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Edward Everett Hale

Edward Everett Hale (April 3, 1822 – June 10, 1909) was an American author, historian, and Unitarian minister, best known for his writings such as "The Man Without a Country", published in Atlantic Monthly, in support of the Union during the Civil War. He was the grand-nephew of Nathan Hale, the American spy during the Revolutionary War.

Edward Everett Hale
From The Critic (1901)
BornApril 3, 1822
DiedJune 10, 1909(1909-06-10) (aged 87)
EducationBoston Latin School
Harvard College (1839)
Harvard Divinity School
Occupations
  • Author
  • historian
  • minister
Childrennine, including Ellen Day Hale (daughter) and Philip Leslie Hale (son)
Parent(s)Nathan Hale
Sarah Preston Everett
RelativesLucretia Peabody Hale (sister)
Susan Hale (sister)
Charles Hale (brother)
Edward Everett (maternal uncle)
Nathan Hale (granduncle)
Signature

Life and career edit

Hale was born on April 3, 1822,[1] in Boston, Massachusetts, the son of Nathan Hale (1784–1863), proprietor and editor of the Boston Daily Advertiser, and Sarah Preston Everett; and the brother of Lucretia Peabody Hale, Susan Hale, and Charles Hale. Edward Hale was a nephew of Edward Everett, the orator and statesman, and grand-nephew of Nathan Hale (1755–1776), the Revolutionary War hero executed by the British for espionage. Edward Everett Hale was also a descendant of Richard Everett and related to Helen Keller.[citation needed]

Hale was a child prodigy who exhibited extraordinary literary skills. He graduated from Boston Latin School at age 13[2] and enrolled at Harvard College immediately after. There, he settled in with the literary set, won two Bowdoin Prizes and was elected the Class Poet.[2] He graduated second in his class in 1839[3] and then studied at Harvard Divinity School. Decades later, he reflected on the new liberal theology there:

The group of leaders who surrounded Dr. [William Ellery] Channing had, with him, broken forever from the fetters of Calvinistic theology. These young people were trained to know that human nature is not totally depraved. They were taught that there is nothing of which it is not capable... For such reasons, and many more, the young New Englanders of liberal training rushed into life, certain that the next half century was to see a complete moral revolution in the world.[4]

 
Edward Everett Hale with his sister Susan in 1855

Hale was licensed to preach as a Unitarian minister in 1842[3] by the Boston Association of Ministers. In 1846 he became pastor of the Church of the Unity in Worcester, Massachusetts.[2] Hale married Emily Baldwin Perkins in 1852; she was the niece of Connecticut Governor and U.S. Senator Roger Sherman Baldwin and Emily Pitkin Perkins Baldwin on her father's side and Lyman Beecher, Harriet Beecher Stowe and Henry Ward Beecher on her mother's side. They had nine children: Alexander, born and died 1853; Ellen Day, 1854–1939; Arthur, 1859–1939;Charles Alexander, 1861–1867; Edward Everett Jr., 1863–1932; Philip Leslie Hale, 1865–1931; Herbert Dudley, 1866–1908; Henry Kidder, 1868–1876; Robert Beverly, 1869–1895.[2][5]

Hale left the Unity Church in 1856 to become pastor at the South Congregational Church, Boston, where he served until 1899.

In 1847 Hale was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society,[6] and he would be involved with the society for the rest of his life, taking up various positions in the service of the society. He served two non-consecutive terms on its board of councilors, from 1852 to 1854, and a lengthy term from 1858 to 1891, and as recording secretary from 1854 to 1858. He served as vice-president of the society from 1891 to 1906, served a shorter term as president from 1906 to 1907, then again took up the position of vice-president from 1907 to 1909.[7]

Hale first came to notice as a writer in 1859, when he contributed the short story "My Double and How He Undid Me" to the Atlantic Monthly. He soon published other stories in the same periodical. His best known work was "The Man Without a Country", published in the Atlantic in 1863 and intended to strengthen support for the Union cause in the North.[3] As in some of his other non-romantic tales, he employed a minute realism which led his readers to suppose the narrative a record of fact. These two stories and such others as "The Rag-Man and the Rag-Woman" and "The Skeleton in the Closet", gave him a prominent position among short-story writers of 19th century America. His short story "The Brick Moon", serialized in the Atlantic Monthly, is the first known fictional description of an artificial satellite. It was possibly an influence on the novel The Begum's Fortune by Jules Verne. He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1865.[8] In 1870, he was elected as a member to the American Philosophical Society.[9]

In recognition of his support for the Union during the American Civil War, Hale was elected as a Third Class Companion of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States.

Hale assisted in founding the Christian Examiner, Old and New in 1869 and became its editor.[2] The story "Ten Times One is Ten" (1870), with its hero Harry Wadsworth, contained the motto, first enunciated in 1869 in his Lowell Institute lectures: "Look up and not down, look forward and not back, look out and not in, and lend a hand." This motto was the basis for the formation of Lend-a-Hand Clubs, Look-up Legions and Harry Wadsworth Clubs for young people. Out of the romantic Waldensian story "In His Name" (1873) there similarly grew several other organizations for religious work, such as King's Daughters, and King's Sons. In 1875, the Christian Examiner merged with Scribner's Magazine.[2] In 1881, Hale published the story "Hands Off" in Harper's New Monthly Magazine. In the tale, a narrator goes through time to alter events in the past, thereby creating an alternate timeline. Paul J. Nahin writes that this story makes Hale a pioneer in emerging science fiction, time travel, and stories about changing the past.[10]

In the early 1880s Harriet E. "Hattie" Freeman became one of Hale's volunteer secretaries. Her family had been connected with Hale's church since 1861. As Hattie and Hale worked together they grew closer and closer. According to historian Sara Day, their relationship became loving and intimate. Day came to this conclusion after studying 3,000 Hale-Freeman love letters (1884–1909) held by the Library of Congress. The letters, donated to the library in 1969, had held their secrets until 2006 when Day realized that the intimate passages were written in Towndrow's shorthand.[11]

In 1886, Hale founded Lend a Hand, which merged with the Charities Review in 1897, and the Lend a Hand Record.[2] Throughout his life he contributed many articles on a variety of subjects to the periodicals of his day including the North American Review, the Atlantic Monthly, the Christian Register, the Outlook, and many more.[2] He was the author or editor of more than sixty books—fiction, travel, sermons, biography and history.[5]

He was awarded American Library Association Honorary Membership in 1895.[12]

Hale retired as minister from the South Congregational Church in 1899 and chose as his successor Edward Cummings, father of E. E. Cummings.[13] By the turn of the century, Hale was recognized as among the nation's most important men of letters. Bostonians asked him to help ring in the new century on December 31, 1900, by presenting a psalm on the balcony of the Massachusetts State House.[14]

In 1903 he became Chaplain of the United States Senate, and joined the Literary Society of Washington.[15] The next year, he was elected as a member of the Academy of Arts and Sciences. Also in 1904, he was one of several high-profile investors who backed the Intercontinental Correspondence University,[16] but the institution folded by 1915.

Hale lived from 1869 to his death at the Edward Everett Hale House in Roxbury.[17] He maintained a summer home in South Kingstown, Rhode Island where he and his family often spent summer months.[18]

Hale died in Roxbury, by then part of Boston, in 1909. He was buried at Forest Hills Cemetery in Jamaica Plain, Suffolk County, Massachusetts. A life-size likeness in bronze statue memorializing the man and his works stands in the Boston Public Garden.[19]

Beliefs edit

 
Statue of Hale by Bela Pratt in the Boston Public Garden, Boston, Massachusetts

Combining a forceful personality, organizing genius, and liberal practical theology, Hale was active in raising the tone of American life for half a century. He had a deep interest in the anti-slavery movement (especially in Kansas), as well as popular education (involving himself especially with the Chautauqua adult-education movement), and the working-man's home.

He published a wide variety of works in fiction, history and biography. He used his writings and the two magazines he founded, Old and New (1870–75) and Lend a Hand (1886–97), to advance a number of social reforms, including religious tolerance, the abolition of slavery and wider education. Writer-educator Mary Lowe Dickinson served as Hale's associate editor for Lend a Hand.[20]

Hale supported Irish immigration in the mid-19th century, as he felt the new workers freed Americans from performing menial, hard labor. In a series of letters in the Boston Daily Advertiser, he noted the "inferiority" of immigrants: "[it] compels them to go the bottom; and the consequence is that we are, all of us, the higher lifted."[21]

Edward Everett Hale's story "The Man Without a Country" (1863) opened with the sentence: "I was stranded at the old Mission House in Mackinaw, waiting for a Lake Superior steamer which did not choose to come." In his 1893 and 1900 reminiscences, Hale states that "To write the story of 'The Man Without a Country' and its sequel, 'Philip Nolan's Friends,' I had to make as careful a study as I could of the history of the acquisition of Louisiana by the United States."[22]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Nelson, Randy F. The Almanac of American Letters. Los Altos, California: William Kaufmann, Inc., 1981: 41. ISBN 086576008X
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h . Harvard Square Library. Archived from the original on January 24, 2011. Retrieved December 21, 2010.
  3. ^ a b c Hall, Timothy L. American Religious Leaders. Infobase Publishing, 2003: 156. ISBN 0816045348
  4. ^ Packer, Barbara L. The Transcendentalists. Athens, Georgia: The University of Georgia Press, 2007: 19. ISBN 978-0820329581
  5. ^ a b . Smith College Northampton, MA, Hale family papers. Archived from the original on June 25, 2010. Retrieved December 18, 2010.
  6. ^ American Antiquarian Society Members Directory
  7. ^ Dunbar, B. (1987). Members and Officers of the American Antiquarian Society. Worcester: American Antiquarian Society.
  8. ^ "Book of Members, 1780–2010: Chapter H" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved April 10, 2011.
  9. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved April 27, 2021.
  10. ^ Nahin, Paul J. Time Machines: Time Travel in Physics, Metaphysics, and Science Fiction. New York: Springer-Verlag, 1999: 54. ISBN 0387985719
  11. ^ Day, Sara "Coded Letters, Concealed Love, The Larger Lives of Harriet Freeman and Edward Everett Hale." New Academia Publishing, 2014.
  12. ^ Frost, John. "The Library Conference of ’53". The Journal of Library History (1966–1972) 2, no. 2 (1967): 154–60.
  13. ^ Sawyer-Lauçanno, Christopher. E. E. Cummings: A Biography. Illinois: Sourcebooks, 2004: 12. ISBN 1570717753
  14. ^ Hall, Timothy L. American Religious Leaders. Infobase Publishing, 2003: 156–157. ISBN 0816045348
  15. ^ Spaulding, Thomas M. (1947). The Literary Society in Peace and War. p. 28.
  16. ^ "To Furnish Knowledge For The Whole World", Pittsburgh Weekly Gazette (August 11, 1904), p. 2.
  17. ^ Mr. Kennell's A.P. United States History class. . Roxbury Heritage Trail. John D. O'Bryant School of Mathematics and Science, Boston Public School District. Archived from the original on August 25, 2004. Retrieved March 3, 2014.[better source needed]
  18. ^ "Historic Hale House". halehouseri.org. South Kingstown Land Trust. Retrieved September 24, 2022.
  19. ^ C.D. Merriman. . The Literature Network. Jalic Inc. Archived from the original on June 5, 2011. Retrieved December 18, 2010.
  20. ^ Emerson, William A. "Mary Caroline Dickinson", in Fitchburg Massachusetts, Past and Present, pp. 101–105. Fitchburg, Massachusetts: Press of Blanchard & Brown, 1887.
  21. ^ Hale, Edward Everett (1852). "Letters on Irish emigration". Harvard Divinity School Library: Harvard University. p. 54. Retrieved February 6, 2011.
  22. ^ Edward Everett Hale, The Works of Edward Everett Hale, a New England Boyhood, Volume VI, Second Edition, p. 338. Boston: Little Brown, and Company, 1900

Further reading edit

Works by Hale edit

  • Illustrious Americans, coauthored by E. E. Hale, Entered into the Library of Congress by W. E. Scull, 1896, Public Domain
  • Old and New. Edited by Hale. v.1 (1870); v.6 (1872–1873); v.8 (1873); v.11 (1875).
  • The Man Without a Country
  • The Life of Christopher Columbus. Arc Manor LLC. 2008 [1891]. ISBN 978-1604502381. Retrieved May 16, 2011.
  • Boy's heroes. D. Lothrop and Company. 1885.
  • James Russell Lowell and His Friends, Edward Everett Hale, Houghton Mifflin Co., 1898.

Works about Hale edit

  • C. D. Merriman (2006). "Edward Everett Hale". The Literature Network. Retrieved January 26, 2008.
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Hale, Edward Everett" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  • Sara Day (2014) "Coded Letters, Concealed Love, The Larger Lives of Harriet Freeman and Edward Everett Hale." New Academia Publishing
  • Bosha, Francis J. "Hale, Edward Everett (1822–1909), author, reformer, and Unitarian minister." American National Biography. . Oxford University Press.

External links edit

  • The Harvard Divinity Library at Harvard Divinity School in Cambridge, Massachusetts holds several collections pertaining to Edward Everett Hale:
    • Letters to Annie Ware Cumings
    • Papers, including correspondence, material related to Antioch college, and biographical information.
    • Scrapbook
    • Sermons
  • Works by Edward Everett Hale at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Edward Everett Hale at Internet Archive
  • Works by Edward Everett Hale at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Edward Everett Hale at Find a Grave
  • Edward Everett Hale 2019-05-01 at the Wayback Machine biography in the on-line Dictionary of Unitarian and Universalist Biography (DUUB)
  • Harriet Elizabeth Freeman (1847–1930) biography at American National Biography Online (ANB)
  • Hale's "The Man Without a Country" linked to accounts of 20th Century exiles.
  • Letters on Irish emigration at Harvard University
Religious titles
Preceded by 51st US Senate Chaplain
December 14, 1903 – June 18, 1909
Succeeded by

edward, everett, hale, april, 1822, june, 1909, american, author, historian, unitarian, minister, best, known, writings, such, without, country, published, atlantic, monthly, support, union, during, civil, grand, nephew, nathan, hale, american, during, revolut. Edward Everett Hale April 3 1822 June 10 1909 was an American author historian and Unitarian minister best known for his writings such as The Man Without a Country published in Atlantic Monthly in support of the Union during the Civil War He was the grand nephew of Nathan Hale the American spy during the Revolutionary War The ReverendEdward Everett HaleFrom The Critic 1901 BornApril 3 1822Boston Massachusetts U S DiedJune 10 1909 1909 06 10 aged 87 Roxbury Boston Massachusetts U S EducationBoston Latin SchoolHarvard College 1839 Harvard Divinity SchoolOccupationsAuthor historian ministerChildrennine including Ellen Day Hale daughter and Philip Leslie Hale son Parent s Nathan HaleSarah Preston EverettRelativesLucretia Peabody Hale sister Susan Hale sister Charles Hale brother Edward Everett maternal uncle Nathan Hale granduncle Signature Contents 1 Life and career 2 Beliefs 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 5 1 Works by Hale 5 2 Works about Hale 6 External linksLife and career editHale was born on April 3 1822 1 in Boston Massachusetts the son of Nathan Hale 1784 1863 proprietor and editor of the Boston Daily Advertiser and Sarah Preston Everett and the brother of Lucretia Peabody Hale Susan Hale and Charles Hale Edward Hale was a nephew of Edward Everett the orator and statesman and grand nephew of Nathan Hale 1755 1776 the Revolutionary War hero executed by the British for espionage Edward Everett Hale was also a descendant of Richard Everett and related to Helen Keller citation needed Hale was a child prodigy who exhibited extraordinary literary skills He graduated from Boston Latin School at age 13 2 and enrolled at Harvard College immediately after There he settled in with the literary set won two Bowdoin Prizes and was elected the Class Poet 2 He graduated second in his class in 1839 3 and then studied at Harvard Divinity School Decades later he reflected on the new liberal theology there The group of leaders who surrounded Dr William Ellery Channing had with him broken forever from the fetters of Calvinistic theology These young people were trained to know that human nature is not totally depraved They were taught that there is nothing of which it is not capable For such reasons and many more the young New Englanders of liberal training rushed into life certain that the next half century was to see a complete moral revolution in the world 4 nbsp Edward Everett Hale with his sister Susan in 1855 Hale was licensed to preach as a Unitarian minister in 1842 3 by the Boston Association of Ministers In 1846 he became pastor of the Church of the Unity in Worcester Massachusetts 2 Hale married Emily Baldwin Perkins in 1852 she was the niece of Connecticut Governor and U S Senator Roger Sherman Baldwin and Emily Pitkin Perkins Baldwin on her father s side and Lyman Beecher Harriet Beecher Stowe and Henry Ward Beecher on her mother s side They had nine children Alexander born and died 1853 Ellen Day 1854 1939 Arthur 1859 1939 Charles Alexander 1861 1867 Edward Everett Jr 1863 1932 Philip Leslie Hale 1865 1931 Herbert Dudley 1866 1908 Henry Kidder 1868 1876 Robert Beverly 1869 1895 2 5 Hale left the Unity Church in 1856 to become pastor at the South Congregational Church Boston where he served until 1899 In 1847 Hale was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society 6 and he would be involved with the society for the rest of his life taking up various positions in the service of the society He served two non consecutive terms on its board of councilors from 1852 to 1854 and a lengthy term from 1858 to 1891 and as recording secretary from 1854 to 1858 He served as vice president of the society from 1891 to 1906 served a shorter term as president from 1906 to 1907 then again took up the position of vice president from 1907 to 1909 7 Hale first came to notice as a writer in 1859 when he contributed the short story My Double and How He Undid Me to the Atlantic Monthly He soon published other stories in the same periodical His best known work was The Man Without a Country published in the Atlantic in 1863 and intended to strengthen support for the Union cause in the North 3 As in some of his other non romantic tales he employed a minute realism which led his readers to suppose the narrative a record of fact These two stories and such others as The Rag Man and the Rag Woman and The Skeleton in the Closet gave him a prominent position among short story writers of 19th century America His short story The Brick Moon serialized in the Atlantic Monthly is the first known fictional description of an artificial satellite It was possibly an influence on the novel The Begum s Fortune by Jules Verne He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1865 8 In 1870 he was elected as a member to the American Philosophical Society 9 In recognition of his support for the Union during the American Civil War Hale was elected as a Third Class Companion of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States Hale assisted in founding the Christian Examiner Old and New in 1869 and became its editor 2 The story Ten Times One is Ten 1870 with its hero Harry Wadsworth contained the motto first enunciated in 1869 in his Lowell Institute lectures Look up and not down look forward and not back look out and not in and lend a hand This motto was the basis for the formation of Lend a Hand Clubs Look up Legions and Harry Wadsworth Clubs for young people Out of the romantic Waldensian story In His Name 1873 there similarly grew several other organizations for religious work such as King s Daughters and King s Sons In 1875 the Christian Examiner merged with Scribner s Magazine 2 In 1881 Hale published the story Hands Off in Harper s New Monthly Magazine In the tale a narrator goes through time to alter events in the past thereby creating an alternate timeline Paul J Nahin writes that this story makes Hale a pioneer in emerging science fiction time travel and stories about changing the past 10 In the early 1880s Harriet E Hattie Freeman became one of Hale s volunteer secretaries Her family had been connected with Hale s church since 1861 As Hattie and Hale worked together they grew closer and closer According to historian Sara Day their relationship became loving and intimate Day came to this conclusion after studying 3 000 Hale Freeman love letters 1884 1909 held by the Library of Congress The letters donated to the library in 1969 had held their secrets until 2006 when Day realized that the intimate passages were written in Towndrow s shorthand 11 In 1886 Hale founded Lend a Hand which merged with the Charities Review in 1897 and the Lend a Hand Record 2 Throughout his life he contributed many articles on a variety of subjects to the periodicals of his day including the North American Review the Atlantic Monthly the Christian Register the Outlook and many more 2 He was the author or editor of more than sixty books fiction travel sermons biography and history 5 He was awarded American Library Association Honorary Membership in 1895 12 Hale retired as minister from the South Congregational Church in 1899 and chose as his successor Edward Cummings father of E E Cummings 13 By the turn of the century Hale was recognized as among the nation s most important men of letters Bostonians asked him to help ring in the new century on December 31 1900 by presenting a psalm on the balcony of the Massachusetts State House 14 In 1903 he became Chaplain of the United States Senate and joined the Literary Society of Washington 15 The next year he was elected as a member of the Academy of Arts and Sciences Also in 1904 he was one of several high profile investors who backed the Intercontinental Correspondence University 16 but the institution folded by 1915 Hale lived from 1869 to his death at the Edward Everett Hale House in Roxbury 17 He maintained a summer home in South Kingstown Rhode Island where he and his family often spent summer months 18 Hale died in Roxbury by then part of Boston in 1909 He was buried at Forest Hills Cemetery in Jamaica Plain Suffolk County Massachusetts A life size likeness in bronze statue memorializing the man and his works stands in the Boston Public Garden 19 Beliefs edit nbsp Statue of Hale by Bela Pratt in the Boston Public Garden Boston Massachusetts Combining a forceful personality organizing genius and liberal practical theology Hale was active in raising the tone of American life for half a century He had a deep interest in the anti slavery movement especially in Kansas as well as popular education involving himself especially with the Chautauqua adult education movement and the working man s home He published a wide variety of works in fiction history and biography He used his writings and the two magazines he founded Old and New 1870 75 and Lend a Hand 1886 97 to advance a number of social reforms including religious tolerance the abolition of slavery and wider education Writer educator Mary Lowe Dickinson served as Hale s associate editor for Lend a Hand 20 Hale supported Irish immigration in the mid 19th century as he felt the new workers freed Americans from performing menial hard labor In a series of letters in the Boston Daily Advertiser he noted the inferiority of immigrants it compels them to go the bottom and the consequence is that we are all of us the higher lifted 21 Edward Everett Hale s story The Man Without a Country 1863 opened with the sentence I was stranded at the old Mission House in Mackinaw waiting for a Lake Superior steamer which did not choose to come In his 1893 and 1900 reminiscences Hale states that To write the story of The Man Without a Country and its sequel Philip Nolan s Friends I had to make as careful a study as I could of the history of the acquisition of Louisiana by the United States 22 See also editInternational Order of the King s Daughters and SonsReferences edit Nelson Randy F The Almanac of American Letters Los Altos California William Kaufmann Inc 1981 41 ISBN 086576008X a b c d e f g h Edward Everett Hale 1822 1909 Harvard Square Library Archived from the original on January 24 2011 Retrieved December 21 2010 a b c Hall Timothy L American Religious Leaders Infobase Publishing 2003 156 ISBN 0816045348 Packer Barbara L The Transcendentalists Athens Georgia The University of Georgia Press 2007 19 ISBN 978 0820329581 a b Hale Family Papers Smith College Northampton MA Hale family papers Archived from the original on June 25 2010 Retrieved December 18 2010 American Antiquarian Society Members Directory Dunbar B 1987 Members and Officers of the American Antiquarian Society Worcester American Antiquarian Society Book of Members 1780 2010 Chapter H PDF American Academy of Arts and Sciences Retrieved April 10 2011 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved April 27 2021 Nahin Paul J Time Machines Time Travel in Physics Metaphysics and Science Fiction New York Springer Verlag 1999 54 ISBN 0387985719 Day Sara Coded Letters Concealed Love The Larger Lives of Harriet Freeman and Edward Everett Hale New Academia Publishing 2014 Frost John The Library Conference of 53 The Journal of Library History 1966 1972 2 no 2 1967 154 60 Sawyer Laucanno Christopher E E Cummings A Biography Illinois Sourcebooks 2004 12 ISBN 1570717753 Hall Timothy L American Religious Leaders Infobase Publishing 2003 156 157 ISBN 0816045348 Spaulding Thomas M 1947 The Literary Society in Peace and War p 28 To Furnish Knowledge For The Whole World Pittsburgh Weekly Gazette August 11 1904 p 2 Mr Kennell s A P United States History class The Edward Everett Hale House Roxbury Heritage Trail John D O Bryant School of Mathematics and Science Boston Public School District Archived from the original on August 25 2004 Retrieved March 3 2014 better source needed Historic Hale House halehouseri org South Kingstown Land Trust Retrieved September 24 2022 C D Merriman Edward Everett Hale The Literature Network Jalic Inc Archived from the original on June 5 2011 Retrieved December 18 2010 Emerson William A Mary Caroline Dickinson in Fitchburg Massachusetts Past and Present pp 101 105 Fitchburg Massachusetts Press of Blanchard amp Brown 1887 Hale Edward Everett 1852 Letters on Irish emigration Harvard Divinity School Library Harvard University p 54 Retrieved February 6 2011 Edward Everett Hale The Works of Edward Everett Hale a New England Boyhood Volume VI Second Edition p 338 Boston Little Brown and Company 1900Further reading editWorks by Hale edit Illustrious Americans coauthored by E E Hale Entered into the Library of Congress by W E Scull 1896 Public Domain Old and New Edited by Hale v 1 1870 v 6 1872 1873 v 8 1873 v 11 1875 The Man Without a Country The Life of Christopher Columbus Arc Manor LLC 2008 1891 ISBN 978 1604502381 Retrieved May 16 2011 Boy s heroes D Lothrop and Company 1885 James Russell Lowell and His Friends Edward Everett Hale Houghton Mifflin Co 1898 Works about Hale edit C D Merriman 2006 Edward Everett Hale The Literature Network Retrieved January 26 2008 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Hale Edward Everett Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Sara Day 2014 Coded Letters Concealed Love The Larger Lives of Harriet Freeman and Edward Everett Hale New Academia Publishing Bosha Francis J Hale Edward Everett 1822 1909 author reformer and Unitarian minister American National Biography Oxford University Press External links editEdward Everett Hale at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource The Harvard Divinity Library at Harvard Divinity School in Cambridge Massachusetts holds several collections pertaining to Edward Everett Hale Letters to Annie Ware Cumings Papers including correspondence material related to Antioch college and biographical information Scrapbook Sermons Works by Edward Everett Hale at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Edward Everett Hale at Internet Archive Works by Edward Everett Hale at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Edward Everett Hale at Find a Grave Edward Everett Hale Archived 2019 05 01 at the Wayback Machine biography in the on line Dictionary of Unitarian and Universalist Biography DUUB Harriet Elizabeth Freeman 1847 1930 biography at American National Biography Online ANB Hale s The Man Without a Country linked to accounts of 20th Century exiles Letters on Irish emigration at Harvard University Religious titles Preceded byF J Prettyman 51st US Senate ChaplainDecember 14 1903 June 18 1909 Succeeded byUlysses Grant Baker Pierce Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Edward Everett Hale amp oldid 1214557335, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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