JAS. W. TRUBSHAW, BOOK & JOB PRINTER, 58 FULTON STREET.
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1865.

[Foreword]

PELHAM, WESTCHESTER CO., Dec. 15th, 1865.

REV. E. W. SYLE.

Rev. and Dear Sir: — Several of your parishioners, to whom the Sermon preached by you on last Thanksgiving Day (and repeated by request on the following Sabbath) was most acceptable, as being eminently appropriate to the occasion, and to the present condition of our country, have expressed a desire that the Christian and patriotic sentiments inculcated in it should be more widely disseminated, by its publication in pamphlet form.  We would therefore request (if entirely agreeable to yourself) that you will enable us to gratify this wish, by furnishing us with the manuscript of your Sermon, for that purpose.  

We are, Rev. and Dear Sir, 

Respectfully, your sincere friends, 
R. EMMET, 
WM. HENRY LEROY, 
JOHN FOWLER, Jr., 
D. CHERBULIEZ, 
ROBT. W. EDGAR. 
-----

PELHAM PRIORY, 20th Dec. 1865. 

MESSRS. R. EMMET, WM. H. LEROY, and others. 

My Dear Friends and Parishioners: — Your gratifying request can hardly receive any other reply than a ready assent.  And yet the difference between the impression made by a Discourse delivered to an attached congregation, and that of the same words when merely read by others, is great enough to make one pause before printing what he is quite ready to preach.  At the same time, I do not hesitate to avow that I regard the views and principles of my Sermon as important; and if you judge them adapted to be useful in pamphlet form, the manuscript is at your service for the purpose of publication. 

Believe me to be, 
With sincere regard, your Friend and Pastor, 

E. W. SYLE. 

[Page 5 - NOTE:  Some pages in the booklet are blank and have not been designated here.  No text is being omitted.]

SERMON.

"Only take heed to thyself, and keep thy soul diligently, lest thou forget the things which thine eyes have seen; and lest they depart from thy heart all the days of thy life; but teach them thy sons, and thy sons' sons' — DEUT. 4 : 9. 

THERE are times when events speak for themselves; and there are states of feeling which are spontaneous — requiring no arguments to produce them, but almost resenting any attempt to heighten their intensity by mere use of words. 

What captive, just set free, would care to hear a dissertation on the blessings of liberty, or the duty of feeling happy?  What convalescent needs to have the advantages of health demonstrated to his understanding, or the joyous feeling of returning strength urged upon him as a matter of duty?  What mariner who finds refuge in a safe harbor, after a perilous storm, wants to be told that it is a good thing to he preserved from shipwreck, or that it is proper for him to experience a feeling of relief?  

It would be counted an impertinence to obtrude such counsels at such times; and the effect of attempting it would be to cause a revulsion of thought 

[Page 6]

and feeling quite contrary to what may have been designed and desired.  Not less incongruous, dear Christian friends, would it be, on such an occasion as this, to present an array of facts bearing on the reasons that exist for national thankfulness, or to demonstrate that the feeling of gratitude to the King of Kings ought to fill the heart of every worshipper in this house to-day. 

We are thankful:  it is a matter of the simplest consciousness with us; needing no demonstration and admitting of no argument.  We know we have reason to feel this gratitude; so that we want no one to tell us what we all so instinctively understand and appreciate. 

What then shall be the subject of our remarks on this auspicious day?  Shall we have nothing to say, one to another, concerning the perils of the past, and the blessings of the present hour? Shall we content ourselves with the simple enjoyment of our deliverances and exemptions; and take no thought for the coming years; but trust that the powerful hand which has so signally sustained and guided thus far, will still sustain and guide in all future emergencies?  

Such trust we well may cherish; and in proportion as it is a simple and well-placed confidence in the God and Father of us all, and is not a mere blind, unreasoning hopefulness, we shall be ready to give heed to what God himself has spoken to a people who had just been brought through great troubles, and had experienced a wonderful deliverance. 

Just eighty years before, the same Moses, through whom these words were addressed to the Jewish nation, had made his first essay for their deliverance — 

[Page 7]

thinking they would understand his purpose and welcome him as their prince and champion; but their minds were not prepared; they were comparatively content with their condition; they preferred the fleshpots of Egypt to the prospect of emancipation; and Moses fled away from them and from Pharaoh, finding in Midian a refuge and a home; so that for forty long years he sojourned there, keeping the flock of Jethro, his father-in-law, and (as we suppose) composing the most ancient work extant, and one of the most sublime of all poems — the book of Job:  a production worthy of a scholar, a hero, a genius, and a legislator! and Moses was all these. 

After the forty years thus well spent, after that maturity of mind had been developed which constituted the providential preparation for his future work, then came the alarming summons to undertake the leadership of that down-trodden people who had previously refused his aid, and whose condition had become ten-fold worse than before — with this exception, that, whereas formerly they had not been ready to accept deliverance, now they sighed by reason of their bondage, and their cry came up unto God by reason of their bondage, for it was very sore.  

We will not trace out the steps of their exodus from Egypt, nor dwell upon their faithless and faint-hearted shrinking from the Divine directions given to them, nor will we delineate the provocations which marked their weary wandering in the wilderness for another forty long years.  Enough, that during all this time, Moses was their leader, and that he brought them once again to the very borders of the promised land, and gave to the new generation that had sprung 

[Page 8]

up a new and fuller declaration of the laws of God -- adding his own earnest exhortations and solemn warnings.  How far his prophetic eye penetrated the obscurity of the remote future, or how far it was mere human sagacity which prompted his forebodings, it is plain that he anticipated for the people of his care anything but an untroubled career.  The great alternatives of obedience with prosperity on the one hand, and of disobedience with destruction on the other, were so plainly, so strongly, so repeatedly put before them, that we, who read these things in the light of the subsequent sorrows which mark the Jewish history, wonder at the little heed they gave to the counsels — so profoundly wise, as well as so tenderly affectionate — of the venerable chief to whom they owed so much.  But — alas for them, and for the world! — those words of wisdom were disregarded; and the nation that had been so miraculously delivered and so marvellously preserved; so carefully instructed and so signally blessed; at last brought ruin upon themselves by neglecting that which, had they observed, the glory of God's chosen people, instead of their shame, would have been recorded on the page of history; they would have been recognized universally as chief among the nations, and their capital as the joy of the whole earth! 

They had been, at the period when our text was spoken, brought through all their difficulties; their experiences had been varied and animating; under almost every form of trial they had been sustained; but there remained for them much yet to accomplish — even the entire subjugation of the iniquitous Ca- 

[Page 9]

naanites; and the more difficult task of resisting the idolatrous allurements which would beset them when they should be fully established in the promised land.  It was in view of these things that Moses exhorted them in the words of our Text — "only take heed'' said he. "Be not careless and confident concerning thyself, as though it were guaranteed that thou shouldest never err.  Keep thy soul diligently : let not other things interfere with chief attention to those things which thine eyes have seen.  Nay : let these be Iife-long subjects of meditation; and, moreover, teach them to thy children, and to their children also; lest they, being ignorant, uninstructed, uninformed, fall into great troubles, and experience afresh those miseries of the past from which thou hast been thyself delivered : let them be spared this renewal of your sorrows." 

This last consideration is that on which we would particularly dwell — the duty of instructing the young in the lessons of the past; of instilling into their minds true principles on all subjects, not counting it a matter of indifference "what the children think," but realizing and remembering that the seeds of thought sown in the minds of our children (yes, and of our little grandchildren), are sure to germinate there, and to bear fruit in due season — perhaps long after we ourselves have passed away; but perhaps, on the other hand, much sooner than any of us would anticipate! 

The life-time of one generation is long enough to develop a harvest of mischief which a whole nation may reap, to their sorrow. Thirty or forty years ago, 

[Page 10]

and the greater part of those who have striven and suffered in the great national struggle were mere children — and not a small proportion of them little babes in their mothers' arms; nay, half that number of years has sufficed to determine the character and form the opinions of perhaps the most efficient elements of those armies which have engaged in mortal strife — some surviving; but many, oh, how many! going down to premature and bloody graves. 

And how were these taught?  Where did they imbibe the principles which led to these results?  What was the nature of the education which prepared them for the emergency that called for action?  It was not the stately teachings of the college professor — though these had their proportionate effect; it was not the careful instructions of the regular school, though these also exercised a large influence in their way; it was not even the more authoritative declarations of the pulpit, though these gave their sanction to the broad general principles which embrace all moral questions.  More than all these — more in number, and greater in influence — were the unobserved, informal, unconscious teachings and learnings that went on by the fireside and at the dinner-table, in the nursery and on the play-ground, over the daily newspaper and the published census, at the political meeting and at the flag-raising; by the anniversary oration and by the pungent pamphlet; on the steamboat and rail-car, in the village lyceum and at the corners of the streets — on these, and many other like occasions, were the opinions formed and the courses of action resolved upon, which culmina-

[Page 11]

ted in that stupendous outburst of war, for the cessation of which we are this day assembled to return thanks to Him who is at once the God of battles and the Prince of Peace.  It was by means of that unceasing indoctrination which always goes on when men are in earnest on any subject, that those great results have been reached, the magnitude and importance of which have fixed the gaze of the astonished world. It was not the phrenzy [sic] of a moment, but the determination of those who had been prepared for the part they sustained by life-long teachings and innumerable influences; it was by that process which Moses both describes and enjoins when he says — "Thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy children, and shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thine house, and when thou walkest by the way, and when thou liest down, and when thou risest up." (Deut. vi. 7.)  

Had such diligence and earnestness been exhibited in the inculcation of right principles of national duty and national morality, throughout the whole nation during the past thirty years, what might not have been spared to this generation!  And if the next generation is to be spared the like sufferings, it must be by more diligence and less indifference on the part of those who now see and feel how great a price has been paid for the perpetuation of those national blessings that have been imperilled.  Foolish notions must not be allowed to pass unchallenged and uncontradicted, for they will increase unto more unreasonableness; and there is nothing too foolish for men to take up with, who are determined to carry their 

[Page 12]

point at all hazards.  False philosophizings must be exposed, and not treated as mere whims of no practical bearing : the effect of philosophically regarding a given race of men as essentially inferior is practically to treat them as essentially inferior.  Fallacious theories must not be laughed at as simply amusing : but must be exploded as dangerous and destructive.  Unwarranted assumptions must not be put up with as harmless peculiarities; but resisted as threatening the liberties of those committed to our charge.  For we are indeed the Trustees of coming generations; and it becomes us to guard, with a holy jealousy, against the insidious approaches of mischief; and to count nothing harmless which carries with it the seeds of error. 

All this involves trouble, and pains-taking, and self-denial; according to that true saying, "Unceasing vigilance is the price of liberty;" and in a country like this, where the ultimate decision of all questions rests on the will of the people, the exercise of this attribute of sovereignty implies a weighty responsibility, and demands an amount of thought and effort commensurate with the greatness of the trust so exercised. 

It is not permitted for the people of a republican government to be inert or unconcerned about the principles and practices which prevail around them.  In other lands, where privileged ranks and ruling classes are recognized, there may be some consistency in allowing those to whom the task of ruling is a sort of inheritance, to take charge — as it were — of the common weal; and the masses of the people may 

[Page 13] 

content themselves with simply giving their vote, if they have one, or only praying for their rulers, if they have not — trusting to the good providence of God, that He will promote to posts of influence men who will "execute justice and maintain truth;" at the same time looking, so far as human considerations come in, to the mutual watchfulness of parties, and to the effect of counter-balancing interests, for the prevention of any extreme deviation from the principles of good government.  

But in a Republic the case is otherwise.  The responsibilities of the position occupied by every voter cannot be devolved : they must be met and fulfilled; faithfully, industriously, and fearlessly; or else that power, which is always creeping from the many to the few, will be exercised by those who — for whatever reason — are found willing to give their time and attention to this especial work; and they will direct the energies, and they will apply the resources, of the people in accordance with their own ideas, or their calculations of present interest. 

In this way many years of prosperity may pass, and the affairs of a nation may seem to go on sufficiently well, especially if there be large material resources at command, and population does not tread on the heels of production; but if a crisis arises; if selfishness, or self-will gain the ascendancy, and the influential actors of the day be willing to "give to party what was meant for man;" if "a factious band agree — to call it freedom when themselves are free;" if passion takes the place of principle, and contrivance of conscience, then the consequences are felt of having the 

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places of authority and influence occupied by men who misrepresent the mind of the people; then the nation is thrown into a convulsion, and it is only after an agonizing struggle that the ultimate authority regains that practical control of affairs with which it ought never to have parted. 

What remains to be done thenceforward is to guard against the recurrence of such a catastrophe, though the right may have triumphed, and the victory be complete and glorious. 

Would not the mariner, saved from shipwreck, naturally warn those who follow him against the errors in navigation which jeopardized his vessel?  Would he not also point out those excellent qualities of the staunch ship which enabled it to outlive the storm?  And if he desired to "point a moral or adorn a tale;" would he not show his children how that noble structure was the result of thought, and skill, and patient workmanship continued through months, it may be years, of toil, and time, and perseverance? 

Yes : the exigencies of the moment bring into play the energies and the accumulations of many generations; and it depends upon the fidelity and industry with which the work of our quiet years has been performed, what shall be the issue of that strife — whether it be of the elements or of the human passions — which may itself be a turning-point in the history of a ship's crew, or of a nation's welfare, or of the human race itself. 

Such a contest has just now terminated.  The accumulated teachings and workings of some fifty years have been gradually increasing in strength and inten- 

[Page 16] 

sity, and at last concentrated their force, on the one side and, on the other, until not only did the heavens gather blackness, and the atmosphere become surcharged with the flashing fluid that destroys, and yet purifies; but the very earth beneath our feet trembled, and many of the old foundations were shaken down during the continuance of this unprecedented storm.  But now that the fury of the tempest has spent itself, and the skies begin to look clear again, and the air is fresh and invigorating, and the earth feels firm once more, and we look abroad again — what do we behold?  We see that the area of human freedom has been marvellously enlarged, and that the Great Republic of the West has, in its onward march kept step with the great northern monarchy, so that Serf and Slave are words of the past, and Peasant and Freedman take their place. 

Well does the President indicate this as among the chief subjects for our thanksgiving!  Its influence upon the great question of human enfranchisement from every form of bondage who can describe, or even conjecture!  Compared with this, even those other blessings enumerated in the Proclamation — relief from the scourge of civil war; the securing of peace, unity and harmony; exemption from the calamities of foreign war, pestilence and famine; and, the bestowment of the fruits of an abundant harvest — even these, great as they are, and deeply grateful as we should be for their enjoyment, hardly equal, in the comparison, that which is at once an enfranchisement both to master and to servant, and also a deliverance from evils the effects of which increased with each succeeding generation. 

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One other feature in the Thanksgiving Proclamation attracts our attention; and that is the prominent recognition of the Divine dogma concerning government : "Righteousness exalteth a nation; but Sin is a reproach to any people."  

Oh, that this were not only recognized, but remembered — so remembered as to be steadily acted upon!  Not the number, in millions, of square miles; not the hundreds of thousands of population; not the mineral wealth, unexhausted and even unexplored; not the abundant productions of the earth, nor the varied results of mechanic skill; not the prodigious tonnage of shipping, nor the force of batteries, nor the size of armies; not even the general intelligence and intellectual culture of the people — none of these constitute, though they all enhance, the exaltation of a people : that is the office of righteousness alone — of truth, and justice, of equal law, and of national honor in its truest and noblest sense.  

And these are the principles and sentiments we are called upon to teach our children, and our children's children — acknowledging, as truth may require, the national sins, in respect to these things, against God's infinite goodness; acknowledging also that it is not in man that walketh to direct his steps; and, therefore, "imploring the divine guidance in the ways of national virtue and holiness."  These are weighty words, coming as they do, from the Chief Magistrate of the nation at such a time as this.  We trust, that, in proportion to the greater reality and earnestness which characterize these days as compared with the times preceding, will be the 

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sincerity of that regard which men will pay to this immutable law of the Divine Government. "Righteousness exalteth a nation, but sin is a reproach to any people." 

Then the National Banner of these United States will be recognized, the world over, as the Symbol of Liberty conjoined with Law, of Progress guided by Discretion, and of Intelligence ennobled by Religion.  It will be in the van-guard of a Christian civilization which will carry the results of modern science to the far-off nations whose advancement is checked by absolutism in government, restriction in commerce, and corruption in social life. It will be a token of encouragement to nations still struggling for the possession and enjoyment of free institutions; while it will be a warning to all rulers who care more for the pre-eminence of the few, than for the welfare of the many.  As it floats over scores of Consulates in foreign lands, it will be the symbol of good neighborship among nations, and at the same time a reminder of the mischief of inter meddling with the interests of others.  As it flies from the mast-heads of hundreds of ships — both of war and commerce — whose keels plough every sea, it will be an "ensign to the nations from far," the meaning of which will be "fair treaties and free commerce among all countries."  And now that in a sense which never before was fully realized; now that, in truth, that flag does -- "Wave o'er the land of the free, and the home of the brave," now let every heart resolve to support and sustain, defend and promulgate all those high principles of which it is the beautiful and significant symbol, 

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making it the standard of a true crusade against everything mean and ignoble, selfish and tyrannous; until righteousness shall be established in the earth, even until God shall "shake all nations, and the desire of all nations shall come."  

It is a favorite device with some writers on government to trace an analogy between the life of a nation and that of an individual; and to insist that as there is in the one case youth and manhood, decadence and death, so there must needs be in the other a rise and progress, a decline and fall.  The idea is poetical, and does not lack some semblance of confirmation from the history of the past — Assyria, Babylon, Persia, Egypt, Greece, Rome, Venetia — all have gone through this process, as some would think completely; yet when we look more closely, it is only the two first — Assyria and Babylon — that have indeed become nationally extinct.  Persia is yet a nation; Egypt still gives signs of life : and though the poet sang: 


" 'Tis Greece 
"But living Greece no more," 

that home of liberty and literature has still a flame burning on its national altar.  May it never be extinguished!  Even Rome — old, glorious Rome — survives; and were it once delivered from sacerdotal usurpation, who doubts but that she would yet lift her head as the natural and rightful mistress of all Italy? — a nation still, though not a popedom!  And beautiful Venetia is not dead; rather, as another captive Briseis, the Austrian Agamemnon and the 

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Italian Achilles are contending for her possession.  Nay; we might even reconsider our first concession, and say that if Bagdad [sic] be considered as supplementing Babylon, then the Caliph Omar revived the realm of Queen Semiramis, and we have yet a living representative among the nations, of the empire which Nimrod founded, and the city which Asshur went forth to build. 

So fanciful and unfounded is that supposed analogy on which is based the expectation that nations must need decay and die.  

Rather let the progress of a nation — and of this nation in particular — be compared to "the path of the just, which shineth more and more unto the perfect day."  Why not — when it is possessed of that knowledge of sacred truth and saving righteousness which are the very salt of preservation, effectually counteracting the tendencies to corruption which, if unchecked; might end in extinction?  Well may we look for "this perpetuity, as a result of knowing and obeying all the Divine Law, when we see that the unremitting obedience to only one of the Ten Commandments — "Honor thy father and thy mother" — has brought down the promised blessing, and caused the people of the far-off land of Sinim to "dwell long in the land" which the Lord God in his providence gave them; so that they are now, not only the most ancient nation on the face of the earth, dating back consecutively to the times just subsequent to the flood, but are also the most numerous of all people; reckoning their four hundred millions of living souls! 

Let this one example incite emulation, as well as 

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afford encouragement. Let this nation also become eminent for the degree in which father and mother are honored, let the whole code of righteousness be observed which truly exalteth a nation, and there will be no decay no leading into captivity, no wasting and destruction in our fields; no complaining in our streets; but in place thereof joy and gladness, prosperity and perpetuity.  

On the contrary : if the admonition of God's prophet and lawgiver be disregarded — if we take not heed to ourselves, and keep not our soul diligently; but forget the things which our eyes have seen, so that they depart from our hearts; if we teach them not to our children and our children's children — then there may come upon us — no; it will not be on us, but upon them — on the children of whose happiness we are the Guardians, and on the generations yet unborn for whose welfare we are the Trustees — on them will come the miseries which our fidelity might have averted. 

The solemnity of so weighty a charge may well temper the joyousness of this happy day; though it ought not to overcloud the brightness of our rejoicing.  It is hard to draw comparisons between this, and those former occasions in the nation's history, when peace and good-will have been restored after warfare and animosity; but the proportions of this latest strife, the aggravated nature of the contest, the unnaturalness of the circumstances, the obstinacy of the resistance, and the completeness of the defeat, all mark this as the most signal of all victories ever granted to this people.  And, whereas, in other con- 

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flicts, especially in ancient times, the greatness of the triumph was enhanced by the numbers who had lost their freedom and, passed into captivity; this — altogether on the contrary — is signalized by the unprecedented numbers who are delivered from the yoke of bondage and made free, so that they can call their bodies as well as their souls their own.  

Now could that bell which hangs over Independence Hall, in Philadelphia, be rung so that its tones would be heard over the whole country, it might perform what is directed by the legend cast into its very substance; that almost prophetic passage from the book of Leviticus:  "Proclaim Liberty throughout all the land, unto all the inhabitants thereof."  Oh, that it might be to every one individually, that liberty wherewith Christ maketh free all that come unto the Father through him! 

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NOTE. 

A portion of the last paragraph of Daniel Webster's letter written in 1850, to certain citizens of Staunton, Virginia, is too illustrative not to be here added. 

''Let me ask you to teach your young men, into whose hands the power of the country must soon fall, to go back to the close of the Revolutionary war; to contemplate the feebleness and incompetency of the confederation of States then existing; and to trace the steps by which the intelligence and patriotism of the great men of that day led the country to the adoption of the existing Constitution.  Teach them to study the proceedings, votes and reports of committees in the old Congress. Especially draw their attention to the leading part taken by the Assembly of Virginia from 1783 onward.  Direct their minds to the Convention at Annapolis in 1786; and by the contemplation and study of these events and these efforts, let them see what a mighty thing it was to establish the government under which we have now lived so prosperously and so gloriously for sixty years." 

Works of Daniel Webster, Vol VI, p. 581.

Source:  Syle, Edward W., The Perpetuity of National Life -- A SERMON DELIVERED ON THANKSGIVING DAY, THURSDAY, DEC. 7, 1865, IN CHRIST CHURCH, PELHAM, N. Y., BY THE REV. E. W. SYLE, A. M., RECTOR (NY, NY:  Jas. W. Trubshaw, Book & Job Printer, 1865).  

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During his 1865 Thanksgiving sermon, Reverend Syle makes repeated reference to the President Andrew Johnson's Thanksgiving Proclamation.  Below is the text of that proclamation.

"Proclamation 147 -- Thanksgiving Day, 1865
October 28, 1865

By the President of the United States of America
A Proclamation

Whereas it has pleased Almighty God during the year which is now coming to an end to relieve our beloved country from the fearful scourge of civil war and to permit us to secure the blessings of peace, unity, and harmony, with a great enlargement of civil liberty; and 

Whereas our Heavenly Father has also during the year graciously averted from us the calamities of foreign war, pestilence, and famine, while our granaries are full of the fruits of an abundant season; and 

Whereas righteousness exalteth a nation, while sin is a reproach to any people: 

Now, therefore, be it known that I, Andrew Johnson, President of the United States, do hereby recommend to the people thereof that they do set apart and observe the first Thursday of December next as a day of national thanksgiving to the Creator of the Universe for these great deliverances and blessings. 

And I do further recommend that on that occasion the whole people make confession of our national sins against His infinite goodness, and with one heart and one mind implore the divine guidance in the ways of national virtue and holiness. 

In testimony whereof I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed. 

Done at the city of Washington, this 28th day of October, A.D. 1865, and of the Independence of the United States of America the ninetieth. 

ANDREW JOHNSON. 

By the President: 
WILLIAM H SEWARD, 
Secretary of State."

Source:  Johnson, Andrew, "Proclamation 147—Thanksgiving Day, 1865," October 28, 1865. Online by Gerhard Peters and John T. Woolley, The American Presidency Project (visited Nov. 20, 2016).


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Wednesday, October 21, 2015

Ministering to Troops on Hart and Davids Islands During and Shortly After the Civil War


The role of Pelham and its citizens during the Civil War remains largely unexplored.  This author has collected some research on the topic, but much remains to be explored.  For a few examples of such research, see:

Mon., Jul. 07, 2014:  More About Pelham Residents Who Served Their Nation During the U.S. Civil War.

Thu., Jun. 12, 2014:  Eyewitness Account of Prisoner of War Concentration Camp That Once Stood in Pelham

Fri., May 21, 2010:  The Announcement of President Abraham Lincoln's Assassination in Pelham, NY on April 15, 1865

Tue., Mar. 30, 2010:  Obituary of William McAllister Who Built Civil War Gunboats in Pelham

Mon., Mar. 29, 2010:  Nathaniel H. Bouldin, a Poor Confederate Prisoner of War Who Died in Pelham in 1865

Tue., Nov. 03, 2009:  Pelham Students Help Civil War Soldiers on Davids' Island in 1864

Fri., Nov. 18, 2005:  A List of Pelham Residents Who Served the Union During the Civil War

Mon., Jul. 11, 2005:  Pelham Cemetery on City Island

Fri., Jun. 3, 2005:  Davids' Island Off the Coast of Pelham Manor During the Civil War

Tue., Apr. 12, 2005: Pelham and the Civil War Ironclad USS Monitor.

Wayne Kempton, Archivist for the Episcopal Diocese of New York, has studied efforts by members of the Episcopal Diocese of New York to minister to Union and Confederate troops on Hart Island and Davids Island during and shortly after the Civil War.  Some of his findings are contained in an important paper, a small portion of which is quoted below.  See Kempton, Wayne, "In Essentials, Unity; In Non-Essentials, Liberty; And In All Things Charity" -- A Historical Account of The Mssion of the Diocese of New York of the Protestant Episcopal Church To the Instutions and the Potter's Field on Hart Island, pp. 7-8 (NY, NY:  Wayne Kempton, Archivist for the Episcopal Diocese of New York, 2006).   

In his paper, Mr. Kempton traces the construction of the Union Chapel and, later, Grace Church, on City Island.  He details the use of Hart Island, then part of the Town of Pelham, as a mustering in location and a training post for Union soldiers beginning as early as 1863.  The Federal government built facilities on the island to house between 2,000 and 3,000 troops.  Eventually more than 50,000 Union troops were trained on Hart Island.  

With the rise of Hart Island as a mustering in and training facility, the Federal government also leased nearby David's Island on the border of Pelham and New Rochelle where it built hospital and military facilities.  By 1863, the women of Christ Church in the Town of Pelham were among the many who were ministering to the needs of sick and wounded soldiers -- both Union soldiers and Confederate prisoners.   

As archivist Kempton notes, the Christ Church parochial report found in the 1864 Journal of Convention notes that Christ Church Rector Edward W. Syle visited Hart Island on Sunday afternoons:

"Hart Island, a military depot, with an average of 2,000 men upon it, is as yet unprovided with a Chaplain of its own; the Rector (then the Rev. Edward W. Syle) visits the post on Sunday afternoons, as often as weather and other circumstances will permit. . . . Several ladies in the parish are unwearied in their attention to the sick and wounded soldiers in the Hospital on David's Island."

Mr. Kempton further notes that by the following year, the Assistant Minister at Christ Church, William Feltwell, visited Hart Island "diligently" to minister to the troops, and "for a few weeks held one of the regimental chaplaincies."  By this time, a rather brutal and horrific prisoner of war camp had been built on Hart Island by enclosing an open space with fencing and housing thousands of men without any adequate shelter inside.  Though the prisoner of war camp operated only about four months before the war ended, thousands were crammed into its confines and nearly 7% of the men perished, principally from cholera, in a dark chapter of the history of the Town of Pelham.



Detail of 1867 Beers Map Showing Hart Island Shortly
Before John Hunter, Jr. Sold it to New York City.
Source: Beers, Ellis & Soule, Atlas of New York and
Vicinity From Actual Surveys By and Under the Direction
of F. W. Beers, Assisted by Geo. E. Warner & Others,
p. 7 (Philadelphia, PA: Beers, ellis & Soule, 1867)
NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.

*          *          *          *          *

"Part I:  The Early Missionary Days on Hart Island

In 1849 the Rev. Cornelius Winter Bolton, son of the Rev. Robert Bolton - Rector and founder of Christ Episcopal Church in Pelham Manor, Westchester County - came to City Island.  A building known as the 'Union Chapel' was secured 'for the use of all denominations' there.  In 1862, the Rev. Marmaduke M. Dillon Lee, then rector of Christ Church, in his parochial report found in the Episcopal Diocese of New York's Journal of Convention for that year, indicates that 'a church is in the course of erection' on City Island.  He reportedly held the first service on City Island on February 7, 1862.  The church building was completed in 1863 and on October 13, 1863 Grace Church, City Island was consecrated by the Rt. Rev. Horatio Potter, the Sixth Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of New York.

In a timeline found on correctionhistory.org, the website of the New York City Department of Correction, we read that in 1863 on Hart Island the 25th [Cavalry] mustered in during February, March, and Apirl, the earliest known recorded mustering on the island of Union recruit units in the Civil War.  Facilities on the island housed between 2,000 and 3,000 recruits and over 50,000 men were trained there.

By this time the Civil War was raging and many sick and wounded soldiers were cared for on David's Island.  The ladies of Christ Church participated in this ministry.

The first mention of missionary work on Hart Island appears in the Christ Church parochial report found in the 1864 Journal of Convention.

'Hart Island, a military depot, with an average of 2,000 men upon it, is as yet unprovided with a Chaplain of its own; the Rector (then the Rev. Edward W. Syle) visits the post on Sunday afternoons, as often as weather and other circumstances will permit. . . . Several ladies in the parish are unwearied in their attention to the sick and wounded soldiers in the Hospital on David's Island.' 

Again from the timeline we read that the 31st United States Colored Troops Regiment was organized on Hart Island during April 1864, one of New York State's three USCT regiments.  The Hart Island regiment would see action at the fall of Petersburg on April 2, 1865.  It would pursue Lee's army from April 3 through April 9 and be at Appomattox before, during and after the Confederate surrender on April 9, 1865. . . . In November, 1864, construction began for barracks on Hart Island to house Confederate POWs.  The final prison established by the Union for Confederate soldiers opened on Hart Island in April of 1865, a month before the Civil War came to an end yet 235 POWs perished there.  Within three weeks of its opening, 3,413 POWs are crammed into the post's tiny enclosed area.  Hart does not become complete cleared of prisoners until July.  Within the four months of its operation, nearly 7 percent of all the camp's POWs died.

In his 1865 report Fr. Syle writes that 'Hart Island, a military rendezvous, where large numbers of soldiers are constantly to be found, has no Government Chaplain.  The Rev. Wm. Feltwell (then Asst. Minister at Christ Church) visits the post diligently, and for a few weeks held one of the regimental chaplaincies.'

By 1866 Fr. Syle reports that City Island had been organized into a separate parish with the Rev. Feltwell elected as Rector.  'The important post at Hart Island is included in the bounds of the new parish' he wrote.

Another early mention of the presence of a minister of the Protestant Episcopal Church on Hart Island appears in a New York Times article dated June 2, 1865.  The heading of the article reads, 'The Rebel Prisoners at Hart's Island'.  The text of the article appears in full below.

'At Hart's Island yesterday, the day was observed in the prison camp by the suspension of the rules requiring marching for exercise, and by religious services in the forenoon, conducted by the Rev. Robert Lowry, Chaplain U. S. A.  He was invited by General Wessells at the suggestion of the prisoners themselves, who had seen the President's proclamation for a day of humiliation and prayer, and wished to observe it.  Nearly 2,000 of them were gathered in the centre of the grounds, which cover four and a half acres, and gave good attention to the preaching and prayers, and joined in the singing.  After the exercises several pressed forward to shake hands with the Chaplain; they had known him when they were prisoners in David's Island Hospital.  Several of the squads also held prayer meetings at 8 a.m. and in the evening.  The papers, hymn books, tracts, and testaments, of which a liberal supply have been placed in their hands by the agents of the American Tract Society, and are very much prized, and will mostly be preserved and taken home with them.  Whether sitting within their comfortable barracks or outside, or walking around the ground, many are constantly reading these.  They hope soon to be sent home.  The hospital is located in a fine airy position outside the camp.'

The Rev. Robert Lowry is listed in the 1865 and 1866 Journal of Convention of the Episcopal Diocese of New York as Chaplain U. S. V. and Missionary."

Source:  Kempton, Wayne, "In Essentials, Unity; In Non-Essentials, Liberty; And In All Things Charity" -- A Historical Account of The Mssion of the Diocese of New York of the Protestant Episcopal Church To the Instutions and the Potter's Field on Hart Island, pp. 7-8 (NY, NY:  Wayne Kempton, Archivist for the Episcopal Diocese of New York, 2006).  

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