Reverend Spring returned to Newburyport and married Hannah, daughter of Rev. Samuel Hopkins of Hadley, Massachusetts, on November 4, 1779. He was a founder of the
Massachusetts Missionary Society in 1779 and of the
Andover Theological Seminary in 1808. He was very influential in a
fundamentalist wing of the
Congregational Church and many of his sermons and discourses were printed and widely disseminated.
John Quincy Adams was one of many who disagreed with Spring's teachings; Adams wrote that Spring's views were "extremely contracted and illiberal" and that he had the "enthusiasm of a bigot". Spring maintained contacts with Uxbridge. He and his wife had 11 children, although several died young: • Margaret Stoddard Spring was born April 26, 1783. In August 1807 she married
Bezaleel Taft, Jr., a politician from Uxbridge. She died on July 25, 1816, and her widower married her cousin Hannah Spring. • Lewis Spring was born October 20, 1793, and was lost at sea in 1815. • Mary Spring was born November 12, 1795, and died August 30, 1796. • Pickney Spring was born July 19, 1798, and died in 1820. •
Charles A. Spring was born July 25, 1800, and married Dorothy B. Norton. He became an influential figure in
Presbyterianism in Illinois and Iowa. • Captain John Hopkins Spring was born September 21, 1802, married Sarah Ann Rand, and had 6 children. Samuel Spring died March 4, 1819, in Newburyport. ==Works==