Charles Lowell (minister)


Charles Lowell was a Unitarian minister and a son of judge John Lowell.

Biography

He was born in Boston, Massachusetts, and attended The Roxbury Latin School and later Harvard College in 1800 where he studied law and then theology. After two years in Edinburgh, Scotland and one year on the Continent, Lowell was, from 1806 until his death, pastor of the West Congregational Church of Boston, a charge in which Cyrus A. Bartol was associated with him after 1837. From that year until 1840, he traveled extensively in Europe and the east. During the latter part of his life Lowell officiated only occasionally in his church.
Lowell was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1814, and served on its board of councilors from 1820 to 1853.
He married Harriet, daughter of Robert T. Spence, of Portsmouth, New Hampshire, an officer in the U. S. Navy. Harvard gave him the degree of D.D. in 1823. He was a fellow of its corporation from 1818 until 1833. He was a member of literary societies in the United States and elsewhere. The "Proceedings" of a parish meeting that was held in his memory were published in 1861.
Almost alone, he spoke out from the pulpit against slavery to Boston's elite.

Family

He was a son of John Lowell, "The Old Judge", and half-brother of businessman Francis Cabot Lowell. His sons included the poet James Russell Lowell and clergyman Robert Traill Spence Lowell. His son Charles Russell Lowell married to the writer Anna Cabot Lowell and they had a daughter who died in young age around 1850.

Works

He contributed largely to periodical literature and published many separate discourses, a volume of Occasional Sermons, one of Practical Sermons, Meditations for the Afflicted, Sick, and Dying and Devotional Exercises for Communicants.