Franklin Elmer Ellsworth Hamilton
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Franklin Elmer Ellsworth Hamilton (born August 9, 1866, Pleasant Valley, Ohio; died May 4, 1918) was an American Bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church, elected in 1916.
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[edit] Birth and Family
Franklin was the son of the Rev. William Patrick and Henrietta (Dean) Hamilton. He married Mary Mackie Pierce 25 April 1895. They had the following children: Edward Pierce, Arthur Dean, and Elisabeth Louise.
Franklin Elmer Ellsworth Hamilton was the younger brother of John William Hamilton, also a Bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church.
[edit] Education
Franklin graduated from the Boston Latin School in 1883. He then earned the A.B. degree at Harvard University in 1887. He went on to earn the S.T.B. degree (1892) and the Ph.D. degree in 1899 at Boston University. He was also elected Phi Beta Kappa.
Dr. Hamilton continued his education with three years of post-graduate work at Berlin University, Germany, and in Paris, France.
[edit] Ordained and Academic Ministry
The Rev. Dr. Hamilton entered the New England Annual Conference of the M.E. Church in 1891. He was appointed to East Boston. He then became the Pastor at Newtonville. His final pastorate was First Methodist of Boston.
Hamilton made a tour around the world in 1904-05 in support of student missions He was elected a delegate to the M.E. General Conferences of 1908-1916, as well as the Ecumenical conference of 1911. He also was the President of the Old South Historical Society of Boston.
In 1907 the Rev. Dr. Hamilton became the Chancellor of the American University, Washington, D.C., serving in this position until elected to the Episcopacy in 1916. He served as a Trustee of American before being elected Chancellor. His office was located at 1422 F St., N.W. in Washington, D.C. He maintained two homes: at the Hotel Hamilton in Washington, and in Milton, Massachusetts.
[edit] Episcopal Ministry
The Rev. Dr. Franklin Elmer Ellsworth Hamilton was elected to the Episcopacy of the Methodist Episcopal Church at the 1916 General Conference of that denomination. He served as resident bishop in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania from then until his death in 1918.
[edit] Selected Writings
- Why Did the Pilgrim Fathers Come to America
- 250th Anniversary Founding of Harvard University
- 200th Anniversity of the Birth of John Wesley
- Cup of Fire, Methodist Book Concern, 1914.
- contributions to magazines.
[edit] References
- The Council of Bishops of the United Methodist Church[1]
- Price, Carl F., Compiler and Editor: Who's Who in American Methodism, New York: E.B. Treat & Co., 1916.
- History of Pittsburgh and Environs, vol. 2; Chapter 22, "The Ecclesiastical History", p. 51.
[edit] See also
Preceded by Charles Cardwell McCabe |
Chancellor, American University 1907-1916 |
Succeeded by John W. Hamilton |
Categories: Boston University alumni | American University presidents | Bishops of the Methodist Episcopal Church | American Methodist bishops | 1866 births | 1918 deaths | Historians of religion | Harvard University alumni | Boston Latin School alumni | American historians | People from Washington, D.C. | English-language writers | Authors whose works are in the public domain