Yale University Library

Overview

Repository: Yale University Divinity School Library
409 Prospect Street
New Haven, CT 06511
Email: divinity.library@yale.edu
Phone: (203) 432-5301
Call Number: Record Group No. 84
Creator: Alter, James P., 1919-
Title: James Payne Alter Papers,
Dates: 1817-1984
Physical Description: Total archival boxes 34; total linear footage 15'
Language(s): Materials in English.
Summary: The papers document Alter's lifelong involvement with the Christian church in India, his affiliation with Yale University, his activities in student Christian organizations, and his ongoing interest in issues of peace and social concern. James Payne Alter was born in India in 1919, son of Presbyterian missionaries. He attended Yale University and Yale Divinity School. He was appointed as a Presbyterian missionary to India in 1945. He taught at Ewing Christian College in Allahabad, served as first Director of the ecumenical Christian Retreat and Study Center, Rajpur, and wrote on Christianity in northern India.
View/Search: To view and/or search the entire finding aid, see the Full HTML(NOTE: for large finding aids, the full HTML view may take up to 30 seconds to render) or the Printable PDF.
Finding Aid Link: To cite or bookmark this finding aid, use the following address:
http://hdl.handle.net/10079/fa/divinity.084
Request Materials: To view manuscript and archival materials at the Yale Divinity Library, please submit the request form at http://www.library.yale.edu/div/request.htm.
Catalog Record: A record for this collection, including location information, may be available in Orbis, the Yale University Library catalog.

Administrative Information

Provenance

Gift of Barbara Beach Alter.

Information about Access

Open to qualified researchers.

Cite As

James Payne Alter Papers, Record Group No. 84, Special Collections, Yale Divinity School Library.

Biographical Sketch

1919 Oct 14 Born in Sialkot, Punjab, India to David Emmett Alter and Martha Payne Alter; his parents were missionaries of the former United Presbyterian Church of North America.
1929-1933 Attended Woodstock School, Mussourie, India
1933-1936 Attended Mount Hermon School, Massachusetts
1936-1940 Attended Yale University, B.A. 1940
1940-1942 Secretary of Yale University Christian Association
1940-1941 Three month prison term at Danbury Correctional Center as Conscientious Objector
1941-1942 Attended Yale Divinity School
1942 Married Barbara Beach, daughter of David Nelson Beach II. (Children: Martha (1944), John (1947), and Thomas (1950))
1942-1944 Student Pastor, Haydenburg, Tennessee, Cumberland Mountain Presbytery under the auspices of the Presbyterian Board of National Missions
1944-1945 Continued studies at Yale Divinity School
1945 Assigned to the mission field in India by the Board of Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian Church in U.S.A. Arrived in India October, 1945
1946-1947 Attended Leonard Theological College, Jabalpur, India
1947-1951 Professor of English, Chaplain, and Chair of the Department of religion and ethics, Ewing Christian College, Allahabad, India
1949 Ordained by the Allahabad Church Council of the United Church of North India
1951-1952 Continued studies at Yale Divinity School, B.D. 1952
1952-1953 Served as Study Secretary for the World Council of Churches
1954-1968 First Director of ecumenical Christian Retreat and Study Centre, Rajpur, India
1968-1983 Researched, traveled, and published articles relating to the history of North Indian Christianity
1980 Left India on medical retirement
1983 Nov 7 Died
1986 In the Doab and Rohilkhand : north Indian Christianity 1815-1915 (Delhi : ISPCK, 1986.) published posthumously, revised and completed by John Alter, son of JPA

Description of the Papers

James Alter's lifelong involvement with the Christian church in India, his affiliation with Yale University, his activities in student Christian organizations, and his ongoing interest in issues of peace and social concern combine to make this record group a valuable addition to collections held at the Yale Divinity School Library.

Alter's student years at Yale, his involvement in the interrelated student Christian groups of that era, and his experiences as a conscientious objector during the Second World War are well documented. After his return to India, extensive correspondence, writings and collected material provide important information about people and events as well as providing insight into Alter's personal journey as a son of traditional Presbyterian missionaries returning to devote his own life to an evolving participation in and understanding of the Christian church in north India. This record group does not contain a great deal of material relating specifically to the Christian Retreat and Study Centre in Rajpur, which Alter directed from 1954 to 1968. His consulting activities and research after this period are well documented.

The Correspondence of Series I, dating from 1936 to 1983, is divided into Family Correspondence and General Correspondence. Correspondence with family members, particularly his parents, is frequent and substantive. These letters, combined with the circular letters prepared by Jim and Barry Alter for their family and friends, provide thorough documentation of their activities for four decades. A fair portion of the General Correspondence is with the Presbyterian mission board and Presbyterian churches throughout the U.S. that provided financial support for the Alters. Also included in the General Correspondence section are letters documenting Alter's involvement in student Christian work, peace groups, and ecumenical ventures.

Series II is comprised of writings by Alter, including unpublished manuscripts, student papers, book reviews, sermons, lectures, and published works. The majority of the unpublished manuscripts and drafts contained in this Series relate to Christianity in northern India. Many are also available in published form, but drafts have been retained to document changes and revisions.

The materials contained in Series III and Series IV are similar in many ways, but Series III, Research Materials, represents the files that Alter had intentionally gathered together to support his ongoing research. These research materials relate almost exclusively to Christianity in northern India or to the interaction between Christianity and Communism. They include articles, reports, letters, notes, and newspaper clippings.

The Collected Material of Series IV is similar in format but covers a broader range of subject matter. Some materials relate to Christianity in India while others relate to courses taken by Alter, peace groups such as the Fellowship of Reconciliation, student Christian groups, and other organizations with which Alter was affiliated throughout his life, including the United Presbyterian Church Commission on Ecumenical Mission and Relations and the World Council of Churches.

Series V, Biographical Material, is an attempt to gather together and organize a hodge-podge of documentation relating to trips, projects, and other events in Alter's life. The Series includes notes, reports, itineraries, photographs, and official documents.