Whittier
Whittier is a city in Los Angeles County, California
about 12 miles (19 km) southeast of Los Angeles.
As of the 2000 census, the city had a total population of
83,680. It is the home of Whittier College.
Like nearby Montebello,
the city is considered both part of the Gateway Cities
or the Southeast area of Los Angeles County.
The city's population as a whole has grown since its founding days but has experienced rapid growth particularly starting in the 1990s. It has increased from 77,807 in 1990 to 83,680 in 2000 and is projected to grow to 90,041 in 2010.
- 90,041 2010 Projection
- 86,671 2005 Estimate
- 83,680 2000 Census
- 77,807 1990 Census
Source : Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
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John Greenleaf Whittier's dedication poem
Dear Town, for whom the flowers are born,
Stars shine, and happy songbirds sing,
What can my evening give to thy morn,
My Winter to Thy Spring?
A life not void of pure intent
With small desert of praise or blame;
The Love I felt, the Good I meant,
I leave Thee with My Name.
Whittier Town websites
| Whittier College. | |
| Private liberal-arts college located in Whittier, California. | |
| City of Whittier. | |
| Official city site with government information. | |
| Whittier Law School. | |
| Provides information about study at the Law School for prospective students, including summer programs in Spain and Israel. | |
| Whittier Daily News. | |
| Find news, sports and a range of entertainment options from the newspaper including an article search, personals, obituaries, business directory. | |
| Whittier Regional Vocational Technical High School. | |
| Includes programs, admission information, school committee agendas, alumni, sports, directions and calendar. | |
| Click here for more sites. | List Your website Here |
Whittier city business listing.
John Greenleaf Whittier
Early Life and Work
John Greenleaf Whittier was born to John and Abigail (Hassey) at their rural homestead in Haverhill, Massachusetts on December 17, 1807. He grew up on the farm in a household with his parents, a brother and two sisters, a maternal aunt and paternal uncle, and a constant flow of visitors and hired hands for the farm. Their farm was not very profitable. There was only enough money to get by. John himself was not cut out for hard farm labor and suffered from bad health and physical frailty his whole life. Although he received little formal education, he was an avid reader who studied his father’s six books on Quakerism until their teachings became the foundation of his ideology. Whittier was heavily influenced by the doctrines of his religion, particularly its stress on humanitarianism, compassion, and social responsibility.
First introduced to poetry by a teacher, Whittier published
his first poem in 1826 in William Lloyd Garrison’s
Newburyport Free Press, a connection that began their
devoted friendship. John then attended Haverhill Academy from
1827 to 1828 and completed a high school education in only two
terms. After this, Garrison secured the young writer an
editorial position for the American Manufacturer in
Boston. Whittier became an out-spoken critic of President Andrew
Jackson, and by 1830 was editor of the prominent New England
Weekly Review in
Hartford, Connecticut, the most influential
Whig journal in
New England. In 1833 he published
The Song of the Vermonters, 1779, which he had
anonymously inserted in The New England Magazine. The
poem was erroneously attributed to
Ethan Allen for nearly sixty years.
Abolitionist Activity
During the 1830s, Whittier became interested in politics, but after losing a Congressional election in 1832, he suffered a nervous breakdown and returned home at age twenty-five. The year 1833 was a turning point for Whittier; he resurrected his correspondence with Garrison, and the passionate abolitionist began to encourage the young Quaker to join his cause.
In June of 1833, Whittier published the antislavery pamphlet Justice and Expediency, and from there dedicated the next twenty years of his life to the abolitionist cause. The controversial pamphlet destroyed all of his political hopes—as his demand for immediate emancipation alienated both northern businessmen and southern slaveholders—but it also sealed his commitment to a cause that he deemed morally correct and socially necessary. He was a founding member of the American Anti-Slavery Society and signed the Anti-Slavery Declaration of 1833, which he often considered the most significant action of his life.
Whittier’s political skill made him useful as a lobbyist, and his willingness to badger anti-slavery congressional leaders into joining the abolitionist cause was invaluable. From 1835 to 1838, he traveled widely in the North, attending conventions, securing votes, speaking to the public, and lobbying politicians. As he did so, Whittier received his fair share of violent responses, being several times mobbed, stoned, and run out of town. In 1838 he became editor of The Pennsylvanian Freeman, one of the leading antislavery papers in the North. He also continued to write poetry, and not surprisingly, nearly all of his poems dealt with the problem of slavery.
By the end of the 1830s, the unity of the abolitionist movement had begun to fracture. Whittier stuck to his belief that moral action apart from political effort was futile. He knew that success required legislative change, not merely moral suasion. This opinion alone engendered a bitter split from Garrison, and Whittier went on to become a founding member of the Liberty Party in 1840. Around this time, the stresses of editorial duties, worsening health, and dangerous mob violence caused him to have a physical breakdown. Whittier went home to Amesbury, and remained there for the rest of his life, ending his active participation in abolition. Even so, he continued to believe that the best way to gain abolitionist support was to broaden the Liberty Party’s political appeal, and Whittier persisted in advocating the addition of other issues to their platform. He eventually participated in the evolution of the Liberty Party into the Free Soil Party, and some say his greatest political feat was convincing Charles Sumner to run on the Free-Soil ticket for the U.S. Senate in 1850.
As of 1848, Whittier was editor of The National Era, one of the most influential abolitionist newspapers in the North. For the next ten years it featured the best of his writing, both as prose and poetry. Being confined to his home and away from the action offered Whittier a chance to write better abolitionist poetry; he was even poet laureate for his party. Whittier’s poems often used slavery to symbolize all kinds of oppression (physical, spiritual, economic), and his poems stirred up popular response because they appealed to feelings rather than logic.
Whittier produced two collections of antislavery poetry: Poems Written during the Progress of the Abolition Question in the United States, between 1830 and 1838 and Voices of Freedom (1846). The passage of the Thirteenth Amendment in 1865 ended both slavery and his public cause, so Whittier turned to other forms of poetry for the remainder of his life.
Whittier died of a stroke on September 7, 1892 in
Hampton Falls, New Hampshire.
Source
Wikipedia