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288:, preaching at Earlville, Illinois. Returning to Massachusetts in September, she was next invited to the pulpit of the Unitarian church in Mansfield, Massachusetts, and after an active ministry of over a year, on December 14, 1871, was regularly ordained as its pastor of the Unitarian Church in Mansfield. This was the first instance of the ordination of a woman by Unitarians in the State. A large council, representing many different churches convened for this purpose, took unusual care in examining the action of the parish and the preparation of the candidate.
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264:. As a teacher she was thirty years ahead of her time. Her generous teaching included cultivating the imagination and the finer qualities of the mind through drawing, and reading, and botany. But this went unappreciated as parsing, ciphering, and the memorizing of map questions were the favored approached of the public schools in that. Failing to garner appreciation by school examiners, she left the teaching profession.
221:, September 12, 1839. Her parents were Eben Graves, a farmer, and Hannah M. (Campbell) Graves. Her parents had six children who grew to maturity. The mother, who died May 21, 188i, was a sister of James S. and John B. Campbell. The father, Eben Graves, a lifelong resident of North Reading, was a farmer and market—man. Kind-hearted and a good friend to the poor, he was a man of few words. When his sudden death from
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229:. The parish records show that the captain was a man of more than ordinary influence in the old North Precinct. He served two terms in the State legislature and in various town offices. Her maternal ancestors, the Campbells and Moores, were descendants of the Scotch-Irish settlers of
197:. She also gave to friends valuable assistance in the education of their children. As the years wore on, her strength proved unequal to the arduous duties of the ministry, and her time was filled with literary work. She contributed occasionally to the pages of
225:, January 2, 1872, was announced, that evening at the Farmers’ Club a spontaneous tribute was paid to his memory in the general utterance, "He was an honest man.” His father was Capt. Daniel Graves, a young soldier in the
306:, acting as literary editor. For one year, she was secretary of the Women's Western Unitarian Conference. Recognizing that her strength was not sufficient to allow her to do the full work of the ministry, Graves moved to
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Graves' health was never vigorous, and this affected her ability for continuous pastoral work after her placement in
Mansfield. However, in 1882, she had pastoral charge of the Unitarian Society in
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Proceedings of the 250th
Anniversary of the Ancient Town of Redding, Once Including the Territory Now Comprising the Towns of Reading, Wakefield, and North Reading: With Historical Chapters
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Samuel Graves, 1630 Settler of Lynn, Massachusetts and His
Descendants: Allied Families Include Adsit, Collins, Gilman, Hibbard/Hebbard, Perkins, Smith, Wilson, and Others
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Like most of the thoughtful minds of her time, she sought intellectual gratification. She found it first in writing for the newspaper press, writing for
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A Woman of the
Century: Fourteen Hundred-seventy Biographical Sketches Accompanied by Portraits of Leading American Women in All Walks of Life
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Then she was led to the study of theology. Graves took a theological course of study under Rev. Olympia Brown in
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Graves taught in the public schools of her own town and in the
Bowditch School, South Danvers, now
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Graves died
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Willard, Frances
Elizabeth; Livermore, Mary Ashton Rice (1893). "Mary H. Graves".
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She aspired to the ministry, and studied under the guidance of Rev.
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147:(September 12, 1839 – December 5, 1908) was an American
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Cemetery in North Reading, Massachusetts, U.S.
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of New
Zealand, and her efforts helped many families.
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American minister, literary editor, writer (1839–1908)
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459:Graves 1985
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227:Revolution
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330:genealogy
149:Unitarian
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223:apoplexy
209:(1904).
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