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Adelia Patten Van Horn.

From Adventist Heritage, Vol. 11, No. 2, Fall 1986, page 49.

Van Horn, Adelia Parlince (Patten) (1839–1922)

By Lindsay Morton Hayasaka

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Lindsay Morton Hayasaka, Ph.D. (Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand), is the Academic Dean at Pacific Union College. Her research interests include the intersection of ethics and epistemology in narrative non-fiction, and the roles of the imagination, experientially, and affect in literary journalism. Lindsay is an active member of her scholarly community, and has held professional roles such as the Research Chair and Second Vice President for the International Association for Literary Journalism Studies. She is also currently Co-Chair of the SDA Higher Education Leadership Council.

 

First Published: July 29, 2024

Adelia Van Horn was an assistant to Ellen G. White, the editor for The Youth’s Instructor, and the first female treasurer for the General Conference.

Early Life

Born Adelia Parlince Patten to Levi Curtis and Adelia Patten in Clay, Onondaga County, New York, on June 30, 1839,1 Adelia Van Horn was the oldest of five children. At age 19, Patten became the first Seventh-day Adventist (SDA) convert from her father’s family,2 after hearing the preaching of Elder Alexander Ross, James White, and J. N. Loughborough. She was baptized in 1861 at Battle Creek by Elder White.3 Following her baptism, Adelia Patten moved into the White’s home, where she assisted Mrs. White with her publications, while tutoring and caring for the children.4 James White described Adelia as having “an excellent influence over our children,”5 and although she was never formally adopted, one biographer notes that “in some ways, she became the daughter that James and Ellen never had.”6

Work and Ministry

After observing the lack of writings for young children, early in 1863 Patten began a series of Sabbath-school lessons in the Youth's Instructor, entitled “Bible Knowledge for Little Children.”7 This was the first full series of original Sabbath-school lessons prepared for the children of Seventh-day Adventists. In August, Patten accompanied the White family to Topsham, Maine, where she looked after the boys while their parents travelled.8 The Whites were particularly intent on moving Henry and Edson from Battle Creek, as the boys had developed a fascination with war activities.9 In December, Henry developed pneumonia. The Whites returned home, but Henry worsened and subsequently passed away with his family and friends—including Patten—in the room.10 Patten gave the life sketch at his funeral, which was later captured in the book Appeal to the Youth: A Funeral Address for Henry N. White.11

In July 1864, Patten was appointed the fourth editor of the Youth’s Instructor, a role she held for four years.12 During that time, Adelia met Isaac Van Horn, a convert of Joseph Bates and Seventh-day Adventist minister. James White later recalled that when “Elder I. D. Van Horn asked [for Adelia’s] hand, we consented, and gave her to him with the interest parents feel for their daughters.”13 The couple were married in Battle Creek on April 29, 1865.14 This was a busy season, as Adelia was working as a clerk in the counting room of the Seventh-day Adventist Publishing Association in addition to her editorship,15 and was called back to the White’s home in Dansville late in 1865 to help care for James White following his stroke.16 The couple subsequently lived with the Whites during their early years of marriage, with many duties pressing on Adelia—not least of which was the shepherding of Edson and his increasingly worrying behavior.17

In 1869, Adelia van Horn was appointed as the executive secretary of the SDA Publishing Association,18 a role she held until poor health forced her to resign three years later.19 However, her managerial and clerical talents were evident, and in 1871 Adelia became the fifth treasurer of the General Conference. She was the first woman to serve as a General Conference officer.20 She remained in this role until 1873, at which time ill health again forced her from this role. James White described her tenure as completed with “great ability and unparalleled devotion,” arguing for a generous financial package to be awarded in the wake of her resignation.21

Later that year, the Van Horns answered the call to establish the Seventh-day Adventist church in the Pacific Northwest. They travelled to California in December over the transcontinental railroad and spent the winter working with believers in California, before travelling to Portland, Oregon, and transferring to a steamboat for the trip up the Columbia River.22 This was likely a difficult trip for Adelia, who was still unwell and pregnant with her first child.23

The couple began evangelistic services in Walla Walla, Washington, in a 50-foot tent in the spring of 1874. The campaign was successful, with a congregation officially organized and a newly built church dedicated on July 3, 1875, with Isaac Van Horn as the pastor. 24

A year later, the Van Horns shifted their evangelistic focus to the Willamette Valley, making their home in Salem, Oregon.25 Adelia’s sister, Francis Patten, came to visit in 1877, but decided to stay after meeting and falling in love with Isaac’s assistant, Alonzo T. Jones. They were married and moved in permanently with the Van Horns, a decision that both couples came to regret over time due to the ill health of both sisters and differing opinions on ministry between the husbands.26

Ellen White visited the Van Horns in Oregon in 1878, meeting two of Adelia’s three children, Burt Isaac (born 1874) and Newman Curtis (born 1878). Charles Wesley was born in 1880.27 At that time Adelia was the secretary of the North Pacific Conference.28 Ellen White praised their evangelistic work, observing that “Elder Van Horn is a missionary in the true sense of the word, and a man of excellent ability and deep spirituality. His wife is equally talented and self-sacrificing.” She also noted that both Adelia and her sister Frances had suffered from ill health: “at times it was feared that both would lose their lives,” but that prayers had been answered and both were in much better health.29 However, after Ellen White visited again in 1880, she wrote to her husband that both Isaac and Adelia had neglected their ministry work, reporting that “Adelia holds [Isaac] back from his labour and he will consent to be held. They have three children. She centres all her powers on them and labours to have him do the same, and she has about succeeded.”30 The next summer, the Van Horns were transferred to California, and shortly after, they returned to the East.31

Final Years and Death

Over the next decade, the couple lived and ministered in Michigan, with Isaac Van Horn travelling extensively throughout the Atlantic Union Conference and beyond, while Adelia managed the home, contributed to local church ministries, and cared for her ailing father, who passed away of paralysis in 1893.32 The couple’s youngest son, Charles Wesley Van Horn, tragically died on August, 10, 1908, the same year Isaac Van Horn was moved to a sanitarium because of ill health. He, too, passed away two years later at the age of 76. 33

Adelia Van Horn continued her ministry and service through the Battle Creek Sanitarium and College, until her death on July 8, 1922.34 She was buried with her husband in Kalamazoo, Michigan. Elder A. E. Serns, who conducted her funeral service, wrote of Adelia Van Horn: “Her faith and confidence in a soon-coming Christ was unbounded. Her beautiful life of usefulness is now ended. She sleeps, awaiting the call of Him who is the Resurrection and the Life.”35

Sources

“A History of the Youth’s Instructor.” The Youth’s Instructor, May 1, 1917.

Adelia Patten’s Bible. American Bible Society, 1869. Digital Image. Center for Adventist Research, Andrews University, Berrien Springs, Michigan. Accessed July 24, 2024. https://adventistdigitallibrary.org/adl-422427/adelia-pattens-bible?solr_nav%5Bid%5D=c57ff0a22d02151c019a&solr_nav%5Bpage%5D=29&solr_nav%5Boffset%5D=1.

Amadon, Geo. W. “Sabbath School Work.” ARH, November 26, 1901.

Daniells, A. G. “Life Sketch of Elder I. D. Van Horn,” ARH, October 6, 1910.

“Edson White: His Work & Conversion.” Linear Journey. Season 2, Episode 42. April 17, 2019. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-NnXvfxJvdA&t=60s.

“GC Session Actions Affecting Women.” ARH, July 5, 1985.

Johnson, Doug R. Adventism on the Northwestern Frontier. Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University Press, 1996.

Johnson, Doug R. “Alonzo T. Jones: From Indian Fighter to Adventist Preacher.” North Pacific Gleaner, July 2006.

Knight, George R. “God’s Fascination with Remembering.” North Pacific Gleaner, May/June 2021.

“North Pacific Conference,” ARH, August 15, 1878.

Serns, A. E. “Mrs. Adelia Van Horn Obituary.” Lake Union Herald, July 26, 1922.

Smith, Uriah. An Appeal to the Youth: Funeral Address for Henry N. White. Battle Creek: Steam Press, 1864.

Spalding, Arthur W. Captains of the Host: First Volume of a History of Seventh-day Adventists

Covering the Years 1845-1900. Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald Publishing Association, 1949.

Valentine, Gilbert. “Finding Their Voice: The Expanding Role of Women—Early Adventism in Context (1865-1875).” Spectrum, October 1, 2016.

Van Horn, Adelia P. “Resignation.” ARH, November 12, 1872.

Van Horn, Isaac D. “Levi Curtis Patten Obituary.” ARH, January 16, 1894.

White, Arthur L. Ellen White: Woman of Vision. Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald Publishing Association, 2000.

White, Arthur L. Ellen G. White: The Progressive Years: 1862-1876 (vol. 2). Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald Publishing Association, 1986.

White. Ellen G. “Visit to Oregon.” The Signs of the Times, July 25, 1878.

White, James. “Adelia P. Van Horn.” ARH, November 12, 1872.

Notes

  1. Adelia Patten’s Bible, American Bible Society, 1869, digital image, Center for Adventist Research, Andrews University, Berrien Springs, Michigan, accessed July 24, 2024, https://adventistdigitallibrary.org/adl-422427/adelia-pattens-bible?solr_nav%5Bid%5D=c57ff0a22d02151c019a&solr_nav%5Bpage%5D=29&solr_nav%5Boffset%5D=1.

  2. James White, “Adelia P. Van Horn,” ARH, November 12, 1872, 176.

  3. A. E. Serns, “Mrs. Adelia Van Horn Obituary,” Lake Union Herald, July 26, 1922, 11.

  4. Gilbert Valentine, “Finding Their Voice: The Expanding Role of Women—Early Adventism in Context (1865–1875),” Spectrum, October 1, 2016, 57.

  5. James White, “Adelia P. Van Horn,” ARH, November 12, 1872, 176.

  6. Gilbert Valentine, “Finding Their Voice: The Expanding Role of Women—Early Adventism in Context (1865–1875),” Spectrum, October 1, 2016, 57.

  7. Geo. W. Amadon, “Sabbath School Work,” ARH, November 26, 1901, 765.

  8. Arthur L. White, Ellen G. White: The Progressive Years: 1862-1876 (vol. 2) (Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald Publishing Association, 1986), 61.

  9. Ibid., 60.

  10. Arthur L. White, Ellen White: Woman of Vision (Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald Publishing Association, 2000), 114.

  11. Smith, Uriah, An Appeal to the Youth: Funeral Address for Henry N. White, (Battle Creek: Steam Press, 1864).

  12. “A History of the Youth’s Instructor,” The Youth’s Instructor, May 1, 1917, 7.

  13. James White, “Adelia P. Van Horn,” ARH, November 12, 1872, 176.

  14. A. E. Serns, “Mrs. Adelia Van Horn Obituary,” Lake Union Herald, July 26, 1922, 11.

  15. Ibid.

  16. Arthur L. White, Ellen White: Woman of Vision (Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald Publishing Association, 2000), 123.

  17. “Edson White: His Work & Conversion,” Linear Journey. Season 2, Episode 42. April 17, 2019. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-NnXvfxJvdA&t=60s.

  18. Gilbert Valentine, “Finding Their Voice: The Expanding Role of Women—Early Adventism in Context (1865–1875),” Spectrum, October 1, 2016, 57.

  19. Adelia P. Van Horn, “Resignation,” ARH, November 12, 1872, 176.

  20. “GC Session Actions Affecting Women,” ARH, July 5, 1985, 6.

  21. James White, “Adelia P. Van Horn,” ARH, November 12, 1872, 176. 2

  22. Doug R. Johnson, Adventism on the Northwestern Frontier (Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University Press, 1996), 13.

  23. Ibid.

  24. Doug R. Johnson, “Alonzo T. Jones: From Indian Fighter to Adventist Preacher,” North Pacific Gleaner, July 2006, 16.

  25. George R. Knight, “God’s Fascination with Remembering,” North Pacific Gleaner, May/June 2021, 8.

  26. Doug R. Johnson, “Alonzo T. Jones: From Indian Fighter to Adventist Preacher,” North Pacific Gleaner, July 2006, 16.

  27. A. G. Daniells, “Life Sketch of Elder I. D. Van Horn,” ARH, October 6, 1910, 9.

  28. “North Pacific Conference,” ARH, August 15, 1878, 63.

  29. E. G. White. “Visit to Oregon,” The Signs of the Times, July 25, 1878, 221.

  30. Doug R. Johnson, Adventism on the Northwestern Frontier (Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University Press, 1996), 26-27.

  31. Arthur W. Spalding, Captains of the Host, (Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald Publishing Association, 1949), 407-8.

  32. I. D. Van Horn, “Levi Curtis Patten Obituary,” ARH, January 16, 1894, 47.

  33. A. G. Daniells, “Life Sketch of Elder I. D. Van Horn,” ARH, October 6, 1910, 9.

  34. A. E. Serns, “Mrs. Adelia Van Horn Obituary,” Lake Union Herald, July 26, 1922, 11.

  35. Ibid.

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Hayasaka, Lindsay Morton. "Van Horn, Adelia Parlince (Patten) (1839–1922)." Encyclopedia of Seventh-day Adventists. July 29, 2024. Accessed December 12, 2024. https://encyclopedia.adventist.org/article?id=IJLD.

Hayasaka, Lindsay Morton. "Van Horn, Adelia Parlince (Patten) (1839–1922)." Encyclopedia of Seventh-day Adventists. July 29, 2024. Date of access December 12, 2024, https://encyclopedia.adventist.org/article?id=IJLD.

Hayasaka, Lindsay Morton (2024, July 29). Van Horn, Adelia Parlince (Patten) (1839–1922). Encyclopedia of Seventh-day Adventists. Retrieved December 12, 2024, https://encyclopedia.adventist.org/article?id=IJLD.