F-5 1828, Dec. 1 Letter to E. R. from Moses Stuart of Andover Seminary. Details the status of his publications and summarizes the religious issues current in Andover and Boston. Also mentions the ongoing lawsuit and trial of a member of the faculty, Dr. Murdock.
Note
1828, December 1 - Letter to Edward Robinson from Moses Stuart of Andover Seminary detailing the status of his publications and the religious issues current in Andover and Boston, etc.
F-5 1829, Aug. 31 Letter to E. R. from Moses Stuart in Andover. Relates how the trustees met and created a Professorship of Ecclesiastical History and Pastoral Theology, to which they appointed Stuart, Moses, ǂd 1780-1852 of Old South Church in Boston. The seminary faculty opposed the position because there was an urgent need for a Professorship of Biblical Rhetoric and thus the matter was referred to the Board of Visitors. Announces he and Stowe are planning to issue a Biblical Inquirer, with the hope that E. R. would assume responsibility for its publication when he returns from Europe. Mentions that Hodge has dropped publication of Biblical Repertory and has taken up a kind of religious magazine. In his discussion of books on geography, Stuart decries the lack of maps in them: "Above all, maps, maps, maps. I am beyond measure astonished that the Germans have not better maps for sacred geography. And this leads me to say what I have greatly at heart, pursue your plan of Sacred Geography." The postscript lists books needed for the library.
Note
1829, August 31 - Letter to Edward Robinson from Moses Stewart, requesting, among other things, that Robinson publish Stewart's Biblical Inquirer and continue to "pursue your plan of Sacred Geography."
F-5 1829, Feb. 9 Letter to E. R. from Moses Stuart in Andover. Announces the seminary won its lawsuit against Dr. Murdock whose dismissal now paves the way for E. R. to join the faculty. Relates the controversy which Mr. Quincy's appointment as Pres. of Harvard has engendered among the Unitarians. Asks E. R. to purchase specific books for the library. He and Mrs. Stuart send "love to the 'stranger-lady' whom we hope to have an opportunity of regarding as neither a stranger nor an alien," a reference to E. R.'s wife Thérèse.
Note
1829, February 9 - Letter to Edward Robinson from Moses Stewart in Andover.
F-7 1824, Sept. 24 [A notation on the envelope in upper left corner where E. R. always writes the date and name of sender indicates the year was 1825, not 1824 as written (very clearly) at the head of the letter itself.] Junior Class of the Theological Institution [i.e., Andover Seminary] expresses via a "committee" gratitude, affection, and respect for E. R. as a teacher and as a man.
Note
1824, September 24 - Junior class of the Theological Institution (Andover) expresses gratitude, affection, and respect for Edward Robinson as a teacher and man.