Ballard, Addison
BALLARD, ADDISON: Congregationalist; b. at
Framingham, Mass., Oct. 18, 1822. He was
educated at Williams College (B.A., 1842), and
was successively principal of Hopkins Academy,
Hadley, Mass. (1842-43), tutor in Williams College
(1843-44), and principal of the academy at Grand
Rapids, Mich. (1845-46). In 1846-47 he was a
home missionary in Grand River Valley, Mich.,
and was then professor of Latin in Ohio University
(1848-54), professor of rhetoric in Williams College
(1854-55), and professor of mathematics, natural
philosophy, and astronomy at Marietta College
(1855-57). He has held successive pastorates at
the First Congregational Church, Williamstown,
Mass. (1857-65), the Congregational Church at
North Adams, Mass. (1865-66; stated supply),
and the First Congregational Church, Detroit,
Mich. (1866-72). He was professor of Christian
Greek and Latin and of moral philosophy and
rhetoric at Lafayette College in 1874-93, and of
logic in New York University from 1894 to 1904.
He is an honorary member of the London Society
of Science, Letters, and Art, and in theology is an
advocate of the doctrine of justification by faith.
He has written Arrows, or the True Aim
in Teaching and Study (Syracuse, N. Y., 1890);
From Talk to Text (New York, 1904);
Through the Sieve (1907).