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Sybil Moseley Bingham

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Portraits of Hiram and Sybil Moseley Bingham, 1819, by Samuel F. B. Morse

Sybil Moseley Bingham (September 14, 1792 — February 27, 1848) was an American teacher in the Hawaiian Islands, a member of the first company of missionaries sent by the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions (ABCFM).

Early life

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Sybil Moseley was born in Westfield, Massachusetts, the daughter of Pliny Moseley and Sophia Pomeroy Moseley. She was an orphan by age twenty, left to support three younger sisters.[1] She was a teacher for nine years as a young woman,[2] some of that time living in Canandaigua, New York.[3]

Mission years in Hawaii

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Hiram Bingham I was a missionary in Honolulu for twenty years, from 1820 to 1840,[4] and founder of the Kawaiahaʻo Church.[5] As his wife, Sybil Moseley Bingham shared the work.[6] "I believe God appoints my work," she wrote in her journal in 1823, "and it is enough for me to see that I do it all with an eye to his glory."[7] She is credited with starting the first missionary school in the Hawaiian Islands, teaching Hawaiian adults in her home. The Binghams helped to develop a written Hawaiian alphabet, and some of the first printed materials in Hawaiian were made for use in her classes. She founded a weekly prayer meeting, attended by more than a thousand Hawaiian women.[2] She also served as an unofficial nurse and midwife among the missionary families.[1]

After 1829, the Binghams lived in the Manoa Valley, on a banana and sugarcane plantation given for their use by Queen Kaahumanu.[8] The estate later became the site of the Punahou School.[9][10][11]

Personal life and legacy

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Sybil Moseley married Hiram Bingham in 1819; they had met a few weeks before, and boarded a ship for Hawaii twelve days later.[12] Samuel F. B. Morse painted a portrait of the newlyweds before they left New England. Sybil Moseley Bingham and her husband returned to New England in 1841; she was ill with tuberculosis, and died in 1848, in Easthampton, Massachusetts.[8]

The Binghams had seven children, all born in the Hawaiian Islands, beginning with Sophia Bingham, the first female American missionary child born on Oahu. Another daughter, Lydia Bingham Coan, wrote a biography of Sybil Moseley Bingham, published in 1895.[13] Two sons died in infancy, in 1823 and 1825; Hiram Bingham II was the only surviving son. Her grandson Hiram Bingham III was an explorer in South America, a Senator, and Governor of Connecticut.[1] Her grandson Edwin Lincoln Moseley was a naturalist. Her great-grandson Hiram Bingham IV was an American diplomat; another great-grandson, Jonathan Brewster Bingham, was a Congressman. Living descendants of Sybil Moseley Bingham include musician Sam Endicott.

The Bingham family's papers, including Sybil's journal of her life in Hawaii in the 1820s,[14] are archived at Yale University, with another large collection at the Hawaiian Historical Society and the Hawaiian Mission Children's Society Library in Honolulu, donated by a descendant in 1966.[15][16]

References

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  1. ^ a b c H. B. Restarick, "Sybil Bingham, As Youthful Bride, Came to Islands in Brig Thaddeus" Honolulu Star-Bulletin (August 15, 1931): 6. via Newspapers.comOpen access icon
  2. ^ a b Barbara Bennett Peterson, "Sybil Moseley Bingham" American National Biography.
  3. ^ Herbert J. Ellis, "Early Canandaiguan Helped Modernize Hawaiian Tongue" Daily Messenger (April 28, 1972): 32. via Newspapers.comOpen access icon
  4. ^ Brij V. Lal, Kate Fortune, eds., The Pacific Islands: An Encyclopedia, Volume 1 (University of Hawaii Press 2000): 188. ISBN 9780824822651
  5. ^ Emma Lyons Doyle, "Souls to be Saved, So Missionaries Came" Honolulu Advertiser (June 23, 1959): 37. via Newspapers.comOpen access icon
  6. ^ Jennifer Thigpen, Island Queens and Mission Wives: How Gender and Empire Remade Hawaii's Pacific World (UNC Press Books 2014): 46. ISBN 9781469614304
  7. ^ Dana Robert, "Evangelist or Homemaker? Mission Mission Strategies of Early Nineteenth-Century Missionary Wives in Burma and Hawaii" International Bulletin of Missionary Research 17(1)(1993): 6. via ProQuest
  8. ^ a b Alfred M. Bingham, "Sybil's Bones, A Chronicle of the Three Hiram Binghams" Hawaiian Journal of History 9(1975): 3-36.
  9. ^ History, Bingham Hall, Punahou website.
  10. ^ "Kaahumanu Memorial at Kawaiahao Church" Evening Bulletin (August 31, 1903): 4. via Newspapers.comOpen access icon
  11. ^ Charles E. Hogue, "Mrs. Bingham at Punahou" Honolulu Advertiser (February 2, 1949): 16. via Newspapers.comOpen access icon
  12. ^ Char Miller, "The Making of a Missionary: Hiram Bingham's Odyssey" Hawaiian Journal of History 13(1979): 43.
  13. ^ Lydia Bingham Coan, A Brief Sketch of the Missionary Life of Sybil Moseley Bingham (Women's Board of Missions for the Pacific Islands 1895).
  14. ^ Marjorie Shell Wilser, "Living Sacrifices: Women Missionaries' Personal Writings, 1812-1860" (PhD diss., San Jose State University, 1997): 19. via ProQuest
  15. ^ Charles Turner, "Bingham Donates Historic Collection" Honolulu Advertiser (January 20, 1966): 22. via Newspapers.comOpen access icon
  16. ^ "A Finding Aid for the Bingham Family Papers", Hawaiian Mission Houses Historic Site and Archives.
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  • An 1819 silhouette portrait of Sybil Moseley Bingham in the Historic New England.
  • Sybil Moseley Bingham at Find a Grave
  • Michelle Ruth Stonis, "'On Heathen Ground': The Double Bind of Women's Roles in the Sandwich Islands Mission, 1819-1863" (M. A. thesis, California State University, Long Beach, 2005). via ProQuest
  • Joy Schulz, "Empire of the Young: Missionary Children in Hawai'i and the Birth of U. S. Colonialism in the Pacific, 1820-1898" (PhD diss., University of Nebraska Lincoln, 2011). via ProQuest
  • Jennifer Thigpen, "'Obligations of Gratitude': Gender, Interaction, and Exchange in the Nineteenth-Century Hawaiian Islands" (PhD diss., University of California Irvine 2007). via ProQuest
  • Jennifer Thigpen, "'You Have Been Very Thoughtful Today': The Significance of Gratitude and Reciprocity in Missionary-Hawaiian Gift Exchange" Pacific Historical Review 79(4)(November 2010): 545-572. DOI:10.1525/phr.2010.79.4.545 via ProQuest