Short Name: | James H. Perkins |
Full Name: | Perkins, James H. (James Handasyd), 1810-1849 |
Birth Year: | 1810 |
Death Year: | 1849 |
Perkins, Rev. James Handasyd. (Boston, Massachusetts, July 31, 1810--December 14, 1849, near Cincinnati, Ohio). He was educated at Phillips Exeter Academy and at Round Hill School. Northampton, Mass. After a brief business experience in Boston he moved to Cincinnati, where he was admitted to the bar in 1837, but two years later he took up the Ministry-at-Large organized by the First Congregational Society (Unitarian) of Cincinnati, and later became pastor of the church. He was active in social reforms and as a lecturer, and was author of a number of essays descriptive of life in what was then the far west.
The hymn in 3 stanzas, C.M., beginning "It is a faith sublime and sure" attributed to "J.H. Perkins" in Longfellow and Johnson's Book of Hymns (1846-1848) is presumably by him, although it is not included with his poems printed in the Memoir and Writings of James Handasyde Perkins, edited by W.H. Channing, Cincinnati, 1851.
Texts by James H. Perkins (4) | As | Authority Languages | Instances |
---|---|---|---|
By earth hemmed in, by earth oppressed | J. H. Perkins (Author) | 3 | |
It is a faith sublime and sure | J. H. Perkins (Author) | 3 | |
Late to our town there came a maid | J. H. Perkins (Author) | 2 | |
Soul, be strong, whatever betide | James H. Perkins (Author) | English | 4 |