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Morgan Dix

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Name
  
Morgan Dix

Role
  
Author

Parents
  
John Adams Dix


Morgan Dix image2findagravecomphotos250photos201237862

Born
  
November 1, 1827 (
1827-11-01
)

Died
  
April 29, 1908, Manhattan, New York City, New York, United States

Education
  
Columbia College of Columbia University in the City of New York

People also search for
  
John Adams Dix, Catherine Dix, Clifford Phelps Morehouse

Books
  
The Seven Deadly Sins: Ser, Harriet Starr Cannon, An Exposition of the Epi, Lectures on the Pantheisti, A Manual of Instructio

Dancing with Nature By Morgan Dix Wheelock


Morgan Dix (November 1, 1827 in New York City – April 29, 1908) was an American Episcopal Church priest, theologian, and religious author.

Contents

Early life

Dix was born on November 1, 1827 in New York City. He was the son of Catherine Morgan, the adopted daughter of Congressman John J. Morgan (1770-1849), and Major General John Adams Dix (1798-1879), U.S. Senator from New York (from 1845–1849), Secretary of the Treasury (from January-March of 1861), Governor of New York (from 1873–1874) and Union major general during the Civil War. His father was notable for arresting six members of the pro-Southern Maryland legislature, preventing that divided border state from seceding, and for arranging a system for prisoner exchange via the Dix-Hill cartel, concluded in partnership with Confederate Major General Daniel Harvey Hill.

Dix was educated at Columbia College and the General Theological Seminary.

Career

For almost fifty-three years, he was identified with Trinity Church, New York, of which he became assistant minister in 1855 and rector in 1862.

As well as being a very active churchman, Dix also wrote widely about the practice of Christianity. Among his major works are Commentaries on Romans and on Galatians and Colossians; The Calling of a Christian Woman; The Seven Deadly Sins; The Sacramental System; and Lectures on the First Prayer-Book of Edward VI.Louis Harmon Peet.

He objected to the entrance of girls into universities, because it was not "proper for young women to be exposed to the gaze of young men, many of whom were less bent upon learning than upon amusement." He was an hereditary companion of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States.

In 1880, he was subject to a sinister hoax that stretched over several months and became the subject of much comment in the New York City newspapers of the time. The arrest of the hoaxer (who was subsequently given a prison sentence) ended the incident.

Personal life

In 1874 Dix married Emily W. Soutter, (b. New York) whose parents James T. Soutter and Agnes G. Knox were from Virginia. Together they had:

  • John A. Dix, a 1902 graduate of Harvard who married Sophie W. Townsend, the granddaughter of Howard Townsend and Justine Van Rensselaer
  • Emily Margaret Gordon Dix, who married Charles Lanier Lawrance (1882–1950) in 1910
  • Catherine Morgan Dix, who married William H. Wheelock
  • On the north side of the Trinity Church is the All Saints’ Chapel, added in 1913 in honor of Rev. Dr. Morgan Dix, Rector from 1862-1908. A cenotaph (or memorial) in the likeness of Dix is in the entry to the Chapel.

    References

    Morgan Dix Wikipedia