Ada Chastina Bowles

Ada Chastina Bowles

Ada Chastina Burpee Bowles (August 2, 1836 – August 30, 1928) was an Universalist minister.

Early life

Ada Chastina Burpee was born in Gloucester, Massachusetts, on August 2, 1836. On her father's side her ancestry runs through the Choates and on her mother's side through the Haskells, back into staunch old English families. She spent most of her youth by the sea, and her outdoor activities laid the foundation for the vigor and health that she have been characterized for later in her life.[1]

Her early opportunities for acquiring education were limited. After easily and rapidly learning all that was taught in the public schools of Gloucester, she studied by herself.[1]

Career

At the age of fifteen she began to teach in the public schools. She continued until she was twenty-two, at the same time writing for the press.[1]

Her success with an adult Bible class led her to expand her theological study, under the direction of her husband, who desired that his wife should be in all things his companion, and, after giving her a thorough course in theology, he encouraged her to preach the gospel. She began in 1869 by supplying vacant pulpits in New England. In 1872 she was licensed in Boston to preach and became the non-resident pastor of a church in Marlborough, Massachusetts. Her husband at the same time settled in Cambridge, and soon after accepted a call to the pastorate of the Church of the Restoration in Philadelphia, while Bowles was called as non-resident pastor of the Universalist Church in Easton, Pennsylvania, a position she held for three years. She left that parish to lay the foundation of a new church in Trenton, New Jersey.[1]

She was regularly ordained in 1874 and preached and lectured since then in most of the large cities of the United States. When without a church of her own, she shared the parish work of her husband and was constantly engaged in charitable and philanthropic work.[1]

In addition to all her ministerial work, she lectured in various parts of the country under the auspices of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union, in which organization she was state superintendent of various departments. She was national lecturer of the American Woman Suffrage Association and president of State, county and city suffrage organizations, as well as an active member of many other reforms.[1]

Notwithstanding all the duties and labors, she was famed among her acquaintances as a wise and affectionate mother and a model housekeeper. One of her most popular lectures was on "Strong-minded Housekeeping" which embodied her own experience in household cares and management.[1]

In 1892 she published The Old Man of the Mountain and Old Mother Ann.[2]

Personal life

She married a popular clergyman. Rev. Benjamin F. Bowles (1824-1892), pastor of the Universalist Church in Melrose, Massachusetts. She became the stepmother of three children, and later the mother of three more, but she still found time for a variety of church work, including teaching an adult Bible class.[1]

She was an expert swimmer, perfectly at home in or on the water, and could handle a saw, hammer or rolling-pin with equal dexterity.[1]

She lived at Abington, Massachusetts.[1]

She died on August 30, 1928, and is buried at Mount Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Evergreen Path Lot 1334.[3][4]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Willard, Frances Elizabeth, 1839-1898; Livermore, Mary Ashton Rice, 1820-1905 (1893). A woman of the century; fourteen hundred-seventy biographical sketches accompanied by portraits of leading American women in all walks of life. Buffalo, N.Y., Moulton. pp. 110–111. Retrieved 8 August 2017. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  2. Bowles, Ada Chastina (Burpee) (1892). The Old Man of the Mountain and Old Mother Ann. Retrieved 17 September 2017.
  3. "Ada Bowles, Path: EVERGREEN PATH Lot: 1334". Mount Auburn Cemetery.
  4. Gordon, Ann Dexter (2006). The Selected Papers of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony: When clowns make laws for queens, 1880-1887. Rutgers University Press. p. 70. Retrieved 17 September 2017.
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