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USC
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Digital Library
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Vahakn Dadrian Papers
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Hovhannes Eskijian Archival Materials
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Publications (2) on Hovhannes Eskijian, 1913, 1941
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Corinna Shattuck: Missionary heroine, 1913 [cover]
/
Corinna Shattuck: Missionary heroine, 1913, p. 14-15
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Corinna Shattuck: Missionary heroine, 1913, p. 14-15
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Description
Emily Clough Peabody, editor. Corinna Shattuck: Missionary heroine. Chicago, Illinois, USA: The Woman's Board of Missions of the Interior (Room 1315, 19 South La Salle Street), 1913. In English. (30 pages). Pages 14-15 include information on Hovhannes Eskijian.
Asset Metadata
Title
Corinna Shattuck: Missionary heroine, 1913, p. 14-15
Tags
OAI-PMH Harvest
Type
texts
Format
1 page
(extent)
Language
English
Source
20230913-dadrian-eskijian
(batch),
Hovhannes Eskijian Archival Materials
(subcollection),
University of Southern California
(contributing entity),
Vahakn Dadrian Papers
(collection)
Repository Email
specol@lib.usc.edu (digital); eskijian@ararat-eskijian-museum.com (original)
Repository Name
USC Libraries Special Collections (digital); Ararat-Eskijian Museum (physical)
Repository Location
Doheny Memorial Library, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0189 (digital); 15105 Mission Hills Road, Mission Hills, CA 91345 (physical)
Access Conditions
The copyright and related rights status of this Item has been reviewed by USC Libraries, but we are unable to make a conclusive determination as to the copyright status of the Item. Please refer to USC Special Collections for more information. USC does not own or control any copyright rights with respect to this item. However, responsibility for making an independent legal assessment of an item and securing any necessary permissions ultimately rests with persons desiring to use the item.
Identifier
dadrian-eskijian-031-lg-004.jpg (
filename
)
IIIF ID
[Document.IIIFV3ID]
Unique identifier
UC113373241
Legacy Identifier
dadrian-eskijian-031-lg-004
Type
Image
Internet Media Type
image/jpeg
Resolution
22.1 in × 16.8 in at 300dpi
56.2 cm × 42.8 cm at 300dpi
Transcript (If available)
Content
holocaust in the Gregorian Church, where some three thou-
sand having gone for refuge, perished. Monday, the work
as declared done. ‘The Kourds and Arabs were driven
away by the soldiers and announcements made that people
were safe,
“Slowly they ean to come out of theit hiding holes—
wells, vaults, drains and all imaginable places—some not
having tasted food since Saturday. The dead number abo
five thousand and the Protestant loss is one hundred and tes
Dur pastor and several important leaders are killed. T have
the pastor's six children with n mother died two
years ago and they have no one who so properly as myself
‘ean care for the My servant, Hagopjan, remained close
by me through all those perilous hours.
rybody’s house is empty. ‘There is no work, no
confidence in the Government, all are utterly crushed, I
am told that the Sultan himself sent a telegram for my pro-
tection. While Tam thankful Tam spared that T may serve,
yet 1 would willingly have died that parents might have
been spared to their children. “The end we sce not, We are
ina thick cloud, but God lives and we will trust Him though
all expected help of man fail.”
Just after the massacre the Pasha sent an officer to in-
‘quire what Miss Shattuck needed for her houschold. Her
Fequests were speedily granted, and among the provisions
bag of white flour as a special gift for herself. She
sent back word, “There is no difference here; the white
flour and the brown flour will be used together for all.”
Miss Shattuck’s courage and resourcefulness saved at
least three hundred lives during those frightful hours of mas-
sacte, But now she was confronted with a situation which
taxed her abilities to the utmost. The hundreds of destitute
4
fige ¢
eel off Miss 0 Shelhecke
Metoer8
Fadia’ erpthiattase LX Wrjiha.
—
people were in need of food, clothing, and the means to make
ir own living. ‘Their faith in God had received a ter-
le shock and they questioned His goodness. Before the
school could be opened or services resumed in the churches
relief work was necessary. Gifts of money from other parts
‘of Turkey, from the Red Cross Society, and from friends in
America provided clothing and some few household neces-
sities. The widows were put at work tying mattresses and
quilts, and i was a great satisfaction to all when conditions
were enough improved so that school work could be resumed
and the teaching by the Bible women. One sorrowing
widow remarked, “Tt takes the fire out of my heart to read
God's words.” Truly, "God's word and their work were
the two blessed panaceas for those sorely afflicted women.
After as many orphans as posible had been placed
relatives and friends, there still remained over three thot
sand vnprovided for. From these Miss Shattuck took sixty
bors and girls under her ear, but the number soon Brew”
to one hundred _and fifty, although they took mone whose
smoTiers had been TeFE With less than four children. Before
long the accommodations were overcrowded and Miss Shat-
tuck was obliged to send half the boys to the German or-
phanage. Her motherly heart hated to part with any of
them for, as she says in a letter, “Long has it been in our
tind as 4 hard, hard thing to send any away, yet it is the
right thing that about one-half go, so the Lord will help us
over this, However, 28 I looked them over at prayers last
evening I was glad I did not know which.”
Denied children of her own, Miss Shattuck became the
mother of Armenian orphans. She had a parent's heart for
them, ‘There was no woman in the land who had as bi
nursery as she, and the organization of these helpless wome
5
e
Inherited Values
Title
Corinna Shattuck: Missionary heroine, 1913 [cover]
Alternative Title
Hayasdani Gotchnag 1941 (
supplied title
)
Description
Emily Clough Peabody, editor. Corinna Shattuck: Missionary heroine. Chicago, Illinois, USA: The Woman's Board of Missions of the Interior (Room 1315, 19 South La Salle Street), 1913. In English. (30 pages). Pages 14-15 include information on Hovhannes Eskijian.
Subject
Eskijian, Hovhannes, 1882-1916
(personal name),
Shattuck, Corinna
(personal name)
Coverage Spatial
19 South La Salle Street
(roadways),
Chicago
(cities),
Illinois
(states),
North America
(continents),
USA
(countries)
Inherited Subject
Eskijian, Hovhannes, 1882-1916
(personal name),
Shattuck, Corinna
(personal name)
Repository Email
specol@lib.usc.edu (digital); eskijian@ararat-eskijian-museum.com (original)
Repository Name
USC Libraries Special Collections (digital); Ararat-Eskijian Museum (physical)
Repository Location
Doheny Memorial Library, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0189 (digital); 15105 Mission Hills Road, Mission Hills, CA 91345 (physical)
Rights
Elmajian, E.E.; Peabody, Emily Clough; Shattuck, Corinna; The Gotchnag; Woman's Board of Missions of the Interior
Creator
Elmajian, E.E.
(writer),
Peabody, Emily Clough
(editor),
Shattuck, Corinna
(writer)
Contributor
Ararat-Eskijian Museum
(donor)
Publisher
Hayaskani Gotchnag
(original),
The Gotchnag
(original),
University of Southern California. Libraries
(digital),
Woman's Board of Missions of the Interior (Room 1315, 19 South La Salle Street, Chicago, Illinois, USA)
(original),
Հայասդանի Գոթչնակ
(original)
Date Issued
1913, 1941-05-03
Type
texts
Format
1 page
(extent)
Internet Media Type
image/jpeg
Language
English
Copyright
Copyright not evaluated (https://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0/)
Linked assets
Corinna Shattuck: Missionary heroine, 1913 [cover]
Publications (2) on Hovhannes Eskijian, 1913, 1941
Conceptually similar
Corinna Shattuck: Missionary heroine, 1913, p. 8-9
Corinna Shattuck: Missionary heroine, 1913, p. 12-13
Corinna Shattuck: Missionary heroine, 1913, p. 18-19
Corinna Shattuck: Missionary heroine, 1913, p. 14-15
Corinna Shattuck: Missionary heroine, 1913, p. 28
Corinna Shattuck: Missionary heroine, 1913, p. 20-21
Corinna Shattuck: Missionary heroine, 1913, p. 26-27
Corinna Shattuck: Missionary heroine, 1913, p. 10-11
Corinna Shattuck: Missionary heroine, 1913, p. 4-5
Corinna Shattuck: Missionary heroine, 1913 [cover]
Corinna Shattuck: Missionary heroine, 1913, p. 1
Corinna Shattuck: Missionary heroine, 1913, p. 6-7
Corinna Shattuck: Missionary heroine, 1913, p. 2-3
Corinna Shattuck: Missionary heroine, 1913, p. 24-25
Corinna Shattuck: Missionary heroine, 1913, p. 16-17
Corinna Shattuck: Missionary heroine, 1913, p. 22-23
Rev. Eskidjiani Machokhan 25-Areakin Artikh (The Gotchnag, 1941) [cover]
Rev. Eskidjiani Machokhan 25-Areakin Artikh (The Gotchnag, 1941), p. 447
Rev. Eskidjiani Machokhan 25-Areakin Artikh (The Gotchnag, 1941), p. 448
Eula B. Lee, USA, letter, 1920-11-17