Synopsis
Excerpt from Sketch of Rev. Seth Sweetser, D. D
Death sometimes reveals the greatness of a life. On the afternoon of March 28, 1878, a remarkable audience gathered in the Central Church at Worcester. The rain was falling heavily, the season the most inclement of the year, yet the large church was full. Men were there from the halls of learning and science, from the Senate Chamber at Washington, from bench and bar, pulpit and hospital, counting-room and the bedsides of the sick, men of various faiths and callings, from many villages and cities, all assembled to do honor to one whose highest distinction, like that of his Master, had been to be the servant of all.
There is a natural and reasonable desire on the part of those impressed by such a spectacle, or by other expressions of public esteem, to know somewhat more fully respecting the early life and personal history of one thus honored at his decease. It is also a task not only grateful but inspiring to study a character and career bearing the unmistakable stamp of genuine goodness.
Seth Sweetser, the subject of this sketch, was born in Newburyport, Mass., March 15, 1807, and died at seven oclock Sunday morning, March 24, 1878, having thus a little more than completed his seventy-first year. He was the fifth child in a family of five sisters and four brothers. All but one grew up to maturity. Five - two brothers, one an officer, and both active members in our churches, and three sisters - survive him. His father and mother were from Charlestown, for several generations the ancestral home.
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