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ELIHU See also: American philanthropist, known as " the learned blacksmith," was See also: born in New Britain, See also: Conn., on the 8th of See also: December 181o
.
His See also: father (a See also: farmer and shoemaker), and his grandfather, both of the same name, had served in the Revolutionary army
.
An elder See also: brother, Elijah, who afterwards published The Geography of the Heavens and other text-books, went out into the See also: world while Elihu was still a boy, and after editing a paper in See also: Georgia came back to New Britain and started a school
.
Elihu, however, had to pick up what knowledge he could get from books at home, where his father's long illness, ending in See also: death, made his services necessary
.
At sixteen he was apprenticed to a blacksmith, and he made this his See also: trade both there and at See also: Worcester, Mass., where he removed in 1837
.
He had a passion for See also: reading; from the See also: village library he borrowed See also: book after book, which he studied at his forge or in his spare See also: hours; and he managed to find See also: time for attending his brother's school for a while, and even for pursuing his See also: search for culture among the advantages to be found at New Haven
.
He mastered Latin, See also: Greek, French, See also: Spanish, See also: Italian and See also: German, and by the age of See also: thirty could read nearly fifty See also: languages
.
His extraordinary aptitude gradually made him famous
.
He took to lecturing, and then to an ardent crusade on behalf of universal See also: peace and human brotherhood, which made him travel persistently to various parts of the See also: United States and See also: Europe
.
In 1848 he organized the Brussels congress of See also: Friends of Peace, which was followed by See also: annual congresses in See also: Paris, See also: Frankfort, See also: London, Manchester and See also: Edinburgh
.
He wrote and published voluminously, leaflets, See also: pamphlets and volumes, and started the Christian Citizen at Worcester to advocate his humanitarian views
.
Cheap trans-oceanic See also: postage was an ideal for which he agitated wherever he went
.
His vigorous philanthropy keeps the name of Elihu See also: Burritt See also: green in the See also: history of the peace See also: movement, apart from the fame of his learning
.
His country-men, at See also: universities such as Yale and elsewhere, delighted to do him honour; and he was U.S. See also: consul at See also: Birmingham from 1865 to 1870
.
He returned to See also: America and died at New Britain on the 9th of See also: March 1879
.
See
See also: Life, by See also: Charles Northend, in the memorial
See also: volume (1879); and an article by Ellen Strong See also: Bartlett in the New See also: England See also: Magazine (See also: June, 1897)
.
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