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ALEXANDER HILL EVERETT (1790-1847)

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Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 8 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ALEXANDER HILL EVERETT (1790-1847)  ,
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American author and diplomatist, was born in Boston, Massachusetts, on the 19th of March 1790 . He was the son of Rev . Oliver Everett (1753-1802), a Congregational minister in Boston, and the
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brother of
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Edward Everett . He graduated at Harvard in 18o6, taking the highest honours of his
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year, though the youngest member of his class . He spent one year as a teacher in Phillips Academy, Exeter, New Hampshire, and then began the study of law in the office of John Quincy Adams . In 1809 Adams was appointed minister to Russia, and Everett accompanied him as his private secretary, remaining attached to the American legation in Russia until 1811 . He was secretary of the American legation at The Hague in 1815-1816, and charge d'affaires there from 1818 to 1824 . From 1825 to 1829, during the
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presidency of John Quincy Adams, he was the
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United States minister to Spain . At that time Spain recognized none of the governments established by her revolted colonies, and Everett became the
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medium of all communications between the
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Spanish government and the several nations of Spanish origin which had been established, by successful revolutions, on the other side of the ocean . Everett was a member of the Massachusetts legislature in 183o–1835, was president of Jefferson College in
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Louisiana in 1842–1844i and was appointed
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commissioner of the United States to
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China in 1845, but did not go to that country until the following year, and died on the 29th of May 1847 at Canton, China . Everett, however, is known rather as a man of letters than as a diplomat . In addition to numerous articles, published chiefly in the North American Review, of which he was the editor from 1829 to 1835, he wrote:
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Europe, or a General Survey of the
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Political Situation of the
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Principal Powers, with Conjectures on their Future Prospects (1822), which attracted considerable attention in Europe and was translated into German, French and Spanish; New Ideas on Population (1822);
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America, or a General Survey of the Political Situation of the Several Powers of the Western Continent, with Conjectures on their Future Prospects (1827), which was translated into several
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European
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languages; a
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volume of Poems (1845); and Critical and
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Miscellaneous Essays (first series, 1845; second series, 1847) .

End of Article: ALEXANDER HILL EVERETT (1790-1847)
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