Wreath of Wild Flowers from New England" (1839) ; " The Happy Release, or the Triumph of Love," a play written at the request of Sheridan Knowles ; " Poetry of Flowers, and Flowers of Poetry " ' (New York, 1841) ; '^ Poems " (1846) ; "The Floral Offering" (Philadelphia, 1847); and "Poems," illustrated (1849). A complete edition of her poems has been published (New York, 1850). Soon after her death a " Memorial " by her friends, with a " Life " by Rufus W. Griswold, appeared.
OSGOOD, Helen Louise Gibson, philanthropist, b. in Boston, Mass., about 1835 ; d. in Newton Centre, Mass., 20 April, 1808. During her childhood she removed with her parents to Chelsea,
Mass., and after their death she became the ward
of Francis 13. Fay, of that place, in whose family
she lived for several years. She was well educated,
and was endowed with great musical and conversa-
tional powers. When the civil war began she was
among the first to organize soldiers' aid societies,
and provided employment for those wives and
daughters of soldiers that were in straitened cir-
cumstances. In the early spring of 1862 she went
to the army as a nurse. She organized and con-
ducted for many months a hospital for 1,000 col-
ored soldiers of the Army of the Potomac, and dis-
played great executive ability. In 1866 she mar-
ried Mr. Osgood, who was connected with the sani-
tary commission in the Army of the Potomac.
Her patriotic labors superinduced the illness which
caused her death.
OSGOOD, Howard, clergyman, b. in Plaque-
mine parish, La., 4 Jan., 1831. He entered Har-
vard, but left in 1849 before graduation. His degree
of A. B. was sent to him in 1858. He was educated
in the Protestant Episcopal church, but, having
adopted Baptist views, was ordained to the minis-
try in that denomination. After holding pastor-
ates in Flushing, L. I., and in New York city, he
was in 1868 called to the professorship of Hebrew
in Crozer theological seminary. Pa. In 1875 he was
elected to the same chair in Rochester theological
seminary. He was a member of the American com-
mittee for the revision of the Old Testament. The
degree of D. D. was conferred on him by Brown in
1868. Dr. Osgood has made three visits to Europe,
and has contributed to periodicals numerous ar-
ticles that are marked bv great research.
OSGOOD, Kate Putnam, author, b. in Frye-
burg. Me., in 1841. She began to write early, and
has contributed both in prose and poetry to the
magazines. In 1869 she went abroad, spending
several years in France, Germany, and Switzerland,
returning to the United States in 1874. Her best-
known poem, " Driving Home the Cows," published
anonymously in " Harper's Magazine," in March,
1865," was copied by nearly every journal in the
United States, and was one of the few poems of
merit that were suggested by the civil war. — James
Ripley Osgood, the publisher, is her brother.
OSGOOD, Samuel, statesman, b. in Andover,
Mass., 14 Feb., 1748 ; d. in New York city, 12 Aug.,
1813. John Osgood, from whom he was fifth in
descent, came from Andover, England, to this
country about 1630, and was the second settler
in Andover, Mass., to which he gave its name.
Samuel was graduated at Harvard in 1770, and
began to study theology, but abandoned it for
commerce on account of impaired health. He was
often in the legislature, a delegate to the Essex
county convention in September, 1774, and served
on many important committees in the Provincial
congress. He commanded a company of minute-
men at Lexington and Concord in 1775, and soon
after the gathering of the troops at Cambridge was
made major of brigade. He was then aide to Gen.
Artemas Ward, with the rank of colonel, till Feb-
ruary, 1776, when he refused the command of a
regiment, and left the army to enter the Mas-
sachusetts Provincial
congress. He was ap-
pointed by that body
a member of the board
of war, and served till
1780, when he was
elected a state sena-
tor under the new
constitution that he
had helped to frame.
He was a member of
the Continental con-
gress in 1780-'4. and
in 1782 headed a dele-
gation that was sent
to urge the assent of
Rhode Island to Alex-
ander Hamilton's res-
olution concerning
the duty on imports
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and prizes. On the expiration of his term he was again elected to the Massachusetts legislature, and on 31 Jan., 1785, he was appointed a judge by the governor, but a few months later he became first commissioner of the U. S. treasury, which office he held till 1789. In the latter year lie was made post- master-general, but he resigned in 1791, on the re- moval of the government to Philadelphia, and con- tinued to reside in New York city. He was afterward a member of the New York legislature, and speaker of the house, supervisor of the state in 1801-'3, and from the latter year till his death naval officer of the port of New York. Mr. Osgood devoted much of his time to literary pursuits, and his correspond- ence with eminent men, including George Wash- ington, John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, and Thomas Jefferson, was extensive. He was an origi- nal member of the American academy of arts and sciences, and a founder of the New York dispensary. His house in New York, which stood on Franklin square, became Washington's headquarters on his arrival in the city. Mr. Osgood was buried in the church on the corner of Nassau and Beekman streets, of which he had been an elder. His pub- lications include "Letter on Episcopacy " (1807) ; " Remarks on Daniel and Revelation " ; " Chro- nology " ; and " Theology and Metaphysics."
OSGOOD, Samuel, clergyman, b. in Charles-
town, Mass., 30 Aus:., 1812 ; d. in New York city,
14 April, 1880. He
was graduated at Har-
vard in 1832 and at
the divinity-school in
1835. For two years
following he was edi-
tor of the " Western
Messenger " at Louis-
ville, Ky. He assumed
charge of a Unita-
rian congregatidn in
Nashua. N. H., in
1837. He was called
to the Westminster
church in Providence,
R. I., in 1841, and
in 1849 went to the
Church of the Mes-
siah (Unitarian) in
New York city. He
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remained in charge of this congregation for twenty years, but resigned in 1869 and went to