- Edwin Ginn
Edwin Ginn (1838 - 1914), American publisher and philanthropist.
In 1838, Ginn was born to a poor family who lived on a small farm near
Orland, Maine . At age twenty-four he graduated fromTufts University . After graduation, Ginn had a career selling schoolbooks that became extremely lucrative. In 1868 he foundedGinn & Co. , and this endeavor allowed him to gain societal influence as one of the leadingtextbook publishers in the country.Edwin Ginn was one of the wealthiest men of his day. After his second
marriage to a much younger woman in his late fifties, he directed his energies and finances to important social causes: the Americanpeace movement was his primary concern. He was resolved to attempt to change world attitudes regarding the arming forwar . He promoteddiplomacy by appealing to world attitudes to use logic, reason, and common sense."A great factor in Ginn's life was
Edward Everett Hale , a pastor of Boston's SouthCongregational Church , a champion of peace, and a notedorator ." By this association with Hale, Ginn developed an interest in internationalarbitration . Ginn dedicated himself to the cause and the possibility of peace. In 1910, Ginn founded anInternational School of Peace inBoston whose purpose was to educate "the people of all nations to a full knowledge of the waste and destruction of war and of preparation for war, its evil effects on present social conditions and on the well-being of future generations and to promote international justice and the brotherhood of man..." The School was later converted into theWorld Peace Foundation .Memorials
* Named "in memoriam", The Edwin Ginn Library is the main library at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at
Tufts University .Book
Robert I. Rotberg . (2007). "A Leadership for Peace: How Edwin Ginn Tried to Change the World. " Stanford, Calif. :Stanford University Press , 2007.External links
* [http://www.library.tufts.edu/ginn/index.html The Edwin Ginn Library]
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