Matching family tree profiles for Reverend John Lathrop, I
view all 21
Immediate Family
-
wife
-
wife
-
son
-
daughter
-
son
-
daughter
-
daughter
-
wife
-
daughter
-
father
-
mother
-
stepmother
About Reverend John Lathrop, I
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Lathrop_(American_minister)_
John Lathrop (1740-1816) was a congregationalist minister in Boston, Massachusetts, during the revolutionary and early republic periods.
He served as minister of the Second Church, Boston, 1768-1816, when it was located in the North End -- first on North Square, and after 1779, on Hanover Street. In 1776, during the British occupation of Boston, the Second Church was burnt for firewood by British soldiers. Lathrop was considered a patriot.
References
1.^ WorldCat. Lathrop, John 1740-1816
2.^ Chandler Robbins. A history of the Second Church, or Old North, in Boston: to which is added a History of the New Brick Church. Boston: John Wilson & Son, 1852.
Further reading
Works by Lathrop
Innocent blood crying to God from the streets of Boston. A sermon occasioned by the horrid murder of Messieurs Samuel Gray, Samuel Maverick, James Caldwell, and Crispus Attucks, with Patrick Carr, since dead, and Christopher Monk, judged irrecoverable, and several other badly wounded, by a party of troops under the command of Captain Preston: on the fifth of March, 1770. And preached the Lord's-day following. Boston, Re-printed and sold by Edes and Gill, Opposite the New Court-House in Queen-Street, 1771.
A discourse, preached on March the fifth, 1778. Boston: Draper & Folsom, 1778.
A discourse, in two parts, preached at the commencement of the nineteenth century. Boston : Printed by E. Lincoln for John West, 1801.
A discourse delivered in the church in Hollis Street, April 13, 1808, at the interment of the Rev. Samuel West, D.D., late pastor of said church. Boston : Printed by Belcher and Armstrong, 1808.
Peace and war, in relation to the United States of America: a discourse, delivered in Boston, on the day of public thanksgiving in the state of Massachusetts, November 21, 1811. Boston : J.W. Burditt, 1811.
A discourse, delivered in Boston, April 13, 1815 : the day of thanksgiving appointed by the president of the United States, in consequence of the peace. Boston : J.W. Burditt, 1815.
A compendious history of the late war : containing an account of all the important battles, and many of the smaller actions, between the American, and the British forces, and Indians ... Boston : J.W. Burditt, 1815.
Works about Lathrop
Chandler Robbins. A history of the Second Church, or Old North, in Boston: to which is added a History of the New Brick Church. Boston: John Wilson & Son, 1852.
James A. Levernier. Phillis Wheatley and the New England Clergy. Early American Literature, Vol. 26, No. 1 (1991), pp. 21-38.
Marc M. Arkin. The Force of Ancient Manners: Federalist Politics and the Unitarian Controversy Revisited. Journal of the Early Republic, Vol. 22, No. 4 (Winter, 2002), pp. 575-610.
view all 11
Reverend John Lathrop, I's Timeline
1739 |
May 6, 1739
|
Norwich, New London County, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America
|
|
1765 |
1765
|
||
1772 |
January 13, 1772
|
||
December 18, 1772
|
|||
1773 |
December 25, 1773
|
||
1774 |
December 26, 1774
|
||
1775 |
November 13, 1775
|
||
1803 |
October 8, 1803
Age 64
|