EISENMAN FAMILY PAPERS
Primarily correspondence plus printed materials and photographic prints pertaining to the lives of Elizabeth Mary Hulsman Eisenman and her four sons, all from Indiana -- Rev. Omer H. Eisenman, Rev. Sylvester Eisenman, O.S.B., Leonard John Eisenman, and Rev. Edward L. Eisenman. Rev. Sylvester Eisenman, O.S.B., served as the principal developer of St. Paul's Mission, Marty, South Dakota, on the Yankton Indian Reservation.
Gift of Helen B. Foster Eisenman, 2013.
Biographical Note
Elizabeth Mary Hulsman Eisenman (1868-1959) and her four sons -- Rev. Omer H. Eisenman (1889-1980), Rev. Sylvester (Norbert) Eisenman (1891-1948), O.S.B., Leonard John Eisenman (1893-1947), and Rev. Edward L. Eisenman (1895-1966) lived primary in Indiana, except for Father Sylvester, who as a Benedictine, served as a missionary in first North Dakota and then South Dakota. To develop St. Paul's Mission (1918-1940s) in Marty, South Dakota, on the Yankton Indian Reservation, Father Sylvester received substantial support from his brothers and other family members. In addition, he was engaged in founding the Oblate Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament (1935) and the Tekakwitha Conference (1939).
Scope and Content
The correspondence is arranged chronologically, followed by certificates, news clippings, color photographic prints, pamphlets, and Internet printouts no longer available on the web. Oversize certificates are in a separate oversize folder. Most of the correspondence was published in the four volume book, My Dear Sons, 2012, compiled by Helen B. Foster Eisenman, which is in Archives: Books.
Eisenman Family Papers, 1906-1973 (Series 1)
More Related Resources
-
Native America Collections: Checklist to 向日葵视频special collections about native peoples of the Western Hemisphere.
- Search the Collections (sidebar)
Guides to Catholic-Related Records about Native Americans in the United States: Over 1,000 repository entries in PDF format to help genealogists and historical researchers find the records they need on American Indians and Alaskan Natives. The entries provide contact information on the repositories, brief descriptions about the records, the Native groups served, and the associated Catholic organizations. Many of the entries include institutional chronologies to explain the history of the records.