Henry Clay Trumbull

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Henry Clay Trumbull (1830-1903) was an American clergyman and author, born at Stonington, Connecticut, and educated at Williston Seminary, at Yale, and at the University of New York. He was ordained a Congregational minister, served as chaplain of the Tenth Connecticut Regiment in 1862-65, and was in several Confederate prisons. In 1875 he became editor of the Sunday School Times. He wrote:

  • The Knightly Soldier (1865)
  • Kadesh-Barnea (1883)
  • Principles and Practices (1889)
  • Studies in Oriental Social Life (1894)
  • The threshold covenant or the beginning of religious rites (1896)
  • War Memories of an Army Chaplain (1898)
  • Old-Time Student Volunteers (1902)
  • Personal Prayer, posthumously presented (1915)
  • The Blood Covenant
  • The Salt Covenant

He was the brother of James Hammond Trumbull.