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ORESTES AUGUSTUS BROWNSON (1803-1876)

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Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 675 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ORESTES AUGUSTUS BROWNSON (1803-1876)  ,
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American theological, philosophical and sociological writer, was born in
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Stockbridge,
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Vermont, on the 16th of September 1803 . Having spent some time in active religious, reformatory and
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political (Democratic)
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work in the interior of New York state, and at Walpole, New Hampshire, and Canton, Massachusetts, Brownson removed in 1839 to
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Chelsea, Mass . He at once began to take an
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independent
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part in the movements then agitating New England, which between 183o and r85o was stirred by discussions pertaining to
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Unitarianism, transcendentalism, spiritual-ism, abolitionism and various schemes for communistic living . He was one of the founders, in New York, of the short-lived Workingman's party in 1828, and established the Boston Quarterly Review, mainly written by himself, in 1838 . This periodical was merged in the U.S . Democratic Review of New York in i842 . In religion he first became a Prebysterian .(1822); was a Universalist minister from 1826 to 1831, editing for some time the chief journal of this church, the Gospel Advocate ; was an independent preacher at Ithaca, N.Y., in 1831; became a Unitarian minister in 1832, and in 1836 organized in Boston the Society for Christian Union and Progress, of which he was the pastor for seven years . In 1844 he became a
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Roman Catholic and so remained, though the question of the orthodoxy of his writings was at one time submitted by the pope to Cardinal Franzelin, who recommended Brownson, to little purpose, to express his views with more moderation . In his philosophy Brownson was a more or less independent follower of Comte for a short time, and of Victor Cousin, who, in his Fragmens philosophiques, praised him; he may be said to have taught a modified intuitionalism . In his schemes for social reform he was at first a student of Robert Owen, until his later views led him to accept Roman Catholicism . His first quarterly was followed, in 1844, by Brownson's Quarterly Review (first published in Boston and after 18J5 in New York), in which he expressed his opinions on many themes until its suspension in 1864, and after its revival for a brief period in 1873-1875 . Of his numerous publications in
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book form, the chief during his lifetime were Charles
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Elwood, or the Infidel Converted (184o, autobiographical), in which he strongly favoured the Roman Catholic Church; and The American Republic: its Constitution, Tendencies and Destiny (1865), in which he based government on ethics, declaring the
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national existence to be a moral and even a theocratic entity, not depending for validity upon the
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sovereignty of the
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people .

Brownson died in

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Detroit, Michigan, on the 17th of
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April 1876 . After his
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death, his son, Henry F . Brownson, collected and published his various political, religious, philosophical, scientific and
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literary writings, in twenty
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octavo volumes (Detroit, 1883-1887), of which a condensed
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summary appeared in a single
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volume, also prepared by his son, entitled Literary and Political Views (New York, 1893) . The son also published a biography in three volumes (Detroit, 1898-1900) . His daughter, Sarah M . Brownson (1839-1876), who married in 1873 William J . Tenney, was the author of several novels, and wrote a
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Life of
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Demetrius Augustine Gallitgin, Prince and Priest (1873) .

End of Article: ORESTES AUGUSTUS BROWNSON (1803-1876)
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