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See also: American clergyman and author, was See also: born in See also: Boston, Mass., on the 13th of See also: December 1835
.
Through his See also: father, See also: William
See also: Gray Brooks, he was descended from the Rev
.
See also: John
See also: Cotton; through his See also: mother, Mary See also: Ann See also: Phillips, a woman of rare force of character and religious faith, he was a See also: great-See also: grandson of the founder of Phillips See also: Academy, See also: Andover, ' Mass
.
Of the six sons, four—Phillips, See also: Frederic, Arthur and John Cotton—entered the See also: ministry of the See also: Protestant Episcopal See also: Church
.
Phillips Brooks prepared for
See also: college at the Boston Latin school and graduated at Harvard in 1855
.
After a See also: short and unsuccessful experience as a teacherin the Boston Latin school, he began in 1856 to study for the ministry of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the theological seminary at Alexandria, Virginia
.
In 1859 he graduated, was ordained deacon by See also: Bishop William Meade of Virginia, and became rector of the church of the Advent, See also: Philadelphia
.
In 186o he was ordained See also: priest, and in 1862 became rector of the church of the See also: Holy Trinity, Philadelphia, where he remained seven years, gaining an increasing name as preacher and patriot
.
Endowed by See also: inheritance with a See also: rich religious character, evangelical traditions, ethical temper and strong intellect, he See also: developed, by wide See also: reading in See also: ancient and See also: modern literature, a See also: personality and attitude of mind which appealed to the characteristic thought and See also: life of the See also: period
.
With See also: Tennyson, See also: Coleridge, Frederic D
.
See also: Maurice and F
.
W
.
See also: Robertson he was in strong sympathy
.
During the See also: Civil War he upheld with power the cause of the See also: North and the See also: negro, and his See also: sermon on the See also: death of President Lincoln was an eloquent expression of the character of both men
.
In 1869 he became rector of Trinity church, Boston
.
In 1877 the See also: present church was finished, the architect being his friend H H
.
See also: Richardson
.
Here Phillips Brooks preached See also: Sunday after Sunday to great congregations, until he was consecrated bishop of Massachusetts in 1891
.
In 1886 he declined an election as assistant bishop of Pennsylvania
.
He was for many years an overseer and preacher of Harvard University, his influence upon the religious life of the university being deep and wide
.
In 1881 he declined an invitation to be the See also: sole preacher to the university and professor of Christian See also: ethics
.
On the 3oth of See also: April 1891 he was elected See also: sixth bishop of Massachusetts, and on the 14th of See also: October was consecrated to that office in Trinity church, Boston
.
After a brief but great episcopate of fifteen months, he died, unmarried, on the 23rd of See also: January 1893
.
Phillips Brooks was a tall, well-proportioned See also: man of See also: fine physique, his height being six feet four inches
.
In character he was pure, See also: simple, endowed with excellent See also: judgment and a keen sense of See also: humour, and See also: quick to See also: respond to any See also: call for sympathy
.
When kindled by his subject it seemed to take possession of him and pour itself out with overwhelming See also: speed of utterance, with heat and power
.
His sympathy with men of other ways and thought, and with the truth in other ecclesiastical systems gained for him the confidence and affection of men of varied habits of mind and religious traditions, and was thus a great factor in gaining increasing support for the Episcopal Church
.
As years went by his influence as a religious See also: leader became unique
.
The degree of S.T.D. had been conferred upon him by the See also: universities of Harvard (1877), and of See also: Columbia (1887), and the degree of D.D. by the university of See also: Oxford, See also: England (1885)
.
In 1877 he published a course of lectures upon preaching, which he had delivered at the theological school of Yale University, and which are an expression of his own experience
.
In 1879 appeared the Bohlen Lectures on " The Influence of Jesus." In 1878 he published his first See also: volume of sermons, and from See also: time to time issued other volumes, including Sermons Preached in See also: English Churches (1883)
.
In 1901, at New See also: York, was published, in two volumes, Phillips Brooks, Life and Letters, by the Rev
.
A
.
V
.
G
.
See also: Allen, D
.
D., professor of ecclesiastical See also: history, Episcopal Theological school, See also: Cam-See also: bridge, Mass., who in 1907 published at New York, in a sinifle volume, Phillips Brooks, an See also: abbreviation and revision of the earlier biography (W
.
L.)
BROOKS'S, a See also: London See also: club in St See also: James's Street
.
It was founded in 1764 by the
See also: dukes of See also: Roxburghe and See also: Portland
.
The See also: building had been previously opened as a gaming-See also: house by William Macall (Almack), and afterwards by Brooks, a See also: wine See also: merchant and See also: money-lender, whose name it retained
.
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