Owen Reed Lovejoy

Owen Reed Lovejoy, Jr. (September 9, 1866 - June 29, 1961) was a minister who opposed child labor.[1][2] He was known as the "children's statesman".[1] He served as the general secretary of the National Child Labor Committee from 1907 to 1926.[3]

Owen Reed Lovejoy
Lovejoy in 1917
Born(1866-09-09)September 9, 1866
Jamestown, Michigan
DiedJune 29, 1961(1961-06-29) (aged 94)
EducationAlbion College
OccupationMinister
Spouse(s)Jennie Evelyn Campbell
Parent(s)Hiram Reed Lovejoy, Sr.
Harriett Helen Robinson

Biography

He was born on September 9, 1866 in Jamestown, Michigan to Hiram Reed Lovejoy, Sr. and Harriett Helen Robinson. He attended Albion College. On June 30, 1892 he married Jennie Evelyn Campbell and they had five children, but only two of his sons survived to adulthood. In 1904 he joined the National Child Labor Committee and served until 1926. He then went to work for the Children's Aid Society. His wife died in 1929. In 1937 he married Kate Calkins Drake. He retired in 1939 and moved to Biglerville, Pennsylvania.[1]

He died on June 29, 1961 in Biglerville, Pennsylvania.[1][2]

gollark: Why? Lower probability of eventually becoming a full person? The individual parts still have a nonzero one.
gollark: What's the exact threshold for probability you would use?
gollark: Why, though? Why require it for a fetus, which will with some fairly high probability be born and then with some also fairly high (with modern medicine) probability go on to grow up and whatever, but not something with a lower chance of becoming a person?
gollark: Why *humans*, then?
gollark: Can you objectively prove that they have some sort of moral worth, though?

References


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