- John Denison Baldwin
Infobox Politician
name=John Denison Baldwin
width=247px
state=Massachusetts
district=8th
party=Republican
term=March 4 ,1863 –March 3 ,1869
preceded=Charles R. Train
succeeded=George F. Hoar
state_house2=Connecticut
state2=Connecticut
district2=Blank
term2=1847 -1852
preceded2=George S. Catlin
succeeded2=William W. Boardman
date of birth=September 28 ,1809
place of birth=North Stonington ,Connecticut , USA
date of death=July 8 ,1883
place of death=Worcester,Massachusetts , USA
spouse=Lemira Hathaway
religion=Congregationalist
profession=Minister,Writer , Editor
footnotes=John Denison Baldwin (
September 28 ,1809 –July 8 ,1883 ) was anAmerican politician ,Congregationalist minister,newspaper editor , and popularanthropological writer. He was a member of theConnecticut State House of Representatives and later a member of theU.S. House of Representatives fromMassachusetts .Biography
Baldwin briefly studied law, but graduated with a degree in
theology fromYale Divinity School in1834 . He became aCongregationalist minister and preached inWest Woodstock ,North Branford , andNorth Killingly , all in Connecticut. In1839 Yale awarded him an honorary Master of Arts degree.He became a member of the
Connecticut State House of Representatives in1847 .Baldwin was active in the Free Soil"Captain John Stanton Baldwin, U.S.V.". "Officers of the Volunteer Army and Navy who served in the Civil War". L.R. Hamersly & Co. (1893).] and
anti-slavery movements.Hoar, George Frisbie. "Autobiography of Seventy Years", Vol. 1-2. Chapter XII. New York, Scribner’s Sons (1903). (available online via Gutenberg Project: http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/19548)] He edited anti-slavery journals the "Republican" (published inHartford ) and the "Commonwealth" (published inBoston ), and from1859 became the owner and editor of the "Worcester Spy ," whatGeorge Frisbie Hoar called "one of the most influential papers in New England."From this time onwards Baldwin was resident in
Worcester, Massachusetts . He was adelegate to the1860 Republican National Convention , whereAbraham Lincoln was nominated as Republican presidential candidate, and in1863 he was elected to theU.S. House of Representatives forMassachusetts's 8th congressional district . A "close friend" of bothCharles Sumner andHenry Wilson ,cite web
last = Conteee
first = Clarence G
title = The Supreme Court Bar's First Black Member
work = Supreme Court Historical Society 1976 Yearbook
publisher = The Supreme Court Historical Society
date =1976
url = http://www.supremecourthistory.org/04_library/subs_volumes/04_c01_j.html
format =
doi =
accessdate = 2007-05-16 ]Senators from Massachusetts, Baldwin served for three terms in the House, promoting fullequal rights forblack Americans in the wake of the Civil War. In1869 , whenGeorge F. Hoar was nominated as the Republican candidate for his seat, Baldwin returned full time to his journalistic and anthropological work. He edited theWorcester Spy until his death in 1883.Family
Baldwin married Lemira Hathaway of
Bristol County, Massachusetts onApril 3 ,1832 , and they had four children. Two daughters died by the age of 21, and neither married. Both of Baldwin's sons survived into adulthood and became partners in their father's newspaper business. The elder, John Stanton Baldwin, served as acaptain in theFifty-first Massachusetts Regiment in theUnion Army during the Civil War.John D Baldwin was a distant cousin of
Roger Sherman and of the Baldwin, Hoar, and Sherman political family. He was also a direct descendant of Mayflower passengerJohn Billington .Anthropological writings and beliefs
Baldwin conducted correspondence with many notable thinkers of his time, including
Ralph Waldo Emerson ,Charles Darwin ,James Russell Lowell , and particularly his friendCharles Sumner . He accepted Darwin'stheory of evolution while maintaining a belief in the divine origin of "first forms."In
1865 he was elected a corporate member of theAmerican Oriental Society . Baldwin's anthropological writing posited the origins of humancivilization as arising among anArabian or NortheastAfrican people, theCushites , in pre-historic times.In "Ancient America, In Notes On American Archaeology" he also speculated on the origins of the "Mound Builder" people then believed to have constructed the famous mounds around the Mississippi and Ohio River valleys, suggesting that they had been an aboriginal people who had migrated northwards from
Central America orMexico . He rejected the then-common notion that they had been a lost European,Semitic , or Asiatic people who had been wiped out by theNorth American Indians , asserting on the contrary that the Mounds were "wholly original, wholly American" and "did not come from the Old World".Baldwin, John D., "Ancient America, in notes on American archæology", New York, Harper, 1871, ISBN 1-564596575.] He did, however, still subscribe to the idea that these "Mound Builders" were not the same as the American Indian inhabitants of the region at that time, who he believed were a separate race originating in Asia.Works
* "A scriptural view of the Messiah: Being the substance of a sermon delivered in the Methodist chapel, Dighton, Mass., on Sunday evening, May 27, 1832", Edmund Anthony, Office of Independent Gazette, 1832.
* "Lessons from the grave: A discourse delivered in North Branford, June 12, 1842, and occasioned by the death of Daniel Wheadon", Hitchcock & Stafford, 1842.
* "The story of Raymond Hill,: And other poems", W.D. Ticknor & Co, 1847.
* "STATE SOVEREIGNTY And TREASON. Speech of Hon. John D. Baldwin, of Massachusetts, Delivered in the House of Representatives, Washington, March 5, 1864, the House being in Committee of the Whole on the State of the Union.", H. Polkinhorn, 1864.
* "Congress and Reconstruction: Speech of Hon. John D. Baldwin of Massachusetts in the House of Representatives, April 7, 1866", 1866.
* "Human rights and human races", Congressional Globe Office, 1868.
* "Human rights and human races : speech of Mr. Baldwin, of Massachusetts, delivered in the House of Representatives, January 11, 1868, in reply to a speech of Hon. James Brooks, of New York, on the Negro race.", F. & J. Rives & G.A. Bailey, 1868.
* "Pre-Historic Nations; or, Inquiries Concerning Some of the Great Peoples and Civilizations of Antiquity", New York, Harper, 1869, ISBN 0-766101436.
* "Ancient America, in notes on American archæology", New York, Harper, 1871, ISBN 1-564596575.
* "Ancient America and the Mound Builders"
* "A record of the descendants of John Baldwin, of Stonington, Conn.: With notices of other Baldwins who settled in America in early colony times", Tyler & Seagrave, 1880.
* "Thomas Stanton of Stonington, Conn: An incomplete record of his descendants", Tyler & Seagrave, 1882.
* "A record of the descendants of Capt. George Denison of Stonington, Connecticut: With notices of his father and brothers, and some account of other Denisons who settled in America in the colony times".Notes
References
* Hoar, George Frisbie. "Autobiography of Seventy Years", Vol. 1-2. New York, Scribner’s Sons (1903). (available online via Gutenberg Project: http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/19548)
* cite web
last = Kestenbaum
first = Lawrence
title = Connecticut: State House of Representatives, 1840s
work =The Political Graveyard
publisher =
date =2005
url = http://politicalgraveyard.com/geo/CT/ofc/sthse1840s.html
format =
doi =
accessdate = 2007-05-15* cite web
last =
first =
title = Samuel J. May Anti-Slavery Collection
work =
publisher = Cornell University Library Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections
date =2006
url = http://dlxs.library.cornell.edu/m/mayantislavery/browse_B.html
format =
doi =
accessdate = 2007-05-16*
* "Captain John Stanton Baldwin, U.S.V.". "Officers of the Volunteer Army and Navy who served in the Civil War". L.R. Hamersly & Co. (1893).
External links
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=7505085 Find-A-Grave profile for John Denison Baldwin]
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