BRIDGES, THOMAS

1843 - 1898 from England


missionary, was a foundling adopted by the Rev and Mrs G Pakenham DESPARD, and taken out to live on Keppel Island in 1856 when he was 13. At the beginning of his life there his status was ill-defined: too young to be a missionary and too old to be treated as a child.

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Lexicographer at 25

He was set to working physically, mixing freely with the Indians. The result was a growing bond and understanding between Bridges and the Fuegian Indians that lasted his whole life. One of its fruits was his Yahgan Dictionary, published posthumously. (See: Yamana/English dictionary)Another was Bridges' deep care for these tribal people that led to his ordination and his subsequent work among them at Ushuaia, and ultimately to his settling at Estancia Harberton on the Beagle Channel.

On Despard's leaving Keppel in 1861, Bridges and BARTLETT were left in charge of the depleted Keppel Mission, pending the arrival of the new superintendent and the renewal of its objectives. In the intervening 16 months, Bridges spent many hours with OKOKKO and Camilenna, learning the intricacies of their speech. The result was that when STIRLING arrived in January 1863, he found Bridges fluent in Yahgan, conversant in both vocabulary and grammar.

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The Bridges family. Thomas Bridges...

In October 1868, Bridges left for England and ordination in the Church of England.

In August 1869, he married Mary Ann Varder of Devon. They had six children: Mary (born 1870), Despard (b1872), Lucas (b1874), William (b1876), Bertha (b1879) and Alice (b1882).Bridges returned from England at the end of 1869 with his bride, and travelled straight to Keppel Island to take charge of the Mission.

There he proceeded with Stirling's plan to move the Mission to Ushuaia, abandoning Keppel to serve as the farm school. So, in October 1871, Bridges, his wife and Mary went to live in the new Mission house on the shores of the Beagle Channel, continuing his work as missionary among the Indians.

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Thomas Bridges (standing, third left)...

Bridges resigned from the South American Missionary Society in 1886, suffering from poor health. He moved with his family, and many of the Indians associated with the Mission, to Harberton, the land granted him by a grateful Argentine Government.

He died in Buenos Aires on 15 July 1898.  Bridges, above anyone else, was the European who got closest to the Indians of Tierra del Fuego in understanding and interpreting their language and culture. Author of the Yamana-English Dictionary, 1933. Bridges was featured on a Falkland Islands stamp issued in 1994.

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Thomas Bridges' grave in the British...

Editorial comment:  For a transcription of Thomas Bridge's account of Tierra del Fuego and it inhabitants see: Transcript


Authors

Jeremy Howat

External links

References

Lucas Bridges; Uttermost Part of the Earth, Second edition, with an introduction by Gavin Young  London: Century, 1987

Rev Thomas Bridges; Yamana-English: A dictionary of the speech of Tierra del Fuego.  ed. Ferdinand Hestermann and Martin Gusinde, Mödling bei Wien (Vienna): Missionsdruckerei St. Gabriel; 1933

Comments

Revisions

November 2019 Two references added; three external links added
January 2020 One additional external link added; two additional photographs added
February 2021 Additional information added to image 1177