Description:

William C. Fowler 47-Piece Archive of Religious & Suffrage Pamphlets, Plus More!

An extensive archive of religious and political publications, totaling 47 pieces with 9 engravings and 10 pencil sketches dating from 1770 to circa early 19th century collected by the Fowler family. It focuses primarily on published sermons and women's rights arguments, with several addresses made by William Chauncey Fowler himself. Several other branches and generations of the Fowler family are also represented in this archive. Additionally, there is a booklet of proverbs inscribed to William Worthington Fowler, William Chauncey's son. All have been mounted in a large scrapbook, save for a small hardcover booklet entitled "Chauncey's Election Sermon, 1770." With varying degrees of toning, soiling, foxing, and wear to each piece. Good to very good; housed in protective pages. Please refer to the photographs for further condition information.

William Chauncey Fowler (1793-1881) graduated from Yale College and was a professor at Middlebury College and Amherst College. He married Harriet Webster, a daughter of lexicographer Noah Webster (1758-1843), and helped edit Amherst College's edition of "Webster's Dictionary." Fowler's son, William Worthington Fowler (1832-1881), also graduated from Amherst College and was an attorney in New York City before becoming a journalist and writer in Durham, Connecticut.

Highlights include:
1. Address on Music. Delivered at Durham, Connecticut February 1861. By Professor William C. Fowler.
2. English Universities. By Re4v. William C. Fowler. July 1853.
3. The Bible and Woman Suffrage. By John Hooker. Hartford, Connecticut, 1870.
4. A Mother's Letters to a Daughter on Woman Suffrage. By Isabella Beecher Hooker. Hartford, Connecticut, 1870.
5. Legal Disabilities of Married Women in Connecticut. By George A. Hickox. Litchfield, Connecticut, 1871.
6. Rooms of the New-York Young Men's Christian Association, April 1858. To the Clergy of the United States.
7. "Come and See" or the Duty of those Who Dread the Sentiments of Other Christians. By William B. O. Peabody. Boston, May 1833.
8. Plymouth Pulpit: A Weekly Publication of Sermons Preached by Henry Ward Beecher. New York, 1869.
9. Charles Chauncy's Election Sermon. Boston, May 30, 1770.
10. "Les Deux Proberbes" by Genéve. Paris, 1852. Inscribed "W.W. Fowler from the Author."
11. Mr. Dickinson's Sermon on the Claims of the American Colonization Society. Springfield, 1829.
12. Spelling Reform by Professor March, Lafayette College. From the Princeton Review. New York, 1880.
13. Engraving: "Which Is The Mother" by A. H. Ritchie. Painted by Melle. Ferrand. Engraved for Godey's Lady Book.
14. Stock Certificate: American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. Boston, 1884. One share issued to Lila Field.
15. Numerous sketches of buildings, men, women, children, and dogs.

William Chauncey Fowler (1793-1881) was born in Connecticut and graduated from Yale College in 1816. After teaching in Virginia for a year, he became a tutor at Yale from 1819 to 1824. He was licensed to preach and ordained a pastor of the Congregational Church in Greenfield, Massachusetts, in 1825. That same year, he married Harriet Webster (1797-1844), one of the daughters of Noah Webster. They had four children. From 1827 to 1838, he taught at Middlebury College in Vermont, and from 1838 to 1843, at Amherst College. Despite leaving Amherst, Fowler still helped edit the college's edition of "Webster's Dictionary" in 1845. In 1858, Fowler moved to Durham, Connecticut, where he wrote a series of English grammar books and a variety of other books, including "History of Durham" (1872).

William Worthington Fowler (1832-1881) was born in Vermont to William Chauncey Fowler and Harriet Webster Fowler, while his father was a professor at Middlebury College. He graduated from Amherst College in 1854 and studied law in Amherst, Massachusetts, and New York City before gaining admission to the bar in 1857. He practiced as a lawyer until 1864 when he became a broker. In 1871, he turned to journalism and literature and settled in Durham, Connecticut. In 1873, he married his cousin Gertrude Van Ness Smith (1846-1933), and they had five children, though one died as an infant. He served in the Connecticut Senate in 1875 and the Connecticut House of Representatives in 1879. He was the author of "Ten Years in Wall Street" (1870), "Life and Adventures of Benjamin F. Moneypenny" (1873), and "Twenty Years of Inside Life in Wall Street" (1880).

William Chauncey Fowler (1875-1941) was born in Hudson, New York, and was the grandson and namesake of the Yale-educated professor and scholar William Chauncey Fowler. The younger Fowler was raised in Durham and lived there for the rest of his life, working as a farmer. He never married, but became a local historian for the area.

This item comes with a Certificate from John Reznikoff, a premier authenticator for both major 3rd party authentication services, PSA and JSA (James Spence Authentications), as well as numerous auction houses.

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