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John Greenleaf Whittier By: Tiffany Keyt and Matt Gentry. Early Life. He was born in Haverhill, Massachusetts on December 17, 1807. He received very little formal education. However, he read a lot. He studied his father’s books about the Quakers. He was very interested with religion.
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Early Life • He was born in Haverhill, Massachusetts on December 17, 1807. • He received very little formal education. However, he read a lot. • He studied his father’s books about the Quakers.
He was very interested with religion. • He went to Haverville Academy. He completed high school in only two terms. • He worked at several newspapers. • While he worked at The New England Weekly Review. • It was during his time there that he discovered his interest in politics.
He ran for a position in Congress in 1832. • He started to become an abolitionist when his old boss, William Lloyd Garrison, asked him to join the cause. • Whittier published an antislavery pamphlet called Justice and Expediency in 1833. • For the next twenty years, he devoted his life to abolishing slavery.
Whittier’s Works • He wrote Snow-Bound, Legends of New England, In War Time, Lays of My Home, and The song for Vermonters. • Some of his poems were turned into hymns. • One of his works, The Brewing of Soma, was turned into the widely known piece, Dear Lord and Father of Mankind.
Legacy • There are many schools and buildings named after John. • There is also a city named Whittier in California named after him. • He died September 7, 1892.