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John G. Fee Papers

 Collection
Identifier: RG 01-1.02

Scope and Contents

The collection contains the papers and correspondence of John G. Fee and Fee family members.  The collection also contains numerous John G. Fee sermons and addresses. Included in the collection are records regarding the genealogy of the Fee family, family member biographical information, family photographs, legal and financial papers, and historical notes by Berea College Historian, Elisabeth S. Peck.

Dates

  • created: 1830-2011

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

Records can be accessed through the Reading Room, Berea College Special Collections and Archives, Hutchins Library, Berea College.

Conditions Governing Use

There are no known restrictions on the collection other than federal copyright regulations. Please cite all references to this collection.

Biographical / Historical

John Gregg Fee (1816-1901) was born into a Presbyterian slaveholding family in Bracken County, Kentucky. After receiving an education at both Augusta College in Bracken County and Miami University of Ohio, he studied at Lane Theological Seminary in 1842 and 1843. In 1844, he married Matilda Hamilton who, like Fee, was a devoted abolitionist. Fee then returned to Kentucky, where he preached against slavery.

In 1854, with the help of Cassius Marcelus Clay, Fee founded the town of Berea, Kentucky. In 1855, against the backdrop of the end of the Mexican American War, passage of the Missouri Compromise (authorizing and funding the Fugitive Slave Law), and the formation of the Republican Party for the abolition of slavery, Fee established Berea College the first interracial and coeducational college in the state.

Berea College began as a one-room schoolhouse, which also served as the local church. Fee modeled the school after Oberlin College of Ohio and hired a number of teachers from Oberlin as the school expanded.  Fee and other Berea College founders believed that opposing slavery without opposing the American caste system would continue to breed social inequality. From its founding, the college was an anomaly -- an interracial, co-educational, cohabitating institution, opposed to slavery and caste within an antebellum, slaveholding South.

To break the system of caste, the school founders committed themselves to providing a church and free education to all. Basing his argument for inclusive education on a strict understanding of the Christian gospel, in 1847 Fee published an antislavery manual in Maysville, Kentucky. His writing advocated the oneness of the entire human race, an extremely controversial belief in his day, in which he stated "God hath made of one blood all nations of men."

Extent

4.00 Linear Feet

Language of Materials

English

Abstract

Papers and family records of John G. Fee.

Arrangement Note

The collection is arranged in ten series.

Processing Information

In 2012-2013, new series, sub-series, item-level folders and additional description/context notes were added to better assist both researchers and archivists with the use of this heavily requested collection.  Prior to this time it was difficult to locate key dates, specific and frequently cited documents, and important correspondence within the large folders and vague groupings.  Due to frequent use, many of the original folders were no longer in date order, which has been corrected.  Family correspondence has been further delineated, as well as the Photographs, Documents, and Writings series.  Genealogical sources now include authors and some provenance in the description.  Folder titles were formatted to reflect the established Berea Digital standards at that time, which may expedite the entry of metadata in the future.  Jaime Marie Bradly, College Archivist.

Materials added to collection March 2018:

Added to Series 2: Box 2, Folder 79: John G. Fee Historical Sketch, unknown author

Added to Series 3: Box 3 - Folders 1B through 1H

Title
John G. Fee Papers Finding Aid
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin
Language of description note
eng

Revision Statements

  • 2023-03: The finding aid and box list were completed in May 2014 by Lori Myers-Steele, Project Archivist.  The box list was completed with the aid of Katie L. Grindstaff, Student Associate Archivist. Updated March 2018. Box 9B added October 2019 with the removal of items from Box 9, Folder 1. Finding guide and digital objects updated March 2023.

Repository Details

Part of the Berea College Special Collections and Archives Repository

Contact:
Hutchins Library
100 Campus Drive
Berea Kentucky 40404 US
859.985.3262