A Guide to the Papers of Philena Carkin 1866-1902
A Collection in
The Special Collections Department
Accession Number 11123
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Funding: Web version of the finding aid funded in part by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Processed by: Special Collections Department
Administrative Information
Access Restrictions
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Use Restrictions
See the University of Virginia Library’s use policy.
Preferred Citation
Philena Carkin Papers, 1866-1875, Accession #11123, Special Collections Dept., University of Virginia Library, Charlottesville, Va.
Acquisition Information
This collection (which also contains copies of the originals) was acquired from Ronald T. Rasi of Quaker Hill, Connecticut in October 1993, and was assigned accession number 11,123 on November 5, 1993.
Biographical Note
Philena Carkin was a Massachusetts schoolteacher of freedmen in Charlottesville, Va., 1866-1875, under the auspices of the American Freedmen's Aid Commission.
Scope and Content Information
The collection contains a bound manuscript journal Reminiscences of my Life and Work among the Freedmen of Charlottesville, Virginia, from March 1st 1866 to July 1st 1875. Vol. 1 (140 pages), together with a carte-de-visite portrait, n.d., of Carkin by Charlottesville photographer William Roads, and a copy of her certificate of commission as a teacher of ex-slaves issued by the Eastern Department of the American Freedmen's Aid Commission.
In her reminiscences Carkin describes her arrival; the town of Charlottesville; military occupation; the University of Virginia and its students; Monticello; fellow teachers, particularly Anna Gardner, Isabella Gibbons and Paul Lewis; schoolhouses, schoolrooms, teaching duties, and students; entertainment; and travel, including a trip to Grant's inauguration and one to the Virginia constitutional convention of 1867-1868.
She discusses the lives of the freedmen and their desire for an education; religious revivals; harassment of the school staff and the freedmen by townspeople and university students; celebrations and social events; trips to town by local mountaineers; and a Rivanna River flood in 1870. Aspects of local life different from New England are noted particularly in the purchase of food and fuel, lack of sanitation, and casual cruelty to animals.
Thomas Jefferson Randolph and Alexander Rives are mentioned briefly.