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Nathaniel Langdon Frothingham

Nathaniel Langdon Frothingham (23 July 1793 – 3 April 1870) was an American Unitarian minister and pastor of the First Church of Boston from 1815 to 1850. Frothingham was opposed to Theodore Parker and the interjection of transcendentalism into the church. He also wrote sermons, hymns, and poetry.

Early life[edit]

Nathaniel Langdon Frothingham was born on July 23, 1793, in Boston, Massachusetts the son of Ebenezer Frothingham and Joanna Langdon. He attended Boston Latin School under the charge of Samuel Hunt. He graduated from Harvard College in 1811 at the age of eighteen and gave a commencement speech entitled "The Cultivation of the Taste and Imagination," which was described by Dr. Pierce as "written with purity and pronounced with elegance."

Family[edit]

In 1818, Frothingham married Ann Gorham Brooks, daughter of Peter Chardon Brooks and sister of the wives of Edward Everett and Charles Francis Adams, Sr.


They had three children, all born in Boston. Octavius Brooks Frothingham was born November 26, 1822, and became an author. Ward Brooks Frothingham was born November 16, 1828, and resided for a time in Burlington, serving in two town offices.[11] Ellen Frothingham was born March 25, 1835, and became a translator (German into English).[1]


Ann Frothingham died on July 4, 1864, in Burlington, Massachusetts.

Illness[edit]

In the summer of 1826, Frothingham was afflicted by weekly violent headaches.


In 1859, on a third foreign tour of eighteen months, in Europe with his wife and daughters, Frothingham first became aware of a defect in his vision. He could not enjoy picture-galleries, and saw distorted figures and blurred colors. He consulted oculists in Paris and London, but no disease was visible in his eyes. When he returned home in the autumn of 1860, the dimness had increased.


In 1865, he underwent an unsuccessful operation on his eyes and became totally blind. His disease was of the nature of glaucoma and was incurable.

Deism Or Christianity? Four Discourses, Kessinger Publishing, LLC, (1845) reprint (March 4, 2009),  978-1-104-11612-5

ISBN

Two Hundred Years Ago: A Sermon Preached to the First Church, on the Close of Their Second Century, 1830, Printed for the Society

J. Wilson, 1849.[12]

God with the Aged: A Sermon Preached to the First Church, Jan. 7, 1849

Munroe and Francis, 1826.[13]

Christian Patriotism: A Sermon, on the Occasion of the Death of John Adams

Sermons in the Order of a Twelvemonth, 1852.

[10]

Octavius Brooks Frothingham (1890). . G.P. Putnam's sons. Nathaniel Langdon Frothingham.

Boston Unitarianism, 1820-1850

Frothingham, N.L. (Nathaniel Langdon) (1793–1870), Harper's Magazine