Nathaniel Niles: Difference between revisions

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==Musical settings of literary works==
==Musical settings of literary works==
{{LyricistSettingsList}}
{{LyricistSettingsList}}
==References==
==References==



Revision as of 06:05, 4 November 2019

Life

Born: 4 April 1741, in Braintree, Massachusetts

Died: 31 October 1828, in West Fairlee, Vermont

Biography

He graduated from Princeton College in 1766, studied law and medicine and was a teacher in New York City. He studied theology and was a preacher in Torrington, Connecticut. After the American Revolution, he moved to West Fairlee, Vermont, served as a member of the Vermont State House of Representatives in 1784 and as a judge of the Vermont Supreme Court, (1784-88). Upon the admission of Vermont as a state into the Union, he was elected as an Anti-Administration candidate to the Second and Third Congresses, serving (1891-95). After his term, he again was a member of the Vermont State House of Representatives, (1800-03, 1812-15). He died in West Fairlee, Vermont, in November, 1828, at the age of eighty-six. He will be mainly remembered by his American Hero, sung vigorously in Norwich in the [early 1800s], and still revived on certain occasions in New Haven.

View the Wikipedia article on Nathaniel Niles.

Musical settings of literary works

Settings of text by Nathaniel Niles

References

Publications

External links