Background
The ministry ran in the Bacons" blood: George B. Bacon was the son of Leonard Bacon and the brother of Leonard Woolsey Bacon, both Congregationalist pastors. Two other brothers were also preachers, Thomas Rutherford Bacon of New Haven, and Edward Woolsey Bacon of New London, Connecticut.
Education
Bacon graduated from Yale University in 1856.
Career
Bacon was a congregational pastor in Orange, New Jersey. In the same year, George Bacon delivered the commencement address at the New York Medical College and Hospital for Women. Bacon, whom The Nation called a "lively" writer, was a regular contributor to Scribner’s Monthly, writing on religious as well as social topics (such as Chinese immigration to the United States).
He also wrote on the Sabbath question, an important subject in late-nineteenth century America when a debate was waged between those who saw the day of rest as a legal obligation and those, including Bacon, who considered it a Christian privilege.
He died at age 40, on 15 September 1876, after a "lingering illness". In a eulogy, Scribner’s Monthly called him a "model literary clergyman": "His contributions to the body of the magazine were always marked by broad views, intense dislike of sham and cant, by high moral purpose, and by a style as simple and direct as it was elegant and attractive.".