Tate collection of notes, pictures and documents relating to the Harmony Society, 1806-1930
Arrangement
Repository
ULS Archives & Special Collections
Title
John M. Tate, Jr. Collection of Notes, Pictures and Documents relating to the Harmony Society
Creator
Tate, John M.
Collection Number
DAR.1946.02
Extent
1 volume
Date
1806-1930
Date
1820-1885
Abstract
John M. Tate, Jr. was interested in documenting the Harmony Society, a communial Christian pietist group that founded the towns of Harmony (Butler County, Pa.) and later Economy (Beaver County, Pa.). As a youth growing up in nearby Sewickley, Pa., in the late nineteenth century, Tate befriended many of the Harmonists and was allowed to photograph several of their members, homes, various community buildings, and nearby scenes. Later, he would also collect documents related to the Society and write about their history and way of life. In 1925, Tate created this bound volume as a presentation album so he could share his work and collection on the Harmonists with others. Digital reproductions of this collection are available online.
Physical Description
A label near the back of the volume indicates that book was created by "Thos. Patterson, Bookbinding, Crafton, Penna." The volume is bound with dark blue levant morocco leather with gold tooled designs, featuring the outline of the church cupola of the Harmony Society and the figure of grapes, symbolizing the wine making business of the Harmonists. The volume is gilt-edged. The covers are lined with a blue silk fabric that was cultivated, spun and woven by the Harmony Society. The text found in the volume was printed with type from the Harmony Society's own printing press. The volume is enclosed in a custom box with gold lettering on the spine.
Language
The material in this collection is in English and German.
Author
David R. Grinnell.
Publisher
ULS Archives & Special Collections
Address
University of Pittsburgh Library System Archives & Special Collections Website: library.pitt.edu/archives-special-collections Business Number: 412-648-3232 (Thomas) | 412-648-8190 (Hillman) Contact Us: www.library.pitt.edu/ask-archivist URL: http://library.pitt.edu/archives-special-collections
Biography
John M. Tate, Jr., was a mechanical engineer by profession who, as a school boy, became interested in documenting the Harmony Society of Economy (Beaver County, Pa.). Tate was born in May of 1870 in Allegheny City, Pa., and received a private education at the Sewickley Academy in Sewickley, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania. While attending the academy he traveled along the Ohio River between the villages of Sewickley and Economy in his leisure time. During his travels he became acquainted with the members of the Harmony Society and photographed its buildings and some of its members. Later in life, Tate became a member of the Harmony Society Historical Association and created lectures and programs on the history of the Harmonists.
Professionally, Tate was employed by the Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company before organizing his own engineering firm, Tate, Jones and Company, in Pittsburgh. The company designed and erected cooling stations for locomotives and was known for their work with industrial furnaces. Socially, Tate held membership in the Duquesne and Edgeworth Clubs. He and his spouse, Ernestine Payne Tate, resided in Sewickley and were members of the Sewickley Presbyterian Church.
The Harmony Society was a communal religious community that traced its beginnings to Iptingen in the Duchy of Württemberg, near present day Stuttgard, Germany in 1785. Following persecution by the Lutheran Church, several hundred members immigrated to Butler County, Pa., in 1804 and formed the community of Harmony under the leadership of Johann George Rapp (1757-1847). The community resided at the Butler County location until 1814, when they relocated and created the town of New Harmony, situated along the Wabash River in Posey County, in the southwest corner of Indiana. They remained at the Indiana location until 1824. In 1825, the Indiana property was sold to Robert Owen, a Welsh social reformer who made an attempt to form a utopian community at the site, which ultimately failed.
The Harmonists returned to Pennsylvania, settled along the Ohio River and formed the community of Economy, which is today incorporated into the Borough of Ambridge. Here the society erected a variety of buildings associated with community and economic life including homes, a feast hall, a church, cotton mill, woolen mill, a wine press, a hotel, post office, saw mills, stores, orchards, and vegetable and flower gardens. The Society began silk production and weaving as early as 1828. Eventually the business holdings of the society would grow to include investments in land and in the railroad systems that boomed following the American Civil War.
As George Rapp aged and ultimately died in 1847, the business of the society was managed by a series of trustees that include Romulius Baker, Jacob Henrici, Jonathan Lenz, and John S. Duss. By 1905 the membership of the Harmony Society included only three members and the society was dissolved.
It was during the later years of the nineteenth century that John M. Tate, Jr. began documenting the Harmonist Society, thus he witnessed the decline of the communal organization and created and preserved photographs and documents which serve as historical evidence. By 1916, efforts to preserve the buildings of the Harmonists were begun when the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania purchased many of the structures to create "Old Economy Village," a museum that is operated by the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. Shortly after the site was acquired by the state, Pittsburgh architect Charles Morse Stotz, a pioneer in historic preservation, documented the site by creating measured drawings of floor plans and exterior elevations for many of the structures. These drawings were contributed as documentation to the Historic American Buildings Survey which also led to the structures being listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Access Restrictions
No restrictions.
Acquisition Information
Gift of John M. Tate, Jr. on November 14, 1946 to the Darlington Library. A note on the outside cover reads, "It is my desire that this book be given to the Darlington Library of the University of Pittsburgh" and is signed John M. Tate, Jr.
Scope and Content Notes
The bound manuscript volume is divided into three sections, each reflected as a series in this guide. The first series includes the text of narratives written by Tate and transcriptions of early documents related to the Harmonists. The second includes photographs taken by Tate in the waning years of the Harmonist Society. The third section includes original documents collected by Tate. With these various sources together, the volume provides a rare snapshot of the leaders, the members, and the organization of the Harmony Society.
Preferred Citation
John M. Tate, Jr. Collection of Notes, Pictures and Documents relating to the Harmony Society, 1806-1930, DAR.1946.02, Darlington Library, Archives & Special Collections, University of Pittsburgh Library System
Related Material
Harmony Society Papers, 1742-1951, Manuscript Group #185, Pennsylvania State Archives, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.
Old Economy Village Collection, ca. 1813-1953, Manuscript Group #354, Pennsylvania State Archives, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.
John Duss Papers, 1882-1951, Manuscript Group #310, Pennsylvania State Archives, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.
Processing Information
This collection was processed by David R. Grinnell in June 2013.
Previous Citation
John M. Tate, Jr. Collection of Notes, Pictures and Documents relating to the Harmony Society, 1806-1930, DAR.1946.02, Darlington Library, Special Collections Department, University of Pittsburgh
Copyright
No copyright restrictions.
Existence and Location of Copies
Digital reproductions of this collection are available online.
Subjects
Corporate Names
Harmony Society
Geographic Names
Germany -- Emigration and immigration
New Harmony (Ind.)
Economy (Pa. : Commune)
Harmony (Butler County, Pa.)
Genres
Photographs
Other Subjects
Religious communities -- Pennsylvania -- Economy (Commune)
Harmonists
Wine and wine making -- Pennsylvania -- Butler County
Germans -- Pennsylvania -- Butler County
Religious communities -- Pennsylvania -- Butler County
Woolen and worsted manufacture -- Pennsylvania -- Butler County
Silk manufacturers -- Pennsylvania -- Butler County
Religious communities -- Pennsylvania -- Harmony (Butler County)
Container List
Scope and Content Notes
Included in this series are 49 photographic images, predominately taken by Tate in and around Economy, Beaver County, Pa. Twenty-five of the images were sent to Japan for hand coloring, according to the text by Tate. These images depict scenery in and around Economy, private homes of the Harmonists, their commercial buildings, and some individuals (particularly the leadership of the community). With the exception of some of the portrait images, these images were most likely taken by Tate between 1885-1890.
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Scope and Content Notes
Included in the third series are 12 pages of documents and one unbound piece of correspondence. The documents include correspondence, citizenship certificates, an advertisement for the sale of property in Indiana, indenture agreements, rent receipts, and a sales agreement. When compared with the text found in the first section of this volume, one recognizes that many of these documents were perhaps the source of information for his narrative. The unbound correspondence (Folder 1) from 1906 is between David Shields and John M. Tate, Jr. following an inquiry for documents related to the Harmonists from one of their early neighbors, the Shields-Leet family. The letter also credits Mrs. Eliza L. Shields with naming the Harmonist community "Economy."