The Cornwall
School Episode
One
illuminating episode in Connecticut history relates to Indians
from Georgia. A missionary school was established in Cornwall
to train Asians, Hawaiians, Africans, and Indians to go back among
their own people to preach Congregational gospel. Two Cherokees—Galgina,
who took the name of Elias Boudinot, the school’s benefactor,
and his cousin John Ridge—wooed and won the daughters of two of
the town’s most respectable families and took them off to the
Cherokees reservation to rear large families of mixed-bloods.
The episode created an exciting, bitter scandal all across the
state. Both Indians became important Cherokee politicians, but
ultimately unpopular ones, and they were murdered by a gang of
outraged braves in 1839. The Connecticut phase of the story is
told in two histories of Cornwall, those of E. C. Starr (1926)
and Theodore S. Gold (1904). The whole story with its tragic
aftermath is told in
Gabriel,
Ralph Henry. Elias Boudinot, Cherokee and His America.
Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1941.
Wilkins,
Thurman. Cherokee Tragedy: The Story of the Ridge Family and
the Decimation of a People. New York: Macmillan, 1970.
See
also
Chamberlain,
Paul H. The Foreign Mission School. Cornwall: Cornwall
Historical Society, 1968. “Cornwall Mission School.” In Contributions
to the Ecclesiastical History of Connecticut. Edited by Leonard
Bacon. New Haven: J.H. Benham, 1861.
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