Eliza Coffin Janney Rawson

Eliza Finch Coffin Janney Rawson (1830-1907) photo from a private collection, shown Courtesy of Rachel Janney

Eliza Finch Coffin (1830-1907) was born in Chatham, NY and as a young woman came to Lincoln, VA to teach at Springdale School. She devoted her life to civil rights efforts in both Black education and civil rights as well as women’s suffrage and prison reform. Eliza Finch Coffin married John Janney in 1854. He was the oldest son of the school’s founders, Samuel M. and Elizabeth Janney. John died in early 1858 of a chronic illness, possibly tuberculosis. In his Memoirs Samuel Janney described the sad circumstances of his son’s death. Eliza was now the single parent of two young children, Samuel and Clarissa, who was born a few months after John’s death.

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Goose Creek Meeting registry of births, marriages, and deaths, showing Samuel M. Janney family and son John Janney family information

Eliza stayed close to her in-laws, Samuel and Elizabeth Janney and remained in Lincoln to help manage the Janney & Son store. In 1877 Eliza married Edward Rawson, who had come down to Lincoln, Virginia from New York, to teach at Springdale School. (Springdale was now a boarding and day school for Quaker boys and girls, managed by Baltimore Yearly Meeting.)

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Eliza Coffin Janney biographical sketch from the Goose Creek Meeting chapter in the book of Hinshaw’s Quaker History

In 1899, Eliza Janney Rawson wrote a series of articles for the Friends’ Intelligencer about her former father-in-law Samuel M. Janney. In the articles much is learned about the Lincoln community and experiences during the years before and during war. The Friends’ Intelligencer was published weekly, printed in Philadelphia. It carried news of interest to the Society of Friends, and had national coverage.

Toward the end of the essay printed below, Eliza mentions freedmen Oscar Carey, who was a paid employee of the Janney family. There must be more information out there about him and his family! The essay also makes reference to Underground Railroad activity of the Janneys. This is an outright statement as fact, from someone alive and present at the time, that unequivocally connects the Janneys to the UGRR. 

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This Friends Intelligencer May 27, 1899 essay written by Eliza Janney Rawson on the life of her former father-in-law Samuel M. Janney also covers some of the experiences of Loudoun residents during the war. This segment of essay also introduces Oscar Carey, about whom more research is needed.

The following Friends Intelligencer May 20, 1899 column written by Eliza Janney Rawson is my personal favorite. Though still primarily writing about Samuel M. Janney, Eliza shows her own sense of humor several times in this essay. She shares information about Lucretia Mott, Nelson Talbot Gant, and a certain set of Confederate soldiers she waited on in the Janney  store who were there for more than just a purchase of caps:

Eliza had been instramental in starting a school for African American children at the war’s end in 1865. A short few sentences included in a Lincoln School centenial history brochure mentions ‘a prominent colored school.’ That was ‘Colored School B,’ the school opened by Eliza Janney and her mother-in-law Elizabeth Janney, with no help from the Loudoun County Freedmen’s Bureau. The school was also supported for decades by Elizabeth’s and Samuel M. Janney’s daughter, Cornelia. 

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An obituary written for the Friends Intelligencer on August 24, 1907 gives only a partial synopsis of this woman’s eventful and self-less life:

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Obituary for Eliza Janney Rawson, Friends Intelligencer August 24, 1907

The photo at the top of this page, showing Eliza Coffin Janney Rawson, is from a private collection and shown courtesy of Rachel Janney. Eliza Rawson appears as we would expect her to be: strong and confident, looking directly out at the viewer. How fortunate that we have a picture of this exceptional woman, Eliza Rawson.

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“Woman on horseback” Alfred Waud, courtesy of Library of Congress