Isaac Pitman was fervently
Swedenborgian. Not only did he read
The Writings of
Emanuel Swedenborg daily, he also devoted much time and energy to educating the world about them. He published and distributed books and tracts by and about Swedenborg. Among the authors he encouraged was
Thomas Child. Pitman was active in the local
New Church congregation in Bath while living on
Royal Crescent. He was one of the founding members, when this congregation was formed in 1841. He served as president of this society from 1887 to his death in 1897. His contribution to this church was honoured by the congregation with a
stained glass window depicting the golden
cherub in the temple of wisdom described in Swedenborg's
True Christian Religion No. 508. The window was dedicated on 5 September 1909. His memorial plaque on the north wall of
Bath Abbey reads, "His aims were steadfast, his mind original, his work prodigious, the achievement world-wide. His life was ordered in service to God and duty to man." Pitman was the grandfather of
James Pitman, who developed the
Initial Teaching Alphabet. His grand-daughter,
Honor Isabel Salmon (b.1912, née Pitman) was killed while piloting an
Airspeed Oxford for the
Air Transport Auxiliary in 1943. His great-grandson John Hugh Pitman was appointed an OBE in 2010 for services to vocational training. ==Vegetarianism==