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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
October 25, 2006
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
AND THE LEGEND OF THE PELL TREATY OAK" -- $11.95 (PROCEEDS AFTER
PRINTING COSTS WILL GO TO
BARTOW-PELL MANSION MUSEUM).
CLICK HERE TO BROWSE BEFORE YOU BUY!
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Wednesday, October 25, 2006
A Biography of the Rev. Henry Randall Waite, Ph. D., a 19th Century
Pastor of Huguenot Memorial Presbyterian Church
The Rev. Henry Randall Waite, Ph. D., served for a number of years as
the pastor of Huguenot Memorial Presbyterian Church in the Village of
Pelham Manor, New York. A magazine article published in 1886 provided an
extensive account of Waite's ancestors and a substantive biography of
Waite. Today's Historic Pelham Blog posting transcribes pertinent portions
of that biography.
"Rev. Hiram Henry Waite, M. A., born Aug. 13, 1816, lately pastor of the
Waverly Congregationalist Church, Jersey City, N. J., and now of the
Congregationalist Church, Madison, N. Y., is well known among
Congregational clergymen as an able, faithful, and successful minister,
his services, wherever he has labored, having been signally blessed in
every way. He married in 1843 S. Maria Randall at Antwerp, N. Y., by whom
he has now living three daughters and one son, Henry Randall Waite, Ph.
D., of West Newton, Mass., who is prominent among the younger
representatives of this ancient New England family. On the maternal side
his descent is traced from the Randalls and Carpenters of New Hampshire,
stocks from which have sprung many notable men. Both his parternal and
maternal grandfathers were soldiers in the war of 1812; his ancestors were
also active participants in the war of the Revolution, and at a still
earlier date, as we have seen, participants in the wars with the
Narragansetts and other Indian tribes. To his puritan ancestry we may
trace his sturdy independence, his originality, and persevering industry;
while to his Celtic progenitors may be due something of his generous and
gnial nature. He graduated in 1868, at Hamilton College, with an excellent
reputation as a scholar and thinker; and in the same year became one of
the editors of the Utica Morning Herald where his abilities as a
critical and literary writer soon gained recognition. Subsequently he
studied theology at Union Theological Seminary in the city of New York,
and in 1872 visited Europe.
He supplied the pulpit of the American Chapel in Paris for a short time,
and afterward visited Rome, where he was invited to assist in the
establishment of what became under his labors a flourishing and useful
church for resident and visiting Americans, the first for English-speaking
people tolerated within the walls. In the pastor's parlors, facing the
windows of the Propaganda Fide, many notable assemblies were gathered.
Here were taken the first steps toward the organization of a union of the
Sunday-school forces in Italy. Here were held important meetings of the
Italian Bible Society, and here was organized the first Young Men's
Christian Association in Italy, its members including Italians of every
evangelical faith. He established a Bible training school for Italian
young men, so planned as to secure the approval and co-operation of
Italian ministers of every denomination, and was also instrumental in the
establishment of a school among the soldiers of the Italian army stationed
in Rome, out of which grew a church, composed wholly of men in the
military service, its creed being that of the Apostles. Many persons,
native and foreign, assisted on the occasion, memorabl in the history of
religious progress in Rome, when the sacrament of the Lord's Supper was
administered to theese modern soldiers of Caesar's household. This work
has been efficiently continued to this day under other direction, and
thousands of ex-soldiers in all parts of Italy have borne with them to
their homes the influence of their Catholic Christian training in the
Scuola of the Chiesa Evangelica Militare.
Dr. Waite's inquiries early led him to look upon sectarianism as one of
the most serious obstacles to the progress of evangelical truth in Italy,
and to the belief that the presentation of a united Christian front, in
agreement upon the fundamental truths of the gospel, was essential to that
influence upon the mind which would bring the most hopeful elements among
the Latin peoples into practical unity with Protestant Christianity. He
therefore energetically espoused the cause of Christian unity, of which
the church in Rome, in its ingathering of worshippers of all creeds, was
made a notable example.
In 1875 he returned to the United States, and, resuming editorial work,
was for a time editor of the New Haven Evening Journal, and then
of the International Review, in New York, in both of which
positions he added largely to his reputation as a scholar, thinker, and
trenchant and graceful writer. In 1876 he received from the University of
Syracuse, pro causa, the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, and was
at the same time invited to become a non-resident professor of Political
Science in that institution. He had previously accepted a call to the
pastorate of the Huguenot Memorial Church at Pelham on the Sound, where he
purchased an estate known as 'Bonny Croft,' and in the midst of most
congenial surroundings remained until 1880, when, upon invitation of Gen.
Francis A. Walker, superintendent of the Tenth Census of the United
States, he undertook the direction of the Educational and Religious
Departments of the Census.
Dr. Waite has an acknowledged position as one of the most accomplished
statisticians and most thoroughly informed educational authorities in the
United States. Doubtless in recognition of this fact, at the Inter-State
Educational Convention held in Louisville in 1883 and composed of
delegates appointed by the governors of the several states, he was invited
to deliver the opening address, a paper on the Ideal Public School System
which was characterized by the Chairman of the convention as 'one of the
best ever read before a like body.' Aside from editorial work he has
furnished frequent contributions to various periodicals, and has gained a
special reputation as a writer upon politico-economic subjects. Two of
these contributions recently published in the form of a brochure by D.
Lothrop & Co., under title of 'Illiteracy and Mormonism,' have attracted
especial attention among those interested in these important questions.
When residing in New York he was President of the Political Science
Association, and Chairman of the Executive Committee of the National
Reform League, one of the pioneer organizations for the reform of the
civil service; and while residing in Washington was president of the
Social Science Association of the District of Columbia.
Dr. Waite is a logical, fluent and earnest speaker, and his reputation as
a student of educational and social problems has led to a frequent demand
for his services on the part of committees concerned with legislative
questions, and at assemblies of leading educators. He presided and
delivered an address at one of the sessions of the National Educational
Assembly at Ocean Grove, in 1883, and in an address at one of the meetings
of the National Educational Association at Madison, Wis., in 1884,
following Mgr. Capel, to whose covert attack upon our public school system
he made, as reported in the Chicago Tribune, a temperate but
caustic and able reply. At the last meeting of the same association, at
Saratoga, he delivered an address upon the Tenure of Office and
Compensation of Teachers, which is characterized by the Iowa School
Journal as one of the specially fine papers of the occasion. In
connection with his editorial labors, he discharges the duties of
President of the American Institute of Civics, an organization lately
incorporated 'for the purpose of promoting the study of political and
economic science and so much of social science as is related to government
and citizenship'; the aim of the institution being to secure, in every
walk in life, a more thorough preparation for the duties of citizenship.
Notable among the officers of this worthy institution are Chief Justice
Waite, Senator Colquitt, Hon. Hugh McCulloch, President Porter of Yale
College, President Seelye of Amherst, Senator Morrill of Vermont, Hon.
John Eaton, U. S. Commissioner of Education, Hon. Carroll D. Wright, Hon.
Mellen Chamberlain, D. C. Heath, Gen. H. B. Carrington, Daniel Lothrop,
and Robert M. Pulsifier, with hundreds of members of equal eminence.
Dr. Waite has had several invitations to accept important positions in
connection with educational institutions, none of which he has thought it
advisable to accept.
The Boston Transcript, not long since, noted the fact that
prominent friends of Middlebury College had presented his name in
connection with the office of President of that institution, and added:
'Whether Dr. Waite will accept the position, if elected, we are not
informed, but of his qualifications there can be no doubt. Graduated from
a kindred institution, he is a firm believer in the usefulness of the
smaller college. . . . To his other qualifications are added the executive
skill and indomitable energy which are needed to place Middlebury College
upon the footing with similar institutions to which its honorable position
in the past so justly entitles it.'
Among other labors, he is preparing for early publication by D. Lothrop &
Co. a work upon the Indian Races of North America; and is also Secretary
of the Inter State Commission on Federal Aid to Education. Few men have a
wider circle of devoted friends among educated young men, a fact in some
degree accounted for by the ready and helpful sympathy and practical
wisdom with which he responds to the numerous demands made upon him for
aid and counsel, by those who are perplexed as to the choice of a calling
or are seeking entrance to some field of labor. There are many such,
within the writer's knowledge, who owe him debts which they will never
cease to acknowledge with gratitude. An evidence of the esteem in which he
is held by college men, is afforded by the fact that one of the oldest of
college societies, which chapters in twenty or more leading colleges,
including Harvard, Brown, Cornell, Williams, Hamilton, etc., chose him as
orator at its semi-centennial anniversary, observed in September of last
year, in the Academy of Music, in New York."
Source: Lovell, Arthur Thomas, Richard and Gamaliel Wayte, and Their
Descendants, in The New England Magazine and Bay State Monthly, Vol. IV,
No.1, p. 48, pp. 55-59 (Boston, MA: Bay State Monthly Co. 1886).
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
Click here to see a
single index of all Historic Pelham Blog Postings to date.
posted by Blake A. Bell @
4:45 AM
Comment
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for
October 25, 2006.
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