William Adams (minister)


William Adams was a noted American clergyman and academic.

Early life

He was born in Colchester, Connecticut on January 25, 1807. He was one of five sons and six daughters born to John Adams and Elizabeth Adams. His father was a 1795 graduate of Yale who was an American educator noted for organizing several hundred Sunday schools.
His father was the eldest of ten children born to Captain John Adams, a farmer from Canterbury and an officer during the American Revolution and Mary Adams of Needham, Massachusetts. Her maternal grandparents were Gamaliel Ripley and Judith Riply. His mother was a great-great-granddaughter of Governor William Bradford of the Plymouth Colony who was a passenger on the Mayflower.
He prepared for College at Phillips Academy at Andover, Massachusetts and graduated from Yale College in 1827. He studied for the ministry at Andover Theological Seminary, under Professor Moses Stuart, graduating in 1830.

Career

In February 1831, he was ordained as pastor of the Congregational Church in Brighton, Massachusetts, where he remained until April 1834. In August 1834, he took charge of the Central Presbyterian Church on Broome Street in New York City.
In 1836, he was a member of the group that founded Union Theological Seminary in New York City. In 1852, he served as the moderator of the New School Party, and was chairman of the New School Committee of Conferences in 1866. In 1874, he became the president of Union Theological Seminary. He also served as a member of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, and as the president of the Presbyterian Foreign Board.
In 1853 his congregation founded the Madison Square Presbyterian Church, whose pastorate he resigned in 1873, after nearly forty years of consecutive service in one church, to accept the presidency of the Union Theological Seminary, in connection with the professorship of sacred rhetoric and pastoral theology.

Personal life

On July 13, 1831, he married Susan Patten Magoun, the daughter of Thatcher Magoun and Mary Bradshaw. Following the death of his first wife, he married her sister, Martha Bradshaw Magoun on August 12, 1835. Together, Adams and his second wife Martha were the parents of:
He died on August 31, 1880, at Orange Mountain, New Jersey. He was buried at Mount Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Descendants

Adams was the grandfather of William Adams Brown. He was born in New York City and was educated privately at first, then went to St. Paul's School in Concord, New Hampshire. He received from Yale University an A.B. degree in 1886, an A.M. degree in 1888 and a Ph.D. in 1901. He graduated from Union Theological Seminary in 1890 and was ordained in the Presbyterian Church in 1893. He also studied at the University of Berlin from 1890 to 1892. He was a member of the Yale Corporation from 1917 to 1934, and was acting president of Yale University from 1919 to 1920.
Another grandson was William Adams Delano,a cousin of Franklin Delano Roosevelt and an 1895 graduate of Yale who was a prominent American architect, and a partner with Chester Holmes Aldrich in the firm of Delano & Aldrich, which worked in the Beaux-Arts tradition for elite clients in New York City and Long Island.