Home >> Encyclopedia-britannica-volume-12-part-1-hydrozoa-jeremy >> Interlaced Arches to The Saivikhya >> Robert Green Ingersoll

Robert Green Ingersoll

Loading


INGERSOLL, ROBERT GREEN American lawyer and lecturer, was born in Dresden (N.Y.), Aug. II, 1833. His father was a Congregational minister, who removed to Wis consin in 1843 and to Illinois in 1845. Robert Ingersoll was admitted to the bar in 1854, and practised law with success in Illinois. During the Civil War he organized a cavalry regiment, of which he was colonel, until captured at Lexington (Tenn.), Dec. 18, 1862, by the Confederate cavalry under Gen. N. B. For rest. He was paroled, waited in vain to be exchanged, and in June 1863 resigned from the service. He was attorney-general of Illinois in 1867-69, and in 1876 his speech in the Republican national convention, naming James G. Blaine for the presidential candidate, won him a national reputation as a public speaker. As a lawyer he distinguished himself particularly as counsel for the defendants in the "Star-Route Fraud" trials. He was most widely known, however, for his public lectures attacking the Bible, and his anti-Christian views were an obstacle to his political advance ment. Ingersoll was an eloquent rhetorician rather than a logical reasoner. He died at Dobbs Ferry (N.Y.), July 21, 1899.

His principal lectures and speeches were published under the titles: The Gods and Other Lectures (1876) ; Some Mistakes of Moses (1879); Prose Poems (1884) ; Great Speeches (1887) . His lectures, entitled "The Bible," "Ghosts," and "Foundations of Faith," attracted particular attention. His complete works were published in 12 vols. in New York in iqoo.

lectures and illinois