Nehemiah Walter

Nehemiah Walter (born December 1663, Youghal, County Cork, Ireland – died 17 September 1750, Roxbury, Boston, British Colonial America) was a clergyman. He came with his father, Thomas, to the American colonies in 1679, settling in the Boston area. He was graduated at Harvard in 1684. After living for a time in Nova Scotia, became colleague to John Eliot, the apostle to the Indians. He was minister of Roxbury, Massachusetts from 17 October 1688 until his death.

Walter married a daughter of Increase Mather. He published ''The body of death anatomized: A brief essay concerning the sorrows and the desires of the regenerate, upon their sense of indwelling sin'' (Boston, 1707); ''Practical Discourses on the Holiness of Heaven'' (1726); and a posthumous volume of ''Sermons on Isaiah LV'' (1755). Provided by Wikipedia

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by Walter, Nehemiah
Published 1713
Printed by B. Green, for Eleazer Phillips, at his shop at the lower end of King Street