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Lester Mondale

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Name
  
Lester Mondale

Nieces
  
Eleanor Mondale

Siblings
  
Walter Mondale

Died
  
August 19, 2003


Lester Mondale image2findagravecomphotos250photos201326211

Nephews
  
Ted Mondale, William H. Mondale

Similar People
  
Walter Mondale, Ted Mondale, Eleanor Mondale, Joan Mondale

Education
  
Harvard Divinity School

The Reverend Robert Lester Mondale (May 28, 1904 – August 19, 2003) was an American Unitarian minister and Humanist. He was the only person to sign each of the three Humanist Manifestos of 1933, 1973, and 2003.

Contents

Lester Mondale Rev R Lester Mondale 1904 2003 Find A Grave Memorial

Biography

Lester Mondale Rev R Lester Mondale 1904 2003 Find A Grave Memorial

Mondale was born in Walnut Grove, Minnesota, the son of Methodist minister and World War I hero Theodore Sigvaard Mondale and Jessie Alice Larson. Although his family was Methodist, he converted to Unitarianism while earning his B.A. from Hamline University. In 1926 Mondale entered the Unitarian ministry and in 1929 he earned an S.T.B. from Harvard Divinity School. He was ordained by the New North Unitarian Church, Hingham, Massachusetts, and went on to serve congregations in Evanston, Illinois, Kansas City, Missouri; Birmingham, Michigan; White Plains, New York; Tempe, Arizona; and Quincy, Illinois. His younger half-brother was Walter Mondale, Vice-President of the United States under Jimmy Carter.

In 1933, Mondale was the youngest to sign A Humanist Manifesto and was also signatory to the 1973 Humanist Manifesto II. At age 99, he was the oldest to sign the 2003 Humanism and Its Aspirations and was the only signatory to all three documents. He died shortly afterwards.

Mondale was a member of the American Humanist Association (AHA) since its inception and received its Humanist Pioneer award in 1973 and the Humanist Founder award in 2001.

Books

  • The Missouri still runs wild, Westport Pub. Co. (Kansas City, MO) 1943
  • Three Unitarian philosophies of religion, Beacon Press (Boston) 1946
  • The Unitarian way of life, Beacon Press (Boston) 1943
  • Values in world religions, Starr King Press 1958
  • Preachers in Purgatory With Reference to Accounts of More Than a Hundred Ministers Reporting on Crisis Situations, Beacon Press 1966
  • New Man of Religious Humanism, Volturna Press 1973
  • References

    Lester Mondale Wikipedia