Prentiss, George Lewis
PRENTISS, GEORGE LEWIS: Presbyterian; b. at Gorham, Me., May 12, 1816;
d. at New York Mar. 19, 1903. He graduated at Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Me.,
1835; was assistant in Gorham Academy, 1836–37; studied theology at the universities
of Halle and Berlin (1839–41); and became pastor of the South Trinitarian Church,
New Bedford, Mass., 1845. In April, 1851, he was installed pastor of the Mercer
Street Presbyterian Church, New York; resigned on account of ill-health in the
spring of 1858, and sought rest in Europe for the next two years. On his return
he organized the Church of the Covenant, New York, and was pastor, 1862–73; and
professor of pastoral theology, church polity, and mission work, in Union Theological
Seminary, New York, 1873–97. He published A Memoir of Seargent S. Prentiss
(2 vols., New York, 1855; later ed., 1879); The Life and Letters of Elizabeth
Prentiss (1882); The Union Theological Seminary in the City of New York
(3 vols., New York, 1889–99); and The Bright Side of Life (autobiographic,
2 vols., 1901).