Jeremiah Phillips

Summary

Jeremiah Phillips (1812–1879) was an American Baptist missionary to the Santals under the Free Baptist Missionary Society in India.[1][2]

He is credited for opening up the first educational facility for the Santals and a farming colony for the Christian Santals at Jellasore, Odisha(formerly Orissa). He also reduced the language of Santals to writing and introduced a written system of clerical administration and missionary work among Santal tribals—laying the foundation of the BengalOrissa Baptist Mission among the Bengali people, Odia people, and Santals.[1][2]

Biography edit

He was born to Parley Phillips and Hannah (Crumb) Phillips on 5 January 1812 at Plainfield, New York, US. He graduated from Hamilton Literary & Theological Institution - later changed its name to Colgate University. While at the university, Amos Sutton from the English General Baptist mission in India visited America and addressed the students of the university and several other schools inspiring Phillips and others to devote their life to missionary service. He was among the first appointees of the Free Will Baptist Foreign Mission Society, organised in 1832 in Maine, USA, for sending missionaries to India at the invitation of the General Baptist missionaries from England, working already in Orissa; accordingly, he was ordained in 1835 as a Minister and missionary to India. He married Mary Spaulding Beede, his first wife, on 15 September 1835. At the age of twenty-three, he sailed along with his colleague Eli Noyes [he left India after four years], Amos Sutton, their wives, and several other missionaries [fifteen] arrived Calcutta in 1836 as missionaries under the Free Baptist missionary society in India. He and Eli Noyes were moved from Calcutta and stationed at Majurbhanj, Orissa, where the Baptists from England had already started their work among the Odia. While at the station Sambalpur, his first wife died on 3 November 1837. Sambalpur station was given up in 1828, moved to Balasore station, and later to Jellasore station in 1840. In 1839, he married Mary Ann[e] Grimsditch, second wife from Serampore, but she fell sick and died of fever in August 1940 at Midnapore - now in West Bengal state. Mary Ann Grimsditch bore two twin sons: James and John.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7]

He married Hannah M. Cummings, third wife and daughter of Thomas Cummings and Hannah Webster, on 12 February 1841—Hannah Cummings arrived in India on 12 September 1840 and was appointed as a missionary to India at the age of 20 - they had ten children, where eight of them were born at Jellasore, Orissa. He along with his wife served at Cuttack, Sambalpur, Balasore, Jellasore, and later at Midnapore.[1][2][3][5]

He came to India as a missionary to the Santals— aboriginal tribes predominant in Orissa, West Bengal, Assam, Bihar, and Jharkhand. He devised a writing system for the Santal language using the Bengali script, and translated parts of Gospel of Matthew into Santali in that script. He opened up the first educational facility for the Santals in Jellasore in 1845, established a farming colony of Christian Santals in 1852, and whereby instrumental in introducing written systems over the local vernaculars - essential for clerical administration and missionary activities. He published An Introduction to the Santal Language in 1852, and translated parts of the Bible into the Santali language. He also produced a grammar and dictionary that combined with schools ultimately resulted in village transformation.[1][2]

He returned to the United States in 1855 due to ill-health, and settled on a farm in Midwest - USA. He came back to India in 1865 and opened a teachers training school in 1866. He went back to the United States in 1879 after almost 44 years in India and died on 9 December 1879. In 1911, the merger of Free Will Baptists with the Northern Baptists brought the oversight of the mission to the American Baptist Foreign Mission Society.[1][2]

Works edit

  • The Sántáls.
  • (Santal) Gospel of Matthew
  • (Santal) Gospel of John.
  • An introduction to the Sántál language.
  • A Santali Primer.

[6][8][9][10][11][12]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Shavit, David (1990). The United States in Asia: A Historical Dictionary. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 397–398. ISBN 978-0-313-26788-8.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Anderson, Gerald H. (1999). Biographical Dictionary of Christian Missions. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. p. 534. ISBN 978-0-8028-4680-8.
  3. ^ a b "Jeremiah PHILLIPS and Hannah M CUMMINGS". our-genealogy.com. March 2, 2008. Retrieved April 15, 2012. Jeremiah was Born 5 JAN 1812 his Occupation was a Minister and missionary to India, appointed Aug 11, 1835. He was the son of Parley & Hannah PHILLIPS of Otsego County, New York
  4. ^ "1889 - Bios.: PHILLIPS- Free Baptist Connection". genforum.genealogy.com. October 25, 2010. Retrieved April 15, 2012. PHILLIPS, Rev. Jeremiah, D.D., son of Parley and Hannah (Crumb) Phillips, was born in Plainfield, N. Y., Jan. 5, 1812 - married to Mrs. Mary Spaulding Beede - In January, 1839, Brother Phillips married Miss Mary Ann Grimsditch, of Serampore - In 1841 Brother Phillips was married a third time, to Miss Hannah W. Cummings, daughter of Thomas and Hannah (Webster) Cummings.
  5. ^ a b "Dr Jeremiah Phillips". findagrave.com. Retrieved April 21, 2012. Dr. Phillips was the son of Parley and Hannah (Crumb) Phillips. He studied at Hamilton Literary and Theological Seminary, N.Y; ordained at Plainfield, NY, Sep. 2, 1835. Was among the very first missionaries for Free Will Baptists, going to India in 1835, aged twenty-three, with his colleague, Rev. Eli Noyes, and founded the Free Baptist Mission in Orissa, India.
  6. ^ a b Soren, Sagram Santosh Kumar; Paul Olaf Bodding (1999). Santalia: Catalogue of Santali Manuscripts in Oslo. NIAS Press. pp. 1–2. ISBN 978-87-87062-73-2.
  7. ^ Allen, Ira Mason (1836). The Triennial Baptist register. Baptist General Tract Society. p. 37. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  8. ^ Phillips, Jeremiah (1874). (Santal) Gospel of John. Midnapore Mission Press.
  9. ^ Phillips, Jeremiah; C. B. Lewis (1854). The Sántáls. Alexander, Printers.
  10. ^ Phillips, Jeremiah (1870). (Santal) Gospel of Matthew. Midnapore Mission Press.
  11. ^ Phillips, Jeremiah (1852). An introduction to the Sántál language. Calcutta School-book Society's Press. Jeremiah Phillips.
  12. ^ "XII ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY". lisindia.net. January 13, 2012. Retrieved April 16, 2012. Phillips, Jeremiah. 1852. An Introduction to the Santali language. Calcutta - Phillips, Jeremiah. 1845/1852. A Santali Primer. Calcutta: School Book Society

External links edit

  • The Freewill Baptist Quarterly (1853-1869) - Foreign Mission Reports (1835-1880)
  • An introduction to the Sántál language : consisting of a grammar, reading lessons, and a vocabulary - Author: J. Phillips
  • Emily Louisa PHILLIPS : daughter of Jeremiah PHILLIPS and Hannah Webster CUMMINGS
  • The American Baptist magazine, Volume 15 - By Baptist General Convention. Board of Managers, Massachusetts Baptist Missionary Society
  • Christianity among the Santals
  • Freewill Baptist missionaries in India included Lavina Crawford, Rev. Jeremiah Phillips, Mrs.Mary Ann (Grimsditch) Phillips, Mrs. Hannah (Cummings) Phillips, Rev. Otis R. Bacheler, Mrs. Sarah P. (Merrill) Bacheler, Mrs. Dorcas (Folsom) Smith, Rev. James L. Phillips, Mrs. Mary R. (Sayles) Phillips, Rev. Thomas Wesley Burkholder, Mrs. Julia E. (Phillips) Burkholder, Lavinia Coombs, and others.