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HOSEA BALLOU (1771-1852)

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Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 282 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HOSEA BALLOU (1771-1852)  ,
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American Universalist clergy-man, was born in Richmond, New Hampshire, on the 30th of
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April 1771 . He was a son of Maturin Ballou, a Baptist minister, was self-educated, early devoted himself to the
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ministry, became a convert to Universalism in 1789, and in 1794 became a pastor of a congregation at Dana, Massachusetts . He preached at Barnard,
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Vermont, and the surrounding towns in 18o1–18o7; at Portsmouth, New Hampshire, in 1807–1815; at
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Salem, Massachusetts, in 1815–1817; and as pastor of the Second Universalist Church in Boston from December 1817 until his
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death there on the 7th of
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June 1852 . He founded and edited The Universalist
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Magazine (1819; later called The Trumpet) and The Universalist Expositor (1831; later The Universalist Quarterly Review); wrote about 1o,000 sermons, many
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hymns, essays and polemic theological
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works; and is best known for Notes on the Parables (1804), A
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Treatise on
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Atonement (1805) and Examination of the
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Doctrine of a Future Retribution (1834); in these, especiallythe second, he showed himself the
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principal American expositor of Universalism . His
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great contribution to his Church was the
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body of denominational literature he
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left . From the
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theology of John Murray, who like Ballou has been called the
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father of American Universalism," he differed in that he divested Universalism of every trace of Calvinism and opposed legalism and trinitarian views . Consult the biography by Thomas Whittemore (4.vols., Boston, 1854--1855) and that by Oscar F . Safford (Boston, 1889) ;. and J .. C . Adams,
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Hosea Ballou and the Gospel Renaissance (Boston, 1904) . His
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grand-
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nephew, HOSEA BALLOU (1796–1861), born in Halifax, Vermont, on the 18th of
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October 1796, preached to Universalists in Stafford,
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Connecticut (1815–1821); and in Massachusetts, in
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Roxbury (1821–1838) and in
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Medford (1838–1853); and in 1853 was elected. first president of Tufts College at Medford, serving in that office until shortly before his death, which took place at Somerville, Massachusetts, on the 27th of May 186i . He was the first (1847) to urge the necessity of a Universalist denominational college, and this did much towards the establishment of Tufts .

He was associated with the

elder Hosea Ballou in editing The Universalist Quarterly Review; edited an edition of Sismondi's
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History of the
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Crusades (1833); and wrote the Ancient History of Universalism, down to A.D . 553 (1829; 2nd ed., 1842) .

End of Article: HOSEA BALLOU (1771-1852)
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