Lydia 5 BIGELOW

page 2

16926.     Lydia 5 BIGELOW,  daughter of  David 4 ( Daniel 3, Joshua2, John1) and his second wife  Deborah (HEYWOOD) BIGELOW, was  born 28 October 1764 at Worcester, Worcester county, MA. She married there, on 07 October 1784, Zachariah Child, son of David and Mehitable (Richardson) Child. He was born 19 November 1763, and served in the Revolutionary War. They lived in Boylston, MA. He died 19 September 1845, and Lydia on _____ at _____ ?

Child of Zachariah and Lydia (Bigelow) Child, presumably born Boylston, MA:

16926.2         David Lee CHILD, b 8 July 1794; d _ Sept 1874 ; m 28 Oct 1828 Lydia Maria Francis (see below the writer; she was born Medford 11 Feb 1802; d 20 Oct 1880 Wayland, MA. David was a Boston lawyer and journalist, and both were active in the anti-slavery cause.

Sources:
Bigelow Family Genealogy Volume. I page.172-173;
Howe, Bigelow Family of America;
Souvenir de Buckingham, Quebec, a commemorative pamphlet for the 75th anniversary of the founding of Buckingham; biography (obit) of Lawrence G. Bigelow, son of Levi.
Note:
Howe and Vol 1 list the family as Childs...................ROD
Subject: Child family
Date: Sat, 3 Feb 2001 11:15:29 -0500
From: "Nancy Dunn" <  ndunn@alltel.net  >

Hello.  I don't know alot about tracing my ancestors, but I have a little info.  I am Nancy Child Dunn (age 45).  Zachariah Child was my ancestor.  My father is David Child (age 77).  (I notice there are several David Child's).  We live in Georgia.  I contacted Ormond Roberts in West Boylston, MA and he sent me pictures of his house which was built and lived in by Zachariah Child, also Zachariah's descendents.  I had bought a book on Lydia Maria (Francis) Child who married a David Child and I found Ormond Roberts name listed as a source for the book.
More:
In my records some dates are a little different.  I don't think you had when David Lee Child died.  It was September 1874 in Wayland, MA.  Zachariah's last name was Child (no s).  The information I have was done by a historian where Lydia Maria Child and David Child lived.  Zachariah and Lydia (Bigelow) had 12 children.  I think you only list 10.  The information on the children and dates were taken from the record in the Child family bible in possesion of Lydia Child (Field) Merrill, Oraville, California.  The birthdates you have do not match the ones taken from the Child family bible.  For instance, Lydia (who only lived a month) was born Oct. 18, 1791 and died November 17, 1791. You have on the Bigelow page that she was born June 1798.  I assume the dates I have are correct since they were taken from a family bible.  I can send you the other dates of the 12 children if you wish.  I also have copies of photos of Zachariah's house at different periods of time. Nancy Dunn



Note2:
Subject: Lydia Maria Child
 Date: Thu, 21 Nov 2002 21:47:53 -0800
From: "Al Streit" <alstreit@mandellstreit.com>

There is an interesting article on the front page of today's (Thurs 11/21/02) Wall Street Journal about Lydia Maria Child,
abolitiionist and author of the Thanksgiving poem "Over the River."  The WSJ website, if my memory is correct, requires payment to
access, so I won't even try to provide a link, but there is more information about Mrs Child at:

http://www.uua.org/uuhs/duub/articles/lydiamariachild.html
 Anyway, I checked my database, and she was a Bigelow by marriage.  Her husband, David Lee Child, was the son of Zachariah Child
and Lydia Bigelow.  (He was my 4th cousin 5 generations removed.)
Al Streit


Lydia Maria Child

                       Lydia Maria Child (1802-1880) was a novelist, editor, journalist and scholar who
                       produced a body of work remarkable for its brilliance, originality and variety,
                       much of it inspired by a strong sense of justice and love of freedom. Little known
                       today, in her own time she was a famously radical abolitionist. She was a student
                       of world religions with a breadth of vision and understanding extraordinary for her
                       time. She was lonely religiously, dissatisfied with the institutional church and hungry
                       for spiritual nourishment. Child is now remembered primarily, if at all, as author of
                       the Thanksgiving poem, "Over the river and through the woods . . . " She deserves
                       an honored place in American and in Unitarian history, though she was critical of
                       the Unitarianism of her day.

                       Born in Medford, Massachusetts, Lydia was the youngest of seven children of
                       Susannah Rand Francis and Convers Francis, a successful baker and businessman.
                       Though the home atmosphere reflected her father's stern Calvinism, she grew up
                       under the wing of her bookish older brother Convers and attended local schools
                       and Medford's First Parish, an orthodox Congregational church. When she was
                       nine, her brother left home to attend Harvard College. Possessed of an eager,
                       inquiring mind, Lydia missed his encouragement in her studies, but she was free to
                       use the library of the Rev. David Osgood, the First Parish minister.

                       In 1814, after the death of her mother and the marriage of her favorite sister Mary, her father decided Lydia would be
                       better off in Mary's new home in Norridgewock, Maine. There Lydia helped with household chores but continued to
                       read, study and correspond with her brother. She also visited a nearby Penobscot settlement, beginning a lifelong
                       interest in Native Americans.

                       In 1819 Lydia took a teaching position in Gardiner, Maine where she discovered the thought of Emanuel Swedenborg.
                       "You need not fear my becoming a Swedenborgian," she wrote her brother Convers in May, 1820. "I am more in
                       danger of wrecking on the rocks of skepticism than of standing on the shoals of fanaticism. I am apt to regard a system
                       of religion as I do any other beautiful theory. It plays round the imagination, but fails to reach the heart. I wish I could
                       find some religion in which my heart and understanding could unite; that amidst the darkest clouds of this life I might ever
                       be cheered with the mild halo of religious consolation."

                       Returning to Massachusetts in 1821, she was baptized at First Parish in Medford. Thereafter she always preferred her
                       chosen baptismal name, Maria. Still in her teens, she was engaged in a religious search that would continue all her life.
                       Though she was living with her brother, now a Unitarian minister at First Parish in Watertown, and attending his church
                       regularly, she became a member of the Boston Society of the New Jerusalem in 1822. Apparently, she maintained
                       some connection there until the 1830s, when the pro-slavery stance of the pastor made her doubt "whether such a
                       church could have come down from heaven." Later she was drawn to the preaching of William Ellery Channing, though
                       she despaired over his reluctance to embrace abolitionism wholeheartedly. She found Unitarianism "a mere half-way
                       house, where spiritual travelers find themselves well accommodated for the night, but where they grow weary of
                       spending the day."

                       In Watertown Maria set to work on a novel, Hobomok: A Tale of Early Times, 1824, the first historical novel
                       published in the United States. The story of was of a colonial New England girl who, when her fiancé was lost at sea,
                       turned for support to a sympathetic Native American, lived with him in his village and bore his son. When her English
                       lover returned, Hobomok nobly encouraged her to marry her fiancé, who adopted the half breed boy. The novel drew
                       on Maria's Maine experience to give an unusually sympathetic picture of Native Americans, commonly thought of as
                       savages. Though she published anonymously, Maria was soon known as the author and was an instant celebrity. She
                       continued to write novels and stories and became editor of The Juvenile Miscellany, a new and popular children's
                       magazine, one of the first of its kind.

                       In 1828 Maria married David Child, an idealistic but improvident lawyer and journalist whose debts exposed him to
                       litigation and imprisonment and drained his wife's earnings. Theirs was a loving marriage of like minds in political
                       matters, though David's ardor for good causes drew him into one impractical venture after another. The following year
                       Maria published The Frugal Housewife, describing her ingenious methods of making do with little means. The
                       popularity of the book helped to keep the household afloat as the couple moved from one temporary home to another.

                       Maria wrote five volumes of the Ladies Family Library, short biographies exemplifying feminine virtues, published
                       from 1832 to 1835, for the growing audience of middle-class women. She included two of her heroines, Germaine de
                       Staël and Manon Roland, known for their independence of mind. The last two volumes ambitiously covered The
                       History and Condition of Women in Various Ages and Nations.

                       In 1831 William Lloyd Garrison began publication of his abolitionist newspaper, the Liberator. Maria later recalled that
                       Garrison "got hold of the strings of my conscience, and pulled me into Reforms. . . . Old dreams vanished, old
                       associates departed, and all things became new." She threw her support to Garrison and the Boston Female
                       Anti-Slavery Society. Closely associated with active abolitionists and Unitarians like Henry and Maria Weston
                       Chapman, Louisa and Ellis Gray Loring, Wendell Phillips and Samuel J. May, she began to write for the cause.

                       Publication of An Appeal in Favor of that Class of Americans Called Africans, 1833 marked a turning point in
                       Child's career. Outspoken in her condemnation of slavery, she pointed out its contradiction with Christian teachings,
                       described the moral and physical degradation it brought upon slaves and owners alike, not omitting the issue of
                       miscegenation, and not excepting the North from its share of responsibility for the system. "I am fully aware of the
                       unpopularity of the task I have undertaken," she wrote in the introduction, "but though I expect ridicule and censure, it is
                       not in my nature to fear them."

                       The public was far from ready to accept what were considered extreme views. Sales of her books fell off, publishers
                       refused to accept anything she wrote, and she lost her editorial post with The Juvenile Miscellany. The already
                       strapped Childs paid a steep price, but more abolitionist tracts and stories followed.

                       From 1841-43 Lydia Maria Child served successfully as editor of the National Anti-Slavery Standard, the weekly
                       New York newspaper of the American Anti-Slavery Society. She and David were listed together on the masthead, but
                       he stayed behind attempting to start a sugar beet industry in Massachusetts. "Such as I am, I am here," she wrote in her
                       first editorial, "ready to work according to my conscience and my ability; providing nothing but diligence and fidelity,
                       refusing the shadow of a fetter on my free expression of opinion, from any man, or body of men and equally careful to
                       respect the freedom of others, whether as individuals or societies."

                       Two years later dissension within the movement caused Maria to resign the post. Garrison advocated staying out of
                       government, even to the extent of refusing to vote, as a protest against union with slaveholders. New York abolitionists
                       opposed his position, and Maria, who had built the Standard's circulation as a family newspaper, felt it would alienate
                       the audience she wished to reach with an antislavery appeal.

                       She separated from the movement but stayed on in New York and continued writing. Still hungry for a satisfying church
                       affiliation, she commented, "The Unitarian meetings here chill me with their cold intellectual respectability." Nor did the
                       Swedenborgians or Episcopalians meet her needs. The art and music in the city fed her soul, though she was appalled
                       by the poverty. She published Letters from New York, 1843 and 1845, popular collections of her regular columns in
                       the Standard. Fortunately, New York State law allowed Maria to separate her income from David's and to build up
                       some savings protected from his debts.

                       Returning to Massachusetts, the Childs settled in the Wayland home of Maria's aging father, with occasional intervals,
                       her home for the rest of her life. Here she completed her three-volume work, The Progress of Religious Ideas
                       through Successive Ages, 1854. She intended these volumes to remove "the superstitious rubbish from the sublime
                       morality of Christ" and to give respectful attention to other world religions. Despite the immense labor of her research
                       and positive reviews, the work did not sell well. Thomas Wentworth Higginson commented that it was "too learned for
                       a popular book and too popular for a learned one."

                       Meanwhile, the uproar precipitated by the 1850 Compromise and related events roused Maria's abolitionist spirit.
                       When John Brown raided the Harper's Ferry arsenal, his example, Maria wrote, "stirred me up to consecrate myself
                       with renewed earnestness to the righteous cause for which he died so bravely." She wrote to Brown, praising his
                       courage and offering to come and nurse his wounds. She sent a copy of her letter to Governor Henry Wise of Virginia,
                       who responded condemning Brown's action. When the correspondence was published in the New York Tribune,
                       Maria received a flood of congratulations from the North and condemnation from the South.

                       Living in Medford for the winter of 1860-61, Maria plunged into Boston activism, writing that "When there is
                       anti-slavery work to be done, I feel as young as twenty." Back in Wayland when war broke out, she gathered supplies
                       for the "contrabands," slaves who fled for safety to Union lines, and compiled her Freedmen's Book, a reading primer
                       for former slaves.

                       After the war Maria supported the suffrage cause. She was a founder of the Massachusetts Woman Suffrage
                       Association, though she believed black men should have the vote first. She also renewed her work on behalf of Native
                       Americans, deploring the requirement that Cherokees leave their tribal lands and upholding the right of native people to
                       their own language and religion.

                       When a group of Unitarians founded the Free Religious Association in 1867, Maria discovered their viewpoint agreed
                       with her own. She attended FRA meetings regularly during her stays in Boston, more frequent after David's death in
                       1874. In 1878 she published her own "eclectic Bible" of quotations from the world's religions, Aspirations of the
                       World, her motive, "to do all I can to enlarge and strengthen the hand of human brotherhood."

                       Free of David's care and enjoying financial security for the first time in her life, she gave generously to causes dear to her
                       heart. When she died on October 20, 1880, her estate was valued at $36,000. Wendell Phillips gave the eulogy in a
                       service at her Wayland home. She was "ready to die for a principle and starve for an idea," Phillips said. "We felt that
                       neither fame, nor gain, nor danger, nor calumny had any weight with her." She was buried beside her husband in the
                       town's old burial ground.

                       Child's papers can be found at the American Antiquarian Society, Worcester, Massachusetts; the Boston Public Library;
                       the New York Public Library; the Milton Ross Collection, Corona del Mar, California; Cornell University Library;
                       the Library of  Congress; the
                       Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston, Massachusetts; the Medford Historical Society, Medford, Massachusetts; the Schlesinger
                       Library at Radcliffe, Cambridge, Massachusetts; the Houghton Library at Harvard, Cambridge, Massachusetts; the Society for the
                       Preservation of New England Antiquities, Boston, Massachusetts; and the Wayland Historical Society, Wayland, Massachusetts.
                       Most of her correspondence is published on microfiche in The Collected Letters of Lydia Maria Child, edited by Patricia G. Holland,
                       Milton Meltzer, and Francine Krasno (1980). A smaller version of this is available: Milton Meltzer and Patricia B. Holland, eds.,
                       Lydia Maria Child: Selected Letters, 1817-1880 (1982).

                       Aside from the works mentioned in the article above Child wrote Anti-Slavery Catechism (1836), Philothea, a Romance (1836), The
                       Evils of Slavery and the Cure of Slavery (1836), Duty of Disobedience to the Fugitive Slave Act (1850), Isaac T. Hopper: A True
                       Life (1853), The Patriarchal Institution, as Described by Members of its Own Family (1860), and The Right Way, the Safe Way,
                       Proved by Emancipation in the British West Indies (1860).
                       Modern biographies of Child include Helene G. Baer, The Heart Is Like Heaven: The Life of Lydia Maria Child (1964); Milton
                       Meltzer, Tongue of Flame: The Life of Lydia Maria Child (1965); William S. Osborne, Lydia Maria Child (1980); Deborah Pickman
                        Clifford,
                       Crusader for Freedom: A Life of Lydia Maria Child (1992); and Carolyn L. Karcher, The First Woman in the Republic: A Cultural
                       Biography of Lydia Maria Child (1995). Lori Kenschaft's Lydia Maria Child: The Quest for Racial Justice (2002) is a short
                       biographyaimed at high school students. John Greenleaf Whittier wrote a biographical introduction to
                       Letters of Lydia Maria Child  (1882)


Modified - 12/05/2002
(c) Copyright 2002 Bigelow Society, Inc. All rights reserved.
Rod  Bigelow - Director
       < rodbigelow@netzero.net >

Rod Bigelow

Box 13 Chazy Lake
Dannemora, N.Y. 12929
< rodbigelow@netzero.net > 
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