Elias Nason

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Elias Nason (born in Wrentham, Massachusetts, 21 April 1811; died in North Billerica, Massachusetts, 17 June 1887) was a Massachusetts Congregational clergyman, educator, editor and author.

Biography

He started working for a paper mill in Framingham, Massachusetts, in 1826, and attended school on the side. After five years, he left to study for a year with Chauncey Colton and Justin Perkins at Amherst College. Then he entered Brown University and taught on the side to finance his studies.[1] He graduated from Brown in 1835.[2]

He spent five months as principal of Cambridge Latin Grammar School, and in 1836 married Myra Anne Bigelow. They had six children eventually. After leaving Cambridge Latin, he sailed for Charleston, South Carolina, with naturalist John E. Holbrook.[1] From 1836 to 1840, he taught in Augusta, Georgia, edited the Georgia Courier, and lectured throughout the state of Georgia on the flora of the south.[2]

Returning to Massachusetts, he settled in Newburyport, edited the Watchtower, became master of the Latin school, and subsequently of the high school, and in 1852 was ordained pastor of the Congregational Church in Natick. He officiated at a church in Needham in 1858-60. During the American Civil War, he served on the Christian Commission, writing and lecturing in support of the Union. From 1865 until his death, he resided in North Billerica, and officiated in adjoining churches.[2]

He was a successful lecturer, spoke several languages, was a member of many learned societies, and at one time edited the New England Historical and Genealogical Register (1866 and 1867).[1][2]

Works

He also left in manuscript a “History of Hopkinton” and a “History of the Nason Family.”

Family

His cousin Henry Bradford Nason (whose father was also named Elias) was a noted chemist.

Further reading

  • W. B. Trask, New England Historical and Genealogical Register, January 1889.

References

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