Joseph Dana

Joseph Dana (1742–1827) was an American clergyman.

Biography

Joseph Dana was born in Pomfret, Connecticut on November 2, 1742. He was a grandson of Benjamin, the third son of Richard, the progenitor of all that bear the name in the United States, who, according to the family tradition, was the son of a French Huguenot that settled in England in 1629. Joseph was graduated at Yale in 1760, studied theology, and was ordained on November 7, 1765, minister of the South society of Ipswich, over which he presided for sixty-two years. He died in Ipswich, Massachusetts on November 16, 1827.[1]

Dana was the author of a report about local American industry that described the Ipswich lace production in his town.[2] Documented lace samples were attached to the report and reside with Alexander Hamilton's papers in the Library of Congress archives.[3]

Works

Many of Dana's occasional discourses were published.[1] A book of Occasional and textual hymns was published posthumously.[4]

Notes

  1. ^ a b Wilson & Fiske 1900.
  2. ^ Alexander Hamilton Papers: General Correspondence, 1734-1804; 1791, Jan.-May. January 1791.
  3. ^ "What does Alexander Hamilton have to do with the lace industry in Ipswich, Massachusetts?". www.americanhistory.si.edu. 2018-05-08. Retrieved 2025-04-10.
  4. ^ Dana, Joseph (1905). Occasional and textual hymns. Princeton Theological Seminary Library. [Ipswich, Mass.?] : Augustine Caldwell, Printer.

References