Item #74114 Holy Bible, Containing the Old and New Covenant. Charles THOMSON, trans.

Holy Bible, Containing the Old and New Covenant

Item #74114

(BIBLES). THOMSON, Charles, trans. The Holy Bible, Containing the Old and New Covenant, Commonly Called the Old and New Testament: Translated From the Greek. By Charles Thomson, Late Secretary to the Congress of the United States. Phila.: Printed by Jane Aitkin, 1808. 1st ed. 4 vols. 8vo. No pagination. Period-style 3/4 calf and marbled boards, gilt-ruled spines, red and black morocco spine labels. Light scattered foxing and toning, else a very good copy. Darlow and Moule 1005. Herbert 1514. Rumball-Petre 184. O'Callaghan 1808.2. Wright, p. 113. "Charles Thomson (1729-1824) made the first translation of the Septuagint into the English language, and the first English translation of the New Testament in the western hemisphere. Thomson spent twenty years in making the translation. The books called Apocrypha, which are included in the canon of the Greek Old Testament but not in the Hebrew, were omitted in his translation. After copying the manuscript four times, he had it published at Philadelphia by Jane Aitken, the first woman to print any part of the Holy Scriptures in America, and the daughter of the printer Robert Aitken. It is of interest that the name `Cha. Thomson' appears as the signer of the Congressional resolution in the front of the 1782 Aiken Bible"-Hills 153. Charles Thomson emigrated to America from his native Ireland in 1739. On recommendation of Benjamin Franklin, he served as a tutor at the College of Pennsylvania (later the University of Pennsylvania). He later left teaching for business, in which he prospered. "Because of his reputation for fairness and integrity, he was chosen by the Indians to keep their record of proceedings at the treaty of Easton (1757), and in the following year he was adopted into the Delaware tribe, with a name meaning `man who tells the truth'"-DAB. He was an early and ardent supporter of the Revolution and was unanimously elected Secretary to the Continental Congress, serving in that post from 1774 to 1789. Thomson "was the very man in Philadelphia with whom John Adams, busily probing the minds of all and sundry on the vital questions involved, would wish to have, as he did have, `much conversation.' `This Charles Thomson,' Adams wrote, `is the Sam Adams of Philadelphia, the life of the cause of liberty, they say.'"-DAB. Thomson resigned his post when.

Price: $8,500.00

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