David Swing
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David Swing (August 23, 1830 - October 3, 1894), United States clergyman, was born of Alsatian stock in Cincinnati, Ohio.
He spent most of his boyhood on a farm and earned his schooling. He graduated from Miami University in 1852, a classmate and Phi Delta Theta fraternity brother of Benjamin Harrison. Swing studied theology at Lane Seminary; and was principal of the preparatory school at Miami in 1853-1866. He became pastor in 1866 of the Westminster Presbyterian Church (after 1868 the Fourth Church) in Chicago, which was destroyed in the fire of 1871; he then preached in McVicker's theatre until 1874, when a new building was completed.
He became a confidant of Abraham Lincoln and Mary Todd Lincoln.
In April 1874 he was tried before the presbytery of Chicago on charges of heresy preferred by Dr Francis Landey Patton, who argued that Professor Swing preached that men were saved by works, that he held a "modal" Trinity, that he did not believe in plenary inspiration, that he unduly countenanced Unitarianism, etc. The presbytery acquitted Dr Swing, who resigned from the presbytery when he learned that the case was to be appealed to the synod. As an action was taken against the church, of which he had remained pastor, he resigned the pastorate, again leased McVicker's theatre (and after 1880 leased Central Music Hall, which was built for the purpose), and in 1875 founded the Central Church, to which many of his former parishioners followed him, and in which he built up a large Sunday school, and established a kindergarten, industrial schools, and other important charities.
He was an excellent preacher, but no theologian. He published Sermons (1874), including most of his "heretical" utterances, Truths for To-day (2 vols, 1874-1876), Motives of Life (1879), and Club Essays (1881). See Joseph F Newton, David Swing, Poet-Preacher (Chicago, 1909).
A residence hall is named in David's honor at Miami University.
He is likely the father of painter David Carrick Swing who was born in Ohio in 1864.
This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.