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THOMAS WENTWORTH HIGGINSON (1823—1911)

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Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 455 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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THOMAS WENTWORTH HIGGINSON (1823—1911)  ,
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American author and soldier, was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on the 22nd of December 1823 . He was a descendant of Francis Higginson (1588—163o), who emigrated from Leicestershire to the colony of Massachusetts
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Bay and was a minister of the church of
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Salem, Mass., in 1629—163o; and a grandson of Stephen Higginson (1943—1828), a Boston merchant, who was a member of the
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Continental Congress in 1783, took an active
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part in sup-pressing Shay's
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Rebellion, was the author of the " Laco " letters (1789), and rendered valuable services to the
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United States government as
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navy agent from the 11th of May to the 22nd of
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June 1798 . Graduating from Harvard in 1841, he was a school-master for two years, studied
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theology at the Harvard Divinity School, and was pastor in 1847—185o of the First Religious Society (Unitarian) of
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Newburyport, Massachusetts, and of the
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Free Church at Worcester in 1852—1858 . He was a Free
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Soil
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candidate for Congress (185o), but was defeated; was indicted with Wendell Phillips and Theodore Parker for participation in the attempt to release the fugitive slave, Anthony Burns, in Boston (18J3); was engaged in the effort to make Kansas a free state after the passage of the Kansas-
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Nebraska
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Bill of 1854; and during the
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Civil War was captain in the 51st Massachusetts
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Volunteers, and from November 1862 to
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October 1864, when he was retired because of a wound received in the preceding August, was colonel of the First South Carolina Volunteers, the first regiment recruited from former slaves for the Federal service . He de-scribed his experiences inArmy
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Life in a Black Regiment (1870) . In politics Higginson was successively a Republican, an
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Independent and a Democrat . His writings show a deep love of nature,
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art and humanity, and are marked by vigour of thought, sincerity of feeling, and grace and finish of style . In his
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Common Sense About
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Women (1881) and his Women and Men (1888) he advocated equality of opportunity and equality of rights for the two sexes . Among his numerous books are Outdoor Papers (1863) ; Mal bone: an Oldport
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Romance (1869) ; Life of Margaret Fuller Ossoli (in " American Men of Letters " series, 1884) ; A Larger
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History of the United States of
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America to the Close of President Jackson's Ad-ministration (188,5); The Monarch of Dreams (1886); Travellers and Outlaws (1889); The Afternoon Landscape (1889), poems and
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translations; Life of Francis Higginson (in " Makers of America," 1891) ; Concerning All of Us (1892) ; The Procession of the Flowers and Kindred Papers 897); Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (in " American Men of Letters " series, 1902); John Greenleaf Whittier (in "
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English Men of Letters " series, 1902) ; A Reader's History of American Literature (1903), the Lowell Institute lectures for 1903, edited by Henry W . Boynton; and Life and Times of Stephen Higginson (1907) . His volumes of reminiscence, Cheerful Yesterdays (1898), Old Cambridge (1899), Contemporaries (1899), and Part of a Man's Life (1905), are characteristic and charming
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works . His collected works were published in seven vols .

(1900) .

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