HIGGINSON, THOMAS WENTWORTH (STORROW)


Meaning of HIGGINSON, THOMAS WENTWORTH (STORROW) in English

born Dec. 22, 1823, Cambridge, Mass., U.S. died May 9, 1911, Cambridge American reformer who was dedicated to the Abolition movement before the American Civil War. Ordained after graduating from Harvard Divinity School (1847), Higginson became pastor of the First Religious Society of Newburyport, Mass., where he preached a social gospel too liberal even for Unitarians. Two years later his progressive views on temperance, women's rights, labour, and slavery caused him to lose his congregation. On the passage of the Fugitive Slave Act (1850), he joined the Boston Vigilance Committee to aid escaping slaves. While pastor of a "Free Church" in Worcester, Mass. (1852-61), he took a leading part in liberating the fugitive Anthony Burns (1854); he supported John Brown both in Kansas (1856) and in his raid on Harpers Ferry, W.Va. (1859). During the Civil War he accepted command of the 1st South Carolina Volunteers, later the 33rd U.S. Colored Troops, the first black regiment in the U.S. armed forces. After 1864 he wrote a series of popular biographies and histories and a novel. Higginson discovered and encouraged the poet Emily Dickinson.

Britannica English vocabulary.      Английский словарь Британика.