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Moses Merrill Mission
TitleMoses Merrill Mission
DescriptionBlack and white photo of the south side of the Moses Merrill Mission building which was copied in October 1967 from a photo taken in 1922. The three giant cotton wood trees close to the southeast corner of the mission building were believed to be planted by Mrs. Merrill. These trees are from 25 to 30 feet in circumference. The front porch was between the two end rooms on this side of the mission building. This is the second mission building. The first mission built in 1835 was burned a year or two after it was built. (It is located at what is now 57th and LaPlatte Road, Bellevue, Nebraska; in 2005, the chimney and the cottonwood trees that surrounded the church are still standing.) Logs used in the structure were of poplar, squared and closely notched at the corners. Lime plaster was poured between the inside log walls and the sheathing of planed boards. The large chimney was built of native limestone--"...plastered with lime almost as hard as the stone itself." This chimney was in the center of the mission building. It rose 25 feet into the air and had a base of five square feet. There was a schoolhouse at one end and living quarters in the other. Two small bedrooms occupied the second story.
ContributorsMcCoy, Karen, K.
PublisherSarpy County Historical Museum
Date1922
SubjectMoses Merrill Mission (Neb.)
Mission churches -- Nebraska
Baptist churches -- Nebraska
Abandoned buildings -- Nebraska
Photographic prints
Owning InstitutionSarpy County Historical Museum
NotesThe mission was built by the government to use in Christianizing the Otoe Indians. The Otoe Indians' nearest village and cemetery lay a quarter of a mile directly southeast. Moses Merrill, a Baptist missionary and his wife Eliza Wilcox were the first missionaries in Nebraska. They were sent by the Baptist Missionary Union and came overland from Missouri in an ox cart. When Mr. Merrill first came to Bellevue in 1833, he studied the Otoe language and later translated parts of the Bible and some hymns into the Otoe language. When the mission was built, they moved there. They established a school for Indian children and held church services in the schoolroom. Mr. And Mrs. Merrill lived eight miles from the village of Bellevue, then a trading post. They lived so far from other white people because, as Merrill wrote, "the liquor furnished the Otoes by the fur traders hindered the work of saving their souls." The Otoe Indians at that time lived on the Platte River in several villages as far up stream as the mouth of the Elkhorn. "They were very poor and great beggars and begged or stole most of the crops raised by the Merrills". Moses Merrill died of consumption in February 1840. Mrs. Merrill left Nebraska soon after his death. Settlers used the old Otoe Mission for many years after the death of Mr. Merrill; church services were held there into the1860's and later. Historical information from the Omaha World Herald, Magazine Section, 10-16-1927, "Nebraska Oldest Church is Fast Going to Ruin."
Ordering and Usehttp://www.memories.ne.gov/rights/schm.html
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