The H600 Project Genealogy DB

Rev. Charles Hoar

Male 1840 - 1911  (71 years)


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  • Name Charles Hoar 
    Prefix Rev. 
    Born 19 Jan 1840  New Braintree, Worcester Co, Massachusetts, USA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    Died 12 Jul 1911  Wellesley, Norfolk Co, Massachusetts, USA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Buried New Braintree, Worcester Co, Massachusetts, USA (Evergreen Cemetery) Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I2437  A00 Hoar and Horr Families North America
    Last Modified 25 Apr 2013 

    Father Charles Hoar,   b. 29 Apr 1789, Westminster, Worcester Co, Massachusetts, USA Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 8 Jul 1849, New Braintree, Worcester Co, Massachusetts, USA Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 60 years) 
    Mother Nancy Damon,   b. 17 Dec 1792, Westminster, Worcester Co, Massachusetts, USA Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 30 Mar 1876, New Braintree, Worcester Co, Massachusetts, USA Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 83 years) 
    Married 29 Sep 1812  Westminster, Worcester Co, Massachusetts, USA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Family ID F769  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Eleanor Converse,   b. 1 Jan 1842, New Braintree, Worcester Co, Massachusetts, USA Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 19 Mar 1922, Wellesley, Norfolk Co, Massachusetts, USA Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 80 years) 
    Married 11 Nov 1863  New Braintree, Worcester Co, Massachusetts, USA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Children 
     1. Wallace Lorenzo Brooks,   b. 14 Oct 1865, Rockland, Plymouth Co, Massachusetts, USA Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 11 Dec 1870, Tyngsborough, Middlesex Co, Massachusetts, USA Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 5 years)
     2. Josephine Damon Brooks,   b. 28 Jan 1872, Tyngsborough, Middlesex Co, Massachusetts, USA Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 2 Oct 1951, Boston, Suffolk Co, Massachusetts, USA Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 79 years)
     3. Charles Converse Brooks,   b. 26 Feb 1874, South Deerfield, Franklin Co, Massachusetts, USA Find all individuals with events at this location
     4. Edwin Miller Brooks,   b. 24 Dec 1878, Putnam, Windham Co, Connecticut, USA Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 7 Apr 1929, Wellesley, Norfolk Co, Massachusetts, USA Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 50 years)
    Last Modified 22 Mar 2009 
    Family ID F1040  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • Biography of CHARLES SYLVESTER BROOKS
      NOT abating one job or title, in spite of that very long word by which Brooks thinks he identifies your Historian without giving the reasons for his definition, not leaving out anything by our classmate's desire, I give the story as he tells it, and I am sure you will all of you be interested, as has been the chronicler of these Class annals. I only preface the tale with one or two items showing the narrator's connection with the college societies and functions during his two years' stay with us. He was a member of the 'Logian Literary Society and of Mills Society, and a toast orator on our Biennial Celebration program. Now, it gives me pleasure to announce Brooks: In response to a request from Dudley, our indefatigable and worthy Class Historian, to report of my whereabouts and whatabouts for the almost forty years since college days, I proceed to give a few dry bones of my history. "And the bones were very dry." Imitating the Hibernian who wanted to say something before he began, I may preface college days and their sequel with the following facts. I was born, according to "hearsay evidence," in New Braintree, Massachusetts, January 19, 1840. My parents were Charles Hoar, born in Westminster, Massachusetts, April 29, 1789, and Nancy (Damon) Hoar, born in Westminster, Massachusetts, December 17, 1792. As two of my brothers had previously done, I obtained, in 1859, the legal change of my surname to Brooks. My residence while in college was New Braintree. The local schools, including "select schools," in my native town gave me the beginning of my education. My college preparation was completed by one term's study at New Salem Academy and four terms at Williston Seminary, Easthampton, Massachusetts, at which I graduated in 1858. I began as Freshman at Williams College with the Class of '63, and remained with it through the Biennial Examination until among the "Biennial Islands" the most of us had, by concerted action, flunked Latin prose and then "Landed safe and sound, Upon the Junior's happy ground." Then unexpectedly, and unsolicited on my part, a financial advantage was offered me if I would go to Amherst College. In my circumstance the offer was too strong to decline, and with exceeding great reluctance I "broke my home ties" with Williams and removed to Amherst and graduated with Amherst 63. But much as I came to be attached to my new class, there was that in those associations of Freshman and Sophomore years at Williams which would not be "transported by railroad." The esprit de corps forged and fashioned on the football field, where we "galoriously" "ragged" both '62 and '64, winning out in both events, and completed in contests and intimacies in classrooms and on campus that esprit de corps and my enthusiastic share in it, together with my social attachments, bound me with a cord of gold to Williams '63. As to events since college graduation: I taught as principal of a high and grammar school at Rockland, Massachusetts, from 1864 to 1866. I spent three years at Andover Theological Seminary, graduating there in 1869. I was ordained and installed in Tyngsboro, Massachusetts, September 15, 1869, and was pastor there for nearly three years of the Evangelical Congregational Church. I was pastor of the Congregational church in South Deerfield, Massachusetts, from 1873 to 1877. I was pastor of the Second Congregational Church, Putnam, Connecticut, from 1877 to 1887, and I was pastor of the Rollstone Congregational Church, Fitchburg, Massachusetts, from 1887 to 1896. In the pastorate of the Rollstone Church, I received nearly three hundred into membership during the nine years, leaving it with a membership of five hundred and forty-seven, and the benevolent contributions, including legacies, and the home expenses, meanwhile aggregated about $87,600. I was called to the pastorate of the First Congregational Church, Mount Vernon, New York, in 1898, and removed there, and served the church briefly, being obliged by infirm health to terminate my work with that church. After a period of a year and three-quarters of invalidism, I so far recovered as to resume pulpit work, and since that time, in September, 1900, I have supplied various churches temporarily. Since leaving Fitchburg I have preached most of the Sabbaths for three months or more in the following Congregational churches, all in Massachusetts: for the Whitefield Church in Newburyport; the First in Hyde Park; the Winthrop in Holbrook; and the Union in Taunton. I have taken a residence in Wellesley, Massachusetts. My former general health is largely restored. While not desiring at present to remove and take a pastorate, I am glad to be in the ranks of the "ministry at large," and wish to occupy my Sabbaths with the supply of pastorless churches, as I have so far had the good fortune to do most of the Sabbaths for two years and more since I resumed preaching. In reply to the request of the Class Historian for some special features of the years since college, I will state that I was successively a member of the Eastern Connecticut Congregational Club and of the Fitchburg Congregational Club. Of the latter I was president for one year. I was preacher of the annual sermon before the Massachusetts General Association of Congregational Churches, in 1875. The topic of the sermon was "The Development of Lay Power." It was largely printed in The Congregationalist by request of an editor of that journal. An historical sermon I preached in the Rollstone Church, Fitchburg, 1890, on a jubilee occasion was printed in pamphlet form in connection with the proceedings of the jubilee. Many sermons preached on special or ordinary occasions have, in part or entire, been printed in the local press. Among such I may mention those on the following topics: "Virtues Distinctively American," "The New Era in Our Country," "The Pilgrim Idea," "The Temperance Issue of the Hour," "The Advent of Christ," "Following Christ," "The Present Duty of the Congregational Denomination," a paper read before the Windham County (Connecticut) Conference, "Church Machinery and the Power to Operate It," "Making the Most of the Hard Times" (1893), "Our Retrospect and Our Prospect," a quarter-centennial sermon of the Rollstone Church, "Constitutional Prohibition," "Secularism, the American Danger." For several years I was a member of the School Board of Fitchburg. I was elected by the General Association of the Congregational Churches of Massachusetts one of the directors of the Board of Pastoral Supply, and served five years. I likewise served for over eight years as a member of the Executive Committee of the Massachusetts Home Missionary Society. Of course every '63 man has the best wife in the world! Wait, however, until I speak before announcing the finding of the court. I married, November 11, 1863, Miss Eleanor R. Converse, of New Braintree, Massachusetts. It is high praise when I say, that I gladly put on record, after nearly forty years of household life with her, that she approaches more nearly than most women whom I have known the counterpart of the unexcelled portrait of the "excellent woman" painted by the wise man in the last chapter of Proverbs. She has been of invaluable worth to me in my private and public life. She was born January 1, 1842, in New Braintree, Massachusetts, and was the daughter of Captain Lorenzo Converse, and his wife, Eliza (Reid) Converse. She completed her education at the Female College and the French Institute, Worcester, Massachusetts. Four children have brightened and enriched our home. 1. Wallace Lorenzo Brooks, born in Rockland, Massachusetts, October 14, 1865. After gladdening our fireside with a radiance ceaseless and quenchless, December 11, 1870, he went away to be at home with God. "Fair boy, too soon translated to another sphere, he lives green in our memories." 2. Josephine Damon Brooks, born January, 28, 1872. She graduated at Wellesley College in 1895. She has since taught in the high schools of Pepperell, Northampton, and Springfield, Massachusetts, and is now teaching in Shortridge High School, of Indianapolis, Indiana. Her specialty is French. Last summer she visited Paris for further French study. 3. Charles Converse Brooks, born February 26, 1874. He graduated as mechanical engineer at Worcester Polytechnic Institute in 1895. He has since been mechanical engineer in Rutland, Vermont, and is now about to remove to Chicago, Illinois, having a good position as mechanical engineer in the new Western manufactory of the John A. Mead Conveyor Manufacturing Company. He married, December 22, 1897, Miss Ida Mae Roleau, of Burlington, Vermont. She was born March 23, 1868, in Williston, Vermont, and was the daughter of Duncan Alexander Roleau. 4. Edwin Miller Brooks, born December 24, 1878. He graduated at Amherst College in 1899. He taught one year in the King School, Stamford, Connecticut. In 1900 he entered Harvard Law School, and is now (February, 1903) in the present Senior Class. He is a member of the editorial board of the Harvard Law Review. He intends to pursue the practice of law. I do not regret having chosen the ministry for my life work. I believe that there is no vocation which surpasses it for one who by native and acquired fitness is adapted for it, and who gives to it the most generous and strenuous service possible. And I may state further my creed in saying that I believe that there is no body of men who as a class excel in sound manhood the clergymen of our generation. My very cordial salutations are extended to all the members of '63, and an invitation of equal heartiness to call upon me at my home. My door will always open easily when you are at my threshold. Classmates, call and prove it. Source: Class of Sixty-Three Williams College Fortieth Year Report, by the Class Historian, Thomas Todd Printer, Boston, 1903

      Marriage:
      https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/N4MN-34Q

      Cemetery:
      http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=35608387