Eggleston, Edward
Related Category: American Literature: Biographies
18371902, American author, Methodist clergyman, b. Vevay, Ind., educated in frontier schools. Before 1870 he was a Bible agent, a farm worker, a circuit rider in Minnesota and Indiana, and a journalist in Chicago. He then joined the editorial staff of the
Independent in New York. He established his literary reputation with
The Hoosier Schoolmaster (1871) and
The Circuit Rider (1874). He was pastor of the Church of Christian Endeavor, Brooklyn, from 1874 until 1879. Besides writing juvenile stories and historical essays and articles, he completed two volumes of his planned history of American life,
The Beginners of a Nation (1896) and
The Transit of Civilization (1901).
See The First of the Hoosiers (1903) by his brother, G. C. Eggleston; biography by W. P. Randel (1946).