Burr, Enoch Fitch
BURR, ENOCH FITCH: Congregationalist; b.
at Westport, Conn., Oct. 21, 1818; d. at Hamburg,
Conn., May 8, 1907. He was educated at Yale
College (B.A., 1839), and devoted several years of
study in New Haven to science and theology. He
then traveled extensively, and after his return to
the United States was called in 1850 to the pastorate
of the Congregational church at Lyme,
Conn., which he held till his death. He lectured
on the scientific evidences of religion at Amherst
College, Williams College, the Sheffield Scientific
School, and other institutions, and wrote: The
Mathematical Theory of Neptune (New Haven,
1848); Spiritualism (New York, 1859); Ecce
Cælum (Boston, 1867); Pater Mundi (1869); Ad
Fidem (1871); Evolution (1873); Sunday Afternoons
for Little People (New York, 1874); Toward
the Strait Gate (Boston, 1876); Work in the Vineyard
(1876); Dio the Athenian (New York, 1880); Tempted to Unbelief (1882); Ecce Terra (Philadelphia,
1884); Celestial Empires (New York, 1885);
Theism as a Canon of Science (London, 1886);
Universal Beliefs (New York, 1887); Long Ago,
as Interpreted by the Nineteenth Century (1888);
Supreme Things (1889); Aleph the Chaldean (1891);
Fabius the Roman (1897); and Autumn Leaves
from the Mansewood (Andover, Mass., 1905).