Products & Servicescrack
Alphabetical Listing
Forms and Documents
Interactive
Resources & Training
Church Health
Leadership Development
Reaching Out
Finance
Kindred Productions
Publications
Theology
Tools for the local church
Christian Press
Centre for Mennonite Brethren Studies
Mennonitische Rundschau Index
Canadian Conference of MB Churches
General Conference of MB Churches
John A. Toews Library
Katie Peters Genealogical Collection
MB Provincial Conferences and Churches
Periodicals and newspapers
Other Mennonite and MB Organizations
About the Centre for MB Studies
Links to Related Sites
Archival Holdings
Theological Resources
Text To Terabyte Project
Mennonite Mirror
Festival Quarterly
Odessaer Zeitung
Mennonite Reporter
PrintShareText Size:Small TextMedium TextLarge Text
 

John F. Harms (1855–1945)

1897, 1942, 1943, 1945, [1983–?], 1983.
1 folder of textual records and one black and white photograph.

Biographical sketch
John F. Harms was born on April 29, 1855 to Jacob Harms (1826– ) and Anna Voth (1823– ) in the village of Kleefeld, south Russia. He married Maria Isaac in 1873. She died ca. 1876. On September 15, 1876, he married Margaretha Isaac who was born in the village of Grossweide, Molotschna to Peter Isaak (1812– ) and Susanna Fast (ca. 1815– ). Together they had six children. In 1878 the family immigrated and settled on a farm near Mountain Lake, Minnesota. John Harms gave up farming in 1879 when John F. Funk invited him to move to Elkhart, Indiana to serve as editor of the Mennonitische Rundschau and the Herold der Wahrheit.

In 1884 the family moved near Hillsboro where Harms was influenced by the French Creek revival and was baptised into the Mennonite Brethren church. In 1884 he also took leadership of the newly established Zionsbote, the first Mennonite Brethren publication. He also helped establish the conference publishing house in Medford, Oklahoma in 1903. In addition to his conference work he wrote short stories, essays, poems, and tracts and was the town journalist.

Harms had interest in conference education. He held various positions and helped establish Tabor College and the Herbert Bible School in Saskatchewan. He was ordained into the ministry in 1896 at the Hillsboro Mennonite Brethren church. Other churches he served at include in Medford, Oklahoma, and Flowing Well, Saskatchewan. He also established new churches and served as an evangelist to the Doukhobors in North Dakota in 1980–1909.

While he had a deep concern for the well being of his conference he also looked outside of it. He was on the committee that established one of the first mission projects of the conference to the Comanche Indians of Oklahoma. He reported the sufferings and hardships of those in Russia after the First World War. He gave “hands-on” help, by packing relief boxes and preparing food drafts.

According to the family, Margaretha died May 15, 1921. Harms married for a third time on November 27, 1921, this time to Adelgunda Jost who was born January 17, 1864, in Prangenau, Molotschna, to Peter Jost and Adelgunda Suderman. John F. Harms died on January 7, 1945.

Scope and content
The material in this collection contains publications by Harms and material written about Harms after his death.

Custodial history
The material in this collection has been collected by the archival staff over time and placed together in this collection.

Notes
Textual file list

Volume 965 Date
1. J.F.H., Zubereitung zur Entrückung, Hillsboro, Kansas. 1897
2. John F. Harms, Zubereitung zur Entrückung, Hillsboro, Kansas. 1942
3. John F. Harms, Eine Lebensreise, Hillsboro, Kansas. 1943
4. Obituary of Rev. John F. Harms, in Hillsboro Journal, and one other unknown newspaper. Jan 11, 1945
5. Letter from Wes Prieb to Ken Reddig. Jan 4, 1983
6. Black and white photograph of John F. Harms on driveway. [193-?]

CDS.