Born in
Boston, Massachusetts, son of Charles and Johanna (Ebeling) Wendte, he graduated from
Meadville Theological School in 1867 and
Harvard Divinity School in 1869. He was ordained as a Unitarian minister and served churches in
Chicago;
Cincinnati, Ohio;
Newport, Rhode Island;
Oakland, California; and
Los Angeles. In the early 20th century, he returned to Massachusetts and worked in several churches in metropolitan Boston. He retired to
Berkeley, California by 1926. On June 22, 1880, he offered the opening
invocation at the
1880 Democratic National Convention, calling the United States "an asylum and a refuge for the distressed and downtrodden throughout the world," and praying that "all sectional divisions and differences may cease forever among us." Starting in 1886, he led the
First Unitarian Church of Oakland through its early growth and the construction of its still-iconic building. His next pulpit was the
First Unitarian Church of Los Angeles in 1897. In 1896, he strongly endorsed woman suffrage, writing: The same enlightened confidence in human nature which led the fathers to found the Republic on manhood suffrage, and its saviors to confer the ballot on millions of emancipated slaves, should animate us, their successors, in bestowing equal political rights on that half of our population which is confessedly the most virtuous, order-loving and trustworthy. Until this is done there can be no true democracy among us, and our Republic is such only in name. He served as secretary of the National Federation of Religious Liberals, 1908–20; secretary for Foreign Affairs of the
American Unitarian Association, 1905–15; president of the
Free Religious Association, 1910–14, and as president of the Unitarian Ministerial Union. ==Personal life==