Nehemiah Adams
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Reverend Nehemiah Adams (born February 19, 1806; died October 6, 1878) was a clergyman and writer.
He was born in Salem, Massachusetts, in 1806 to Nehemiah Adams and Mehitabel Torrey Adams. He graduated from Harvard University in 1826, and from Andover Theological Seminary in 1829. He was ordained as co-pastor of First Congregational Church in Cambridge, Massachusetts, that same year. In 1832, he married Martha Hooper.
In 1834, he became pastor of Union Congregational Church in Boston, Massachusetts. He would remain in that position through 1878. In 1850, he married again, to Sarah Brackett.
In 1854, he took a trip to the American South, and wrote a book entitled A South-Side View of Slavery. This book was attacked by abolitionists for its perceived moderation. In 1861, Adams wrote a successor volume, The Sable Cloud, to answer his attackers. He was a member of the American Tract Society and the American Board for Foreign Missions.
He died in 1878, aged 72. He left nine children.
[edit] Works
- Remarks on the Unitarian Belief (1832)
- The Life of John Eliot (1847)
- A South-Side View of Slavery (1854)
- Catharine (1859)
- The Sable Cloud - A Southern Tale With Northern Comments (1861)
- A South-Side View of Slavery; or, Three months at the South (1854)
- Correspondence between Nehemiah Adams & Joy Hamlet Fairchild
[edit] References
- Who Was Who in America. Historical Volume 1607-1896. Chicago: Marquis Who's Who, 1963.