Adams James Alonzo
ADAMS, JAMES ALONZO: Congregationalist; b. at Ashland, O., May 21,
1842. He was educated at Knox College (A.B., 1867) and Union Theological Seminary
(1870), after having served in the Civil war as a member of Company D, 69th
Illinois Volunteers. He was pastor of the Congregational Church at Marshfield,
Mo., in 1870-71; of the Plymouth Congregational Church, St. Louis, in 1880-86;
of the Millard Avenue Congregational Church, Chicago, in 1887-88; and of the
Warren Avenue Congregational Church in the same city in 1889-95. In 1891 he
was a delegate from the Congregational churches of Illinois to the International
Congregational Council in London, and has also been their representative at
a number of national councils. He was professor in Straight University, New
Orleans, 1873-77, and president in 1875-77, and then became editor of the
Dallas Daily Commercial, Dallas, Tex. From 1887 to 1903 he was editorial
writer on the Chicago Advance, becoming its editor-in-chief in the latter
year. His principal works are Colonel Hungerford’s Daughter (Chicago,
1896) and Life of Queen Victoria (1901).