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  1. Samuel Atkins Eliot II (1862-1950) was the first President of the American Unitarian Association (AUA) to be given the power of an executive; he held this office from 1900 to 1927.

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    • Samuel Atkins Eliot1
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  2. Samuel Atkins Eliot (March 5, 1798 – January 29, 1862) was a member of the notable Eliot family of Boston, Massachusetts, who served in political positions at the local, state and national levels. [1]

  3. Samuel Atkins Eliot II (August 24, 1862 – October 15, 1950) was an American Unitarian minister. In 1898 the American Unitarian Association elected him secretary (a position effectively the chief executive officer) but in 1900 the position was redesignated as president and Eliot served in that office from inception to 1927, significantly ...

  4. Samuel Atkins Eliot (1862-1950) was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and graduated from Harvard College in 1884 and Harvard Divinity School in 1889. He served Unitarian parishes in Denver, Colorado, the Church of the Saviour in Brooklyn, New York, and the Arlington Street Church in Boston, Massachusetts. While in Denver he founded the Rocky ...

  5. Samuel Atkins Eliot 275 with the problems of individual souls. Eliot remained in Brooklyn for five years, attaining an outstanding reputation among the clergy of the area of greater New York. On January 1, 1898, he became secretary of the American Unitari an Association, which was organized in Boston in 1825 by a group of

  6. In 1858, Samuel Atkins Eliot and his family also settled at Shady Hill. His son Charles W. Eliot, shortly before he became president of Harvard University, helped finance their new house and lived in half of it until 1867. Here Samuel’s grandson Charles Eliot the landscape architect was born in 1859.

  7. ELIOT, SAMUEL ATKINS, (great-grandfather of Thomas Hopkinson Eliot), A Representative from Massachusetts; born in Boston, Mass., March 5, 1798; attended the Boston Latin School; was graduated from Harvard University in 1817 and from the divinity school in 1820; member of the State house of representatives 1834-1837; mayor of Boston 1837-1839 ...