fbpx
Wikipedia

Robert G. Ingersoll

Robert Green Ingersoll (/ˈɪŋɡərˌsɔːl, -ˌsɒl, -səl/; August 11, 1833 – July 21, 1899), nicknamed "the Great Agnostic", was an American lawyer, writer, and orator during the Golden Age of Free Thought, who campaigned in defense of agnosticism.

Robert G. Ingersoll
BornRobert Green Ingersoll
(1833-08-11)August 11, 1833
Dresden, New York, U.S.
DiedJuly 21, 1899(1899-07-21) (aged 65)
Dobbs Ferry, New York, U.S.
Resting placeArlington National Cemetery
OccupationPolitician, orator, lecturer
Period19th century
GenreSatire, essay, social commentary, political commentary, philosophical literature, biblical criticism
SubjectFreethought, agnosticism, humanism, abolitionism, women's rights
SpouseEva Parker Ingersoll
ChildrenEva Ingersoll Brown
Maud Ingersoll Probasco
RelativesEbon Clarke Ingersoll (brother)
Eva Ingersoll Wakefield (granddaughter)
Signature
16th Attorney General of Illinois
In office
1867–1869
Preceded byOffice reestablished
Succeeded byWashington Bushnell

Personal life Edit

Robert Ingersoll was born in Dresden, New York. His father, John Ingersoll, was an abolitionist-sympathizing Congregationalist preacher, whose radical opinions caused him and his family to relocate frequently. For a time, Rev. John Ingersoll substituted as preacher for American revivalist Charles G. Finney while Finney was on a tour of Europe. Upon Finney's return, Rev. Ingersoll remained for a few months as co-pastor/associate pastor with Finney. The elder Ingersoll's later pastoral experiences influenced young Robert negatively, however, as The Elmira Telegram described in 1890:[1]

Though for many years the most noted of American infidels, Colonel Ingersoll was born and reared in a devoutly Christian household. His father, John Ingersoll, was a Congregationalist minister and a man of mark in his time, a deep thinker, a logical and eloquent speaker, broad minded and generously tolerant of the views of others. The popular impression which credits Ingersoll's infidelity in the main to his father's severe orthodoxy and the austere and gloomy surroundings in which his boyhood was spent is wholly wrong. On the contrary, the elder Ingersoll's liberal views were a source of constant trouble between him and his parishioners. They caused him to frequently change his charges, and several times made him the defendant in church trials. His ministerial career was, in fact, substantially brought to a close by a church trial which occurred while he was pastor of the Congregational Church at Madison, Ohio, and at which his third wife appeared as the prosecutor. Upon this occasion, he was charged with prevarication and unministerial conduct. The evidence adduced – the trial is one of the abiding traditions of the dull little town of Madison – was of the most trivial and ridiculous character, but the committee which heard it decided that, though he had done "nothing inconsistent with his Christian character," he was "inconsistent with his ministerial character," and forbade him to preach in the future. Elder John went before the higher church authorities and was permitted to continue his clerical labors. However, he soon removed to Wisconsin, going from there to Illinois, where he died. The Madison trial occurred when young Robert was nine years old, and it was the unjust and bigoted treatment his father received which made him the enemy, first of Calvinism, and later of Christianity in its other forms.

During 1853, "Bob" Ingersoll taught a term of school in Metropolis, Illinois, where he let one of his students, the future Judge Angus M. L. McBane, do the "greater part of the teaching, while Latin and history occupied his own attention". At some time prior to his Metropolis position, Ingersoll had also taught school in Mount Vernon, Illinois.[2]

Ingersoll was married, February 13, 1862, to Eva Amelia Parker (1841–1923). They had two daughters. The elder daughter, Eva Ingersoll-Brown, was a renowned feminist and suffragist.[3]

Lawyer Edit

Later that year, the family settled in Marion, Illinois, where Robert and his brother Ebon Clarke Ingersoll were admitted to the bar in 1854. A county historian writing 22 years later noted that local residents considered the Ingersolls as a "very intellectual family; but, being Abolitionists, and the boys being deists, rendered obnoxious to our people in that respect."[4]

While in Marion, he learned law from Judge Willis Allen and served as deputy clerk for John M. Cunningham, Williamson County's County Clerk and Circuit Clerk. In 1855, after Cunningham was named registrar for the federal land office in southeastern Illinois at Shawneetown, Illinois, Ingersoll followed him to the riverfront city along the Ohio River. After a brief time there, he accepted the deputy clerk position with John E. Hall, the county clerk and circuit clerk of Gallatin County, and also a son-in-law of John Hart Crenshaw.[5] On November 11, 1856, Ingersoll caught Hall in his arms when the son of a political opponent assassinated his employer in their office.[6]

When he relocated to Shawneetown, he continued to read law with Judge William G. Bowman who had a large library of both law and the classics. In addition to his job as a clerk, he and his brother began their law practice using the name "E.C. and R.G. Ingersoll".[7] During this time they also had an office in Raleigh, Illinois, then the county seat of neighboring Saline County. As attorneys following the court circuit he often practiced alongside Cunningham's soon-to-be son-in-law, John A. Logan, the state's attorney and political ally to Hall.

With his earlier mentor Cunningham having moved back to Marion after the land office's closing in 1856, and Logan's relocation to Benton, Illinois, after his marriage that autumn, Ingersoll and his brother moved to Peoria, Illinois, where they finally settled in 1857.

Ingersoll was involved with several major trials as an attorney, notably the Star Route trials, a major political scandal in which his clients were acquitted.[8] He also defended a New Jersey man charged with blasphemy.[9] Although he did not win the acquittal, his vigorous defense is considered to have discredited blasphemy laws and few other prosecutions followed.

For a time, Ingersoll represented con artist James Reavis, the "Baron of Arizona", pronouncing his Peralta Land Grant claim valid.[10]

Civil war Edit

With the beginning of the American Civil War, he raised the 11th Regiment Illinois Volunteer Cavalry of the Union Army and assumed command. The regiment fought in the Battle of Shiloh. Ingersoll was later captured in a skirmish with the Confederates near Lexington, Tennessee on December 18, 1862, then paroled – i.e. released on his oath that he would not fight again against the Confederate States of America until formally exchanged for a captured Confederate soldier or officer of like rank (who was often under parole himself, making the practice a matter of honor and formality, which could be extended to individuals or even entire regiments en masse). This was an old practice which was still commonly observed early in the war, until the Dix–Hill Cartel broke down under political distress. Unable to perform his duties under his officer's commission while paroled, he tendered his resignation as commanding officer on June 30, 1863.

Entry into politics Edit

After the war, he served as Illinois Attorney General. He was a prominent member of the Republican Party and, though he never held elective office, he was nonetheless an active participant in politics. According to Robert Nisbet, Ingersoll was a "staunch Republican."[11] His speech nominating James G. Blaine for the 1876 presidential election was unsuccessful, as Rutherford B. Hayes received the Republican nomination, but the speech itself, known as the "Plumed Knight" speech, was considered a model of political oratory. His opinions on slavery, woman's suffrage, and other issues of the time would sometimes become part of the mainstream, but his atheism/agnosticism effectively prevented him from ever pursuing or holding political offices higher than that of state attorney general. Illinois Republicans tried to persuade him to campaign for governor on the condition that Ingersoll conceal his agnosticism during the campaign, which he refused to do.

Oratory and free thought Edit

 
The only known image of Ingersoll addressing an audience.
 
A political cartoon depicting crowds seeking entertainment by flocking to hear Ingersoll advocate for agnosticism in a theater which is open on Sunday, when the American Museum of Natural History is closed so as "Not to Offend Morality".

On October 30, 1880, Ingersoll was introduced as "the Great Agnostic" by Rev. Henry Ward Beecher, before a political speech delivered to a large audience at the Academy of Music in Brooklyn.[12] In an unpublished 1881 lecture entitled "The Great Infidels", he attacked the doctrine of Hell: "All the meanness, all the revenge, all the selfishness, all the cruelty, all the hatred, all the infamy of which the heart of man is capable, grew, blossomed, and bore fruit in this one word – Hell."[13] He opposed the Chinese Exclusion Act and supported a more lenient policy toward Chinese workers coming to the United States.[14]

Membership of The Lambs Edit

Ingersoll was elected to The Lambs Theatre Club in 1889[15] and gave an address to their first public "gambol" at the Broadway Theatre on March 3, 1891; his address "brought many laughs".[16]: 66 

Death Edit

Ingersoll died from congestive heart failure at the age of 65. Soon after his death, his brother-in-law, Clinton P. Farrell, collected copies of Ingersoll's speeches for publication. The 12-volume Dresden Editions kept interest in Ingersoll's ideas alive and preserved his speeches for future generations. Ingersoll's ashes are interred in Arlington National Cemetery.

Legacy Edit

Susan Jacoby credits Ingersoll for the revival of Thomas Paine's reputation in American intellectual history, which had decreased after the publication of The Age of Reason published during 1794–95. Paine postulated that men, not God, had written the Bible, and Ingersoll included this work in his lectures on freethinking. As the only freethinker of his time with a wide audience outside of the unbelieving circle, he reintroduced Paine's ideas to a new generation.[17]

In 2005, a popular edition of Ingersoll's work was published by Steerforth Press. Edited by the Pulitzer Prize-winning music critic Tim Page, What's God Got to Do With It: Robert Ingersoll on Free Speech, Honest Talk and the Separation of Church and State brought Ingersoll's thinking to a new audience.

Friendship with Walt Whitman Edit

Ingersoll enjoyed a friendship with the poet Walt Whitman, who considered Ingersoll the greatest orator of his time. "It should not be surprising that I am drawn to Ingersoll, for he is 'Leaves of Grass' ... He lives, embodies, the individuality, I preach. I see in Bob [Ingersoll] the noblest specimen – American-flavored – pure out of the soil, spreading, giving, demanding light."[18]

The feeling was mutual. Upon Whitman's death in 1892, Ingersoll delivered the eulogy at the poet's funeral. The eulogy was published to great acclaim and is considered a classic panegyric.[19]

In popular culture Edit

 
Ingersoll statue in Peoria, Illinois.
  • The community of Redwater, Texas was founded in the mid-1870s as Ingersoll in honor of Robert Ingersoll; it was changed to its current name following an 1886 revival meeting that yielded 110 conversions, the townspeople no longer wishing to honor the agnostic.[20]
  • Colonel Bob Mountain in Washington state was named for Robert Ingersoll.[21]
  • His birthplace, known as the Robert Ingersoll Birthplace, or Robert Green Ingersoll Birthplace Museum, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.[22]
  • A mine near Keystone, SD is named after him.[23]
  • Ingersoll's type of agnosticism was labelled Ingersollism by his intellectual contemporaries, including Congregationalist Lyman Abbott,[24] Congregationalist minister John P. Sanderson,[25] Illinois scholar and lawyer George Reuben Wendling[26] and others (such as a collection of refutations of Ingersollism published in 1879 by Chicago publishers Rhodes and McClure).[27]
  • In July 2016 Ingersoll's statue in Peoria, Illinois was restored thanks to a successful fundraising effort by the Freedom From Religion Foundation.[28]
  • In Lewis Grassic Gibbon's modernist novel Sunset Song (1932), the character of Long Rob reads "the books of a coarse creature Ingersoll that made watches and didn't believe in God" and "God knows if the creature's logic was as poor as his watches" and "fair caution him and his Ingersoll that could neither make watches nor sense". The author's running joke intentionally confuses Robert G. Ingersoll with the watch-making company of the same name.[29]
  • In Sinclair Lewis's novel Elmer Gantry, the "freethinker" Jim Lefferts throws a volume of Ingersoll's work at Gantry following an argument over his recent conversion; Gantry, struggling to write a speech for a revival meeting, takes a paragraph from Ingersoll out of context and builds his sermon on it.

Works Edit

  • The gods and other lectures (New York : D. M. Bennett, 1876)
  • Some mistakes of Moses (Washington, D.C. : C. P. Farrell, 1879)
  • Proceedings of the Civil Rights Mass-Meeting held at Lincoln Hall, October 22, 1883. Speeches of Hon. Frederick Douglass and Robert G. Ingersoll. (Washington, D. C.: C. P. Farrell, 1883)
  • Walt Whitman (New York, The Truth Seeker Co, 1890)
  • Col. Ingersoll's reply to his critics in the N.Y. "Evening Telegram." (Toronto : J. Spencer Ellis, 1892)
  • Shakespeare, a lecture (New York, Farrell, 1895)
  • Abraham Lincoln, a lecture (New York, Farrell, 1895)
  • Voltaire, a lecture (New York, Farrell, 1895)
  • Great speeches of Col. R. G. Ingersoll; complete (Chicago : Rhodes & McClure, 1895)
  • "Why I am an agnostic" (1896)
  • The works of Robert G. Ingersoll vols. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, and 12 (New York : The Dresden pub. co., C. P. Farrell, 1902)

Footnotes Edit

  1. ^ Wilson, Rufus R. (16 March 1890). "A Sketch of the Life of America's Most Noted Agnostic by Rufus Wilson". The Elmira Telegram. Retrieved 2018-09-16.
  2. ^ 1887. History of Gallatin, Saline, Hamilton, Franklin, and Williamson Counties, Illinois. Goodspeed Publishing Co. 557, 585. As of 1887, Judge McBane still had in his possession Ingersoll's letter of inquiry regarding the school dated May 16, 1853.
  3. ^ Entry for Eva Ingersoll-Brown in A Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalists
  4. ^ Milo Erwin. 1876. History of Williamson County, Illinois. 250.
  5. ^ Kittredge, Herman E., A Biographical Appreciation of Robert G. Ingersoll, Ch. 2.
  6. ^ Eva Ingersoll Wakefield, ed. 1951. The Letters of Robert G. Ingersoll, New York: Hallmark-Hubner Press, Inc. 18–19.
  7. ^ Kittredge, Ch. 2. 1911.
  8. ^ "The Star Route Trial". The Evening Star (Washington, D.C.). February 28, 1883. p. 1. Retrieved August 4, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  9. ^ Shapiro, Carl (May 20, 1973). "The Morristown Blasphemy Trial". The Record (Hackensack, New Jersey). pp. Magazine-20, 22. Retrieved August 4, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  10. ^ Myers, John Myers, "The Prince of Swindlers", American Heritage, August 1956 (7:5). Updated link retrieved 05-11-2011.
  11. ^ McCarthy, Daniel (2012-11-21) Outsider Conservatism, The American Conservative
  12. ^ Kittredge, Ch. 5. 1911.
  13. ^ Ingersoll, Robert G. (1915). "The Great Infidels". The Works of Robert G. Ingersoll, in Twelve Volumes, Volume III. The Dresden Publishing Company. p. 319. Retrieved December 9, 2012.
  14. ^ In correspondence with Congress Representative Thomas J. Geary, The North American Review, vol. 157 (1893) pp. 52-67.
  15. ^ "The Lambs". the-lambs.org. The Lambs, Inc. 6 November 2015. (Member Roster 'I'). Retrieved December 4, 2021.
  16. ^ Hardee, Lewis J. Jr. (2010) [1st pub. 2006]. The Lambs Theatre Club (softcover) (2nd ed.). Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7864-6095-3.
  17. ^ Jacoby, Susan. "Freethought's Forgotten Hero". Point of Inquiry. Center for Inquiry. Retrieved July 6, 2017.
  18. ^ Intimate with Walt: Selections from Whitman's Conversations with Horace Traubel, Gary Schmidgall (Editor), 2001, University of Iowa Press, Page 81.
  19. ^ The Book of Eulogies, Phyllis Theroux (Editor), 1977, Simon & Schuster. Page 30.
  20. ^ "Redwater, TX". TSHA Handbook of Texas. Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved 7 October 2022.
  21. ^ Majors, Harry M. (1975). Exploring Washington. Van Winkle Publishing Co. p. 72. ISBN 978-0-918664-00-6.
  22. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  23. ^ Palais, Hyman. “Black Hills Miners’ Folklore.” California Folklore Quarterly 4, no. 3 (1945): 255–69. https://doi.org/10.2307/1495819.
  24. ^ Abbott, Lyman (1890). "Flaws in Ingersollism". The North American Review. 150 (401): 446–457. JSTOR 25101967.
  25. ^ Association, Michigan Congregational (2 December 1892). The Congregational Churches of Michigan: For the First Fifty Years of Their Organization Into a State Association ; Addresses Delivered, Papers Read and Reports Made at the Jubilee Meeting Held at Jackson, May 19-22, 1892. order of the Association. p. 70. Retrieved 2 December 2017 – via Internet Archive.
  26. ^ Wendling, George Reuben (2 December 1883). Ingersollism: From a Secular Point of View. A Lecture Delivered in Association Hall, New York; Music Hall, Boston; in Philadelphia, Chicago, St. Louis, and in Over Six Hundred of the Principal Lecture Courses of the United States and Canada. Jansen, McClurg. p. 19. Retrieved 2 December 2017 – via Internet Archive.
  27. ^ James Baird McClure (2 December 1879). "Mistakes of Ingersoll: As Shown by Rev. W. F. Crafts, Bishop Charles E ..." Rhodes & McClure. Retrieved 2 December 2017 – via Internet Archive.
  28. ^ Renken, Leslie. "Ingersoll statue restored by FFRF". Freedom From Religion Foundation. Peoria Journal Star. Retrieved 24 October 2016.
  29. ^ "A Scots Quair". Guttenberg. Retrieved 2 October 2020.

Further reading Edit

  • Nathan G. Alexander, Race in a Godless World: Atheism, Race, and Civilization, 1850–1914. New York/Manchester: New York University Press/Manchester University Press, 2019. ISBN 978-1526142375
  • Eric T. Brandt, Timothy Larsen, "The Old Atheism Revisited: Robert G. Ingersoll and the Bible," Journal of The Historical Society, vol. 11, no. 2 (2011), pp. 211–238.
  • R. W. Justin Clark, "Ingersoll, Infidels, and Indianapolis: Freethought and Religion in the Central Midwest," IUPUI ScholarWorks, (2017).
  • C. H. Cramer, Royal Bob: The Life of Robert G. Ingersoll The Bobbs-Merrill Company, Inc., 1952.
  • Eugene V. Debs, "Recollections of Ingersoll," Pearson's Magazine, vol. 37, no. 4 (April 1917), pp. 302–307.
  • Susan Jacoby, The Great Agnostic: Robert Ingersoll and American Freethought. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2013.
  • Orvin Larson, American Infidel: Robert G. Ingersoll a Biography. Citadel Press, 1962.
  • Susan Jacoby, Freethinkers: A History of American Secularism. Metropolitan Books, 2004.

External links Edit

  • RobertGreenIngersoll.org, complete works online (website expired)
  • [1] The Ingersoll Times
  • Works by Robert G. Ingersoll at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Robert G. Ingersoll at Internet Archive
  • Works by Robert G. Ingersoll at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Voice recordings at the Library of Congress
  • Works by Robert G. Ingersoll at the Secular Web
  • Ingersoll's biography 2016-03-05 at the Wayback Machine
  • , that tracks his speaking career
  • Ingersoll Memorial Home Page 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine from the Council for Secular Humanism
  • Ingersoll on sabbath superstition
  • Robert G. Ingersoll at Find a Grave
  • Robert Ingersoll – The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois newspaper)
  • Area once rolled out welcome mat for ‘The Great Agnostic’ – Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois newspaper)
  • Gordon Stein Collection of Robert Green Ingersoll 2020-07-23 at the Wayback Machine, Special Collections Research Center, Southern Illinois University Carbondale
Legal offices
Preceded by
office abolished
Attorney General of Illinois
1867–1869
Succeeded by

robert, ingersoll, other, people, named, robert, ingersoll, robert, ingersoll, disambiguation, robert, green, ingersoll, ɔː, august, 1833, july, 1899, nicknamed, great, agnostic, american, lawyer, writer, orator, during, golden, free, thought, campaigned, defe. For other people named Robert Ingersoll see Robert Ingersoll disambiguation Robert Green Ingersoll ˈ ɪ ŋ ɡ er ˌ s ɔː l ˌ s ɒ l s el August 11 1833 July 21 1899 nicknamed the Great Agnostic was an American lawyer writer and orator during the Golden Age of Free Thought who campaigned in defense of agnosticism Robert G IngersollBornRobert Green Ingersoll 1833 08 11 August 11 1833Dresden New York U S DiedJuly 21 1899 1899 07 21 aged 65 Dobbs Ferry New York U S Resting placeArlington National CemeteryOccupationPolitician orator lecturerPeriod19th centuryGenreSatire essay social commentary political commentary philosophical literature biblical criticismSubjectFreethought agnosticism humanism abolitionism women s rightsSpouseEva Parker IngersollChildrenEva Ingersoll Brown Maud Ingersoll ProbascoRelativesEbon Clarke Ingersoll brother Eva Ingersoll Wakefield granddaughter Signature16th Attorney General of IllinoisIn office 1867 1869Preceded byOffice reestablishedSucceeded byWashington Bushnell Contents 1 Personal life 2 Lawyer 3 Civil war 4 Entry into politics 5 Oratory and free thought 6 Membership of The Lambs 7 Death 8 Legacy 9 Friendship with Walt Whitman 10 In popular culture 11 Works 12 Footnotes 13 Further reading 14 External linksPersonal life EditRobert Ingersoll was born in Dresden New York His father John Ingersoll was an abolitionist sympathizing Congregationalist preacher whose radical opinions caused him and his family to relocate frequently For a time Rev John Ingersoll substituted as preacher for American revivalist Charles G Finney while Finney was on a tour of Europe Upon Finney s return Rev Ingersoll remained for a few months as co pastor associate pastor with Finney The elder Ingersoll s later pastoral experiences influenced young Robert negatively however as The Elmira Telegram described in 1890 1 Though for many years the most noted of American infidels Colonel Ingersoll was born and reared in a devoutly Christian household His father John Ingersoll was a Congregationalist minister and a man of mark in his time a deep thinker a logical and eloquent speaker broad minded and generously tolerant of the views of others The popular impression which credits Ingersoll s infidelity in the main to his father s severe orthodoxy and the austere and gloomy surroundings in which his boyhood was spent is wholly wrong On the contrary the elder Ingersoll s liberal views were a source of constant trouble between him and his parishioners They caused him to frequently change his charges and several times made him the defendant in church trials His ministerial career was in fact substantially brought to a close by a church trial which occurred while he was pastor of the Congregational Church at Madison Ohio and at which his third wife appeared as the prosecutor Upon this occasion he was charged with prevarication and unministerial conduct The evidence adduced the trial is one of the abiding traditions of the dull little town of Madison was of the most trivial and ridiculous character but the committee which heard it decided that though he had done nothing inconsistent with his Christian character he was inconsistent with his ministerial character and forbade him to preach in the future Elder John went before the higher church authorities and was permitted to continue his clerical labors However he soon removed to Wisconsin going from there to Illinois where he died The Madison trial occurred when young Robert was nine years old and it was the unjust and bigoted treatment his father received which made him the enemy first of Calvinism and later of Christianity in its other forms During 1853 Bob Ingersoll taught a term of school in Metropolis Illinois where he let one of his students the future Judge Angus M L McBane do the greater part of the teaching while Latin and history occupied his own attention At some time prior to his Metropolis position Ingersoll had also taught school in Mount Vernon Illinois 2 Ingersoll was married February 13 1862 to Eva Amelia Parker 1841 1923 They had two daughters The elder daughter Eva Ingersoll Brown was a renowned feminist and suffragist 3 Lawyer EditLater that year the family settled in Marion Illinois where Robert and his brother Ebon Clarke Ingersoll were admitted to the bar in 1854 A county historian writing 22 years later noted that local residents considered the Ingersolls as a very intellectual family but being Abolitionists and the boys being deists rendered obnoxious to our people in that respect 4 While in Marion he learned law from Judge Willis Allen and served as deputy clerk for John M Cunningham Williamson County s County Clerk and Circuit Clerk In 1855 after Cunningham was named registrar for the federal land office in southeastern Illinois at Shawneetown Illinois Ingersoll followed him to the riverfront city along the Ohio River After a brief time there he accepted the deputy clerk position with John E Hall the county clerk and circuit clerk of Gallatin County and also a son in law of John Hart Crenshaw 5 On November 11 1856 Ingersoll caught Hall in his arms when the son of a political opponent assassinated his employer in their office 6 When he relocated to Shawneetown he continued to read law with Judge William G Bowman who had a large library of both law and the classics In addition to his job as a clerk he and his brother began their law practice using the name E C and R G Ingersoll 7 During this time they also had an office in Raleigh Illinois then the county seat of neighboring Saline County As attorneys following the court circuit he often practiced alongside Cunningham s soon to be son in law John A Logan the state s attorney and political ally to Hall With his earlier mentor Cunningham having moved back to Marion after the land office s closing in 1856 and Logan s relocation to Benton Illinois after his marriage that autumn Ingersoll and his brother moved to Peoria Illinois where they finally settled in 1857 Ingersoll was involved with several major trials as an attorney notably the Star Route trials a major political scandal in which his clients were acquitted 8 He also defended a New Jersey man charged with blasphemy 9 Although he did not win the acquittal his vigorous defense is considered to have discredited blasphemy laws and few other prosecutions followed For a time Ingersoll represented con artist James Reavis the Baron of Arizona pronouncing his Peralta Land Grant claim valid 10 Civil war EditWith the beginning of the American Civil War he raised the 11th Regiment Illinois Volunteer Cavalry of the Union Army and assumed command The regiment fought in the Battle of Shiloh Ingersoll was later captured in a skirmish with the Confederates near Lexington Tennessee on December 18 1862 then paroled i e released on his oath that he would not fight again against the Confederate States of America until formally exchanged for a captured Confederate soldier or officer of like rank who was often under parole himself making the practice a matter of honor and formality which could be extended to individuals or even entire regiments en masse This was an old practice which was still commonly observed early in the war until the Dix Hill Cartel broke down under political distress Unable to perform his duties under his officer s commission while paroled he tendered his resignation as commanding officer on June 30 1863 Entry into politics EditAfter the war he served as Illinois Attorney General He was a prominent member of the Republican Party and though he never held elective office he was nonetheless an active participant in politics According to Robert Nisbet Ingersoll was a staunch Republican 11 His speech nominating James G Blaine for the 1876 presidential election was unsuccessful as Rutherford B Hayes received the Republican nomination but the speech itself known as the Plumed Knight speech was considered a model of political oratory His opinions on slavery woman s suffrage and other issues of the time would sometimes become part of the mainstream but his atheism agnosticism effectively prevented him from ever pursuing or holding political offices higher than that of state attorney general Illinois Republicans tried to persuade him to campaign for governor on the condition that Ingersoll conceal his agnosticism during the campaign which he refused to do Oratory and free thought Edit The only known image of Ingersoll addressing an audience A political cartoon depicting crowds seeking entertainment by flocking to hear Ingersoll advocate for agnosticism in a theater which is open on Sunday when the American Museum of Natural History is closed so as Not to Offend Morality On October 30 1880 Ingersoll was introduced as the Great Agnostic by Rev Henry Ward Beecher before a political speech delivered to a large audience at the Academy of Music in Brooklyn 12 In an unpublished 1881 lecture entitled The Great Infidels he attacked the doctrine of Hell All the meanness all the revenge all the selfishness all the cruelty all the hatred all the infamy of which the heart of man is capable grew blossomed and bore fruit in this one word Hell 13 He opposed the Chinese Exclusion Act and supported a more lenient policy toward Chinese workers coming to the United States 14 Membership of The Lambs EditIngersoll was elected to The Lambs Theatre Club in 1889 15 and gave an address to their first public gambol at the Broadway Theatre on March 3 1891 his address brought many laughs 16 66 Death EditIngersoll died from congestive heart failure at the age of 65 Soon after his death his brother in law Clinton P Farrell collected copies of Ingersoll s speeches for publication The 12 volume Dresden Editions kept interest in Ingersoll s ideas alive and preserved his speeches for future generations Ingersoll s ashes are interred in Arlington National Cemetery Legacy EditSusan Jacoby credits Ingersoll for the revival of Thomas Paine s reputation in American intellectual history which had decreased after the publication of The Age of Reason published during 1794 95 Paine postulated that men not God had written the Bible and Ingersoll included this work in his lectures on freethinking As the only freethinker of his time with a wide audience outside of the unbelieving circle he reintroduced Paine s ideas to a new generation 17 In 2005 a popular edition of Ingersoll s work was published by Steerforth Press Edited by the Pulitzer Prize winning music critic Tim Page What s God Got to Do With It Robert Ingersoll on Free Speech Honest Talk and the Separation of Church and State brought Ingersoll s thinking to a new audience Friendship with Walt Whitman EditIngersoll enjoyed a friendship with the poet Walt Whitman who considered Ingersoll the greatest orator of his time It should not be surprising that I am drawn to Ingersoll for he is Leaves of Grass He lives embodies the individuality I preach I see in Bob Ingersoll the noblest specimen American flavored pure out of the soil spreading giving demanding light 18 The feeling was mutual Upon Whitman s death in 1892 Ingersoll delivered the eulogy at the poet s funeral The eulogy was published to great acclaim and is considered a classic panegyric 19 In popular culture Edit Ingersoll statue in Peoria Illinois The community of Redwater Texas was founded in the mid 1870s as Ingersoll in honor of Robert Ingersoll it was changed to its current name following an 1886 revival meeting that yielded 110 conversions the townspeople no longer wishing to honor the agnostic 20 Colonel Bob Mountain in Washington state was named for Robert Ingersoll 21 His birthplace known as the Robert Ingersoll Birthplace or Robert Green Ingersoll Birthplace Museum was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1988 22 A mine near Keystone SD is named after him 23 Ingersoll s type of agnosticism was labelled Ingersollism by his intellectual contemporaries including Congregationalist Lyman Abbott 24 Congregationalist minister John P Sanderson 25 Illinois scholar and lawyer George Reuben Wendling 26 and others such as a collection of refutations of Ingersollism published in 1879 by Chicago publishers Rhodes and McClure 27 In July 2016 Ingersoll s statue in Peoria Illinois was restored thanks to a successful fundraising effort by the Freedom From Religion Foundation 28 In Lewis Grassic Gibbon s modernist novel Sunset Song 1932 the character of Long Rob reads the books of a coarse creature Ingersoll that made watches and didn t believe in God and God knows if the creature s logic was as poor as his watches and fair caution him and his Ingersoll that could neither make watches nor sense The author s running joke intentionally confuses Robert G Ingersoll with the watch making company of the same name 29 In Sinclair Lewis s novel Elmer Gantry the freethinker Jim Lefferts throws a volume of Ingersoll s work at Gantry following an argument over his recent conversion Gantry struggling to write a speech for a revival meeting takes a paragraph from Ingersoll out of context and builds his sermon on it Works EditThe gods and other lectures New York D M Bennett 1876 Some mistakes of Moses Washington D C C P Farrell 1879 Proceedings of the Civil Rights Mass Meeting held at Lincoln Hall October 22 1883 Speeches of Hon Frederick Douglass and Robert G Ingersoll Washington D C C P Farrell 1883 Walt Whitman New York The Truth Seeker Co 1890 Col Ingersoll s reply to his critics in the N Y Evening Telegram Toronto J Spencer Ellis 1892 Shakespeare a lecture New York Farrell 1895 Abraham Lincoln a lecture New York Farrell 1895 Voltaire a lecture New York Farrell 1895 Great speeches of Col R G Ingersoll complete Chicago Rhodes amp McClure 1895 Why I am an agnostic 1896 The works of Robert G Ingersoll vols 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 and 12 New York The Dresden pub co C P Farrell 1902 Footnotes Edit Wilson Rufus R 16 March 1890 A Sketch of the Life of America s Most Noted Agnostic by Rufus Wilson The Elmira Telegram Retrieved 2018 09 16 1887 History of Gallatin Saline Hamilton Franklin and Williamson Counties Illinois Goodspeed Publishing Co 557 585 As of 1887 Judge McBane still had in his possession Ingersoll s letter of inquiry regarding the school dated May 16 1853 Entry for Eva Ingersoll Brown in A Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalists Milo Erwin 1876 History of Williamson County Illinois 250 Kittredge Herman E A Biographical Appreciation of Robert G Ingersoll Ch 2 Eva Ingersoll Wakefield ed 1951 The Letters of Robert G Ingersoll New York Hallmark Hubner Press Inc 18 19 Kittredge Ch 2 1911 The Star Route Trial The Evening Star Washington D C February 28 1883 p 1 Retrieved August 4 2022 via Newspapers com Shapiro Carl May 20 1973 The Morristown Blasphemy Trial The Record Hackensack New Jersey pp Magazine 20 22 Retrieved August 4 2022 via Newspapers com Myers John Myers The Prince of Swindlers American Heritage August 1956 7 5 Updated link retrieved 05 11 2011 McCarthy Daniel 2012 11 21 Outsider Conservatism The American Conservative Kittredge Ch 5 1911 Ingersoll Robert G 1915 The Great Infidels The Works of Robert G Ingersoll in Twelve Volumes Volume III The Dresden Publishing Company p 319 Retrieved December 9 2012 In correspondence with Congress Representative Thomas J Geary The North American Review vol 157 1893 pp 52 67 The Lambs the lambs org The Lambs Inc 6 November 2015 Member Roster I Retrieved December 4 2021 Hardee Lewis J Jr 2010 1st pub 2006 The Lambs Theatre Club softcover 2nd ed Jefferson North Carolina McFarland Publishing ISBN 978 0 7864 6095 3 Jacoby Susan Freethought s Forgotten Hero Point of Inquiry Center for Inquiry Retrieved July 6 2017 Intimate with Walt Selections from Whitman s Conversations with Horace Traubel Gary Schmidgall Editor 2001 University of Iowa Press Page 81 The Book of Eulogies Phyllis Theroux Editor 1977 Simon amp Schuster Page 30 Redwater TX TSHA Handbook of Texas Texas State Historical Association Retrieved 7 October 2022 Majors Harry M 1975 Exploring Washington Van Winkle Publishing Co p 72 ISBN 978 0 918664 00 6 National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service March 13 2009 Palais Hyman Black Hills Miners Folklore California Folklore Quarterly 4 no 3 1945 255 69 https doi org 10 2307 1495819 Abbott Lyman 1890 Flaws in Ingersollism The North American Review 150 401 446 457 JSTOR 25101967 Association Michigan Congregational 2 December 1892 The Congregational Churches of Michigan For the First Fifty Years of Their Organization Into a State Association Addresses Delivered Papers Read and Reports Made at the Jubilee Meeting Held at Jackson May 19 22 1892 order of the Association p 70 Retrieved 2 December 2017 via Internet Archive Wendling George Reuben 2 December 1883 Ingersollism From a Secular Point of View A Lecture Delivered in Association Hall New York Music Hall Boston in Philadelphia Chicago St Louis and in Over Six Hundred of the Principal Lecture Courses of the United States and Canada Jansen McClurg p 19 Retrieved 2 December 2017 via Internet Archive James Baird McClure 2 December 1879 Mistakes of Ingersoll As Shown by Rev W F Crafts Bishop Charles E Rhodes amp McClure Retrieved 2 December 2017 via Internet Archive Renken Leslie Ingersoll statue restored by FFRF Freedom From Religion Foundation Peoria Journal Star Retrieved 24 October 2016 A Scots Quair Guttenberg Retrieved 2 October 2020 Further reading EditNathan G Alexander Race in a Godless World Atheism Race and Civilization 1850 1914 New York Manchester New York University Press Manchester University Press 2019 ISBN 978 1526142375 Eric T Brandt Timothy Larsen The Old Atheism Revisited Robert G Ingersoll and the Bible Journal of The Historical Society vol 11 no 2 2011 pp 211 238 R W Justin Clark Ingersoll Infidels and Indianapolis Freethought and Religion in the Central Midwest IUPUI ScholarWorks 2017 C H Cramer Royal Bob The Life of Robert G Ingersoll The Bobbs Merrill Company Inc 1952 Eugene V Debs Recollections of Ingersoll Pearson s Magazine vol 37 no 4 April 1917 pp 302 307 Susan Jacoby The Great Agnostic Robert Ingersoll and American Freethought New Haven CT Yale University Press 2013 Orvin Larson American Infidel Robert G Ingersoll a Biography Citadel Press 1962 Susan Jacoby Freethinkers A History of American Secularism Metropolitan Books 2004 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Robert G Ingersoll Wikisource has original works by or about Robert Green Ingersoll Wikimedia Commons has media related to Robert G Ingersoll RobertGreenIngersoll org complete works online website expired 1 The Ingersoll Times Works by Robert G Ingersoll at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Robert G Ingersoll at Internet Archive Works by Robert G Ingersoll at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Voice recordings at the Library of Congress Robert Green Ingersoll Museum Works by Robert G Ingersoll at the Secular Web Ingersoll s biography Archived 2016 03 05 at the Wayback Machine Ingersoll Chronology Project that tracks his speaking career Ingersoll Memorial Home Page Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine from the Council for Secular Humanism Large selection of quotations Ingersoll on sabbath superstition Robert G Ingersoll at Find a Grave Robert Ingersoll The Pantagraph Bloomington Illinois newspaper Area once rolled out welcome mat for The Great Agnostic Pantagraph Bloomington Illinois newspaper Gordon Stein Collection of Robert Green Ingersoll Archived 2020 07 23 at the Wayback Machine Special Collections Research Center Southern Illinois University CarbondaleLegal officesPreceded byoffice abolished Attorney General of Illinois1867 1869 Succeeded byWashington Bushnell Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert G Ingersoll amp oldid 1169746176, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.