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See also: American writer of books for the See also: young, was See also: born at Hallowell, Maine, on the 14th of See also: November 1803
.
He graduated at See also: Bowdoin See also: College in 182o; studied at See also: Andover Theological Seminary in 1821, 1822, and 1824; was tutor in 1824-1825, and from 1825 to 1829 was professor of See also: mathematics and natural philosophy in Amherst College; was licensed to preach by the Hampshire Association in 1826; founded the See also: Mount See also: Vernon School for young ladies in See also: Boston in 1829, and was See also: principal of it in 1829-1833; was pastor of See also: Eliot Congregational See also: Church (which he founded), at
See also: Roxbury, Mass., in 1834-1835; and was, with his See also: brothers, a founder, and in 1843-1851 a principal of See also: Abbott's Institute, and in 1845-1848of the Mount Vernon School for boys, in New See also: York City
.
He was a prolific author, writing juvenile stories, brief histories and See also: biographies, and religious books for the general reader, and a few See also: works in popular science
.
He died on the 31st of See also: October 1879 at Farmington, Maine, where he had spent See also: part of his See also: time since 1839, and where his See also: brother See also: Samuel See also: Phillips Abbott founded in 1844 the Abbott School, popularly called "Little Blue." See also: Jacob Abbott's " Rollo Books "—Rollo at See also: Work, Rollo at See also: Play, Rollo in See also: Europe, &c
.
(28 vols.)—are the best known of his writings, having as their chief characters a representative boy and his associates
.
In them Abbott did for one or two generations of young American readers a service not unlike that performed earlier, in See also: England and See also: America, by the authors of Evenings at Home, See also: Sandford and See also: Merlon, and the See also: Parent's Assistant
.
Of his other writings (he produced more than two See also: hundred volumes in all), the best are the See also: Franconia Stories (10 vols.), twenty-two volumes of See also: biographical histories in a series of See also: thirty-two volumes (with his brother See also: John S
.
C
.
Abbott), and the Young Christian,—all of which had enormous circulations
.
His sons, Benjamin
See also: Vaughan Abbott (183o-189o), See also: Austin Abbott (1831-1896), both eminent lawyers, Lyman Abbott (q.v.), and See also: Edward Abbott (1841-1908), a clergyman, were also well-known authors
.
See his Young Christian, Memorial Edition, with a Sketch of the Author by one of his sons, i.e
.
Edward Abbott (New York, 1882), with a bibliography of his works
.
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