
Born in a modest Northamptonshire village in 1761, William Carey spent his early years learning the trade of a cobbler while teaching himself Latin, Greek, Hebrew and several modern languages. Surrounded by dissenting preachers and a community that prized learning, he turned the cramped shoemaker’s shed into a personal “college,” absorbing the ideas of reformers and missionaries who stirred his imagination. His relentless curiosity and devotion to scripture set him on a path far beyond the confines of his apprenticeship.
In his late twenties, Carey answered a growing conviction to bring the Christian message to distant lands, eventually journeying to India where he would become a pioneering translator of the Bible into local tongues. There, his scholarly zeal merged with a practical concern for education and social reform, laying foundations that would influence generations of missionaries and scholars alike.
Language
en
Duration
~14 hours (828K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by John Bechard. HTML version by Al Haines.
Release date
2000-02-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1833–1919
A major Victorian publisher, he helped shape the literary world through Smith, Elder & Co. and later founded the Dictionary of National Biography. He also worked closely with writers including Charlotte Brontë, whose letters he edited after her death.
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