Joshua Coffin
Joshua Coffin was a historian, an American antiquary, and an Abolitionism in [the United States|abolitionist].
Life
Coffin was born to Joseph and Judith Coffin in Newbury, Massachusetts October 12, 1792 in the Coffin House. He graduated at Dartmouth College in 1817, and taught school for many years, numbering among his pupils the poet John Greenleaf Whittier, who addressed to him a poem entitled "To My Old School-Master".Coffin was ardent in the cause of emancipation, and was one of the co-founders of the New England Anti-Slavery Society in 1832, being its first recording secretary. From 1834 to 1837, Coffin was the manager of the American Anti-Slavery Society.
He published The History of Ancient Newbury, genealogies of the Woodman, Little, and Toppan families, and magazine articles. As an adult, Coffin lived for a time in the downstairs southwest room of the Coffin House, his ancestral home; in a tiny study housed within an ell of the house, Joshua wrote his History of Ancient Newbury.
Family life
On December 2, 1817, Coffin married his first wife Clarissa Dutch of Exeter, New Hampshire. They had two children together: Sarah Bartlett and Lucia Tappan. His first wife died in 1821.On April 20, 1835, Coffin married his second wife Mrs. Anna Wiley Chase, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. They had three children together: Elizabeth Wiley, Anna Lapsley, and Mary Hale. Their three children were born in Philadelphia.