See Also: Channing, William Ellery(encyclopedia)
Ellery (as used in expressions)(encyclopedia)
Queen, Ellery(encyclopedia)
Herbal medicine (botanical medicine, herbology, phytomedicine)(health)
croup(medicine)
croup(encyclopedia)
croup(2)(dictionary)
croup(dictionary)
Croup(health)
croup(1)(dictionary)

croup-associated virus (medicine) and Channing, William Ellery (sh)


croup-associated virus (medicine)


croup-associated virus
parainfluenza virus type 2


Channing, William Ellery (sh)




born April 7, 1780, Newport, R.I., U.S.
died Oct. 2, 1842, Bennington, Vt.

U.S. Unitarian clergyman.

He studied theology at Harvard University and became a successful preacher. From 1803 until his death he was pastor of Boston's Federal Street Church. He began his career as a Congregationalist but gradually adopted liberal and rationalist views that came to be labeled Unitarian. In 1820 he established a conference of liberal Congregationalist clergy, later reorganized as the American Unitarian Association. Known as the "apostle of Unitarianism," he also became a leading figure in New England Transcendentalism, and his lectures and essays on slavery, war, and poverty made him one of the most influential clergymen of his day.