Background
Edgar Harkness Gray was born on November 28, 1813, in Bridport, Vermont, the son of Daniel Gray and his second wife, Mary “Amy” Bosworth.
chaplain pastor Baptist clergyman
Edgar Harkness Gray was born on November 28, 1813, in Bridport, Vermont, the son of Daniel Gray and his second wife, Mary “Amy” Bosworth.
Gray graduated from Colby College (then Waterville College) in 1838.
Upon his ordination he became the pastor of the Baptist Church in Freeport, Maine (1839). Following ordination Gray served the Baptist congregations in Freeport, Maine and in Bath, Maine. Thereafter he was pastor of the Baptist church in Shelburne Falls, Massachusetts.
In 1863, Gray was called to the East Street Baptist Church in Washington, District of Columbia, becoming well known.
Abraham Lincoln was numbered among his friends. While in Washington, he was elected Chaplain of the Senate, an office he held for four years.
Gray was one of the four clergymen who officiated at the funeral services of President Lincoln in Washington. The University of Rochester conferred him the Doctorate. Doctorate. in 1864.
Gray moved to California, and became the first pastor of a Baptist church in San Francisco.
Later he served in the same capacity the Baptist church in Oakland, California. He was made Superintendent of the Baptist Churches in California, while serving as pastor in Oakland. He was also dean of the Theological Seminary of Oakland.
He died in California in 1894.