Washington, D. C, in 1841-'3. He was graduated at Newton theological institute in 1845, and in the same year became pastor of a Baptist church in Eastport, Me., where he remained till 1852. He was then appointed professor of mathematics and natural philosophy at Waterville, and in 1855 became pastor of a church in Fitchburg, Mass. He edited the " National Baptist," in Philadelphia, from 1865 till 1868, and then became president of Kalamazoo college, Michigan,
BROOKS, Lewis, philanthropist, b. in New
Milford, Conn., in 1793 ; d. in Rochester, N. Y., 9
Aug., 1877. He received a common-school educa-
tion, settled in Rochester when he was twenty-
nine years old, and first engaged in the manu-
facture of woollen cloth, and later in mercantile
business. In 1837 he retired, and devoted his time
chiefly to investing liis money and looking after his
real estate. He made various charitable bequests,
among which was $10,000 to the Rochester city
hospital, a like sum to St. Mary's hospital, and
$5,000 each to the industrial school and the female
charitable society. He also bequeathed $130,000
to the University of Virginia, $31,000 alone being
expended on the work of collecting a cabinet. Nu-
mei'ous other gifts were made to several societies,
and in no case was the name of the giver known.
BROOKS, Maria Gowen, poet, h. in Medford,
Mass., about 1795; d. in Matanzas, Cuba, 11 Nov.,
1845. She w5s descended from a Welsh family
that settled in Charlestown before the revolution.
Her father was a man of literary tastes, numbering
among his friends several of the Harvard profes-
sors, and before she was nine years old his daughter
had committed much poetry to memory, and was
noted for the elegance of her conversation. Before
she was fourteen her father died bankrupt, and
Mr. Brooks, a Boston merchant, to whom she was
already betrothed, completed her education and
then married her. At first she lived in affluence,
but in a few years heavy losses reduced her hus-
band to comparative poverty, and she began to
write verses for consolation. At nineteen she had
finished a metrical romance, which was never pub-
lished, and in 1820, after several anonymous lyrics,
she published "Judith, Esther, and other Poems,
by a Lover of the Fine Arts." Mr. Brooks died in
1823, and his widow went to live with an uncle
in Cuba, whose
death soon after-
ward gave her a
settled income.
The greater part
of her principal
work, a poem en-
titled " Zophiel,
or the Bride of
Seven," was writ-
ten here, and the
first canto was
published in Bos-
ton in 1825. After
her uncle's death
she returned to
this country, and
in 1830 visited
France and Eng-
land. She passed
the spring of 1831
at Keswick, the
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home of Robert Southey, the poet, where the latter part of "Zophiel" was written. Southey admired her work, and gave her the name of " Maria del Occidente." In " The Doctor " he speaks of her as " the most impassioned and imaginative of all poetesses," and under his care the completed poem was published (London, 1 833). " Zophiel " has for its subject the love of a fallen angel for a beautiful Hebrew maiden, and is founded on the story of Sara, in the apocryplial book of Tobit. Returning to this country, Mrs. Brooks lived for some time near West Point, where her son was first a student and afterward assistant professor, and her house was a favorite resort of the officers of the academy. In 1834 she published in Boston an edition of " Zo- phiel " for the benefit of the Polish exiles in this country ; but at the end of a month only twenty copies had been sold, and Mrs. Brooks withdrew the rest of the edition from the market. While living on Governor's island. New York harbor, where her son was then stationed, Mrs. Brooks published " Idomen, or the Vale of Yunmri " (1843), a work partaking of the nature of an auto- biography. In December of the same year she returned to her Cuban estate, where she remained till she died. One of her latest poems was an " Ode to the Departed," written in 1843. At the time of her death she had planned an epic entitled " Beatriz, the Beloved of Columbus." A new edition of " Zophiel," edited by Zadel Barnes Gustafson, was published in Boston in 1879. — Her son, Horace, soldier, b. in Boston. Mass.. 14 Aug., 1814; d. in Kissimnie, Fla., 13 Jan., 1894, was appointed to the U. S. military academy, through the influence of Lafayette, and was graduated there in 1835. He served in the Seminole war of 1835-'6, receiving, 31 Dec, 1835, the brevet of first lieutenant for gallantry and good conduct. He was assistant professor of mathematics in the U. S. military academy from November, 1836, till August, 1839, and served on garrison and recruiting duty at various places till the Mexican war. On 18 June, 1846, he became captain in the 2d artillery, and served through Scott's campaign. For his services during the war he received two brevets — that of major, 20 Aug., 1847, for Churubusco and Contreras, and that of lieutenant-colonel, 8 Sept., 1847, for Molino del Rey. From this time until the civil war he was stationed in various forts, taking part in the Utah expedition of 1855 and in quietting the Kansas disturbances of 1860-'l. On 28 April, 1861, he became major in the second artillery, and on 1 Aug., lieutenant-colonel. He served in defence of Washington from February till March, 1861, at Fort Pickens, Fla., until October, and at Fort Jefferson, Fla., until March, 1862. From September, 1862, till September, 1863, at the time of the Morgan raid, he was chief mustering and pay officer for the state of Ohio, under Gov. Todd, and during the year $1,000,000 passed through his hands without an error in his accounts. After this he served on various military boards at Washington and else- where, becoming colonel on 1 Aug., 1863, and brevet brigadier-general at the close of the war. From 1866 till 1868, and from 1869 till 1872, he commanded a regiment at Fort McHenry, Md., being at the head of the department of Washing- ton 'in the interim. From 18 Nov., 1872, till 10 Jan., 1877, he commanded the presidio at San Francisco, and on the latter date was retired from active service, being over sixty-two years of age. He became a resident of Baltimore, Md.
BROOKS, Nathan Covington, educator, b. in Cecil CO.. Md., 12 Aug., 1809 ; d. in Philadelphia, 6 Oct., 1898. He was graduated at St. John's college, and began teaching when only sixteen years old. He was chosen first principal of the Baltimore high school, and organized the Baltimore female college, of which he became president. Mr.