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Personal papers of Braden and his wife, Grace McMurray Braden, also a Methodist missionary in Bolivia and Chile, including diaries, correspondence, mss., bulletins, publications, and photographs. Includes diaries (1912) chiefly reflecting their missionary service in Bolivia; mission related materials, including programs from church activities in Bolivia and Chile; pictorial listing of missionaries published in The Epworth Herald (1912 Nov. 9); report on religion in Chile; writings by Grace Braden, containing descriptive accounts and notations on mission work; list of students interviewed at various colleges regarding missionary service; church bulletins (1911-1912) from First Presbyterian Church, Brooklyn, N.Y.; bibliography (1967) of Braden's writings entitled The Literary Harvest of a Half-Century; copy (1939) of World Christianity, of which Braden was editor; two works in Spanish: one related to the English Methodist church in Chile and the other by Christian Lalive d'Epinay entitled "La Expansión Protestante en Chile"; photographs of the Bradens; and photographic souvenir booklet from Santiago, Chile.
Samuel Braden is being made to face mortality in the most acute way - he is dying of cancer. And death is coming to haunt him in the form of an agonising regret; a regret centred around three marriages and the three estranged children that each marriage produced.He manages to convince each of his children to visit with him, and to each he makes a startling request, that they promise to ensure that he is buried in his resting place of choice. It is startling because to each child he gives a different location.In his last days, Sam is delivering a message that he had taken too long to deliver.
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