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Home  »  library  »  BIOS  »  Stephen Pearl Andrews (1812–1886)

C.D. Warner, et al., comp.
The Library of the World’s Best Literature. An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.

Stephen Pearl Andrews (1812–1886)

Andrews, Stephen Pearl. An American miscellaneous writer; born at Templeton, MA, March 22, 1812; died at New York, May 21, 1886. He was a prominent abolitionist, practiced law in the South, and settled in New York in 1847. He paid much attention to phonographic reporting, and also to the development of a universal philosophy which he called “Integralism,” and of a universal language, “Alwato.” Besides numerous works relating to these subjects, he wrote: ‘Comparison of the Common Law with the Roman, French, or Spanish Civil Law on Entails, etc.’; ‘Love, Marriage, and Divorce’; ‘French, with or without a Master’; ‘The Labor Dollar’ (1881); ‘Transactions of the Colloquium’ (a society founded by himself and his friends for philosophical discussion [1882–83]).