Hardcover
n.d. · London
by Goulding, Rev. F. R.
London: Routledge, n.d.. Hardcover. Good. 12mo. x, 11-217 pages, [6] pages of advertisements. Green color illustrated cloth binding with title on the front cover and spine. Advertisement on the right front flyleaf. Illustrated with a folding frontispiece and 2 folding illustrations in text titled "the Hawk and Squirrel" and "Indian Ball Play". Text block is cracked in spots (no loose pages). The front and rear hinges are slightly cracked. This is a story involving the Cherokee Indians. Francis Robert Goulding, author, clergyman, inventor, lived in this house at the time of his death, August 22, 1881, and is buried in the Roswell Presbyterian Cemetery. The son of Rev. Thomas Goulding, founder and first president of the Presbyterian Theological Seminary at Columbia, S. C., Goulding was born near Midway Church in Liberty County, September 28, 1810. Graduated from the University of Georgia in 1830, and graduated from the Theological Seminary at Columbia, SC where he became licensed to preach in 1833. Best Known as the author of the popular juvenile novel, "The Young Marooners" and similar books, Francis R. Goulding like his father achieved eminence in the pulpit, filling many pastorates. In 1842, while visiting near Eatonton, he conceived the idea for a machine for sewing. While pastor of the Bath Presbyterian Church in Augusta, aided and encouraged by a friend, Judge Schley, he perfected his model, Meantime, Elias Howe of Massachusetts had secured a patent on a similar machine. His first wife, Mary Wallace Howard of Savannah (1808 - 14 Jul 1853 in Kingston, Bartow, GA), was the first to sing Bishop Reginald Heber's famous hymn, "`From Greenland's Icy Mountains." It was set to music by Dr. Lowell Mason, pastor of Savannah's Independent Presbyterian Church, and dedicated to her. (From find a grave dot com). (Inventory #: 17483)