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Ripley, George

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Ripley, George, 1802–80, American literary critic and author, b. Greenfield, Mass. After graduating from Harvard Divinity School in 1826, he entered the Unitarian ministry. He was one of the leaders of the transcendentalists transcendentalism (trăn'sĕndĕn`təlĭzəm) [Lat.
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 and a contributor to their magazine, the Dial. In 1841 his interest in social reform led him to resign from the ministry and help found Brook Farm Brook Farm, 1841–47, an experimental farm at West Roxbury, Mass., based on cooperative living. Founded by George Ripley , a Unitarian minister, the farm was initially financed by a joint-stock company with 24 shares of stock at $500 per share.
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, where he remained as president until 1847. His edition, with F. H. Hedge, of Specimens of Foreign Standard Literature, in translation (14 vol., 1838–42), increased American knowledge of European literature. In his later life he became an influential literary critic on the New York Tribune, conducting the first regular book review department in a U.S. newspaper.

Bibliography

See biography by O. B. Frothingham (1882, repr. 1970); study by C. R. Crowe (1967).


Ripley, George

(born Oct. 3, 1802, Greenfield, Mass., U.S.—died July 4, 1880, New York, N.Y.) U.S. journalist and reformer. He became a Unitarian minister after graduating from Harvard Divinity School. A member of the Transcendental Club and an editor of The Dial, its literary magazine, he founded the utopian community Brook Farm in 1841 and served as its director and leading promoter. When it closed in 1847, he took a job with the New York Tribune to pay off its debts. His own financial position did not become secure until he published The Cyclopedia (1862), a popular reference book.


Ripley, George (1802–80) transcendentalist, reformer, editor, literary critic; born in Greenfield, Mass. Ordained a Unitarian minister (1826) after studies at Harvard College and Cambridge Theological Seminary, he ministered to a Boston congregation while studying German idealism. In his Discourses on the Philosophy of Religion (1836), he espoused a transcendentalist philosophy stressing individual intuition and the presence of the divine in all; he and his wife, Sophia Dana Ripley, also hosted meetings of a Transcendentalist Club. His philosophical views, combined with a strong belief in social reform, led him to leave the church, and, with his wife and others, to establish a community at Brook Farm (on the edge of Boston) (1841); under his influence, Brook Farm developed into an agricultural commune modeled after the ideas of French socialist Charles Fourier. In 1845 Ripley began editing the Harbinger, a journal that propagated Fourierism. After the collapse of Brook Farm (1847) he moved to New York, where he wrote for the New-York Tribune, soon becoming a prominent literary critic; he also helped found Harper's New Monthly Magazine (1850) and was editor (1858–63) of the New American Cyclopaedia. Ripley prospered as a major stockholder in the Tribune and was president of the Tribune Association after the death of Horace Greeley (1872).


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