This Day in Unitarian Universalist History March 10

by Tho. H. Shepherd, Engraved by W. Wallis

1719 – Clergy dissenting from the Church of England held an interfaith meeting at Salters’ Hall in Exeter, England, and declared the right of Christian liberty in matters of religious belief. They were the first group of Christian ministers to call for noncreedal religion, and they established a milestone in the path toward freedom of conscience.

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This Day in Unitarian Universalist History Austin, William (1778-1841)

William Austin was born on March 2,1778, in Lunenburg, Massachusetts, where his family fled after their house in Charlestown was burned down during the Battle of Bunker Hill. Austin was educated at Harvard College in a class of forty-nine students that included William Ellery Channing, and he studied law at Lincoln’s Inn, London, thanks to assistance from Alexander Hamilton.  He married twice, fought one duel, had fourteen children, as well as briefly serving as a Unitarian chaplain and teacher aboard the USS Constitution. He was mainly known as a respected lawyer, a representative to the State House of Massachusetts, and a staunch member of his local Unitarian church of Charlestown.

During his life, he published a work of Unitarian theology (The Human Character of Jesus Christ, 1807), a depiction of his travels, and a few fictional tales. His most successful work by far was “Peter Rugg, the Missing Man.”  This story, published in three parts, depicted Peter Rugg, a resident of Boston, who sets out for home at night in the middle of a terrible storm, only to get lost (largely due to supernatural causes) for fifty years, doomed to roam up and down the Eastern seaboard in a chaise drawn by his black horse, “Lightfoot.”  The story was so compelling variations on the Peter Rugg stories were confused for authentic New England folktales. 

Austin did not publish under his own name, seeing his writing mainly as a vehicle for the transmission of Unitarian values, especially the belief that human nature includes the capacity for positive moral agency.  The Peter Rugg tales can be read as a specifically Unitarian anti-Calvinist allegory. Peter Rugg, a troubled Calvinist with a possibly demonic horse, cannot find his way home because the Boston he once knew is now unrecognizable, having thrown of Calvinism for the new liberal religion, Unitarianism.  The Peter Rugg tales were originally published in The New England Galaxy, 1824–1826.

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This Day in Unitarian Universalist History February 28

1901 – Linus Carl Pauling was born in Portland, Oregon. He helped integrate chemistry with quantum theory and founded the discipline now known as molecular biology. When the atomic bomb was developed, Pauling became a pacifist. He joined First Unitarian Church of Los Angeles, California. He received the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1945 and for Peace in 1962. Read more about Linus Carl Pauling at: www.HarvardSquareLibrary.org – the digital library of Unitarian Universalism.

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This Day in Unitarian Universalist History February 27

1807 – Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, the most famous American poet of his time, was born in Portland, Maine. He taught modern languages at Bowdoin College and at Harvard University. His many famous poems included “The Song of Hiawatha,” “Tales of a Wayside Inn,” and “Evangeline.” He was a friend of the Transcendentalists of the Concord-Cambridge area. Read more about Henry Wadsworth Longfellow at: www.HarvardSquareLibrary.org – the digital library of Unitarian Universalism.

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This Day in Unitarian Universalist History February 26

1608 – George Otinovius, a Socinian who was imprisoned for writing Book of Extracts from the Scriptures and the Church Fathers, died in prison. He was headmaster of the Socinian School in Rakow. With his older brother, Erasmus Otvinovius, he also wrote Unitarian tracts.

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This Day in Unitarian Universalist History February 25

1566 – Ferancesco Sega de Rovigo was executed for being a member of the Unitarian society in Venice, Italy. He was a friend of Laelius Socinus and was influenced by Michael Servetus’s On the Errors of the Trinity. De Rovigo was taken by boat into the Adriatic Sea, weighted with stones, and dropped into the sea.

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This Day in Unitarian Universalist History February 24

1566 The first disputation on the Trinity in Transylvania, originally scheduled for Torda, was opened at Gyulafehervard under the leadership of Francis Dávid and authority of Prince John Sigismund. This brought to a close a period of outbursts against the Trinity by a local clergy and congregations throughout the country.

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This Day in Unitarian Universalist History February 23

1813 – John Murray Forbes was born in Bordeaux, France. His father was a wealthy merchant, and John learned the trade. He invested in land, iron, steam and railroads and served as the president of the Michigan Central Railroad. Murray became an abolitionist and provided equal pay to freed slaves. He was a member of First Parish (Unitarian) of Milton, Massachusetts, and gave the land for its parsonage. Read more about John Murray Forbes at: www.HarvardSquareLibrary.org – the digital library of Unitarian Universalism.

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This Day in Unitarian Universalist History February 21

1830 – Brooke Herford was born in Altrincham, Cheshire, England. He studied theology at Manchester College and served as a Unitarian minister in England and the United states. Herford was author of The Story of Religion in England. Harvard awarded him a D.D. degree. Read more about Brooke Herford at: www.HarvardSquareLibrary.org – the digital library of Unitarian Universalism.

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This Day in Unitarian Universalist History February 20

1855 – Joseph Hume, a member of Parliament who adopted Universalist views, died. He was the leader of the Radical Party for thirty years, taking special interest in financial oversight of both public and private enterprises.

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