The American Missionary — Volume 52, No. 02, June, 1898 by Various

(6 User reviews)   1323
By Amelia Liu Posted on Mar 30, 2026
In Category - Ethics
Various Various
English
Hey, have you ever wondered what missionaries were actually thinking in the late 1800s? I just finished this wild time capsule—the June 1898 issue of 'The American Missionary.' It’s not a novel; it’s a real magazine published as America was about to go to war with Spain. You get these firsthand reports from missionaries in the Philippines, Cuba, and across the U.S. right before everything changed. The main tension is incredible: these are people dedicated to spreading faith and education, but they’re caught in the middle of a huge, messy imperial moment. They’re writing about building schools one day and then, almost nervously, discussing what an American victory might mean for their work the next. It’s like reading their private, professional diary at a major historical crossroads. It completely reframed how I see that era. If you like history that feels immediate and unfiltered, you have to check this out.
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This isn't a traditional book with a single plot. 'The American Missionary' from June 1898 is a primary source, a monthly magazine published by the American Missionary Association. It collects letters, field reports, financial statements, and editorials written in real-time by missionaries and teachers. The 'story' is the unfolding work and worries of these individuals across the globe.

The Story

The volume opens a window into dozens of lives. You read letters from a teacher in a segregated school in the American South, describing the hunger for education. You get reports from missionaries in Puerto Rico and Cuba, islands on the brink of being pulled into the American sphere after the Spanish-American War. There are detailed accounts from the Philippines, where missionaries were trying to establish churches and schools just as the U.S. Navy's victory at Manila Bay was shifting the entire political landscape. The narrative thread is the mission itself: its daily challenges, its costs, and its uncertain future in a world being rapidly redrawn by American power.

Why You Should Read It

What grabbed me was the raw, unpolished perspective. These aren't polished history books looking back with judgment; they're people in the thick of it, trying to do good while history happens around them. You feel their conviction, but also their anxiety. One moment they're pleading for more funds for textbooks, the next they're cautiously hoping the war might 'open doors' for their work. It's a fascinating, sometimes uncomfortable, look at the collision of idealism, religion, and empire. You see the genuine desire to help and educate, tangled up with the cultural assumptions of the time.

Final Verdict

This is perfect for history buffs who are tired of textbook summaries and want to hear the voices of the past directly. It's also great for anyone interested in the history of religion, education, or America's role in the world. Don't expect a neat story with a clear hero—expect a complex, real, and deeply human document that makes a distant era feel startlingly present. It's a challenging but rewarding read that sticks with you.

Patricia Torres
1 year ago

Recommended.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (6 User reviews )

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