Edwin Paxton Hood
Edwin Paxton Hood (1820–1885) was an English nonconformist and author.
Life
The son of a seaman and a servant, he was born in Half Moon Street, Piccadilly in London, on 24 October 1820. Losing both parents before he was seven years old, he was brought up at Deptford by a heraldic painter named Simpson.[1]
Hood began to lecture on temperance and peace about 1840, and in 1852 entered the congregational ministry. His first charge was at North Nibley in Gloucestershire. In 1857 he moved to Offord Road, Islington. From 1862 to 1873 he officiated at Queen Street, Brighton. He then returned to Offord Road, and later moved to Cavendish Street, Manchester, but resigned his charge in 1880 after political differences with his congregation: he was a strong liberal. After a brief visit to America, he became the pastor of Falcon Square Church, Aldersgate Street in London.[1]
Hood died suddenly at Paris on 12 June 1885. He married three times, his third wife being a daughter of the Rev. Samuel Oughton of Kingston, Jamaica.[1]
Legacy
Hood took much interest in the Royal Hospital for Incurables, for which he raised £2,000 by a pamphlet entitled The Palace of Pain, London, 1885. After his death a further sum of £525 was raised by public subscription, and given by his widow to the hospital, one of the wards of which was named after Hood.[1]
Works
Hood was for some years editor of the Eclectic and Congregational Review, and later of The Argonaut. He was throughout life a prolific writer of popular books, among them biographies of the nonconformists Thomas Binney, Christmas Evans, and Robert Hall. His main works were:
- ‘The Age and its Architects: ten chapters on the English People in relation to the Times,’ London, 1850; 2nd edit. 1852.
- ‘Self-Education: twelve chapters for Young Thinkers,’ London, 1851, reissued as ‘Self-Formation,’ 3rd edit. 1858, new ed. 1865.
- ‘Old England: Historic Pictures of Life in Old Castles, Forests, Abbeys, and Cities,’ &c., London, 1851.
- ‘Dream Land and Ghost Land: Visits and Wanderings there in the Nineteenth Century,’ London, 1852.
- ‘John Milton: the Patriot and Poet,’ London, 1852.
- ‘The Uses of Biography,’ London, 1852.
- ‘Andrew Marvell: the Wit, Statesman, and Poet: his Life and Writings,’ London, 1853.
- ‘Swedenborg: a Biography and an Exposition,’ London, 1854.
- ‘The Last of the Saxons: Light and Fire from the Writings of William Cobbett,’ London, 1854 (a volume of selections).
- ‘William Wordsworth: a Biography,’ London, 1856.
- ‘The Peerage of Poverty; or Learners and Workers in Fields, Farms, and Factories,’ 1st ser. 3rd edit. London, 1859,; 2nd ser. 1861, 5th edit. enlarged, 1870.
- ‘Thomas Binney: his Mind, Life, and Opinions,’ London, 1874.
- ‘Isaac Watts: his Life and Writings, his Homes and Friends,’ London, 1875.
- ‘Thomas Carlyle: Philosophic Thinker, Theologian, Historian, and Poet,’ London, 1875.
- ‘Vignettes of the Great Revival of the Eighteenth Century’ (reprinted from Sunday at Home), London, 1880; 2nd edit. 1887.
- ‘Christmas Evans, the Preacher of Wild Wales: his Country, his Times, and his Contemporaries,’ London, 1881; 3rd edit. 1888.
- ‘Robert Hall,’ London, 1881.
- ‘Oliver Cromwell: his Life, Times, Battlefields, and Contemporaries,’ London, 1882; 2nd edit. 1884.
- ‘Scottish Characteristics,’ London, 1883.
- ‘The Throne of Eloquence: great Preachers, Ancient and Modern,’ London, 1885.
- ‘The Vocation of the Preacher,’ London, 1886.[1]
References
- Attribution
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Rigg, James McMullen (1891). "Hood, Edwin Paxton". In Lee, Sidney. Dictionary of National Biography 27. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
External links
*hymntime.com, Edwin Paxton Hood.
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