Alli Bramel, Collections Specialist
At Shaker Village of Pleasant Hill, we are always learning about the people who called Pleasant Hill home. In celebration of International Women’s Day, we wanted take a closer look at one of Pleasant Hill’s female spiritual leaders, who not only served the Shaker community at Pleasant Hill until her death, but compiled a vital piece of material culture, offering insight into the early music of the Shakers.
Paulina Bryant served in Pleasant Hill’s ministry for 45 years, the longest tenure of any member of the community’s leadership, male or female. The ministry was ultimately responsible for Shaker spiritual leadership, including appointing elders, trustees, and deacons in each family within the community.
She was born on February 10, 1808 in Fayette County, Kentucky and came to Pleasant Hill with her parents and other family members in March 1810. Paulina served as deaconess for the Centre Family, taking charge over the temporal matters of everyday life, living, and business within the Centre Family beginning in 1834.
On June 20, 1841, Paulina was appointed as second to Sarah Jenkins within the Pleasant Hill ministry by the ministry at New Lebanon. Paulina was then appointed first Eldress and would remain in this position until her death in 1886.
As a group, the Shakers have written over 20,000 songs since the eighteenth century. Music and song were vital to Shaker life and Shaker worship. In the early decades of the Shaker West, the tunes for hymns and songs were mainly held in oral tradition. When the “Era of Manifestations” reached Pleasant Hill in the late 1830s, new music written by Shaker sisters and brethren flowed through Pleasant Hill.

However, Eldress Paulina recognized the importance of preserving the older music that had been used during Shaker worship from its founding until the beginning of the “Era of Manifestations.”
In 1854, Eldress Paulina began to compile a manuscript of “ancient songs” written and sung at Pleasant Hill, as well as songs and hymns originating at other Shaker sites. These songs served as the foundation of Pleasant Hill’s music up until 1840. This collection has been of great value to modern Shaker scholars in reconstructing earlier Shaker music both at Pleasant Hill and throughout the Shaker west. The manuscript is housed within the Library of Congress.
Eldress Paulina died on September 13, 1886 at Pleasant Hill and is buried in the Pleasant Hill cemetery. For her funeral, large bouquets of fresh flowers were gathered to decorate her coffin:
“Demise Eldress Polina [Paulina] Bryant Leading sister of the Society at Pleasant Hill & excellent pattern of Christianity….some went for flowers to decorate Eldress Polinas coffin / in PH Ministry 1841 until death, 1886, 45 yrs.”
As we celebrate International Women’s Day, we celebrate Paulina Bryant and her many contributions to the Shaker community at Pleasant Hill, along with all the sisters at Pleasant Hill that contributed to its rich history.
To learn more about the women of Pleasant Hill go behind the scenes with Shaker Village’s curator to explore Shaker Sisterhood on Saturday, March 8.