Edward Porter Humphrey

Edward Porter Humphrey
Born (1809-01-28)January 28, 1809
Fairfield, Connecticut
Died December 9, 1886(1886-12-09)
Burial place Cave Hill Cemetery
Nationality American
Alma mater Amherst
Occupation Presbyterian minister, orator, writer, and Moderator of the Presbyterian General Assembly
Spouse(s) Catherine Cornelia Prather
Martha Pope
Children Edward William Cornelius Humphrey
Alexander Pope Humphrey
Parent(s) Heman Humphrey
Sophia Porter

Edward Porter Humphrey (1809 - 1886)[1] was a Presbyterian minister,[2] orator, writer,[3] and moderator of the national Presbyterian General Assembly. He was a planner and co-founder of Cave Hill Cemetery in Louisville, Kentucky. He gave the dedicatory address on July 25, 1848 for Cave Hill, an innovative garden cemetery which is listed in the National Register of Historic Places.[4][5]

Biography

Humphrey was the son of Congregationalist minister and second president of Amherst College Heman Humphrey and his wife Sophia Porter (1785–1868), daughter of Noah Porter.[6][7] He was born in Amherst, Hampshire, Massachusetts or in Fairfield, Connecticut. The documentary evidence in Ancestry.com for Fairfield, Connecticut appears to be strongest and is based on census records.[8][9] His first wife was Catherine Cornelia Prather, daughter of Thomas Prather and Matilda Martha Fontaine.

Portrait of young Catherine Cornelia Prather by Matthew Jouett in an old book with partial list of other portraits by Jouett.

He and Catherine Cornelia were married March 3, 1841. She bore him one son, Edward William Cornelius Humphrey, who became a legal expert and representative to the national Presbyterian General Assembly. Edward and Catherine also had one young daughter who died as an infant shortly after Catherine died during childbirth on September 28, 1844.[7] As a child, Catherine Cornelia Prather's portrait was painted by the American portrait painter Matthew Harris Jouett.[10]

Portrait of Catherine Cornelia Prather by Matthew Jouett.

Her portrait was retrieved from Louisville's Speed Museum collection to become part of the private collection of her descendant Eleanor Belknap Humphrey, sister of William Burke Belknap the younger, and daughter of William Richardson Belknap. Her portrait, known as "The Little Grandmother" remains in a Humphrey family collection, is registered with the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery, and in the 1970s was on temporary loan to Transylvania College for an exhibition of Kentucky portraits. The Jouett portrait of Catherine Cornelia Prather Humphrey as a child was also used as an illustration in the book Kentucky Heyday by British Army officer Brigadier General Arnold Nugent Strode Strode-Jackson.

On April 3, 1847, Humphrey married his second wife, Martha Pope, daughter of Alexander Pope and Martha Fontaine and widow of her cousin, Charles Pope, son of William Pope Jr., and Cynthia Sturgess.[11][7] Humphrey's second son was Alexander Pope Humphrey, a Louisville lawyer with the firm of Brown, Humphrey, & Davie, who later inherited his mother's home, "Fincastle", in Louisville. Other descendants of Humphrey include newspaper editor Lewis Craig Humphrey, Dr. Edward Cornelius Humphrey, M.D., Politics and Prose co-founder Barbara Meade, and historian of economic thought Thomas M. Humphrey.

Religious training and ministry

Humphrey grew up in Connecticut, and he trained for college at the Amherst academy. In 1828 he graduated with honors from Amherst College. In 1833 he graduated at the Andover Theological Seminary, and in 1834 he answered the call to begin his ministry as pastor of a Presbyterian church in Jeffersonville, Indiana.[12] He soon, in 1835, became pastor of the Second Presbyterian Church in Old Louisville, Kentucky, and served that rapidly expanding church for eighteen years. In 1846 the Rev.Stuart Robinson, for whom the Stuart Robinson School was later named, filled the pulpit during a nine-month absence of Rev. Dr. Edward P. Humphrey.[13][14] Photos of the old Second Presbyterian Church, before and after it was destroyed by fire in 1956, show that it was once a magnificent building.[15][16] In 1852 Rev. Humphrey was elected Moderator of the General Assembly of the Old School Presbyterian Church, and he preached a sermon called "Our Theology" as retiring moderator to the national assembly gathered in Charleston, South Carolina. The sermon was well received and was distributed by the Presbyterian Board of Publications.[7] He served as pastor in Louisville of the old Presbyterian Church on Third Street between Green and Walnut Streets, a building later converted into a theatre and eventually known as the Metropolitan building.[7]

He received the degree of Doctor of Divinity from Hanover College in Indiana in 1852, and in 1853 he was named by the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church as a professor in Princeton Theological Seminary. He declined the professorship at the Princeton Seminary but accepted one offered as Professor of Church History at the Theological College in Danville, Kentucky. In the later years of his residence in Danville, his health began to fail, perhaps because of the ongoing American Civil War. He had a devoted loyalty to the Union forces of the national government and a strong desire for conciliation of the differing factions in the nation and in the church.[7]

Cave Hill Cemetery, which includes a National Memorial Cemetery begun for Civil War soldiers, has been the pre-eminent burial ground in Louisville ever since Humphrey gave the dedicatory address in 1848, and it remains a premier example of cemetery design in the United States. "The site's natural rock outcroppings and hilly topography have been complemented with ponds, statuary, and architecturally elegant tombs. More than 500 kinds of trees and garden plantings are maintained in this naturalistic oasis."[17] As Porter said in the dedicatory address for the cemetery, "Let the place of graves be rural and beautiful. Let trees be planted there. Let the opening year invite to their branches the springing leaf and birds of song . . . . Let the tokens of fond remembrance in the shrub and flower be there."[18]

Member, National Presbyterian General Assembly

In 1866 he answered an appeal to return to Louisville. Members of the old Second Church, where he had been pastor for many years, started a newly organized College Street Presbyterian Church, of which he became the pastor. The church became one of Louisville's largest and most notable places of worship.[7] In 1871, Amherst College, his alma mater conferred upon him the degree of L.L.D.

Bibliography

Humphrey wrote The Tabernacle: A Sermon in 1873, now a Google Books selection.[19]

Heman H. Allen wrote In Memoriam: Edward Porter Humphrey, published in 1888 by the Synod of Kentucky.[20]

In 2006 author Waymond Rogers of the University of California in his book Process Thinking: Six Pathways to Successful Decision Making quoted Edward Porter Humphrey: "True wisdom is to know what is best worth knowing and to do what is best worth doing."[21]

Humphrey wrote Our Theology in Its Developments. The text of this book has been reproduced as a Google book.[22] The Google books entry for this book states, "Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not used OCR (Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made available for future generations to enjoy."[23]

References

  1. "This Day in Presbyterian History · Edward Porter Humphrey". www.thisday.pcahistory.org. Retrieved 13 October 2016.
  2. "Results for 'su:Humphrey, Edward P. (Edward Porter), 1809-1887 Correspondence.' [WorldCat.org]". www.worldcat.org. Retrieved 13 October 2016.
  3. "Edward Porter Humphrey | Great Thoughts Treasury". www.greatthoughtstreasury.com. Retrieved 13 October 2016.
  4. Cemetery, Cave Hill. "About Cave Hill Cemetery". Cave Hill Cemetery. Retrieved July 31, 2015.
  5. http://www.cem.va.gov/cems/nchp/cavehill.asp
  6. Perrin, Battle, Kniffin. Kentucky Gen Web:A History of the State, 8th ed., 1888, Jefferson Co.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "c6". kygenweb.net.
  8. http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~kygenweb/kybiog/jefferson/humphrey.ep.txt
  9. http://interactive.ancestry.com/8054/4192497_00124/17250078?backurl=http://person.ancestry.com/tree/6834177/person/7005575023/facts/citation/24263029401/edit/record
  10. Floyd, William Barrow (1980). Matthew Harris Jouett: Portraitist of the Ante-Bellum South. Lexington: Transylvania Printing Company.
  11. Jennings, Kathleen. "Louisville's First Families:A Search of Genealogical Sketches". www.kygenweb.net. Louisville, Kentucky: The Standard Printing Company. Retrieved 8 August 2016. Photo of Martha Pope Humphrey
  12. Rev Dr Edward Porter Humphrey, Obituary from New York Tribune,Saturday, December 10, 1887, page 5.
  13. https://books.google.com/books?id=W7EeBgAAQBAJ&pg=PA81#v=onepage&q=Edward%20Humphrey&f=false
  14. http://www.oldlouisville.com/Ruins
  15. http://www.oldlouisville.com/Ruins/pictures.htm
  16. http://www.oldlouisville.com/Ruins/2ndPresb/2ndbrdwy.htm
  17. Cemetery, Cave Hill. "About Cave Hill Cemetery". Cave Hill Cemetery. Retrieved November 3, 2015.
  18. Mohney, Gregory A. Luhan, Dennis Domer, David (2004). The Louisville guide ([Online-Ausg.] ed.). New York: Princeton Architectural Press. p. 290. ISBN 1-56898-451-0.
  19. https://books.google.com/books?id=mKb5GgAACAAJ Edward Porter Humphrey - 1873 -
  20. https://books.google.com/books?id=5s3xGwAACAAJ&dq=%22Edward+Porter+Humphrey%22&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0CCEQ6AEwAWoVChMIydet1c7ZyAIVw28-Ch1yYAj-
  21. https://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=p-8wwCsEw0YC&oi=fnd&pg=PR7&dq=%22Edward+Porter+Humphrey%22&ots=UyUnxMEtL_&sig=SdTic0uPEF0vBSMnm3StyuW4aaU#v=onepage&q&f=false
  22. Humphrey, Edward Porter (2012). Our Theology in Its Developments. HardPress. ISBN 1290834431.
  23. Humphrey, Edward Porter. "Our Theology in Its Developments". HardPress. Google. p. 104. Retrieved October 24, 2015.

External links

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