Narcissa Whitman and her husband, Marcus, were pioneer
missionaries to the Cayuse Indians in Oregon Territory. Narcissa
grew up in western New York State, her values and attitudes
carefully shaped by her mother. Very much a child of the Second
Great Awakening, she eagerly embraced the burgeoning evangelical
missionary movement. Following her marriage to Marcus Whitman, she
spent most of 1836 traveling overland with him to Oregon. Narcissa
enthusiastically began service as a missionary there, hoping to see
many "benighted" Indians adopt her message of salvation through
Christ.
But not one Indian ever did. Cultural barriers that Narcissa
never grasped effectively kept her at arm's length from the Cayuse.
Gradually abandoning her efforts with the Indians, Narcissa
developed a more satisfying ministry. She taught and counseled
whites on the mission compound, much as she had done in her own
church circles in New York. Meanwhile, the growing number of
eastern emigrants streaming into the territory posed an increasing
threat to the Indians. The Cayuse ultimately took murderous action
against the Whitmans, the most visible whites, thus ending
dramatically Narcissa's eleven-year effort to be a faithful
Christian missionary as well as a devoted wife and loving
mother.
In this moving biography, Julie Roy Jeffrey brings the
controversial Narcissa Whitman to life, revealing not only white
assumptions and imperatives but the perspective of the Cayuse tribe
as well. Jeffrey draws on a rich assortment of primary and
secondary materials, blending narration and interpretation in her
account. She clearly traces the motivations and relationships, the
opportunities and constraints that structured Narcissa Whitman's
life as a nineteenth-century American evangelical woman.
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