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  1. 23 de jun. de 2020 · After eight years of letter writing, the author Thomas Wentworth Higginson finally met the reclusive poet face-to-face. “My dear young gentleman or young lady,” the essay in the April 1862 ...

  2. Thomas Wentworth Higginson died on May 9, 1911 at the age of 87. Called a man whose whole life was a “sermon on freedom," Higginson had a fascinating career as minister, editor, writer and abolitionist. He was born on December 23, 1823 in Cambridge, Massachusetts. His father died when he was 11.

  3. Thomas Wentworth Higginson (b. 1823–d. 1911) was a native of Cambridge, Massachusetts, and a graduate of Harvard College (1841) and Harvard Divinity School (1847). A prolific author and popular lecturer, Higginson was also a Unitarian minister, an abolitionist activist, a soldier, an editor, a women’s rights leader, and a literary critic.

  4. Thomas Wentworth Higginson passed away peacefully on May 9, 1911, at his home in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He was 87 years old. While the exact cause of death isn’t readily available in most sources, he reportedly fell ill the previous Saturday and lapsed into unconsciousness the day before his passing.

  5. Thomas Wentworth Higginson is often remembered as the man who co-edited Emily Dickinson’s first two collections of poetry, but he was also an abolitionist, supporter of the woman’s suffrage movement, and founder of the Intercollegiate Socialist Society. Higginson was also an ordained Unitarian minister and a commander of a Union regiment of ...

  6. Photomechanical. Thomas Wentworth Higginson was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts on 22 December 1823. He entered Harvard College in 1837. After graduation he was admitted to Harvard Divinity School, graduating in 1847. He became a Unitarian minister in the politically conservative town of Newburyport, Massachusetts.

  7. The Thomas Wentworth Higginson Collection at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln is part of the larger Carlton and Territa Lowenberg Collection at the UNL Archives and Special Collections. The Lowenberg Collection's primary focus is Emily Dickinson, and it contains many items of interest collateral to Dickinson, including thirty letters written by Higginson between 1865–1910.

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