Annie Jonas Wells: Charity begins in Quincy

In 1841, three years after the first Jewish couple settled in Adams County, their seventh child, Annie Jonas, was born. Annie's father was one of Abraham Lincoln's "most valued friends," and the Jonas family was among the most elite Jewish families in America. Yet, Annie married an Episcopal priest and worked with him in a shared ministry. When she died, her Minneapolis church said she had launched its Christian social work. Annie led women in impressive intellectual and charitable pursuits; it all started in Quincy.
By the time of Annie's birth, her father had already distinguished himself serving in the Kentucky legislature and as Grand Master of the Kentucky Masons and had set his eyes on politics. In Illinois, he was elected to the legislature, became the first Grand Master of the Masons, and worked hard campaigning for Lincoln -- entertaining Lincoln on two of his Quincy visits and serving as Republican chairman of arrangements for Quincy's Lincoln-Douglas debate in October 1858.
Business relations were good among religious groups in Quincy, but Annie didn't have the same social opportunities as her Christian neighbors, whose lives revolved around their churches. Quincy's first Jewish congregation wasn't organized until Annie was a teenager. Most Christians respected Judaism but considered it outmoded and exotic. The Quincy Whig Republican described 1860 services at Quincy's fledgling synagogue: "Christians may view them (the Jews) as having only part of the truth, and the part left out to be as Hamlet, with Hamlet omitted."
Annie's parents stressed education, and Annie likely attended a private female academy in Quincy. By the time Annie's much younger sister Rosalie went to school, she was the only Jewish girl at the rigorous Quincy Academy, which recognized "the truth and divine authority of the christian religion."
During the Civil War, Annie's life was complicated by the fact that five of her six brothers served the South, much to the anguish of their father, a staunch Union man with a high-profile job as Quincy's postmaster. But, as a 19-year-old Annie decided to do what she could to help the Union. She was elected treasurer of the Needle Pickets, a soldiers' aid society of about 100 women from Quincy's leading families who spent countless hours sewing, raising funds, and sending supplies to the troops. They helped soldiers' families and tended to wounded soldiers' spiritual needs as well as the physical. When Quincy's women hosted the huge Western Illinois Sanitary Fair, Annie headed the books and stationery booth. Her name--"Annie E. Jonas, Quincy, Illinois"-- is embroidered at the corner of a Civil War-era American flag now housed in a Minnesota pioneer museum.
Annie corresponded with her brothers during the war and played an important role in facilitating the temporary release of her brother Charles, a Confederate soldier who was held prisoner by the Union Army. Annie wrote to Orville Browning telling him that her dying father wished to see Charles, and Browning approached Lincoln, who granted a brief parole. Charles arrived in Quincy just in time. Browning sent his condolences to Annie: "I had no closer friend than your father." He asked Lincoln to appoint Annie's mother, Louisa Block Jonas, to be Quincy's postmaster -- a job she held until moving to New Orleans, where she died in 1867.
After years of straddling the Jewish and Christian communities, the war's end found Annie teaching in a four-room public school and fraternizing with Quincy's Protestant intelligentsia. Annie's mentor was Sarah Atwater Denman, a genteel, benevolent woman who championed women's suffrage and higher education. The two became so close that Annie was at Denman's side at her death in 1882.
Denman traveled regularly and met leading thinkers. At her invitation, Caroline Healey Dall, Unitarian women's rights advocate, visited Quincy in 1866. Dall lectured on Moses, preached in the Unitarian church, and met Annie Jonas, who was then living with the Denmans. Shortly afterward, Denman invited a select group of nine women, including Annie, to establish a serious study circle, later known as Friends in Council. The women -- all Protestants save for Annie -- were dedicated to self-improvement and the study of religious history and philosophy. They became close, and soon after their first meeting, member Mary Chapin wrote that Annie Jonas -- "as lovely as she is intelligent"--had begun teaching with her at the Quincy Female Seminary. The two taught also at a free evening school for indigent children organized by Quincy's Unitarian minister. Annie reminisced: "Under Mrs. Denman's roof, an intellectual and spiritual influence had been gathered, ever since I could remember a few eager, hungry souls bent on reaching a higher place than early opportunity had offered." In 1869, Annie chaired the session when the group adopted a constitution, and she later recalled visits from A. Bronson Alcott, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and suffragist Anna Dickinson.
By 1869, Quincy supported two synagogues, and its Jewish population was near its peak of several hundred. Unlike Annie's British-born father and American mother, most of the Jews were recent immigrants who spoke German, leaving Annie unlikely to find a good match among them. By now she identified enough with Christianity to be courted by an Episcopal priest. Thomas Bucklin Wells, a Yale graduate, was grieving the recent loss of his wife, the niece of Sarah Denman, and Annie and he were married in the Denman home.
Wells brought Annie to live with his two surviving children in Painesville, Ohio, where he was rector of St. James' Episcopal Church. He baptized Annie, who taught Sunday school. Together they had three children. When they moved to Minneapolis in 1880, the couple immersed themselves in church life with an emphasis on social justice. Annie was an officer of a Protestant orphanage, chaired the church's altar guild, and established a successful women's study group patterned after Friends in Council. She was best known for co-founding the church's settlement house. Parishioners had moved to better neighborhoods, leaving the church surrounded by Scandinavian, German, and Jewish immigrants.
A German woman approached Annie asking to be taught how to use a sewing machine. Soon others wanted to learn, so Annie recruited church women to finance machines and volunteer as teachers. From this beginning grew a large enterprise with day nursery, kindergarten, vocational classes, and medical dispensary -- eventually named the Wells Memorial Settlement House.
After Denman died, Annie returned to Quincy only twice--for Friends in Council Founders Day celebrations honoring Denman. She rarely saw her family. In fact, after her conversion, a Quincy uncle disinherited her. Even as adults, her children barely knew her background. One son wrote: "I ... learned but little from my mother of his [Abraham Jonas's] history, excepting his political association with Mr. Lincoln."
When Annie was 49, her husband, who had long been sickly, died en route home from Japan. Annie stayed in Minneapolis. She dressed in black and wore a veil for 35 years until she died in 1926. Late in life, she gave one son the "most valuable birthday gift I can give him." It was the Lincoln-Douglas debate book Lincoln had inscribed to Jonas and letters Lincoln had written him.
From her start in Quincy, Annie motivated many women to study and work for social justice, and she imbued her children to be charitable. Her daughter worked in the Wells Memorial Settlement House and for a French orphanage. One son became editor of Harper's Magazine and worked for the Red Cross during World War I. Her other son, an industrial titan and Minneapolis philanthropist, established the Annie E.J. Wells Fund, which to this day dispenses charity.
Cynthia Francis Gensheimer, an independent scholar who lives in Massachusetts, holds a doctorate in economics. She is studying the history of Quincy's Jewish women's benevolence and is completing a scholarly article about Annie Jonas Wells.
Sources
Ackman, Chloe. "'In the Beginning' - The Founding Ladies," October, 1989. Chloe Ackman Folder, 147.K.14.8F, Box 2, Peripatetics Club Records. Minnesota Historical Society.
"Address." Quincy Daily Whig. June 25, 1857.
Annie Jonas flag is held by the Western Hennepin County Pioneer Association Museum, Long Lake, Minnesota.
"Baptisms, 1864-1881" handwritten register, St. James Church, 88. St. James Church Archives, Painesville, Ohio.
Browning, Orville H. Letter to Annie Jonas. June 2, 1864. Wells Family Collection.
Chapin, Mary E. Letter to Caroline Healey Dall. January 11, 1866 [should be 1867]. Caroline Wells Healey Dall Papers. Massachusetts Historical Society.
Catalogue of the Officers and Students of Quincy Academy for the Academical Year 1864-5. Quincy, Illinois: 1865. http://www.alliancelibrarysystem.com/IllinoisWomen/files/qp/htm1/qpacad.html
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"Death of Mrs. Wells." Painesville Telegraph. April 9, 1868.
"Dr. T.B. Wells is Dead." Minneapolis Tribune. August 13, 1891.
"Feeding Hungry Soldiers: An Interesting Letter from Mrs. G.H. Morton." Quincy Morning Whig. January 21, 1898.
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Gensheimer, Cynthia Francis. "A Jewish Family Divided." Heritage: The Magazine of the American Jewish Historical Society, Winter 2012.
Jonas, Samuel. Will with codicil. August 16, 1875. Adams County, Illinois, Courthouse.
"Mrs. Dall's Lecture." The Quincy Daily Herald. October 28, 1866.
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Nelson, Iris. "Once Upon a Time in Quincy: Sarah Atwater Denman." Quincy Herald-Whig. January 7, 2012.
"Rev. Dr. T.B. Wells." Painesville Telegraph. October 14, 1880.
S.D. [Sarah Denman] to Caroline Healey Dall, December 12, 1866. Caroline Wells Healey Dall Papers. Massachusetts Historical Society.
Second Annual Report of the Needle Pickets of Quincy, Illinois,1863, 2. Archives of the Historical Society of Quincy and Adams County.
Sicilia, Mary. Building Honestly: The Foundations of the Cathedral Church of St. Mark. Minneapolis: The Cathedral Church of St. Mark, 1991, 41-43.
Temple, Wayne C. "Abraham Jonas: One of Lincoln's ‘Most Valued [Masonic] Friends.'" The Illinois Lodge of Research vol. 14. Sept 2005.
The Diary of Orville Hickman Browning I, 1850-1864. Springfield, Illinois: Illinois State Historical Library, 1925. entry of June 10, 1864.
"The Jewish New Year." Quincy Whig Republican. September 22, 1860.
Wells, Annie Jonas. Founders Day Speech. November 21, 1916. Wells Family Collection.
Wells, Annie Jonas. Letter to Frederick B. Wells. April 21, 1919. Wells Family Collection.
Wells, Annie Jonas. "Speech by Mrs. Annie Jonas Wells to F. in C. in Quincy." 1908. Wells Family Collection.
"Western Illinois Sanitary Fair." Quincy Daily Whig. August 15, 1864.





