Background
He was the son of John and Abigail (Waterhouse) Mitchell, and was born in Chester, Connecticut, 29 December, 1794.
He was the son of John and Abigail (Waterhouse) Mitchell, and was born in Chester, Connecticut, 29 December, 1794.
He graduated from Yale College in 1821.
In the autumn of 1821, he entered Andover Theological Seminary, but left after about nine months, in consequence of impaired health. In January 1824, he became the editor of the Christian Spectator, a religious and theological monthly published in New Haven. In December, 1830, he was ordained as the first pastor of the First (Congregational) Church in Fair Haven, Connecticut
After remaining there six years, he was settled, 6 December, 1836, as pastor of the Edwards (Congregational) Church in Northampton, Massachusetts
At the close of the year 1842, ill health compelled him to resign his charge there, and he spent the following year abroad in the hope of recovery. Though he was benefited, and his life doubtless prolonged by this change, he was never able to resume the labors of the ministry.
Most of his remaining years were spent in Stratford, Conn, where he employed himself, as strength would allow, in literary work. While at Fair Haven, he had written a manual of the Congregational polity, entitled The New England Churches.
After his return from Europe, he published Notes from Over Seas (2 volume), in which he aimed to give, not merely his own experience as a traveler, but a collection of interesting facts relating to the political, religious, and social status of the countries which he had visited.
He afterwards published Scenes and Characters in College, My Mother, or Recollections of Maternal Influence, and Rachel Kell. He also published occasional sermons, and contributed to periodicals, and was editorially connected with different newspapers. At the time of his death he had nearly completed a took of sketches under the title of Derwent.
He had three sons, two of whom survived him.
He died in Stratford, Conn, 28 April, 1870, aged 75 years.