Cotton Mather was a New England Puritan minister, author, and pamphleteer
@Church Minister, Facts and Childhood
Cotton Mather was a New England Puritan minister, author, and pamphleteer
Cotton Mather born at
His personal life was marked by disappointment. His first wife was Abigail Philips, whom he married in 1686. They had nine children together. After her death, he remarried twice. His last wife was Lydia George, whom he married in 1715.
He had fifteen children from three marriages, but most of them died in their childhood. Only two of his children outlived Mather.
He died on February 13, 1728, on his 65th birthday. He was buried on Copp’s hill, near Old North Church.
Mather was born on February 12, 1663 at the Massachusetts Bay Colony in Boston to Maria and Increase Mather. He was the grandson of John Cotton and Richard Mather, who were both important Puritan leaders.
He attended Boston Latin School and in 1678, at the age of 15, he graduated from the Harvard University.
In 1685, he was formally ordained and joined his father as an assistant pastor of North Church.
In 1660, he was made a fellow of Harvard College. Throughout his life he remained involved in the affairs of the college.
He was very influential in both secular and spiritual occurrences in New England. He had a prominent role to play in the revolt organized against Sir Edmond Andros, the governor of James II, in 1688.
He was a one of the helping hands behind the prosperity of Elihu Yale (now Yale College).
Cotton Mather had always been interested in science. In 1710 he was awarded a doctorate of divinity from the University of Glasgow in Scotland. In 1713 he was also elected to the Royal Society of London.
He was greatly inspired by Robert Boyle’s ‘The Usefulness of Experimental Natural Philosophy’. In 1716, he conducted a hybridization experiment on corn plants which was duly recorded.
He took an important step in the prevention of the smallpox disease which was rampant during those times. He came to know about the process of inoculation as an effective treatment for the disease. From 1716, he tried communicating with local physicians and Boston doctors to take on the practice of inoculation. He gained support from Dr. Zabdiel Bolyston who practiced inoculation successfully on a few subjects.
Cotton Mather wrote a number of books that dealt with subjects like modern science, religion, philosophy, biography, sermons, poetry. He wrote in seven languages and even knew the Iroquois Indian language.
His book ‘Biblia Americana’ revealed his interpretations of the Bible. ‘Boston Ephemeris’ and ‘The Christian Philosophers’ are treatises on science. Other important books include ‘Wonders of the Invisible World’, ‘Magnalia Christi Americana’, ‘The Negro Christianized’.