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ALONZO POTTER (1800-1865)

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Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 211 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ALONZO

POTTER (1800-1865)  ,
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American bishop of the
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Protestant Episcopal Church, was born at Beekman (now La Grange), Dutchess county, New York, on the 6th of
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July 1800 . His ancestors,
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English Friends, settled in Portsmouth, Rhode Island, between 164o and 166o; his
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father was a farmer, a Quaker, and in 1798 and in 1814 was a member of the New York Assembly . The son graduated at Union College in 1818, and in 1821-1826 was professor of mathematics and natural philosophy there . In 1824 he was ordained priest, and married a daughter of President Eliphalet Nott of Union College; she died in 1839, and in 1841 he married her cousin . He was rector of St Paul's Boston, from 1826 to 1831, when he became professor of moral and intellectual philosophy and
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political
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economy at Union . In 1838 he refused the
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post of assistant bishop of the eastern diocese (Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts and Rhode Island) . He was
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vice-president of Union College in 1838-1845 . After the suspension of Henry Ustick Onderdonk (1789-1858) from the bishopric of Pennsylvania Potter was chosen to succeed him, and was consecrated on the 23rd of September 1845 . Owing to his failing
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health he visited England and France in 1858, and in
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April 1864 sailed from New York for California, but died on board
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ship in
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San Francisco harbour on the 4th of July 1865 . In 1846 he established the western and north-eastern convocations of priests in his diocese; from 1850 to 186o, when its corner-stone was laid, he laboured for the " Hospital of the Protestant Episcopal Church in
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Philadelphia "; and in 1861 he established the Philadelphia Divinity School . In 1842 with George B . Emerson (1797–1871) he published The School and the Schoolmaster, which had a large circulation and
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great influence .

In 1847, 1848, 1849 and 1853 he delivered five courses of lectures on the

Lowell Institute foundation . He advocated
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temperance reform and frequently delivered a lecture on the Drinking Usages of Society (1852); he was an opponent of
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slavery and published a reply to the
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pro-slavery arguments of Bishop John Henry Hopkins (1792–1868) of
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Vermont . He edited many reprints and collections of sermons and lectures, and wrote: Political Economy (184o), The Principles of Science applied to the Domestic and Mechanic Arts (1841), Handbook for Readers and Students (1843), and-Religious Philosophy (187o) . See M . A. de Wolfe Howe,
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Memoirs of the
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Life and Services of the Right Reverend Alonzo Potter, D.D . (Philadelphia, 1871) . His
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brother, HORATIO POTTER (1802-1887), was born in Beek-man, New York, on the 9th of
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February 18o2 . He graduated at Union College in 1826, was ordained a priest of the Protestant Episcopal Church in 1828, was rector for several months in
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Saco, Maine, and in 1828-1833 was professor of mathematics and natural philosophy at Washington (now Trinity) College, Hart-ford,
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Connecticut . In 1833-1854 he was rector of St Peter's, Albany; in November 18J4 he was elected provincial bishop of New York in place of Benjamin Tredwell Onderdonk (1791-1861), who had been suspended, and upon Onderdonk's
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death he became bishop .

End of Article: ALONZO POTTER (1800-1865)
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HENRY CODMAN POTTER (1835–1908)

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