To Elisha Camp
22 January 1821
[MS in the Elisha Camp Papers, Cornell University, Department of Manuscripts and Archives (Accession Number, 696, Box 2)]
Elisha Camp (1786-1866) was a prominent citizen in Sackets Harbor, New York, and a land agent. He had settled in the village in 1804, where he had become supervisor of the township of Houndsfield in 1808. Subsequently he was postmaster, captain of an artillery company in the militia, deputy New York state attorney, and a politician. He was also a newspaper owner and editor, a banker, and a substantial landowner with interests in local mills, in Lake Ontario shipping, and in land and water transportation (see Elisha Camp Papers, Department of Manuscripts and Archives, Cornell University; and Franklin B. Hough, A History of Jefferson County in the State of New York [Albany: Joel Munsell, 1854], pp. 171, 174). For some years he had been a lawyer, and was at one time in partnership with someone by the name of Wright &endash; possibly Benjamin Wright (1784-1861), the lawyer in whose office Finney was employed. (See Hamilton Child, Geographical Gazetteer of Jefferson County, N.Y., 1684-1890 [Syracuse, N.Y.: 1890], p. 69)
According to Marianne Perciaccante who discovered this letter, "Camp was facing suit from numerous people for a variety of reasons. It is difficult to discern what this case involved."
Adams 22nd Jan. 1821
Dr. Sir,
It not being convenient for
Mr Wright to attend your cause at Rodman,
he handed me your letter, & desired me to attend
to it. The objection you mentioned is not tenable,
as there is a Subsequent Statute in effect repea
ling the clause which you referred to.
I succeeded however in quashing the suit,
on account of the summons' being made retur
nable "at my office at S. Harobr" it being
a public house. I took an exception to the
Jurisdiction of the court, (and whether the
objection was tenable or untenable is imma ial)
I prevailed as the court decided that he had
no Jurisdiction. I could not draw much
from the plaintiff in conversation. but
his counsel informed me that he was prepa
red to prove that you employed Miles.
they also expected Waldo from the Harbor as
a witness. you will probably be able to learn
from him what they can prove by him.
They have a letter which they probably think
to make use of on trial, (which by the by is
no evidence) purporting to be from the
Trustees of the corporation of your Village
which shows that they considered you responsi
ble to Miles for his labor. What they can in
reality prove I know not. but his counsel seemed
[page 2]
to have much confidence in the action
and that he had all the necessary proof.
The action will probably be commenced de
novo. immediately. I give you this information
that you may be prepared to meet them
and give them "change in their own coin".
Yours Respectfully
C. G. Finney.
Elisha Camp Esq,
Nearly twenty years later Finney received a letter from Elisha Camp, dated Sackets Harbor, May 16, 1840, in which he expressed a desire to visit Oberlin and enquiring about the possibility of his second son being educated there.
Be the first to react on this!
Charles Finney (1792 - 1875)
Known as one of the leaders in the Second Great Awakening revival in America. He was a revivalist who called for deep introspection of sin and preaching of the law to bring about sin. He was known to preach 30+ nights on sin and than the last night on Christ to have people flee to Him for mercy. Used greatly in the book: "Revivals of Religion" which is a classic on the subject of revival.He preached on the true Baptism of the Holy Spirit and its necessity. In his revivalistic campaigns he was used of the Lord to bring some estimate over 50,000 souls to the Lord which many were sound converts. There has been questions raised surrounding his theology in the later years of his ministry but this does not discredit that God used him powerfully in revival and for God's kingdom.
Charles Finney was born in Connecticut to an ordinary family and life that gave little hint of the great things God had in store for him. He was a schoolteacher and then a lawyer before his conversion at age 29. Finney was filled with the Holy Spirit on the same day he was saved and immediately began witnessing to friends and family members. More than twenty people were saved in the 24 hours following Finney's conversion. Finney's personal evangelism soon became public evangelism as he began to travel and preach in extended revival meetings. He considered revival to be a natural result of following the instructions God had laid out in His Word.
During Finney's fifty years of preaching, more than 500,000 were saved. He wrote many books, the most enduring of which are The Autobiography of Charles Finney and Lectures on Revival of Religion. After ill health forced him to stop traveling in meetings, he accepted the pastorate of a church in New York City. From 1852 until 1866 he served as president of Oberlin College in Ohio. Although some of his theology was lacking, he was a powerful, Spirit-filled soul winner who brought revival to cities and towns across the eastern United States.