Kansas Historical Quarterly
The Shawnee Sun
The First Indian-language Periodical
Published in the United States
Doug C. McMurtrie
Kansas
Historical Quarterly
November, 1933 (Vol. 2, No.
4), pages 338 to 342
Transcribed by lhn;
digitized with permission
of the
Kansas State Historical Society.
AFTER Jotham Meeker had set up
his press at the Shawanoe Baptist mission in 1834, one of the most
interesting things he undertook to print was a small "newspaper"
in the language of the Shawnee Indians. This Shawnee Sun,
to name it by the translation of its Indian title, was the first
periodical publication to be printed in what is now Kansas, and
the first in all the land to be printed wholly in an Indian
language.[1]
In his journal, which is
preserved in the valuable collections of the Kansas State
Historical Society, Meeker recorded that he began "setting types
on the 1st No. of the Shawanoe Sun" on February 18, 1835[2]
Composition continued on the two days following and was finished
on the 21st, when the pages were made up and proofs taken. On the
23d the proof was read and the corrections made, and on the 24th
the type was put in the press and printed. Thus we know exactly
the date of the erection of this rather interesting typographic
landmark.
This little paper began with
monthly issues, the first being for March, 1835. Meeker's journal
records the issues of April, May and June, after which there was a
pause until October. Thereafter the issues were rather irregular
until April, 1837, which is the last of which Meeker makes
mention.[3] In the summer of 1837, Meeker moved from the Shawanoe
mission to his new mission for the Ottawa Indians, near the
present city of Ottawa, Kan. The printing office at Shawanoe was
then turned over to John G. Pratt, who was sent out from
Massachusetts to continue the Shawanoe printing.
Pratt continued the Shawnee
Sun, probably at irregular intervals. However, it was
suspended entirely for a little over a year in 1830-1840, while
Pratt was absent from Shawanoe on sick leave. It was resumed again
by 1841 (Pratt returned to the mission in November, 1840), and the
Baptist Missionary Magazine, organ of the Board of Foreign
Missions, mentions its continued publication up to 1844.
1. Isaac McCoy, History of Baptist Indian Missions
(Washington, New York, and Utica, 1840), p. 488 says: "This was
the first newspaper ever published exclusively in an Indian
language." The Cherokee Phoenix, begun at New Echota,
Ga., in February, 1828, was partly in Cherokee and partly in
English.
2. Douglas C. McMurtrie and Albert H. Allen, Jotham Meeker,
Pioneer Printer of
Kansas
(Chicago, 1980), p. 69; and see, also, under "Siwinowe Kesibwi,"
on p. 140.
3. The Meeker journal records issues of the Sun (in
addition to those mentioned) for December, 1836, January,
February, July, August and November, 1830, January, February and
April, 1837. In view of the care with which Meeker made a note of
almost everything he did, it is hardly possible that there were
also other issues not mentioned in the journal.
340 TILE KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
The editor of the Shawnee
Sun throughout its life was Johnston Lykins, another of the
Baptist missionaries at Shawanoe, whose special field of labor was
with the Shawnees. Lykins, however, was absent on sick leave in
1836 and did not return to duty until May, 1837[4] and during this
interval it would appear that Meeker was the editor as well as the
printer of the little sheet. In fact, Meeker made numerous entries
in his journal which show that he devoted considerable time to
writing or translating articles for the Sun, either alone,
or with the help of Joseph Deshane, an interpreter, or with an
Indian named Blackfeather, who, on at least two occasions, is
mentioned as a contributor to the paper. But Meeker was not only
the editor and the printer-he was also the inventor of a method by
which the sounds of the Shawnee language (and of several other
Indian languages) might be represented by the letters of the
English alphabet.
As a creator of orthographies
for the languages of the natives, Meeker was diligent and
ingenious. He simply took the letters for sounds that did not
occur in the given Indian tongue and arbitrarily assigned to them
sounds that needed to be expressed.[5] Thus, for the Shawnee, he
gave to b the sound of th in thin, and to
i the sound of a in far. As printed, the Indian
title of the Shawnee Sun read Siwinowe Kesibwi,
which Isaac McCoy, in his account of the paper, transliterated
Shau-wau-nowe Kesauthwau-an approximation to the sounds of the
words. Crude as this system of "writing Indian" may seem, it was
practical, as the Indians, even adults, learned to read by it, and
even in some individual instances to write by it in their own
language.
The Shawnee Sun
"circulated" among the Indians at and near the mission settlement.
On January 11, 1837, Meeker noted in his journal that he had
"distributed 100 copies of the Shawanoe, Sun among the Shawanoes."
Presumably, copies were sent to the Baptist Board of Foreign
Missions, at Boston[6] and presumably copies were given to the
local Indian agent for forwarding to the Commissioner of Indian
Affairs, at Washington. But the little paper must have been
printed in a quite limited edition, possibly not more than one
hundred and fifty or two hundred copies to an issue.
4. McCoy, op. cit., p. 504.
5. For a more extended account of the Meeker orthographies, see
McMurtrie and Allen, op. cit., pp. 25-30, and McCoy, op.
cit., pp. 471-476.
6. By 1837 the Board of Foreign Missions had adopted a rule that
at least one copy of everything printed at any of its missionary
stations should be sent to the Board (Baptist Missionary
Magazine, v. 21 1841 pp 208-209) But the Board seems to have
made no provision that the material thus collected should be
preserved.
MCMURTRIE: THE
SHAWNEE
SUN
341
It is easy to understand why
copies of the Shawnee Sun have disappeared. Indians in the
days of the Shawanoe mission did not preserve files of newspapers.
If copies were sent to the Board of Foreign Missions or to the
Commissioner of Indian Affairs, no importance was attached to
them; at least, no record of such copies can now be found. Meeker
himself made up two partial files; an entry in his journal on
December 12, 1836, reads "Famine all the old Nos. of the Sun
and bind two volumes of it." By that date, the journal had
recorded the printing of eleven issues of the paper. But these two
files seem not to have survived the vicissitudes of flood and
storm to which Meeker's few earthly possessions were subjected. We
do not even know how many issues appeared. Meeker mentions
fourteen up to April, 1837, the last which he printed, and in a
memorandum book kept by Johnston Lykins[7] there is mention of an
issue in May, 1842. Of all the copies that were printed, one
single, solitary copy is known to have survived, and even that
copy is not yet securely rescued from oblivion.
The surviving copy of the
Shawnee Sun is one of the issue for November, 1841. At the
time of the publication of our book on Jotham Meeker, in the
spring of 1930, Mr. Allen and I had tried in vain to locate this
copy. A reproduction of the first page had been printed in the
Kansas City (Kansas) Sun of Friday, February 18, 1898; the
original had then just been presented to Mr. Emanuel F. Heisler by
Charles Bluejacket, a Shawnee chief then living in the Indian
territory. After that, the original vanished so far as available
knowledge of it was concerned. The search was continued, with the
invaluable assistance of Mr. Ford B. Wright, librarian of the
public library of Kansas City, Mo., who finally found the
long-sought copy in March, 1930. This was unfortunately too late
for including a reproduction of it in the Meeker book, which was
then printed and in the bindery. But as no reproduction of this
elusive rarity has been published since thirty-five years ago, and
as the newspaper reproduction of it in 1898 is practically
inaccessible,[8] it seems quite in order to present it again, in
order that the record of thus strange little paper may be
preserved for at least another generation.
The original of the copy, dated
November, 1841, is now in the possession of a member of the
Heisler family, in Kansas City, Kan. It consists of but two pages
(one leaf), but a divided word at the
7. Preserved in the collections of the Kansas State Historical
Society.
8. The
Kansas
State Historical Society has two clippings of the newspaper
reproduction, but they are yellowing and becoming frail with age.
342 THE KANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY
end of the second page makes it seem
likely that there were four pages in the paper as printed. The
pages were numbered, the second page of the existing copy being
page 70. If this issue originally consisted of four pages, it ran
to page 72. If the pages were numbered consecutively from the
beginning of publication in 1836, and if each issue consisted of
four pages, the issue of November, 1841, would have been the
eighteenth issue. There is no volume number or serial number on
this issue.
The only English words in the
two pages of the existing copy are in the combined date line and
imprint, which reads: "J. Lykins, Editor. November, 1841. Baptist
Mission Press." Not being familiar with the Shawnee language, I am
unable to give any account of the subject matter of the four
principal articles on the two pages, but my guess is that much of
it consisted of didactic Baptist theology. The page measures about
6 3/4 by 10 3/4 inches, with the text in two 8 1/2-inch columns
containing 52 lines of pica type to the full column. The printer,
whose name does not appear, was undoubtedly John G. Pratt.
Attached to the unique copy of
the Shawnee Sun here described is a printed note which may
be presented, by way of conclusion, because of its testimony to
the difficulties under which the Baptist Mission Press was
conducted. It reads: "In the year 1838 there were shipped from
Boston via New Orleans to the Shawnee Baptist mission in Kansas
(about five miles west of Westport, Mo.) several boxes of paper
and printing material. These goods were addressed to Westport
Landing, which had not yet appeared upon the maps, and as the
forwarding agent at New Orleans did not know where Westport
Landing was located, he sent the goods to Fort Gibson, on the
Arkansas, in the Indian territory. The goods were returned to New
Orleans, and then sent up the Mississippi and Missouri
rivers, being more than a year on the way before Mr. Pratt
received them. This certificate is printed upon a part of the
paper then and there received. The paper is a coarse book paper,
and was used in printing books in eight [7] different dialects,
for the Indians, viz., the Otoe, Kaw, Potawatomie, Ottawa,
Shawnee, Delaware and Miami languages. A newspaper was also
printed, the Sauwa-noe Ke-sawthwa, `the Shawnee Sun,'
(the first paper ever printed in the territory . . . printed here
from 1836 to 1842)." With this note is attached a certificate,
dated in June, 1897, signed by John G. Pratt, to the effect that
certificates of membership for the Wyandotte County Historical
Society were printed on sheets from that shipment of paper made in
1838.
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