He passed the winter of 1825–1826 in the South as an agent for the
American Bible Society, and the following summer in Massachusetts and on Long Island in a similar way. From January 10, 1827 to February 24, 1829, he was the settled pastor of the Congregational Church in
Hatfield, Massachusetts, and on March 18, 1829, took charge of the Pleasant Street Congregational Church in
Portsmouth, New Hampshire. was obliged by his health to resign this charge in 1831, but a year later was able to resume work, and was settled over the Presbyterian Church in
Hudson, New York, where he continued with great acceptance until he became, Sept 3, 1846, pastor of the
Bowdoin Street Congregational Church in Boston, Massachusetts. In 1857 he retired from parish work, and after two years spent in
Stamford, Connecticut, removed to Brooklyn. While his health permitted, he was there engaged in city missions, and was Secretary of the Brooklyn and L. I.
Christian Commission during the
American Civil War. Waterbury was the author of more than thirty larger religious works, and of several published tracts, sermons, and hymns. == Personal life ==