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Heman Humphrey (March 26, 1779 – April 3, 1861) was a 19th-century American author and clergyman who served as a trustee of Williams College and afterward as the second president of Amherst College, a post he held for 22 years.[1][2][3][4]

Early life and education

Humphrey was born in West Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut (which became Canton, Connecticut) to farmer Solomon Humphrey, of a family that came from England before 1643, and Hannah, daughter of Captain John Brown.[5]

Humphrey graduated from Yale University with an A.M. in 1805 and was ordained a Congregational minister on March 16, 1807. He became a minister in Fairfield, Connecticut, in 1807, moving to Pittsfield, Massachusetts, in 1817. His 1813 report to the Fairfield Association is one of the earliest temperance tracts published in America.[6] Humphrey is also said to have published six articles in The Panoplist and Missionary Magazine on the cause, origin, effects and remedy of intemperance.[7]

Following his tenure at Williams College, in 1825 he was appointed president of Amherst.[8] He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1842.[9] Humphrey was influential in the nineteenth-century temperance movement and typical of the early proponents of prohibition.[10] He was the father of U.S. Representative James Humphrey.

Bibliography

References

  1. ^ Heman Humphrey: Second President Archived May 18, 2008, at the Wayback Machine Amherst College Archives & Special Collections
  2. ^ Heman Humphrey and John R. Rice on Revival Praying
  3. ^ William Stearns, President (amherstiana.org)
  4. ^ Heman Humphrey, President (amherstiana.org)
  5. ^ Humphrey, Zephaniah Moore; Neill, Henry (1869). Memorial Sketches, Heman Humphrey, Sophia Porter Humphrey. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: J. B. Lippincott & Co. pp. 199. hdl:2027/uc2.ark:/13960/t00001f6x – via HathiTrust.
  6. ^ "Humphrey, Heman" in The Cyclopaedia of Temperance and Prohibition, 234 (New York: 1891)
  7. ^ Fourth Report of the American Temperance Society, 69 (Boston: 1831)
  8. ^ "Heman Humphrey Sermons". Amherst College Archives and Special Collections Amherst, MA. Retrieved June 1, 2012.
  9. ^ "Book of Members, 1780–2010: Chapter H" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved September 8, 2016.
  10. ^ (Hugins, Walter (ed.), The Reform Impulse, 1825–1850). Columbia, SC 1972

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Academic offices
Preceded by President of Amherst College
1823–1845
Succeeded by