Henry Ward Beecher: An American PortraitPickle Partners Publishing, 2017 M01 12 - 413 pages First published in 1927, this is the acclaimed biography of Henry Ward Beecher (1813-1887), the American Congregationalist clergyman, social reformer and speaker best known for his support of the abolition of slavery. It was written by former American diplomat, journalist, author and humanitarian Paxton Hibben (1880-1928). “Mr. Hibben has written a great biography, and one of lasting value. It is not merely interesting; it is profound. But its historical scholarship does not lie like a leaden weight on the book; for Hibben’s style is graceful and delicate, sometimes almost gay. He is so saturated with Beecher knowledge that he writes without effort. In reading it one feels that Paxton Hibben understands Beecher better than anybody has ever understood him, and that this book is a permanent contribution to American history.”—W. E. Woodward |
From inside the book
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... Harriet Beecher Stowe found his sermons as unintelligible as Choctaw. Certainly, to read, they are remarkably uninspiring, and, curiously enough, considering the stirring times in which he lived, with little or no application to the ...
... Harriet Beecher Stowe found his sermons as unintelligible as Choctaw. Certainly, to read, they are remarkably uninspiring, and, curiously enough, considering the stirring times in which he lived, with little or no application to the ...
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... Harriet (the second of that name—the first had died) only a year older than Henry Ward—the Harriet Beecher Stowe of the years to come. There was Charles, the baby, and the two negro bound girls, Zillah and Rachel Crook, and Betsey Burr ...
... Harriet (the second of that name—the first had died) only a year older than Henry Ward—the Harriet Beecher Stowe of the years to come. There was Charles, the baby, and the two negro bound girls, Zillah and Rachel Crook, and Betsey Burr ...
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... Harriet Porter, of Portland, Maine, niece of the great Rufus King, heard Lyman Beecher preach at the Park Street church. He was forty-two. He was by no means handsome. There was much of the village parson about him. But he was a ...
... Harriet Porter, of Portland, Maine, niece of the great Rufus King, heard Lyman Beecher preach at the Park Street church. He was forty-two. He was by no means handsome. There was much of the village parson about him. But he was a ...
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... Harriet's popular cousins. But Harriet herself waited in vain. Her thoughts gradually turned from dances and parties at Broad's, near Portland, to the vice of the day—absorption in the welfare of the soul. “For a whole month I sought ...
... Harriet's popular cousins. But Harriet herself waited in vain. Her thoughts gradually turned from dances and parties at Broad's, near Portland, to the vice of the day—absorption in the welfare of the soul. “For a whole month I sought ...
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... Harriet Porter married him, and came to live in the rambling, rat-infested, overcrowded parsonage at Litchfield. “A ... Harriet Beecher Stowe. Dr. Nathan Lord had known Harriet Porter all her life. “She never made a mistake,” he says ...
... Harriet Porter married him, and came to live in the rambling, rat-infested, overcrowded parsonage at Litchfield. “A ... Harriet Beecher Stowe. Dr. Nathan Lord had known Harriet Porter all her life. “She never made a mistake,” he says ...
Contents
PART IVSPRING TIDE 135 | |
CHAPTER XVI1860 136 | |
CHAPTER XVIIENGLAND 146 | |
CHAPTER XVIIIFORT SUMTER 158 | |
CHAPTER XIXLIVINGSTON STREET 172 | |
CHAPTER XXFALTER 186 | |
PART VCLIMAX 201 | |
CHAPTER XXVFALL 240 | |
PART VINEW LIFE 251 | |
CHAPTER XXVI1874 252 | |
CHAPTER XXVIICITY COURT 263 | |
CHAPTER XXVIIIHELL 278 | |
CHAPTER XXIXDELMONICOS 286 | |
CHAPTER XXXREDEMPTION 297 | |
ACKNOWLEDGMENT 311 | |
CHAPTER XXI1870 202 | |
CHAPTER XXIITHE UPPER ROOM 212 | |
CHAPTER XXIIIREMSEN STREET 222 | |
CHAPTER XXIVYALE 229 | |
SOURCES CITED 312 | |
REQUEST FROM THE PUBLISHER 326 | |
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Common terms and phrases
Abolitionists adultery American Amherst anti-slavery audience Auto Birney Bonner Boston Bowen Brooklyn brother Bullard called Calvin Calvin Fletcher Catherine Charles Christ Christian Union Cincinnati congregation editor Elizabeth Elizabeth Cady Stanton Elizabeth Tilton emotional England Eunice Beecher Family Biog feel felt Frank Moulton Frémont God’s hand Harriet Harriet Beecher Stowe Hattie heart Henry Ward Beecher husband ibid Independent Indianapolis John Judge Fullerton July Ketcham knew ladies Lawrenceburgh letter Lib Tilton Lincoln Litchfield live Lyman Beecher mind minister moral Mount Pleasant N. Y. Sun N. Y. Tribune never Pastor Plymouth Church political preached preacher Presbyterian President Scandal Sept sermons slave slavery Society stood story suffrage Synod Theodore Tilton Theodore’s things thought told took truth Victoria Woodhull Ward’s Wendell Phillips whole wife William woman women wrote Yale Lectures York young Beecher