- Donald S. Harrington
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Donald Szantho Harrington (July 11, 1914 Newton, Middlesex County, Massachusetts - September 16, 2005 Romania) was an American politician and religious leader.
Life
Harrington graduated from the University of Chicago in 1939, and began preaching at the People's Liberal Church on Chicago's South Side. The same year, he married fellow seminary student Vilma Szantho (d. 1982). They had two children: Loni Hancock and David Harrington.
Harrington became a minister of the Community Church of the New York Unitarian Universalist in New York City in 1944. He retired as senior minister in 1982.
He was State Chairman of the Liberal Party of New York, being the "face" of the party which was ruled with an iron fist by Alex Rose until 1976.
In the New York state election, 1966, Harrington ran for Lieutenant Governor of New York on the Liberal ticket with Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr. They were defeated by the incumbent Republicans Nelson Rockefeller and Malcolm Wilson, but Harrington was elected a delegate to the New York State Constitutional Convention of 1967.
In 1984, he married his first wife's niece, Anika Szantho, who was ordained a Unitarian minister in 1990. They lived in Transylvania where Harrington was active in economic development and his wife served several village congregations.
Harrington died from sequels of a gall bladder surgery, done in spring 2005, from which he never fully recovered.
A past president of United World Federalists, Harrington wrote Religion in an Age of Science (1965).
External links
- Donald S. Harrington talks to Richard D. Heffner about contemporary events and his friend and colleague Norman Cousins; Open Mind, 1991
- The Community Church of New York Unitarian Universalist
- Liberal Party of New York
- "Donald S. Harrington, 91, Liberal Crusader, Dies", New York Times, September 20, 2005
Preceded by
John J. BurnsLiberal Party Nominee for Lieutenant Governor of New York
1966Succeeded by
Basil PatersonCategories:- 1914 births
- 2005 deaths
- American Christian clergy
- American Unitarians
- People from Newton, Massachusetts
- People from New York City
- University of Chicago alumni
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