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Ellen Gould Harmon White
Ellen Gould Harmon White
White and her twin sister Elizabeth were the youngest of eight children born to Robert and Eunice Harmon. When the twins were born on November 26, 1827, the family lived on a farm near Gorham, Maine. A few years later, Robert Harmon gave up farming and moved the family to Portland, where he worked out of his home making hats. The whole family, including young Ellen, helped in the hat-making enterprise. An unfortunate incident occurred when White was nine years old. While walking home from school, a classmate threw a rock at White, hitting her in the face and knocking her unconscious for three weeks. White was left disfigured and for the rest of her life she suffered from recurring health problems, including nervousness, tremors, and dizziness. The symptoms made it impossible for her to complete her schoolwork and she was forced to withdraw from school. White considered this incident to be a defining moment in her life; her ill health caused her to become withdrawn and she became deeply interested in religion. The Harmons were Methodists and in 1840, when White was 12, she attended a church camp meeting where she devoted her life to God, received baptism, and became a member of the Methodist Church. White was devoted to the church, but she feared that she was not worthy of salvation. During the early 1840s, the Harmon family attended Adventist meetings. The Adventist church was a Christian denomination that believed that the coming of Christ, or advent, was imminent. The Harmons were especially taken with the views of William Miller who predicted Christ's return on October 22, 1844. The conflict between the Methodist and Millerite beliefs resulted in the Harmon family's removal from the Methodist Church in 1843. October 22, 1844, passed without Christ's return. The event, called the Great Disappointment, caused many Adventists to waver in their faith. White remained earnest and tried to make sense of the failed prediction. In December 1944, while praying with four other women, White experienced the first of many visions she had during her life. The vision showed her that Adventists had misunderstood the significance of October 22. It was the beginning of a special time of preparation that would culminate in the coming of Christ. When White revealed her vision to others, they accepted it as a gift from God. White had subsequent visions and she began to travel, sharing her visions with other Adventists. She believed that God had selected her as a prophet through whom God would communicate to the world and prepare for Christ's second coming. She helped rally Adventists, who had become scattered after the Great Disappointment. White was only 17 when she began her mission as God's messenger. She experienced some 2,000 visions in her lifetime. Without warning, she would go into a trance, which began when she shouted "Glory!" three times. If no one caught her, she then swooned to the floor. The trances lasted from a few minutes to several hours, during which time her eyes were open and her heart and respiration rate slowed to an almost imperceptible level. Sometimes she exhibited extraordinary physical strength during the trance. When she came out of it, she sometimes remained blind for a few days. In later years, White's daytime trances stopped and her visions occurred in nighttime dreams. Skeptics offered various explanations for White's visions. Some believed they were the result of hypnotism. Others thought she suffered from hysteria or other mental disorder. But most Adventist followers accepted her as a prophet who received messages from God. White believed it was her mission to relay the messages she received, although she was somewhat uncomfortable with the responsibility. Although she was young and frail, suffering from breathing difficulties, fatigue, and fainting spells, she traveled to churches and camp meetings, where she was accepted as a messenger of God. Married James WhiteIn her travels, White met James White, a Millerite minister, whom she married in 1846. Like his wife, James had lifelong health problems. The couple traveled throughout the eastern states preaching their message and living off the charity of Adventists they visited along the way. When their children, Henry and James Edson were born, the parents left them in the care of friends so they could continue their mission. Being separated from her children distressed White, but she felt God was calling her to preach. James White encouraged his wife to write down the messages received in visions and in 1849 the couple began publishing her teachings. The Present Truth was an eight-page semimonthly newspaper containing Ellen White's prophetic views. Later, they published the Review and Herald and Youth's Instructor. White's first book, A Sketch of the Christian Experience and Views of Ellen G. White, was published in 1854. James White was the driving force behind his wife's publishing. In 1852, the Whites stopped traveling and the impoverished family settled down in Rochester, New York. In 1854, their third child, Willie, was born. White gave birth to her fourth son, Herbert, in 1860. He died three months later. In 1853, the family moved to Battle Creek, Michigan, where Adventist believers built them a headquarters for their Review and Herald Publishing Company. The following years were spent writing and publishing messages from White's visions, which became the basis of the church's teachings. In 1858, White wrote her most important book, The Great Controversy Between Christ and His Angels and Satan and His Angels. The book was based on a vision and described the war between good and evil and the second coming of Christ. It was the first of four volumes published under the title, Spiritual Gifts. Up until this time, the Adventists were a scattered, unorganized group of believers. In 1863, the movement that White led was formally organized as the Seventh Day Adventist Church. The name came from the belief, from a vision, that the Sabbath should be observed on Saturday, the seventh day of the week. James White took on much of the church's administrative duties, although he turned down the opportunity to serve as president. Ellen White was the church's spiritual leader. Led Health Reform MovementShortly after establishing the church, White had a vision that showed the connection between physical health and spirituality. She published a series of pamphlets titled Health, or How to Live that described her guidelines for healthy living. Thus began a lifelong crusade for health reform. White advocated a strict vegetarian diet that included whole grains and only two meals a day. Butter, tea, and coffee were strictly forbidden as were medicine, tobacco, and alcohol. Hydratherapy, the use of water baths and wraps, was used as a treatment for disease. These were not unique ideas in the mid-nineteenth century. Before the Civil War, preachers and medical doctors advocated fresh air, vegetarianism, and abstinence from tobacco and alcohol as alternatives to traditional medical treatments such as blood letting, blistering, and purging. Medical clinics, called water cures, opened across the country before the Civil War. These health reform ideas were readily available in publications and some people suggested that White took her ideas from medical doctors who had previously published articles on the topic. White claimed that she never read their articles before writing down the ideas she received in visions. In 1865, a vision inspired White to establish the church's first health institute to care for the sick and to teach preventive medicine in an atmosphere of Adventist spirituality. The Western Health Reform Institute (later the Battle Creek Sanitarium) was established in Battle Creek in 1866. It operated under the direction of John Harvey Kellogg, who later invented Cornflake breakfast cereal and founded the Kellogg Company. The institute attracted patients from around the world. The sanitarium left the control of the church in 1906 following a dispute between White and Kellogg. Continued Preaching and PublishingDespite the fact that health reform was a defining characteristic of the church, the White family continued to suffer health problems throughout their lives. Henry White died of pneumonia at the age of 16 in 1863. During the 1870s, the Whites traveled extensively on behalf of the church. Much of their work was in the west, where they established Pacific Press Publishing Association. White spoke at camp meetings, churches, conferences, in town squares, and even prisons. Temperence was a frequent topic and in 1877 it was reported that White spoke on that topic to an audience of 20,000 people in Groveland, Massachusetts. The Whites also established schools, beginning with Battle Creek College (later Andrews University) in 1874. The church's membership increased five-fold between 1863 and 1880. James White's health deteriorated in the late 1870s and he died on August 6, 1881. White became even more involved in the church and her son Willie took on more responsibilities. In the 1880s, White began spreading the Adventist message worldwide. She traveled to Europe in 1885-1889 and lived in Australia for nine years beginning in 1891. White established a bible school and a sanitarium in Australia. When she returned to the United States at the age of 71, she moved to Elmshaven, a rural town in northern California, from which she traveled throughout the South preaching to African Americans. She founded Oakwood College, a school for African Americans, in Huntsville, Alabama, and established the Southern Publishing Association in Nashville, Tennessee. White spearheaded a reorganization of the church in 1901. In 1903, she moved its headquarters from Battle Creek to suburban Washington, D.C. She also established medical schools to train doctors for the church's health facilities. In 1909, she founded the College of Medical Evangelists at Loma Linda, California, which is now Loma Linda University and Medical Center. White continued writing, completing a number of books and articles between 1910 and 1915. In total, White wrote 26 books and numerous articles and pamphlets. Together with her diaries and other writings, she produced more than 100,000 pages in her lifetime. In February 1915, White broke her hip in a fall. She was confined to a wheelchair and died five months later, on July 16, 1915, in Elmshaven, California, at the age of 87. She was buried beside her husband and sons in Battle Creek, Michigan. After White's death, the Seventh Day Adventist Church continued to grow and draw inspiration from her teachings. Church membership increased from 135,000 in 1915 to more than 12.3 million in 2001. The church's network of schools and hospitals has also expanded. White's books are still considered a major source of inspiration in the church. They've been translated into 320 languages. All are still in print and are available and searchable on the official website of the Ellen G. White Estate, a corporation established in her will, at www.whiteestate.com. BooksNumbers, Ronald L., Prophetess of Health: A Study of Ellen G. White, Harper & Row, 1976. Women in World History: A Biographical Encyclopedia, Anne Commire, editor, Yorkin Publications, 1999. Online"139th Annual Statistical Report-2001," General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, www.adventist.org (February 21, 2003). American Decades CD-ROM, Gale Research, 1998. White, Arthur L., "Ellen G. White: A Brief Biography," The Ellen G. White Estate Inc. web site, www.whiteestate.org (February 20, 2003). □ |
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Cite this article
"Ellen Gould Harmon White." Encyclopedia of World Biography. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. 1 Jun. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>. "Ellen Gould Harmon White." Encyclopedia of World Biography. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. (June 1, 2012). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3404708335.html "Ellen Gould Harmon White." Encyclopedia of World Biography. 2004. Retrieved June 01, 2012 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3404708335.html |
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White, Ellen Gould Harmon 1827-1915
WHITE, ELLEN GOULD HARMON 1827-1915Cofounder of seventh-day adventists VisionsEllen Gould Harmon White's childhood is remarkable not for any particular accomplishment or intimation of her future but instead for the fact of her survival. She was born Ellen Gould Harmon in Gorham, Maine, in 1827. At age nine she was seriously injured when a classmate threw a stone at her, hitting her in the head and knocking her to the ground. Ellen lay unconscious for three weeks, and afterward, her face somewhat disfigured and her constitution weakened, she was unable to obtain a formal education. Her life changed when at age fourteen she dreamed of Christ and consulted Elder Stockman, Portland Adventist, who told her that she had been chosen as a messenger for God. She found her faith and expression for it in the then-popular evangelist William Miller, who taught his followers that Christ would return on 22 October 1844. Miller's followers were deeply disappointed when the day passed uneventfully, though Ellen retained her faith. Two months later she had the first of her more than two thousand visions, in which God's messages were communicated through her to individuals and congregations in the form of prophecy, censure, or praise. Reports were that she stopped breathing during these visions and that her eyes remained open. PublishersIn 1846, not quite nineteen years old, Ellen married Rev. James White, an Adventist minister from Palmyra, Maine. They were very poor and neither was in good health, but their faith and their work sustained them. White began to write down her visions with a vigor she had not previously possessed. Three years later the Whites began the first of their many publishing projects together, creating the periodical The Present Truth, an eight-page semimonthly. White had seen the need for publication in a vision that would later expand to show her a future of faith-spreading international publishing ventures. The Whites moved to Rochester, New York, where they had secured a printing press. They met Uriah Smith, who would oversee much of their publishing work, such as The Review and Herald, a weekly magazine that grew out of The Present Truth. By 1855 conditions had improved financially for the Whites, who moved to Battle Creek, Michigan, to continue their publishing work in a building given to them by friends and followers. Smith continued to put out The Review and Herald almost single-handedly. Ellen White's first book, Christian Experiences and Views, appeared in 1851. She would write more than three dozen in her life, which when combined with her diaries and notebooks totaled more than one hundred thousand pages of work. 1860In the early years of their marriage the Whites became convinced that Scripture dictated Saturday as the Sabbath day, thus leading to the adoption of the name "Seventh-Day Adventists" around 1860. The Seventh-Day Adventists were a scattered, unorganized group of congregations in 1860, but largely through the work of James White, a general conference for the emerging church was organized. Twenty delegates came to Battle Creek in 1863 and offered the presidency of the group to James White, but he refused. The year 1860 also saw publication of what may be Ellen White's greatest work, The Great Controversy, a book that grew out of a vision she had in Lovett's Grove, Ohio, in 1858. The vision revealed the cosmic war between good and evil and the imminent Second Coming of Christ. Another great vision occurred in June 1860 when she was shown the connection between physical health and spirituality. She quickly issued a series of sixty-four-page pamphlets titled Health, or How to Live. But 1860 was not all good news for the Whites. In December their fourth son, Henry, died suddenly at the age of three months. HealthThe work caught up to James White. In 1864 he suffered a serious illness. Though he was nursed back to health, the illness had an affect on the Whites' future. On Christmas Day 1865 a vision inspired Ellen White to establish a health institute for the sick as well as a place to teach preventive medicine. The Western Health Reform Institute (later the Battle Creek Sanitarium) opened the following year, the first in a series of Seventh-Day Adventist clinics around the world. By the time of Ellen White's death, there would be thirty-three such sanitariums and hundreds of treatment rooms worldwide. The success of the Western Health Reform Institute made White even more popular. She was a mesmerizing speaker who in the 1860s and 1870s drew some of the largest crowds of the age. She became a temperance advocate and also disavowed meat, coffee, tea, and many drugs. White never claimed status as a prophet, however, nor did she push her views on others; instead, she requested Bible study from her followers. TravelsIn August 1881 James White died. He and Ellen White had been partners in work and marriage for thirty-five years. James White in his later years had been a major force in establishing Battle Creek College (later Andrews University) as well as the Review and Herald Publishing Association and the Pacific Press Publishing Association. The sanitarium had succeeded under his guidance. As a result of his death, Ellen White took on even more work. She began pushing international mission programs, the establishment of a college in the West, and overseas publishing ventures. She traveled abroad herself, to Europe from 1885 to 1889 and to Australia in 1891, where she lived for nine years. In 1901 she returned to the United States and at the age of seventy-four continued speaking publicly in the American South, where she established the Southern Publishing Association in Nashville, Tennessee. In 1903 White moved the denominational headquarters from Battle Creek to Washington, D.C. She founded the College of Medical Evangelists at Loma Linda, California, in 1909. Between 1900 and 1915, the tireless White resided in Saint Helena, California, where she finished ten books while carrying out her other work. "Your work," she wrote that the Lord had told her, "is to bear My word. Strange things will arise, and in your youth I set you apart to bear the message to erring ones, to carry the word before unbelievers, and with pen and voice to reprove from the Word actions that are not right." Ellen White lived by his word as she believed it and carried it faithfully. When she died in 1915, she had an estimated 135,000 followers. Source:Rene Noorbergen, Ellen G. White: Prophet of Destiny (New Canaan, Conn.: Keats, 1972). |
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Cite this article
"White, Ellen Gould Harmon 1827-1915." American Decades. 2001. Encyclopedia.com. 1 Jun. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>. "White, Ellen Gould Harmon 1827-1915." American Decades. 2001. Encyclopedia.com. (June 1, 2012). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3468300262.html "White, Ellen Gould Harmon 1827-1915." American Decades. 2001. Retrieved June 01, 2012 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3468300262.html |
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