Edward Higginson
Edward Higginson was an English Unitarian minister and author.
Life
He was born at Heaton Norris, Lancashire, on 9 January 1807. His father, Edward Higginson the elder, was a Unitarian minister and schoolmaster at Stockport and Derby, who married as his first wife Sarah Marshall of Loughborough, Leicestershire. He was educated in his father's school, and in September 1823 entered Manchester College, York, as a divinity student.In August 1828 Higginson settled as minister of Bowl Alley Lane Chapel, Kingston upon Hull. From 1829 he also taught a school. He removed in 1846 to Westgate Chapel, Wakefield, West Riding, taking his school with him. In 1858 he became minister of High Street Chapel, Swansea, Glamorganshire, a position which he resigned because of failing health in 1876. While at Swansea he assisted in the tutorial work of Carmarthen College, and at the end of 1875 was offered the principalship. From 1877 to 1879 he was president of the Royal Institute of South Wales.
Higginson was a conservative among Unitarian scholars, his theological position being similar to that of Samuel Bache, who married his sister. He died at Swansea on 12 February 1880.
Works
Higginson published, with sermons and tracts:Orthodoxy and Unbelief, &c., 1832.The Sacrifice of Christ, &c., Hull, 1833; 2nd edition, 1848.Christ Imitable, or, The Religious Value of Christ's Proper Humanity, 1837.The Spirit of the Bible, &c., 1853–5, 2 vols.; 2nd edition, 1863.Astro-Theology, &c., 1855. This was a contribution to the debate of the time on cosmic pluralism, involving also David Brewster, Baden Powell, Thomas Collins Simon, and William Whewell.- Six Essays on Inspiration, &c., 1856.The Morals of Belief, &c., 1860.An English grammar, specially intended for classical schools, London: Longman, Green. 1864A Short Memoir of the Rev. R. B. Aspland, &c., 1869.A Catechism without Questions, &c. . Ecce Messias, 1871.
- With his wife he published The Fine Arts in Italy, 1859, a translation from the French of Athanase Josué Coquerel.