User:RGKMA/sandbox/Ephriam Peabody
Ephraim Peabody III | |
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Born | March 22, 1807 |
Died | November 28, 1856 | (aged 49)
Religion | Christianity |
Spouse | Mary Jane Derby |
Children | |
Denomination | Unitarian |
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Ephraim Peabody (March 22, 1807 – November 28, 1856) was an American Unitarian clergyman, preacher, and philanthropist who was one of the founders of the Provident Institution for Savings in Boston. Peabody also founded a school for adults whose education had been neglected and was otherwise largely interested in devising measures for the relief of the poor.
Biography
[edit]Peabody was born March 22, 1807 in Wilton, New Hampshire to Ephraim Peabody II and Ruth Abbot. His father was the village blacksmith and died young in 1816, leaving his mother Ruth to raise him and his sister.[1] He went to school for a year at Byfield Academy, then to Phillips Exeter Academy, which was at the time headed by his uncle Benjamin Abbot.[2]
Peabody attended Bowdoin College and graduated in 1827. Afterwards he studied theology in Cambridge, Massachusetts at the Harvard Divinity School where he graduated in 1830. Soon after, he went to Meadville, Pennsylvania to tutor the family of Harm Jan Huidekoper and to begin to preach. In 1832, Peabody accepted a call to preach at the First Unitarian Church congregation in Cincinnati, Ohio. Here he began a long association with Louisville minister James Freeman Clarke with whom he started a Unitarian periodical The Western Messanger.[1] In the summer of 1835, while visiting Boston, Massachusetts, Peabody suffered a lung hemorrhage due to tuberculosis and the death of his first son.[1] He returned to Cincinnati, but was unable to continue his work and spent the following winter preaching in Mobile, Alabama. He resigned from the Cincinnati congregation in 1836 and spent the next winter back in Mobile.[2]
During the summer of 1837, Peabody returned to Boston and preached at the Federal Street Church. Soon after he was offered a position at the First Congregational Society in New Bedford, Massachusetts alongside Rev. John H. Morison. While in New Bedford, Peabody lost two more children. He resigned from the New Bedford congregation in 1845 and was called to preach at King's Chapel in Boston, where he was pastor for the remainder of his life. A parishioner of Peabody's at King's Chapel said:[2][3]
In one respect he was the most remarkable man it has been my fortune to meet, and that was in the union of a childlike simplicity with a singular knowledge of men. His judgments on the characters of those with whom he came in contact were wonderful. All shams, all pretence, all mere outside coverings, seemed to fall at once before his gentle eye; and though his opinions were announced with great caution, and he always took the most lenient view possible, yet it was clear he understood perfectly well the real character of those whom he knew. The affection which he inspired in the people of his parish has never been surpassed.
Peabody was often the public orator or poet for both the city of Boston and the Unitarian denomination. In 1852, Peabody delivered the commencement poem to Bowdoin College.[2]
During 1853 he travelled in Europe to benefit his health,[2] and spent the winter of 1855 and 1856 in St. Augustine, Florida, with the same object.[citation needed]
Peabody was one of the founders of the Provident Institution for Savings which was the first chartered savings bank in the United States.[2] In Boston, Peabody was editor of The Christian Register, a Unitarian periodical journal. He also founded a school for adults whose education had been neglected and developed plans for the Boston school system.[2]
While serving at King's Chapel, Peabody happened to marry famous Boston portrait-painter William Morris Hunt to Louise Perkins in 1855.[4] His sermons, with a memoir, were published in 1857, and a volume of his writings, entitled Christian Days and Thoughts, was published in 1858.
Peabody suffered another lung hemorrhage in the summer of 1855 which caused him to retire from preaching. Peabody's last public appearance was later that year in 1855 where he gave a memorial sermon at his friend Judge Charles Jackson's funeral.[2]
In 1833 Peabody married Mary Jane Derby, the daughter of Elias Hasket Derby. Together they had seven children, three of which died in childhood:
- Samuel A. Peabody (1834–1836)
- Ellen Derby Peabody (1836–1869)—married Charles William Eliot
- Anna Huidekoper Peabody (1838–1920)—married Henry Whitney Bellows
- George Derby Peabody (1840–1842)
- Emily Morison Peabody (1842–1845)
- Robert Swain Peabody (1845–1917)—notable Boston architect of Peabody & Stearns and President of the American Institute of Architects
- Rev. Francis Greenwood Peabody (1847–1936)—Unitarian minister and theology professor at Harvard University
Ephraim Peabody died in Boston, Massachusetts, on November 28, 1856 at the age of 49.[2]
Citations
[edit]- ^ a b c Carpenter, Frank (20 July 2001). "Ephraim Peabody". Dictionary of Unitarian & Universalist Biography.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Eliot, Samuel A. "Peabody, Ephraim (1807-1856)". Harvard Square Library. Archived from the original on 24 September 2022.
- ^ Henry James (1930). Charles W. Eliot, President of Harvard University. p. 76.
- ^ Massachusetts Marriages, 1841-1915," database with images, FamilySearch(https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NWBG-S1C : 7 December 2017), William M Hunt and Louisa D Perkins, 18 Oct 1855; citing , Boston, Massachusetts, United States, State Archives, Boston; FHL microfilm 1,433,014.
References
[edit]- Gilman, D. C.; Peck, H. T.; Colby, F. M., eds. (1905). . New International Encyclopedia (1st ed.). New York: Dodd, Mead.
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Wilson, J. G.; Fiske, J., eds. (1900). . Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton.
External links
[edit]- An autograph book kept by Ephraim Peabody covering the period 1717-1849 and including letters from many leading Unitarians and the papers of Ephraim Peabody are in the Harvard Divinity School Library at Harvard Divinity School in Cambridge, Massachusetts.