Steele, Richard H. (Richard Holloway), 1824-1900
Variant namesRichard Holloway Steele was born to John B. and Eliza B. (Holloway) Steele September 17, 1824 at Watervliet, NY. After earning an A.B. from Rutgers College in 1844, he graduated from New Brunswick Seminary in 1847. He also received an A.M.(1847) and D.D.(1867) from Rutgers College. Richard was Pastor of the First Reformed church in New Brunswick, New Jersey and later the pastor of the the Presbyterian Church of Ann Arbor, Michigan. He married Frances Hays of Milton, NY in 1848, with whom he had three children. Richard died in Detroit, Michigan on April 5, 1900.
A prolific writer, Steele published many sermons, addresses and historical discourses. He also spoke and published much on the duty of patriotism during the Civil War.
From the description of Letters of Richard Holloway Steele, 1840-1843. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 122662452
Richard Holloway Steele, the son of John B. and Eliza B. (Holloway) Steele, was born in Watervliet, New York on September 17, 1824. A Reformed minister, he served the Presbyterian churches of Charlton, Albany, and Ballston Spa, as well as the Reformed Church at Nassau, N.Y.
Steele was pastor of the First Reformed Church in New Brunswick, N.J., for seventeen years, from 1863 to 1880. He then proceeded to Ann Arbor, Michigan, where for seven years he was pastor of the Presbyterian Church. He then retired from active work in the ministry and lived quietly in Detroit with his family.
A prolific writer, Steele published many sermons, addresses and historical discourses, including "America, a land pre-eminently blessed," a sermon preached in the Reformed Protestant Dutch Church, Nassau, N.Y., on Thanksgiving Day, November 25, 1852. He spoke and published much on the duty of patriotism during the Civil War, including "Victory and mourning: a sermon occasioned by the death of Abraham Lincoln, late president of the United States, preached in the first Reformed Dutch Church, New Brunswick, N.J., June 1st. 1865."
He was married to Miss Frances Hays of Milton, N.Y., on December 13, 1848. They had three children, Charles H., M.D., (Rutgers College Class of 1872), E. Francis (Fannie), and Wallace. Richard Holloway Steele died on April 5, 1900 and was buried in Detroit, Michigan, next to his wife and son Wallace, who had pre-deceased him.
From the guide to the Guide to the Richard Holloway Steele Letters, 1840-1843, (Rutgers University Libraries. Special Collections and University Archives.)
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creatorOf | Steele, Richard H. (Richard Holloway), 1824-1900. Letters of Richard Holloway Steele, 1840-1843. | Rutgers University | |
creatorOf | Guide to the Richard Holloway Steele Letters, 1840-1843 | Rutgers Special Collections and University Archives |
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associatedWith | Coney, Mary Frances Steele, 1823? | person |
associatedWith | Coney, Mary Frances Steele, b. 1823? | person |
associatedWith | Reformed church in America | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Rutgers College | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Rutgers Preparatory School | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Rutgers University | corporateBody |
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Person
Birth 1824
Death 1900