HENRY WHITNEY BELLOWS - AUTOGRAPH LETTER SIGNED 01/30/1879 - HFSID 78431
Price: $400.00
HENRY WHITNEY BELLOWS
Unitarian minister Henry Whitney Bellows wrote this letter in 1879 to
tell the recipient that he didn't have any copies left of his Cornell
baccalaureate speech. Bellows was president of the United States Sanitary
Commission, which improved the lives of Union soldiers and helped treat the
wounded during the American Civil War.
Autograph letter signed "H.W. Bellows". 1 page, 4½x7, 1 sheet
folded, 2 binder holes at left edge. New York, Jan. 30, 1879. In
full: "Dr. Sir , I am sorry to say I have not a single copy of my Cornell
Baccalau-reate left, &I can give you no help, except by saying that by
writing to some acquaintance at Ithaca, you would probably secure it. Very truly
yours". American Unitarian clergyman and author Bellows (1814-1882)
is probably best remembered today for co-founding the United States Sanitary
Commission (USSC) during the American Civil War. The USSC, officially
created on June 18, 1861, was one of the largest soldier's aid agencies
during the war and improved camp conditions and food for Union and captured
Confederate soldiers and assisted evacuation and treatment of the wounded.
Before it was disbanded in 1866, it also helped Union veterans secure
bounties, back pay and pensions. Bellows was the USSC's first and only
president. He graduated from Harvard Divinity School in 1837. A brief
pastorate in Mobile, Alabama (1837-1838) turned him into a moderate
abolitionist. However, Bellows reportedly refused to call slave owners evil like
other abolitionists, as he'd been tempted by the good life of the South's white
upper class himself. He was then made pastor of the First Congregational Church
(Unitarian) in New York City, which he held until his death. An influential
voice in Unitarianism, he founded the newspaper the Christian
Inquirer in 1847 and edited it and its successor, the Liberal
Christian for over three decades. His greatest influence on Unitarianism
was his proposing and organizing the National Conference of Unitarian Churches
in 1865. He served as president of the National Conference, with short
breaks, until 1880. The organization was later absorbed into the American
Unitarian Association. Lightly toned and creased. Signature and body of letter
are lightly smeared in places but legible. Ink stain near left edge. Lightly
soiled on verso (no show-through). Folded twice and unfolded. Otherwise in fine
condition.
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