1821 - 1867 (45 years)
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Name |
Peck, Henry Everard |
Born |
20 Jul 1821 |
Rochester, Monroe County, New York, USA |
Gender |
Male |
Died |
9 Jun 1867 |
Haiti |
Person ID |
I37862 |
Sackett |
Last Modified |
7 Dec 2014 |
Father |
Peck, Everard, b. 1791, Berlin, Hartford County, Connecticut, USA , d. 9 Feb 1854, Rochester, Monroe County, New York, USA (Age 63 years) |
Mother |
Porter, Chloe, b. Abt 1794, d. 5 Dec 1830, Rochester, Monroe County, New York, USA (Age ~ 36 years) |
Married |
1821 |
Children |
| 1. Peck, Henry Everard, b. 20 Jul 1821, Rochester, Monroe County, New York, USA , d. 9 Jun 1867, Haiti (Age 45 years) | |
Family ID |
F13422 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
Family |
Buckley, Esther M., b. Abt Jun 1822, Yates County, New York, USA , d. Unknown |
Married |
3 May 1849 |
Connecticut, USA [1] |
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Children |
| 1. Peck, Alice McKeen, b. Jul 1850, Rochester, Monroe County, New York, USA , d. 1852 (Age ~ 1 years) |
| 2. Peck, Everard T., b. Mar 1852, Rochester, Monroe County, New York, USA , d. 1939 (Age ~ 86 years) |
| 3. Peck, Norman E., b. Abt 1855, Oberlin, Lorain County, Ohio, USA , d. Unknown |
| 4. Peck, William H., b. Abt 1858, Oberlin, Lorain County, Ohio, USA , d. Unknown |
| 5. Peck, Margaret C., b. Abt Jan 1860, Ohio, USA , d. Unknown |
| 6. Peck, Mary F., b. Abt 1862, Oberlin, Lorain County, Ohio, USA , d. Unknown |
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Last Modified |
4 Dec 2014 |
Family ID |
F13420 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
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Event Map |
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| Born - 20 Jul 1821 - Rochester, Monroe County, New York, USA |
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| Married - 3 May 1849 - Connecticut, USA |
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| Child - Peck, Alice McKeen - Jul 1850 - Rochester, Monroe County, New York, USA |
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| Child - Peck, Everard T. - Mar 1852 - Rochester, Monroe County, New York, USA |
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| Child - Peck, Norman E. - Abt 1855 - Oberlin, Lorain County, Ohio, USA |
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| Child - Peck, William H. - Abt 1858 - Oberlin, Lorain County, Ohio, USA |
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| Child - Peck, Margaret C. - Abt Jan 1860 - Ohio, USA |
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| Child - Peck, Mary F. - Abt 1862 - Oberlin, Lorain County, Ohio, USA |
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| Died - 9 Jun 1867 - Haiti |
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Pin Legend |
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Notes |
- https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MCB3-PQ2
1850 Census; Rochester, ward 2, Monroe, New York
11 Aug 1850; stamped 65
208/404
Henry E Peck, 29, M, Cong. Clergyman, N. York
Esther M. Peck, 28 F, ---, N. York
Alice McK., 1/12, F, ---, N. York
Mary J. Cook, 15, F, ---, Ireland
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HeritageQuest
1860 > OHIO > LORAIN > OEBERLIN
Series: M653 Roll: 1002 Page: 222
Page No. 79 [stamped 222]; 25 June, 1860
Post Office: Oberlin
557/551
Henry E. Peck, 39, M, Prof Memy Philosophy, New York
Esther M. Peck, 38, F, ---, New York
Everard T. Peck, 8, M, ---, New York
Norman E. Peck, 5, M, ---, Ohio
William H. Peck, 2, M, ---, Ohio
Margaret C. Peck, 5/12, F, ---, Ohio
Mrs. Alexander, 40, F, W, Domestic, Virginia
Alice Alexander, 5, F, ---, New York
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«b»Henry Everard Peck.«/b»
H.E. Peck joined J.B.T. Marsh as co-editor at «i»The Lorain County News«/i» when he bought a share of the paper from V.A. Shankland on March 5, 1862 (Williams Brothers, 65). Peck continued to edit the paper until September 1863 (H.E. Peck, «i»Lorain County News«/i», September 30, 1863).
«b»Henry E. Peck was born in Rochester, New York on July 20, 1821«/b» (Faculty File, H.E. Peck, Oberlin College Archives). His father, Everard Peck, worked in the print industry as a printer, publisher, and bookstore owner. The elder Peck was deeply involved in the revival movement and was a friend of President Finney's, the second President of Oberlin College (Fletcher, vol. 1, 23-24). H.E. Peck finished his preparatory schooling at the Oneida Institute near Rochester, and then received a degree in 1841 from «u»Bowdoin College <http://www.bowdoin.edu/>«/u» in Maine. Finally, he earned an A.M. from the Oberlin Theological Seminary in 1845 (Faculty File, H.E. Peck, O.C.A.). After graduating from Oberlin Peck returned to Rochester to do pastoral work (James H. Fairchild, Oberlin: «i»The Colony and the College«/i», 1833-1883 [Oberlin, OH: E.J. Goodrich, 1883] 298-299).«b» Henry Peck married Ester Buckley on May 3, 1849«/b». They had three children (H.E. Peck, Faculty File, O.C.A.).
Peck became the Professor of Sacred Rhetoric and Adjunct Professor of Mental and Moral Philosophy at Oberlin College in 1851. This was a position he held until 1865. During his time at Oberlin Henry Peck was known as eccentric and liberal compared with his colleagues. He was also known as a staunch abolitionist (Fletcher, 691). Peck often traveled throughout Northern Ohio making speeches concerning the abolition of slavery, and campaigning for abolitionist candidates (Fletcher, vol. 1, 391).
Peck was involved in the «u»Oberlin-Wellington Rescue <http://www.oberlin.edu/EOG/OYTT-images/Rescuers.html>«/u» in September of 1858. Oberlin was a town infamous for harboring escaped slaves. In 1858 slave catchers came to Oberlin, acting under the Fugitive Slave Law, to find and return former slaves to the South. They caught John Price and headed to Wellington, just south of Oberlin. A large group of men from the town and college were warned of the abduction and they set off for Wellington to rescue John Price, where they forcefully removed him from a Wellington hotel. In December of 1858 Peck pled innocent, along with twenty other Oberlin men. to "infringement of the Fugitive Slave law" a federal offense. Peck spent 85 days in jail with the other rescuers during the spring and summer of 1859. The prisoners were made to feel quite at home and their incarceration garnered national attention. Peck was even allowed to preach in jail to the other inmates (Fletcher, vol. 1 403-409). The federal trial ended when the slave catchers (the main witnesses for the prosecution) were indicted in Lorain County Court on charges of kidnapping. Peck was never convicted and released from prison on July 7, 1859 (Fletcher, vol. 1, 411).
In March of 1862 Peck took on the co-editorship of «i»The Lorain County News«/i», while he was a professor at the College. He left the paper in September 1863 so that he could devote more time to the war effort. Peck was involved in recruiting soldiers.He made many trips to the front to visit local soldiers in battle, bringing them some of the comforts of home, and taking back news of the war to the residents of Oberlin (Fletcher, vol. 2, 864, 867). In 1865, after the war, Peck resigned from the College to become the first U.S. Minister to Haiti. «b»He died of Yellow Fever in office in Haiti on June 9, 1867«/b» (H.E. Peck, Faculty File, O.C.A.). His body was returned to Oberlin for burial (Fairchild, vol. 1, 299). Peck was quite a hero in Oberlin. He was one of the most influential professors in the college, and a man that threw himself into dangerous situations to stand up for what he believed in, namely the abolition of slavery.
[Source: www.oberlin.edu/faculty/classer/students/jennifer4.htm]
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Find A Grave Memorial
Henry E. Peck
Birth: 1821; Rochester, Monroe
County, New York, USA
Death: 1867; Haiti
Information from this memorial obtained from Oberlin Heritage Center, Westwood Cemetery inventory found on Oberlin Public Library website.
[Husband of Margaret Peck (B-34-02)]
Burial:
Westwood Cemetery , Oberlin, Lorain County, Ohio, USA
Maintained by: KeepsakeQuilter
Originally Created by: LindaB
Record added: Jan 14, 2010
Find A Grave Memorial# 46692369
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