- Source: Thomas Coffin Amory
Thomas Coffin Amory Jr. (October 6, 1812 – August 20, 1889) was an American lawyer, historian, politician, biographer, and poet. He served as chairman of the Boston Board of Aldermen. He published on the American Revolution and his own ancestors.
Biography
Amory was born in Boston, Massachusetts, the youngest son of Jonathan Amory and his wife Mehitable (Sullivan) Culter. He graduated from Harvard University in 1830. He became a member of the bar of Suffolk County, Boston in 1834. He served in the legislature of Massachusetts and in the municipal government of Boston.
In 1858 he published "Life of James Sullivan" about the former governor of Massachusetts and his grandfather. He later published extensively on the American Revolution as well as on various others of his ancestors, including Major-General John Sullivan and Sir Isaac Coffin. He also wrote numerous poems, the best known of which, "William Blaxton, Sole Inhabitant of Boston" was written at a time when the Old South Church of Boston was threatened with demolition. The poem is said to have contributed to saving the church. In 1858, Amory was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society. In 1863, Armory served as the chairman of the Boston Board of Aldermen.
Amory declined to run as the Whig nominee in the second vote of the 1853–54 Boston mayoral election, despite being offered the party's nomination. He ran as the Democratic nominee in the 1864 Boston mayoral election, losing by a large margin.
Amory died August 20, 1889.
See also
Amory-Ticknor House
Works
Biographies
The Life of James Sullivan: With Selections from his Writings. 1859
The Military Services and Public Life of Major-General John Sullivan of the American Revolutionary Army. 1868
Old Cambridge and New. 1871
Our English Ancestors. 1872
General Sullivan not a pensioner of Luzerne. 1875
Transfer of Erin: or The Acquisition of Ireland by England. 1877
Memoir of John Wingate Thornton. 1879
Memoir of Hon. Richard Sullivan. 1885
The Life of Admiral Sir Isaac Coffin, baronet, his English and American ancestors. 1886
Class Memoir of George Washington Warren, with English and American Ancestry. 1886
William Blaxton.1886
Poetry
William Blackstone, Boston's First Inhabitant 1877
Charles River: A Poem 1888
Siege of Newport. 1888
References
Elkins, James R. Strangers to Us All: Lawyers and Poetry Thomas Coffin Amory College of Law, West Virginia University 2001 Retrieved June 22, 2019
Warner, Charles Dudley, Hamilton Wright Mabie, Lucia Isabella Gilbert Runkle, George Henry Warner, and E. C. Towne. Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern. Vol. XXIX New York: R.S. Peale and J.A. Hill, 1896. (p. 17) googlebooks Retrieved September 7, 2009
William Richard Cutter; William Frederick Adams Genealogical and personal memoirs relating to the families of the state of Massachusetts. Vol. 1 (pp. 210–11) New York, Lewis historical Pub. Co., 1910. googlebooks Retrieved September 7, 2009
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Thomas Coffin Amory
- Thomas Amory
- Boston Brahmin
- Tristram Coffin (settler)
- William H. Prescott
- Amory–Ticknor House
- William Blaxton
- Thomas J.C. Amory
- Amory Grant
- Memorial Hall (Harvard University)