Adams, William
ADAMS, WILLIAM: American Presbyterian; b. at Colchester, Conn., Jan.
25, 1807; d. at Orange Mountain, N. J., Aug. 31, 1880. He was graduated at Yale
(1827) and at Andover Theological Seminary (1830); was pastor at Brighton, Mass.
(1831-34); of the Broome Street (Central) Presbyterian Church, New York (1834-53);
and of the Madison Square Presbyterian Church, formed from the Broome Street
Church (1853-73). From 1873 till his death he was president and professor of
sacred rhetoric and pastoral theology in Union Theological Seminary. He was
one of the leading clergymen in New York in his time, and his influence was
not bounded by his own denomination or land. Besides many individual sermons
he published an edition of Isaac Taylor’s Spirit of Hebrew Poetry, with
a biographical introduction (New York, 1862); The Three Gardens (1856);
In the World and not of the World (1867); Conversations of Jesus Christ
with Representative Men (1868); Thanksgiving (1869).