From 1845 to 1846 Bacon edited the
New Englander, a quarterly magazine published in
New Haven, and he helped to establish the
New Haven Morning Journal and Courier, which he edited until 1849. For the next year or two he supplied the pulpit of the Congregational Church in
South Britain, a parish of
Southbury, Connecticut. From 1853 to 1854, supplied his old church in Trumbull, while residing in the family homestead in Woodbury. He also conducted a boarding and day school in Woodbury for some years. In 1866 he removed to
Derby, Connecticut, and became proprietor and editor of the
Derby Transcript, a weekly newspaper. His literary tastes were already marked while in college. He was, if not the earliest to suggest, one of the most earnest supporters of the
Yale Literary Magazine, and served on the magazine's the first board of editors. He published three volumes of poems, the first in 1838. "To delight and elevate the mind, and thus to refine it," he wrote in 1840, "is the office and end of true poetry." == Publications ==