Nehemiah Adams

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Template:Short description Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Template:Main otherScript error: No such module "Check for clobbered parameters".Template:Wikidata image Reverend Nehemiah Adams (February 19, 1806 – October 6, 1878) was an American clergyman and writer.

Biography

He was born in Salem, Massachusetts,Template:Sfn in 1806 to Nehemiah Adams and Mehitabel Torrey Adams. He graduated from Harvard University in 1826, and from Andover Theological Seminary in 1829. That same year, he was ordained as co-pastor, with Abiel Holmes, of the First Congregational Church in Cambridge, Massachusetts.Template:Sfn In 1832, he married Martha Hooper.

In 1834, he became pastor of Union Congregational Church in Boston, Massachusetts. He would remain in that position until his death in 1878.Template:Sfn 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 (Boston, 1855).[1] In the book, he lauded slavery as beneficial to the Negroes' religious character.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn This book was one of several polemic works he wrote. It caused a great sensation, and he received much hostile criticism. The book was attacked by abolitionists for its perceived moderation; the abolitionist newspaper The Liberator called it "as vile a work as was ever written, in apology and defence of 'the sum of all villanies'".[2]

In 1861, Adams wrote a successor volume, The Sable Cloud, a Southern Tale with Northern Comments, to answer his attackers, and it was met with a similar response.[3]

He also wrote The Cross in the Cell, Scriptural Argument for Endless Punishment, Broadcast, At Eventide,Template:Sfn and a Life of John Eliot.Template:Sfn He was a member of the American Tract Society and the American Board for Foreign Missions.Template:Sfn

In 1869, in consequence of his failing health, his people procured an associate pastor and gave Adams a long leave of absence. He made a voyage round the world and described it in Under the Mizzenmast: A Voyage Around the World (1871).Template:Sfn

Adams died in 1878, aged 72. He left nine children.

  • Anna Hooper [b.d.8 Dec 1832]
  • Martha Hooper [b.8 Aug 1834-d.29 Sept 1862] married 8 June 1859 Thomas Joseph Lee
  • Catherine [b.1836-d.19 Jan 1857]
  • Rev William Hooper [b.8 Jan 1838-d.15 May 1880] married 1866 PAulina Thomas; married 1878 Margaret Holmes
  • Robert Chamblet [b.1 Dec 1839-d.10 Aug 1902] married MAry Eminy Job
  • Susan Gertrude [b.Apr 1841-d.19 Jan 1917] married Daniel Ward Job
  • Mary [b.Apr 25,1846-d.3 sept 1874]
  • Sarah [b.1847-d.1879]

Notes

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Attribution:

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References

Further reading

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