Shaw, Joseph Coolidge, 1821-1851

Source Citation

This voluminous file of incoming letters from more than 6000 correspondents includes letters from literary figures and scholars in Great Britain and Europe, as well as the U.S., including Thomas Carlyle, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nathaniel Hawthorne, James Thomas Fields, George Washington Greene, Charles Appleton Longfellow, Charles Eliot Norton, Edgar Allen Poe, Charles Sumner, Alfred Tennyson, and Samuel Ward. There are several boxes of letters requesting Longfellow's autograph, seeking a lecture appearance, offering honorary memberships, and sending birthday greetings. Also included are a few literary manuscripts by authors other than Longfellow, and some letters from various persons to other addressees.

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Source Citation

Joseph Coolidge Shaw, SJ was born in Boston, Massachusetts on January 22, 1821, to Robert G. Shaw, a Boston merchant, and his wife Elizabeth (Parkman) Shaw. Raised a Unitarian, he entered Harvard College in 1836 and studied languages, before graduating in the class of 1840. Following graduation, Shaw spent time furthering his education in Europe and, on a trip to Rome, met Frederick William Faber. Faber was part of the Oxford movement which sought to renew the Church of England through a revival of Catholic doctrine and practice. After meeting Faber, Shaw was introduced to Thomas Glover, SJ, a Jesuit residing in Rome, and soon after converted to Catholicism in 1843. After returning to Boston, Shaw decided to leave Harvard Law School, and returned to Rome to study for the priesthood. After three years of study, Shaw came back to Boston in 1847, and was ordained a Catholic priest by Bishop Fitzpatrick at the Cathedral of the Holy Cross.

In 1850, Shaw entered the Novitiate of the Jesuits in Frederick, Maryland, but contracted tuberculosis and died March 10, 1851. Prior to his death, he was able to take his vows and joined the Society of Jesus on March 4. In his will, Shaw left a significant portion of his life insurance for a college to be established in Boston by the Jesuits, and donated his nearly 2,000-volume library to the same school, as deemed appropriate. The school, which was not yet established, would be Boston College, which opened in the South End of the city in September 1864. About 350 volumes from Shaw's library formed a significant portion of the original Boston College library. Additionally, the Shaw House on the Chestnut Hill campus, dedicated in 1962, houses 20 freshmen who take part in the Shaw Leadership Program.

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BiogHist

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Collection includes letters, diaries, and travel journals, etc., of four generations of the Cabot family of Boston, Massachusetts. The bulk of the collection documents the lives of James Elliot Cabot and his wife Elisabeth (Dwight) Cabot and includes Thomas Handasyd Perkins' letters and records on the slave, tea and, spice trades (1786-1840).

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Source Citation

Shaw, Joseph Coolidge, AB 1840

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Source Citation

Letters written to Boston, Mass. lawyer James Lawrence from friends and family, 1835-1855, include letters written by his father Abbott Lawrence, brothers Timothy Bigelow Lawrence and Abbott Lawrence, Jr.; sisters Katherine Bigelow Lawrence and Annie Bigelow Lawrence (Rotch); future brother-in-law Benjamin Smith Rotch; and friends and business associates Edward Hammond Clarke, Joseph Coolidge Shaw, and Nathaniel D. Hubbard, among others, on subjects ranging from family news, travels, business, and daily activities. The collection also includes essays and papers written by Lawrence as a student in the Harvard University Class of 1840, Lawrence's personal account book kept from 1837-1840, and several printed items.

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Unknown Source

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Name Entry: Shaw, Joseph Coolidge, 1821-1851

Found Data: [ { "contributor": "WorldCat", "form": "authorizedForm" }, { "contributor": "LC", "form": "authorizedForm" } ]
Note: Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest