Scope and Content Note
The Job Pierson Family Papers span the years 1755-1908, with the bulk of material dating from 1809 to 1896. The collection consists primarily of the papers of Job Pierson (1791-1860), lawyer and politician, who represented New York in the House of Representatives from 1831 to 1835. The collection also contains the papers of various family members and includes a journal and diaries kept by Pierson's son, Job Pierson (1824-1896), a Presbyterian minister who spent most of his clerical career in New York and Michigan. The papers are arranged into groupings that include a journal and diaries, correspondence, financial and legal papers, miscellany, a scrapbook, and oversize material.
The bulk of the papers consists of approximately 350 letters written by Job Pierson (1791-1860) to his wife Clarissa Bulkeley Pierson between 1831 and 1835. The letters, written during Pierson's two congressional terms, focus almost exclusively on political and social events in Washington. An ardent supporter of Andrew Jackson, Pierson filled his letters with accounts of the president and other major political figures, including Martin Van Buren, Henry Clay, Daniel Webster, and John C. Calhoun, and the spirited issues that dominated Jacksonian politics, including the Cherokee nation's legal status, the Second Bank of the United States, the tariff of 1833, and the nullification crisis. The letters also reveal much about Democratic efforts to maintain party discipline in Congress, congressional daily work routines, Washington social gatherings, and boarding-house life endured by many congressmen. Two partial subject indexes to Pierson's congressional letters are filed with correspondence dated February 1833 and March 1835.
Correspondence dated prior to 1831 concerns Pierson's student days at Williams College and his early legal practice. Pierson's interest in politics is evident throughout his early correspondence. A sizeable portion of his later correspondence consists of letters written to two of his children, Sarah J. Pierson and John B. Pierson.These letters contain, in addition to Pierson's usual political commentary, paternal advice on educational pursuits and character formation and frequent warnings against religious fanaticism. Oversize correspondence, dated between 1809 and 1832, is arranged separately.
The papers also include a journal and typed transcripts of diaries kept by Pierson's son, Job, who became a Presbyterian minister despite his father's objections to religious revivalism. The younger Pierson's journal describes a summer vacation spent in East Hampton, Long Island, New York, in 1843, shortly before he entered Auburn Theological Seminary. Pierson's diaries, transcribed in 1903 by his son, Philip T. H. Pierson, are prefaced by a memoir written by him concerning his family history, childhood, and experiences at Williams College where he attended two revivals that led to his religious conversion.
Pierson's diary entries, commencing with his marriage to Rachel Williams Smith in 1849 and continuing until shortly before his death in 1896, are essentially personal in nature. In addition to references to family life, they recount Pierson's career as a Presbyterian minister in New York and Michigan. Entries made during the summer of 1856 contain a detailed account of an Atlantic crossing made during a trip to Scotland. The diaries include only occasional references to national events.
Legal and financial papers date from 1755 to 1886 and primarily concern the family's property holdings, principally in Rensselaer County and Suffolk County, New York. Material described as miscellany includes genealogical studies, newspaper clippings, diplomas, and autographs, including those of Wendell Phillips and the theologian Henry James (1811-1882).
The papers also contain a scrapbook compiled by Philip T. H. Pierson in 1908 in memory of his brother Bowen Whiting Pierson. The memorial volume consists of photographs of family members, including Job Pierson (1791-1860), Clarissa Bulkeley Pierson, Job Pierson (1824-1896), Rachel Smith Pierson, and their children. Other photographs depict various Pierson family homes in New York and Michigan. Genealogical material and correspondence concerning the death of Bowen Whiting Pierson complete the scrapbook.