Baltic and Russian Methodism Collection

Identity elements

Reference code

US NjMdUMCG 4831

Name and location of repository

Level of description

Collection

Title

Baltic and Russian Methodism Collection

Date(s)

  • 1887- 2008 (Creation)

Extent

6.3 cubic feet

Name of creator

Biographical history

S. T. Kimbrough was the collector of these records.

The Methodist Episcopal Church first entered Russia during the late 19th century. By 1874, a few Finnish men, who were members of the Swedish Annual Conference, felt that the church needed to have a presence in both Finland and Russia. It took ten years for Finland to get their first appointed pastor. Russian Methodism had to wait another five years before any formal activity could be realized. Bishop Charles H. Fowler with Helsinki minister, B. A Carlson, rented a house on Vasili Ostroff in St. Petersburg to start the new mission. By November of that same year, the first Methodist congregation was organized with seven members. All of the workers at that time came from Finland, including Sister Anna Eklund, who aided George A. Simons as the officially appointed missionary to the St. Petersburg work. By 1911, there were nineteen appointments to be filled in western Russia. Two additional congregations were set up in Siberia as well.

During the First World War and Russian Revolution, Methodist Episcopal charges had only six pastors. Simons left the field in October 1918 to which Sister Eklund stepped in and filled the resultant leadership vacuum. Later bishops John Nuelsen and Raymond Wade visited the work on a haphazard basis until 1939. Once the Second World War really began taking its toll on the Soviet population, the Methodist Church faded into obscurity. A small Methodist remnant survived and was later reinvigorated in 1989 with the General Board of Global Ministries Russian Initiative.

Southern Methodism Mission to Russia was divided between Harbin, Manchuria, Nikolsk, Siberia, in the east along with Klarysew, Poland, in the west and whose work primarily focused on the White Russians. The Harbin work was an outgrowth of the established mission work in Korea. When native Korean Southern Methodists migrated north to flee from Japanese occupation, they tended to settle in the Harbin area where many Russians lived as well. The mission was officially established in 1921 under the leadership of Bishop Walter Lambuth. At that time he sent W.G. Cram, J. S. Ryang and Chung Chai Duk to Manchuria as full time missionaries. Under their leadership the work flourished to a point that in 1924 more than one thousand persons were members of the church with an additional five thousand in regular attendance.

By 1927, Soviet officials barred the presiding bishop from visiting the area to give episcopal oversight. All of the workers were now from Korea who focused their efforts on Korean speaking congregations. The work in Siberia took off after Bishop Boaz sent George Erwin to Vladivostok in 1921. Erwin later transferred to Harbin because of the same Soviet pressure that faced the Manchurian mission. Here he ministered among the ethnic Russians with great success until 1927 when it was dismantled. Korean congregations continued to struggle for another ten years.

Polish work began as an extension of the 1918-1919 Centenary Commission's effort to give relief to war ravaged eastern Poland through preaching and social missionand money for Methodist missions. The mission was technically started on June 5, 1919 when the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, voted it an official mission work. Relief became the primary objective of the mission due to deprivation from World War 1. Unlike its filial work in the east, the Polish work survived and continues to this day.

Content and structure elements

Scope and content

The largest element of the collection consists of Methodist newspapers from Estonia, Latvia and Russia. The time span for these periodicals range from 1909 to 1940. Here the researcher will find a written record of the church's main activities in these specific geographic areas. Many of the periodicals are not in English but their native tongues. There are, however, some English language documents with the most important being the index for the Russian Christian Advocate. General administration records are the next section within the collection. Various minutes make up the bulk of these records. Other documents include histories of the areas, one local church set of records, an Estonian Book of Discipline (1927), and other ephemera. One of the unique aspects of this collection is Bishop Nuelsen's records while serving as bishop for the Baltic-Russia area. These records were separated out from the general administrative records in order to highlight Nuelsen's work for these annual conferences during the turbulent times they both found themselves in. Most of the documents found here are photocopies. The orginal records can be found at various institutions in the Russian-Baltic region.

System of arrangement

This collection is arranged by series.

Conditions of access and use elements

Conditions governing access

There are no restrictions regarding this collection.

Physical access

Technical access

Conditions governing reproduction

Detailed use restrictions relating to our collections can be requested from the office of the archivist at the General Commission on Archives and History. Photocopying is handled by the staff and may be limited in certain instances. Before using any material for publication from this collection a formal request for permission to publish is expected and required.

Languages of the material

  • English
  • Russian
  • Latvian
  • Estonian

Scripts of the material

    Language and script notes

    Finding aids

    Acquisition and appraisal elements

    Custodial history

    Immediate source of acquisition

    Appraisal, destruction and scheduling information

    Accruals

    Related materials elements

    Existence and location of originals

    Existence and location of copies

    Related archival materials

    Administrative Files Series of the Board of Missions of the Methodist Church

    Administrative files of United Methodist Communications

    Nuelsen Family Papers

    Mission Biographical Reference Files

    Records of the World Division of the General Board of Global Ministries

    Missionary correspondence of the Board of Missions of the Methodist Episcopal Church

    Records of the Mission Education and Cultivation Program Department of the General Board of Global Ministries

    Missionary files series of the Board of Missions of the Methodist Church

    Bishop William Burt Collection

    Mission Geographical Reference Files

    Related descriptions

    Notes element

    General note

    When citing material from this collection please use the following format: Direct reference to the item or its file folder, Baltic and Russian Methodism Collection, United Methodist Church Archives - GCAH, Madison, New Jersey. Do not make use of the item's call number as that is not a stable descriptor.

    Specialized notes

    Alternative identifier(s)

    Description control element

    Rules or conventions

    Sources used

    Archivist's note

    Prepared by Roger Clayton, Student Assistant and Mark C. Shenise, Associate Archivist

    Access points

    Place access points

    Accession area