Previously unknown snapshot is part of a collection donated to Pacific Union College.

July 15, 2021 | Silver Spring, Maryland, United States | By: Marcos Paseggi, Adventist Review

A previously unknown photo of Seventh-day Adventist Church co-founder Ellen White (1827-1915) allows church members to see into her life and seems to confirm some of the comments surrounding her persona in her later years, scholars say. The photo, which shows White at work in her studio, was part of a private document collection donated to Pacific Union College (PUC) in 2017. It became more broadly known after it was added to the special collections at the institution’s library, located on the school campus in Angwin, California, United States.

The photo was taken sometime between 1901 and 1905, after White came back from Australia and settled in Elmshaven, her last residence, located in St. Helena, California. By this time, she was in her mid-70s. The photo shows White in her studio during one of her daily writing sessions. In the snapshot, White takes a break from writing to look up directly and intently at the camera. A pencil inscription on the back of the photograph reads, “Sr. White at Elmshaven.”

“When we digitized the photograph using some of the best techniques available, we could feel her character came alive,” Katharine Van Arsdale, special collections librarian at the PUC Nelson Library, said. “Looking at Mrs. White in this casual snapshot, you can imagine what it was like to know her and call her ‘Mother.’ It is deeply moving.”

Ellen G. White at her writing desk in Elmshaven, stops for a moment to look at the camera during one of her writing sessions, sometime between 1901 and 1905. According to scholars, the previously unknown photograph, donated to Pacific Union College, sheds light on the daily endeavors of the woman whom many called “Mother.” [Photo: Pacific Union College Nelson Library Special Collections]

How the Photograph Was “Discovered”

The photograph is part of the Taylor Family Collection, donated by church member Julia Pearce, a descendant of the Taylor family, which has strong roots in the St. Helena area. The collection primarily contains correspondence between members of the Taylor family, including Charles L. Taylor, his son, George Taylor, and his wife, Lucy Taylor Whitney (she remarried after Charles died in 1918).

“Julia Pearce had commented that her family had had some connections to the White family,” Van Arsdale shared. “Apparently, her family knew about the existence of the photograph as part of the collection, but we didn’t. As we were reviewing the documents she donated, it was a wonderful surprise.”

By the time White moved to Elmshaven in 1901, Charles Taylor was serving as the chaplain at the nearby St. Helena Sanitarium. “We believe Charles Taylor or his wife, Lucy Brown Taylor, took the photograph,” Van Arsdale said, “but we don’t know it for sure.”

The Ellen G. White Estate Weighs In

Even after the remarkable discovery, the PUC librarians had no way of knowing the photograph was unique or was not known by other scholars of White’s life and work, including those in the office of the Ellen G. White Estate at the Adventist Church headquarters in Silver Spring, Maryland. That changed earlier in 2021, when Van Arsdale published a book entitled Angwin and Howell Mountain, about the early history of the area where PUC is located. The book featured information and old images from the history of the area.

White Estate former director Jim Nix got a copy of the book and read it because it contains a history of Adventists in the area, and almost all the photographs come from the PUC Special Collections. Then, Van Arsdale shared, White Estate vice-director Tim Poirier “recognized that the photo was ‘previously unknown,’ and he let us know at PUC that we had a treasure on our hands.”

Where Is the Photograph Now

Van Arsdale explained that the photograph is currently stored with the rest of the Taylor Family Collection in the PUC Library Archives & Special Collections. It sits alongside other Taylor and White family photographs, including a Christmas card from the family of Ellen’s son, William C. White, sent in 1930. The collection is open to researchers by appointment with the library. The image of Ellen White is also digitized and viewable in the PUC Library online archive. A high-quality digitized copy is also available at the White Estate in the Adventist Church headquarters.

The PUC Special Collections include documents about the school’s history, founded in 1882 as Healdsburg Academy in the town of Healdsburg. It also features the history of the local area, which has strong Adventist connections. Besides information about Elmshaven and St. Helena, there are documents related to some of the first Adventist members in California. The collections include information about Edward Angwin, the owner of the Angwin Resort, site of the PUC campus, which was purchased by the Adventist Church in 1909. Recently, PUC has launched a renovation project of a wing of the library building, which is set to store these special collections.

Why the Photograph Is Significant

Seventh-day Adventists believe that Ellen White exercised the biblical gift of prophecy during more than 70 years of public ministry. In that context, the photograph sheds light on the daily endeavors of the prophet in the latter part of her life.

Poirier explained that even though the White Estate has nearly 60 photographs of White, the one donated to the PUC collection is unique. “It is the only picture of her taken from inside her Elmshaven home,” he wrote. “And to have her seated at her writing desk is especially appropriate.”

It is something, Poirier believes, that has been a significant addition to the collection. “We are thankful to the descendants of the Taylor family for preserving the photo all these years, and to the Special Collections Librarian at Pacific Union College for making it known,” he wrote.

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