- George Ripley (transcendentalist)
Infobox Person
name = George Ripley
image_size = 200px
caption = "George Ripley, sometime between 1849 and 1860: a detail fromMathew Brady 's daguerreotype of theNew York Tribune editorial staff."
birth_date = October 3, 1802
birth_place =
death_date = July 4, 1880
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education =
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children =George Ripley (October 3, 1802-July 4,1880) was an American
social reformer , Unitarian, and Transcendentalist. He is best remembered as the founder of the short-lived utopian communityBrook Farm inWest Roxbury, Massachusetts .Biography
Ripley was born on October 3, 1802, in
Greenfield, Massachusetts . [Ehrlich, Eugene and Gorton Carruth. "The Oxford Illustrated Literary Guide to the United States". New York: Oxford University Press, 1982: 48. ISBN 0195031865] Ripley graduated fromHarvard College in 1823. In 1827 he married Sophia Dana. Graduating in 1826 fromHarvard Divinity School , he became aUnitarian minister at Boston's Purchase Street Church, and was active throughout the 1830s in Unitarian theological thought. He was involved in a widely-read debate withAndrews Norton over the necessity of belief in the Biblicalmiracle s in 1836. Ripley contended that to insist upon the reality of miracles was to demand material proof of spiritual matters, and that faith needed no such external confirmation; but Norton and the mainstream of Unitarianism found this tantamount to heresy. This dispute laid the groundwork for the separation of a more extremeTranscendentalism from its liberal Unitarian roots, a division which would come fully to fruition inRalph Waldo Emerson 's "Divinity School Address" of 1838. In 1836 the "Transcendental Club ," nucleus of the Transcendentalist movement, was formed in Ripley's house, where it would continue to meet for years.In the late 1830s Ripley became increasingly engaged in "
Associationism ," an early Fourieristsocialist movement. In October 1840 he announced to the Transcendental Club his plan to form an associationist community based on Fourier's utopian plans. Later in 1840 and 1841 he convinced many of the club's members (though not Emerson) to join him in the enterprise, or to visit the community. On March 28, 1841, Ripley gave a farewell sermon to his failing Purchase Street parish, and in April he formed the community atBrook Farm .The community failed in 1847 after a fire bankrupted Brook Farm and nearly ruined Ripley. His wife had converted to
Catholicism in 1846, encouraged byOrestes Brownson , and had become doubtful of his Associationist politics; their relationship became strained by the 1850s. George Ripley began to work as a freelance journalist, and in 1849 was employed byHorace Greeley at the "New York Tribune " and also edited "Harper's Magazine ". Together withBayard Taylor he compiled a "Handbook of Literature and the Fine Arts" (1852). Later he found a steadier income by publishing the "New American Cyclopedia" (16 volumes); between 1858 and 1863, it sold in the millions and earned Ripley over $100,000. [Miller, Perry. "The Raven and the Whale: Poe, Melville, and the New York Literary Scene". Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1997 (first printed 1956): 341. ISBN 0-8018-5750-3] In 1861 Sophia Ripley died. George Ripley remarried, to Louisa Sclossberger, in 1865, and was a part of theGilded Age New York literary scene until his death in 1880. The biography of "George Ripley" (1882) was written byOctavius Brooks Frothingham .References
External links
*George Ripley, Charles A. Dana. [http://www.archive.org/search.php?query=%22the%20american%20cyclopaedia%22%20AND%20mediatype%3Atexts "The American Cyclopaedia."] . From
Internet Archive .
* [http://www.uua.org/uuhs/duub/articles/georgeripley.html Ripley biography] from "Dictionary of Unitarian & Universalist Biography"
* [http://www.colonial.net/alcottweb/neighborhood/NER/ripleybc.html Ripley's career as a writer] from Alcott School
* [http://www.vcu.edu/engweb/transcendentalism/ideas/brhistory.html Ripley and Brook Farm] from Transcendentalism Web
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