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Topic: Frederick Henry Hedge


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  The Transcendental Club
Frederic Henry Hedge (1805-90) was one of the key figures in the establishment of the Transcendental Club.
Hedge was also engaged in a protracted salary dispute with the congregation.
Hedge contributed an article, two translations, and one poem to The Dial during its brief four-year existence, yet his interest and involvement in the journal soon languished, possibly because of a growing disenchantment with some of the more radical tendencies of the transcendentalist movement.
www.age-of-the-sage.org /transcendentalism/transcendental_club.html   (764 words)

  
 Frederic Henry Hedge
Frederic Henry Hedge (December 12, 1805-August 21, 1890) was a Unitarian minister, an early Transcendentalist leader, a historical theologian, a German scholar and translator, and a Harvard professor.
Hedge held to a moderating position, thus tending to be dismissed by the zealots of both sides.
There are collections of Hedge correspondence and papers at the Andover-Harvard Library of the Harvard Divinity School, the Houghton Library of Harvard University, the Schlesinger Library at Radcliffe College, and the Harvard University Archives, all in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
www.uua.org /uuhs/duub/articles/frederichenryhedge.html   (1115 words)

  
 Margaret Fuller: Freeing the Artist Within
Fuller was born in 1810 at Cambridgeport, Massachusetts, and during her youth, she was the companion and confidante of William Henry Channing, James Freeman Clarke, and Frederick Henry Hedge of the Harvard Class of 1829 and the Divinity School Class of 1833.
Henry Hedge, a Unitarian minister in West Cambridge, and then in Bangor, Maine, from 1829 to 1850, was an established figure among the Concord transcendentalist group.
Hedge was concerned with the dualities of the scholar: the scholar found his knowledge in private (the writer/artist finds his need to write in private), then sounded out his findings in society (the writer/artist temporarily joins community to find confidence and further subject matter).
www.critiquemagazine.com /article/fuller.html   (7956 words)

  
 Frederick Henry Hedge - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Frederick Henry Hedge (1805-August 21, 1890) was a New England Unitarian minister and Transcendentalist.
Born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Hedge traveled to Germany and studied in music before graduating from Harvard in 1825.
After graduating from the Divinity School, Hedge was ordained as a Unitarian minister.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Frederick_Henry_Hedge   (264 words)

  
 GEORGE HUNTSTON WILLIAMS: HISTORIAN OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Recalling the Rev. Henry Whitney Bellows’s memorable depiction of a true liberal, George Huntston Williams was in every respect a “large round-about soul.” His work and life, each greater than the sum of their parts, were replete with historic moments.
Somebody that you and I can both relate to one who in the 19th century had such a hope for the Unitarian church to be the broad, liberal church that would influence all of American society, and who wanted it to be both deeply historically grounded, philosophically acute, civically engaged, and ecumenically minded.
Hedge was the first in America to use the term "ecumenical" in it's modern interfaith connotation.
www.harvardsquarelibrary.org /unitarians/williams.html   (4683 words)

  
 Hedge Making | Frederick Henry Hedge   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
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 Frederick Henry Hedge | Broker Buyout Fund Fund Fund Fund Fund Funds Hedge Leveraged | Hedge Fund Accounting Software | ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
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dgem.info /frederick-henry-hedge.htm   (337 words)

  
 A Mighty Fortress is Our God -- Martin Luther   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
This song has been called “the greatest hymn of the greatest man of the greatest period of German history” and the “Battle Hymn of the Reformation.” Today's protestant churches spring from the efforts of Martin Luther.
Though Wesley denounced some of the Moravian views, he was greatly influenced by them in many ways, leading to his formation of Methodist Societies within the Church of England.
Frederick Henry Hedge attended Harvard University and Harvard Divinity School.
www.gbgm-umc.org /HolcombUMC/mightyfortress.htm   (391 words)

  
 Hymn Writers of the Church | Christian Classics Ethereal Library
Hedge, Frederick Henry, a Unitarian divine, professor and author of note, was born at Cambridge, Mass., December 12, 1805.
Huntingdon (who later became a bishop in the Episcopal Church) prepared a volume titled Hymns for the Church of Christ, for use in Unitarian Churches.
Hedge was for some years one of the editors of the Christian Examiner.
www.ccel.org /ccel/nutter/hymnwriters.Hedge_FH.html   (176 words)

  
 AMERICAN MORAL PHILOSOPHY IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY
Hedge's Logick was reviewed in the North American Review in 1816 (vol.4,pp.78-92).
But Levi Hedge's son, Frederick Henry Hedge, devoted his life to calling the attention of American scholars to German thought.
Hedge published at least one work that is still in use today.
www3.baylor.edu /~Elmer_Duncan/ammoralphil.htm   (3115 words)

  
 GO AMERICA   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Henry Ford was determined to build a simple, reliable and affordable car; a car the average American worker could afford.
Henry Ford did not invent the car; he produced an automobile that was within the economic reach of the average American.
Henry Ford and his first carthe Quadricycle, which hebuilt in 1896steadily reduced the cost of the Model T. Instead of pocketing the profits; Ford lowered the price of his car.
goamerica.blogspot.com   (5614 words)

  
 Thelemapedia: The Encyclopedia of Thelema & Magick | Transcendentalism
It began as a protest against the general state of culture and society at the time, and in particular, the state of intellectualism at Harvard and the doctrine of the Unitarian church which was taught at Harvard Divinity School.
The publication of Emerson's 1836 essay Nature is usually taken to be the watershed moment at which Transcendentalism became a major cultural movement.
The practical aims of the Transcendentalists were varied; some among the group linked it with utopian social change (and, in the case of Brownson, it joined explicitly with early socialism), while others found it an exclusively individual and idealist project.
thelemapedia.org /index.php/Transcendentalism   (676 words)

  
 §6. The Transcendental Club. VIII. Transcendentalism. Vol. 15. Colonial and Revolutionary Literature; Early ...
This they had done many months before any regular gatherings were contemplated.
Among those who joined the group at later meetings were Theodore Parker, Margaret Fuller, Orestes A. Brownson, Elizabeth and Sophia Peabody, Thoreau, Hawthorne, Jones Very, Christopher P. Cranch, Charles T.Follen, and William Henry Channing.
For a number of years, following 1836, this group, generally referred to as the Transcendental Club, continued occasionally to come together.
www.bartleby.com /225/1706.html   (319 words)

  
 Food For Thought
Frederic Henry Hedge, "The Mythical Element in the New Testament," in Christianity and Modern Thought, a collection of discourses published by the American Unitarian Association in 1872.
Frederic Henry Hedge, "The Cause of Reason The Cause of Faith" in Reason in Religion (1865), pp.
Frederick M. Eliot was President of the AUA from 1937 to 1958.
www.americanunitarian.org /FFT.htm   (14416 words)

  
 Glossary of Key Terms with Pronunciation Key
Richard II, Henry IV, Parts I and II, and Henry V constitute a tetralogy.
The movement was closely associated with the growth of the Unitarian spirit in New England.
The leading members were Emerson, Convers Francis, Frederick Henry Hedge, Amos Bronson Alcott, Ripley, Margaret Fuller, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Henry D. Thoreau, and William Ellery Channing.
wps.prenhall.com /hss_harmon_handbook_10/0,11189,2590756-,00.html   (1153 words)

  
 New England Scholarship
Translation, as time went on, followed, and German thought was also further sustained and advanced in the community by Frederick Henry Hedge (1805-1890), a philosophical theologian, who conducted a propaganda of German ideas.
Of this group of men Longfellow is the most national figure, and from the point of view of literary history the most significant by virtue of what he contributed to American romanticism in the large.
In the writings of Prescott and Motley the romanticism of the period is clearly felt, and they attained the highest distinction in the literary school of history of the period.
www.conklinguide.com /new-england-scholarship.html   (3095 words)

  
 Andover-Harvard Library - Palfrey Exhibit - Divinity School of the University of Cambridge.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
As there is no record of the time when they entered on theological studies, their names are arranged in the order of the College Catalogue, with the exception of the last four, who are not graduates of Harvard College.
William Farmer, William Henry Furness, Ezra Stiles Gannett, Henry Hersey, Benjamin Kent, Calvin Lincoln.
Benjamin Brigham, George Bradford, Jonathan Cole, Wendell Bayard Davis, Frederick Augustus Farley, George Fiske, Frederick Henry Hedge, Samuel Kirkland Lothrop, William Parsons Lunt, Artemas Bowers Muzzy, John Langdon Sibley, Moses Thomas.
www.hds.harvard.edu /library/exhibits/online/palfrey/divsch.html   (1139 words)

  
 Charles Timothy Brooks
While at Harvard, Brooks heard both Emerson and Edward Everett speak, took courses from Henry Ware, and, most importantly, began his work in German studies under the tutelage of Carl Follen, the premier German scholar of the time.
Lorley and Reinhard, The Convicts and Their Children, and Aloys (1877), exhibit the power of virtuous characters to overcome their circumstances, and in the case of Lorley and Reinhard, in the power of fate to level those lacking in virtue.
This translation of Rückert, dedicated to Frederick Henry Hedge and William Henry Furness, highlights the extent to which eastern thought had entered the America philosophical and literary circles.
academics.vmi.edu /eng_rt/ctbrooks.htm   (2171 words)

  
 History of American Thought
Father of Henry Ward Beecher, Catharine Beecher, and Harriet Beecher Stowe.
Levi Hedge was Harvard's first professor of philosophy.
He was a tutor (1795-1810) and then Professor of logic and metaphysics (1810-27), and then Professor of natural religion, moral philosophy and civil polity (1827-32).
www.pragmatism.org /american/index.htm   (5430 words)

  
 Emerson: The Man by Rev. Samuel A. Trumbore
This desire for direct contact with truth, with the divine unmediated by the Bible, by the church and its authorities inspired not just Emerson but the other Transcendentalists of his time.
Along with Margaret Fuller, George Ripley, James Freeman Clarke, Henry Thoreau, Bronson Alcott, Orestes Brownson, Frederick Henry Hedge, Theodore Parker and other less well remembered Unitarian ministers, Emerson attended a symposium planning meeting in September of 1836 to form what became known as the Transcendentalist Club the first meeting of Unitarian heretics.
Henry David was quite taken with Emerson's first book, Nature, and his lecture and description of an American Scholar.
www.trumbore.org /sam/sermons/s713.htm   (2640 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
- 338 The Sermons of Henry Ward Beecher.
By Henry Ward Beecher, - - - - 341 Rev.
Edited by Henry Robert Reynolds, D. Christianity and the Greek Philosophy; or the relation between spontane- ous and reflective thought in Greece and the positive teaching of Christ and his Apostles.
lcweb2.loc.gov /ndlpcoop/nicmoas/nwng/nwng0029.sgm   (18475 words)

  
 Left Bank Review - Margaret Fuller, Profile
When Fuller’s family relocated to Cambridge in the 1830s, she met the Harvard students who would come to be known as Transcendentalists and who would publish the Dial.
Through Frederick Henry Hedge, Fuller discovered German literature and philosophy, which she pursued with vigor.
However, her father’s sudden death in 1835 caused her to have to enter a teaching career in order to support the family.
www.leftbankreview.com /profiles/MargaretFuller.html   (981 words)

  
 Thoreau as a Spiritual Guide
We often forget that Henry David Thoreau is one of our spiritual ancestors, and that his book, Walden, is part of our "Holy Scripture." Perhaps in this beautiful spring season, and so close to Earth Day, we might remind ourselves.
From 1845 to '47 Henry David Thoreau lived in a small wooden cabin he built himself on the shores of Walden Pond on the outskirts of Concord, Massachusetts.
They included Ralph Waldo Emerson, their leading light; Thoreau, Margaret Fuller, Elizabeth Peabody, the Rev. Theodore Parker, Bronson Alcott, the Rev. George Ripley, the Rev. Orestes Brownson, and the Rev. Frederick Henry Hedge of Bangor, Maine.
ellsworthme.org /uuce/Sermons/thoreausg.html   (2097 words)

  
 Ralph Waldo Emerson
They were a group of intellectuals who shared an idealist frustration with the general state of American culture and society of the day.
Among those attending were Emerson Frederick Henry Hedge, Orestes Brownson, Bronson Alcott, James Freeman Clarke, and Convers Francis.
Other regular male members included William Henry Channing, Theodore Parker, Christopher Pearse Cranch, John Sullivan Dwight, Cyrus Bartol, and Caleb Stetson.
www.u-s-history.com /pages/h3862.html   (1221 words)

  
 SOP Sabbath 2004: Hymns
Luther died on February 18, 1546, while on a visit to his native Eisleben.
More than 50 translations of Luther’s hymn have been made into English, this one by Frederick Henry Hedge.
Hedge was born at Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1805, was educated at Harvard and in Germany, and became a pastor of the Unitarian Church.
www.whiteestate.org /sop/2004/hymn_2.html   (503 words)

  
 ON THE ROAD – PART TWO: THE YELLOW BRICK ROAD   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Or if not arrive, at least know that the journey was worthwhile.
Then perhaps, we will finally realize that the ideals for which we strive are those spoken of by The Rev. Frederick Henry Hedge, a Unitarian divine of the 19
What we need most is not so much to realize the ideal as to idealize the real.
uusara.lunarpages.com /minister/don144.htm   (2407 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
The Scholarship Committee of the Unitarian Universalist Christian Fellowship and The Committee on Seminarians of the Council of Christian Churches in the Unitarian Universalist Association are soliciting manuscripts for the 2006 Frederick Henry Hedge Prize in Unitarian Universalist Christian Church history.
The prize consists of a $500 cash award and publication of the essay in The Unitarian Universalist Christian.
The prize will be presented at General Assembly.
www.uuma.org /documents/SermonAwards/Hedge.htm   (233 words)

  
 Today in History - December 12
1805 Frederick Henry Hedge, New England clergyman and hymnist, was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts (d.
The meeting led to the formation of the General Council of the Lutheran Church in North America.
1898 Matthias Henry Richards, Lutheran professor and editor, died (b.
chi.lcms.org /history/tih1212.htm   (536 words)

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