Harriet Bradford Tiffany was born near
Stamford, Connecticut, on June 24, 1798. Her father, Isaiah Tiffany (1759-1800), was an officer in the
Continental Army, and her mother Anne Whiting (1762-1830) was a descendant of
William Bradford, the leader of the pilgrims of
Leiden, and for thirty years, the governor of
Plymouth Colony. When a child, Stewart was known for a sweet disposition and a lively sensibility.
Gouverneur Morris, who was in the habit of meeting her at the
springs of Lebanon, often spoke of her as presenting at this period one of the most perfect pictures of beautiful childhood he had ever seen. Stewart's father died while she was very young, and she passed her youth chiefly under the guardianship of an uncle, in
Albany, New York. But the marriage of an elder sister, in 1815, to a gentleman of
Cooperstown, New York, led her from that time to make his house her home. The appointment of her brother, soon after, to the
rectorship of the
Episcopal Church in that village, brought all the members of her family closer together. The two or three succeeding years were to her a period of much enjoyment. But it was not until the occurrence of a protracted and dangerous illness, in the summer of 1819, that she became convinced of the necessity of spiritual peace. It was two years after her recovery, in the autumn of 1821, that she received a marriage proposal from the Rev. Charles Samuel Stewart, who had been a US Navy chaplain, but was then just appointed by the
American Board of Foreign Missions as a missionary to the Sandwich Islands. In January 1822, after the decision to accept the marriage proposal was finalized, Stewart returned to Cooperstown, to pass a few weeks with her family, and to prepare for her departure. On June 3, 1822, she married, at Albany. ==Career==