Sereno Edwards Dwight

Sereno Edwards Dwight (May 18, 1786 – November 30, 1850) was an American author, educator, and Congregationalist minister, who served as Chaplain of the Senate.

Early years

Dwight was the fifth son of Yale College President Timothy Dwight IV and his wife Mary Woolsey, born in Greenfield Hill in Fairfield, Connecticut. He graduated Yale in 1803, was a tutor there in 1806–1810, and successfully practised law in New Haven, Connecticut in 1810–1816. For several years during this time, he worked ten hours each day preparing an exhaustive "Geography".[1]

Ministry

Licensed to preach in 1816, he served as the Chaplain of the Senate of the United States for one year's term (December 16, 1816  December 19, 1817). Dwight was ordained on September 3, 1817, at Park Street Church, Boston.[2]

Thereafter, he served as pastor of the Park Street Church, Boston, in 1817–1826, where he greatly influenced the young hymn writer and clergyman Ray Palmer (18081887), author of "My Faith Looks Up to Thee", among others. In 18331835 he was president of Hamilton College, Clinton, New York.[3] His career was wrecked by accidental mercury poisoning, which interfered with his work in Boston and at Hamilton College, and made his life after 1839 solitary and comparatively uninfluential.

His publications include Life of David Brainerd (1822); Life and Works of Jonathan Edwards (ten volumes, 1830), of whom he was a great-grandson; The Hebrew Wife (1836), an argument against marriage with a deceased wife's sister; and Select Discourses (1851); to which was prefixed a biographical sketch by his brother William Dwight (1795–1865), who was also successively a lawyer and a Congregational preacher.

Personal life

In August 1811, Dwight married Susan Edwards Daggett (1788 - 1839), the daughter of David Daggett, of New Haven, Connecticut. Their only daughter did not survive infancy.[4]

Publications

gollark: Blockchain is not "how society is structured".
gollark: Please reexplain it?
gollark: You may like trusting people you interact with a lot. You can continue doing this. But having options to minimize necessary trust gives people more options, which I think is good.
gollark: Wondrous.
gollark: Although HTTP tries its best to alienate you from the people you interact with via the stateless request/response model, at least with unencrypted HTTP I am still aware that I am interacting with another server. TLS and so on seek to undermine this further, by forcing you to treat everyone as a faceless certificate surrounded by attackers trying to eavesdrop at all times. It thus depersonalizes and alienates you from the people you are interacting with even further.

References

  1. The Life of Jedidiah Morse, Part 4, by William Buell Sprague, p. 220
  2. Order of Exercises at the Ordination of the Rev. Sereno E. Dwight, and Several Missionaries to the Heathen on the 3d of September, 1817, at Park Street Church, Boston.
  3. The Works of William H. Seward, Volume 2 By William Henry Seward, George E. Baker, p. 16
  4. Select Discourses of Sereno Edwards Dwight: With a Memoir of His Life, by William T. Dwight, p. xxviii

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Dwight, Timothy". Encyclopædia Britannica. 8 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 741–742.

Religious titles
Preceded by
John Glendy
Chaplain of the United States Senate
December 16, 1816 – December 8, 1817
Succeeded by
William Dickinson Hawley
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