[[13]] Memoir, II. 348.
[[14]] Memoir.
[[15]] Ibid., 351.
[[16]] Ibid., IV. 572.
[[17]] Reminiscences, 328.
[[18]] Memoir, III. 36; one-volume edition, 477.
[[19]] Memoir, III. 31; one-volume edition, 474, 475.
[[20]] Works, II. 301.
[[21]] When will the Day come? and other tracts of the Massachusetts Temperance Society, 135.
[[22]] Of the twenty-seven annual addresses given before this society from 1814 to 1840, at least sixteen were by Unitarians; and among these were John T. Kirkland, Abiel Abbot, William E. Channing, Edward Everett, the younger Henry Ware, Gamaliel Bradford, Charles Sprague, James Walker, Alexander H. Everett, William Sullivan, and Samuel K. Lothrop. The first four presidents of this society--Samuel Dexter, Nathan Dane, Isaac Parker, and Stephen Fairbanks--were Unitarians. Of the same faith were also a large proportion of the vice-presidents and other officers. Many of the tracts published by the society were written by Unitarians.