Haverford College
Quick Access
Quaker & Special Collections >

Welcome
About
Collections
Finding Aids
Research
Services
Exhibitions
Gest Fellowship
Blog

Grab a feed! Grab an RSS Feed
Subscribe to Email Updates Get Email Updates

  • Categories

    • Announcements
      • Hours
    • Collections
      • Art
      • Audio Visual
      • College Archives
      • Manuscripts
      • Photography
      • Rare Books
      • Treasures
    • Digital Projects
    • Events
    • Exhibitions
    • People
      • Gest Fellows
      • Interns
      • Staff News
      • Students
    • Publications
    • Uncategorized
  • View by Tag

    Abolition Africa Anti-Slavery Art Benjamin Franklin Cadbury Charles Roberts China Christopher Morley Civil War Conservation Cope CRALC Digital Libraries Evans Fanny Brawne France Germantown Gest Fellows GIS Greek Haverford Haverford History History of Science John Keats John Woolman London Maps Meeting Houses Music Native Americans New Jersey Nobel Prize PACSCL Philadelphia Quakers Rare Books Rene Descartes Rufus Jones Slavery William Penn William Pyle Phillips William Shakespeare WWI WWII
  • Archives

  • Admin

    • Log in
    • Entries RSS
    • Comments RSS
    • WordPress.org
« The Robert Simkin Mystery
Finding the Famous People »

2011 Gest Fellow: Aaron Jerviss

From time to time, we will be posting profiles of our Gest Fellows. Aaron Jerviss is a Ph.D. candidate in History at University of Tennessee, Knoxville.  His research is on “Testimony through Sufferings: The Civil War in Pacifist Memory, 1865-1914.”

2011 Gest Fellow Aaron Jerviss

My dissertation focuses on how Friends, Mennonites, and Brethren (the three “historic peace churches”) remembered their Civil War experiences throughout the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries. For me, the great research question has been: How does a group document the role it played during a war when its members refused to fight or contribute directly to the military effort? I argue that these religious bodies did so by seeking to redefine the concepts of “suffering” and “heroism” in distinctly non-militaristic terms.

During my months’ stay as a Gest fellow, I have primarily been diving into Haverford’s rich collection of Quaker serials. Two topics have jumped out at me after reviewing these periodicals. First, I am interested in how Quakers explicitly linked the perceived social, economic and moral evils of the last three decades of the nineteenth century back to the Civil War. National “sins” as diverse as increased intemperance, the “militarization” of school textbooks, and the corporate corruption of the Gilded Age all found their roots in the great American internal conflict, according to Quaker authors and thinkers. Second, I am fascinated by the way peace churches memorialized Abraham Lincoln. The Quakers contributed to the construction of an image of Lincoln as “Pacifist Friend,” even though he took unprecedented actions in the areas of conscription and military mobilization.

My time spent at Haverford Quaker and Special Collections has been highly profitable. The wealth of source material and the helpful suggestions of the knowledgeable staff have given my dissertation structure and opened up exiting new fields of inquiry. I am extremely grateful for the opportunity to spend part of my summer as a Gest fellow and would strongly encourage anyone interested in researching Quaker-related topics to come investigate the extensive holdings at Haverford.

–Aaron Jerviss

Tags: Civil War, Pacifism, Peace Churches

This entry was posted on Wednesday, July 13th, 2011 at 12:22 pm by John Anderies and is filed under Gest Fellows. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

One Response to “2011 Gest Fellow: Aaron Jerviss”

  1. Steve McPherson Says:
    December 8th, 2011 at 4:54 pm

    I appreciate seeing you on Facebook! I have been wondering about the dissertation topic. Maybe your research will help us Brethren to understand more of the contributing factors to the split of the church in the middle of this period! Hope you are doin’ alright in every endeavor!!

    Steve McPherson

Haverford College • 370 Lancaster Avenue • Haverford, PA 19041
Quaker & Special Collections is proudly powered by WordPress