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CATALOGUS
SENATUS

ACADEMICL,

ET EORUM

QUI MUNERA ET OFFICIA ACADEMICA GESSERUNT,

QUIQUE ALICUJUS GRADUS LAUREA DONATE SUNT,

COLLEGIO DICKINSONIENSI,
CARLE OLI,
IN

REPUBLICA PENNSYLVANIENSI.

PHILADELPHIA:
-

MDCCCLXIV.

FEDERATE AMERICA! BEIPUBLICi SUMMA! POTESTATIS
ANNO LXXXVII.

�MONITUM.
Magistrates summi et optimates maiusculis:

Evangelii ministri literis Italicis, impressi:
Jurisconsulti, litera j, designati sunt.

Qui nullo titulo notantur Baccalaurei sunt.
Qui e vivis cesserunt, stelligeri sunt.

PHILADELPHIA:

TYPIS, COLLINS, 705 JAYNE STREET.

�CATALOGUS SENATUS ACADEMIC!

CURATORES.
ACCESSUS.
*

EXITUS.

A. D.

A. D.

1783

*Johannes Dickinson, LL. D.................................................. 1807

1783

*Henricus Hill.......................................................................1798

1783

*Jacobus Wilson, LL. D........................................................ 1798

1783

*Gulielmus Bingham .

1783

*Benjamin Rush, M. D., LL. D. .

.

.

.

.

.

. 1804

.

.

.

. 1813

1783

*Jacobus Boyd...................................................................... Yl&amp;l

1783

*Johannes McDowell............................................................ 1825

1783

*Henricus-Ernestus Muhlenberg, S. T.D. .

.

. 1815

1783

^Gulielmus Hendel............................................................. 1802

1783

*Jacobus Jacks...................................................... . 1802

1783

*Johannes Black............................................................. 1802

1783

*Alexander Dobbins............................................................ 1809

1783

*Johannes McKnight, S. T. D.............................................. 1794

1783

*Jacobus Ewing...................................................................... 1810

1783

*Robertus McPherson................................................... 1789

1783

*Henricus Slagle............................................................. 1810

1783

*Thomas Hartley...............................................

. 1801

1783

*Michael Hahn...................................................................... 1792

1783

*Johannes King, S. T. D........................................................ 1813

1783

*Robertus Cooper, S. T. D...........................................1805

�CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

4

EXITUS.

ACCESSUS.

A.D.

A. D.

......

.

1798

■.......................................

.

1807

1783

*Gulielmus Linn, S. T. D.................................

.

1787

1783

*Johannes Linn................................................

.

1821

1783

*Johannes G. Armstrong

.

1794
1808
1794

1783

*Jacobus Lang

1783

*Samuel Waugh

....

1783

*Johannes Montgomery

....

.

1783

*Stephanus Duncan......................................

.

1783

*Thomas Smith ...

.

.

1809

.

1790

.

1815

1783

*Robertus Magaw......................................

1783

*Samuel A. McCoskry

1783

Christophorus-Emanuel Shulze .

.

1788

.

1794

.

.

1788

....

.

1794

.

.

1796

.

1792

.

.

. .

1783

*Petrus Spyker................................................

1783

Johannes Arndt .

1783

*Gulielmus Montgomery

.

1783

*Gulielmus Maclay

1783

*Bernardus Dougherty

....

1783

*David Espy

...

.

1795

1784
1788

.

.

.

1783

*Jacobus Sutton .

.

.

.

.

1783

*Alexander McClean .

.

.

.

1783

*Gulielmus McOleerv......................................

.

1788

1784

Nicholas Kurtz................................................

.

1796

1787

*Josephus Montgomery

.

1794

1787

*Jacobus Latta, S. T. D....................................

.

1801

.

1803

.

.

.

.

1788

*Gulielmus Irvine

1788

*Robertus Johnston......................................

.

1808

1788

*Patricus Alison, S. T. D. .

.

1788

1788

*Jacobus Snodgrass......................................

.

1833

*Johannes Creigh......................................

.

1813

1788

.

.

.

�5

OATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

ACCESSUS.

EXITUS.

A. D.

A. D.

. ..................................

.

1799

1790

*Thomas Duncan, LL. D............................................

.

1816

1792

*Georgius Stevenson, M. D.......................................

.

1&amp;27

1792

*Ephraimus Blaine................................................

.

1804

1794

*Robertus Cathcart, S. T. D......................................

.

1833

1794

*Nathanael-R. Snowden......................................

.

1827

1794

*Samuel Laird.........................................................

/ 1807

1794

*Carolus M cClure

1789

*Josephus Thornburg

.

.

.

1794 *Jacobus Hamilton................................................
1794

*Michael Ege

.

•

•

1811

.

•

1820

.

• * •

1815

1821

1795

*Samuel Weakley................................................

.

1796

*Johannes Campbell, S. T. D.....................................

.

1820

1796

*Jacobus Armstrong................................................

.

1826
1802

1798

* Thomas McPherrin,

......

.

1798

*Jacobus Riddle................................................

,

1833

1798

*Franciscus Gurney................................................

.

1815

1799

*Carolus Smith, LL.D................................................

.

1824

1801

*David Denny.........................................................

.

1833

1801

*David Watts..........................................................

.

1820

1802

*Joshua Williams, S. T. D.

.

1821

1802

^Johannes Young

......

.

1803

1802

*Robertus Coleman................................................

.

1826

1802

David McConaughy, S. T. D....................................

.

1834

1803

*Hugo-H. Brackenridge......................................

.

1816

1803

Franciscus Herron, S.T. D......................................

.

1816

1804

*J onathan Walker................................................

.

1824

1805

*Nathan Grier...............................................

.

1814

1807

*Jonathan Helfenstein......................................

.

1826

.

�6

CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

EXITUS.

ACCESSUS.

A. D.

A. D.

. .

.

.

1808

.

1820

1807

*Jacobus Duncan

1808

*Jacobus Gustine................................................

1808

*Gulielmus Alexander......................................

.

1814
1833

.

.

1808

*Jacobus Hendel................................................

.

1809

*Robertus Davidson, S. T. D.

.

1812

1809

Gulielmus-M. Brown................................................

.

.

.

' .

.

1827

.

1826

1811

*Robertus Blaine

1814

*Andreas Carothers................................................

.

1833

1814

*Johannes Lind.........................................................

.

1825

.

1828

.

...

1814

*Franciscus Pringle .

1815

Nathaniel Chapman, M. D.........................................

.

1833

1815

*E dvardus-J acobus Stiles....................................... '

.

1827

1815

*Johannes McKnight, S.T. D...................................

.

1820

1815

Albertus Helfenstein................................................

.

1826

1815

Georgius-A. Lyon................................................

.

1833

1816

*Johannes-Bannister Gibson, LL. D. .

.

1829

1816

Amos Ellmaker..........................................................

.

1821

1820

Georgius Duffield, S. T. D.

.

1833

1820

*Henricus-R. Wilson................................................

.

1825

1820

Johannes Swartzwelder......................................

.

1825

1820

*Isaias Graham

.

1834

1820

Johannes Moodey

................................................

.

1834

1820

Isaacus-B. Parker................................................

.

1833

1820

Alexander Mahon................................................

.

1827

1820

*Josephus Knox..........................................................

.

1827

1820

Gulielmus-N. Irvine................................................

.

1833

1820

*Jacobus Alter..........................................................

.

1823

1820

*Andreas Boden................................................

.

1827

.

.

...

...

�7

CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

EXITUS.

ACCESSUS.

A. D.

A. D.
1821

Gulielmus-R. Dewitt, S. T. D...................................

.

1834

1821

*Johannes Reed, LL.D.............................................

.

1828

1821

Johannes-S. Ebaugh................................................

.

1833

1821

Gulielmus-C. Chambers, M.D...................................

.

1833

1823

*Ashbel Green, S. T. D., LL. D................................

.

1826

1824

^Michael Ege.........................................................

.

1827

1824

Benjamin Keller................................................

1824

*Johannes-F. Grier, S. T. D....................................

1824

Jacobus Hamilton................................................

.' 1833

1825

* Georgius Lochman, S. T. D....................................

.

1826

1825

Georgius Metzger................................................

.

1833

1825

Johannes-Duncan Mahon......................................

.

1834

1826

Redmond Conyngham.......................................

.

1827

1826

Benjamin Stiles......................................

.

1827

1826

Ricardus Rush.........................................................

.

1832

1827

David Elliott, S. T. D.......................................

.

1829

1827

*Johannes Nevin

.

1830

1827

Samuel Agnew, M.D.......................................

.

1832

1827

*Johannes McClure................................................

.

1833

1827

*Johannes Creigh................................................

.

1833

1827

Georgius Chambers................................................

.

1834

1827

Carolus-Bingham Penrose......................................

.

1833

1827

*Samuel Alexander................................................

.

1833

1828

Samuel-S. Schmucker, S.T. D.

.

1833

1833

.

.

\

.

.

.

1833
.

.

.

1829

1828

*Calvinus Blythe................................................

.

1828

Fredericus Watts................................................

.

1833

1828

*Gabriel Hiester................................................

.

1833

*Jacobus Coleman................................................

.

1833

1828

�OATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

8

EXITUS.-

ACCESSUS.

A. D.

A. D.

1829

Jacobus-M. Haldeman

........................................... 1833

1829

*Samuel Baird

........................................... 1833

1829

Johannes Paxton, M.D.

........................................... 1833

1829

*Alexander Fridge

........................................... 1833

1829

*Johannes-V.-E. Thorn

........................................... 1833

1830

Alexander Nisbet

........................................... 1833

1831

Jesse-Duncan Elliott .

........................................... 1833

1833

*Rt.-Rev. Johannes Emory, S.T. D..................................... 1836

1833

*Johannes McLean, LL.D. Cur. Sup. Feed. Iud. Ads.

1833

*Stephanas-Georgius Roszel

........................................... 1841

1833

*Josephus Lybrand

........................................... 1844

1833

Alfredus Griffith

1833

*Samuel Harvey .

1833

Job Guest

1833

*Henricus Antes .

1833

*Theodorus Myers, M. D.

...........................................1839

1833

*Johannes-M. Keagy, M.D.

........................................... 1835

1833

*Samuel Baker, M. D. .

........................................... 1836

1833

Johannes Davis

1833

*Johannes Phillips

...................................... 1860

1833

Matthaeus Anderson, M. D.

........................................... 1838

1833

Ira Day, M.D.

1833

*Ricardus Benson

........................................... 1844

1833

*Thomas Sewall, M. D.

........................................... 1845

1833

Henricus Hicks .

........................................... 1837

1833

Georgius-W. Nabb

...........................................1840

1833

Samuel-H. Higgins

........................................... 1837

1833

Carolus-A. Warfield

1855

........................................... 1848

......

........................................... 1836

.

.

.

.

1840

.......................................... 1843

.

.

...........................................1837

�9

CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

ACCESSUS.

EXITUS.

A. D.

A. D.

Jacobus Roberts.........................................................

.

1835

1833

Jacobus Dunlop.........................................................

.

1839

1833

*Benjamin Matthias

.

1850

1846

1833

I

.

.

'.

1833

*Carolus McClure................................................

.

1833

Samuel-E. Parker................................................

.

1835

1833

*Gulielmus-M. Biddle................................................

.

1855

1833

Thomas-A. Budd................................................

.

1843

1833

*Thomas-Emerson Bond, M.D..................................

.

1835

1833

Jacobus-B. Longacre

1833

Josephus Holdich, S. T. D..........................................

.

1835

1833

* Carolus Pitman,

.

1854

1834

Henricus Boehm .......

.

1838

1834

Gulielmus Hamilton................................................

.

1838

1834 Jacobus Watson.........................................................

.

1839

.

1847

1834 *Johannes Harper
1834

....

.

.

.

.

.

1837

.

1836

.

.

1837

Jacobus Massey.........................................................

.

1834
'

Carolus-F. Mayer

1835

Thomas-Chapman Thornton

1835

Josephus-S. Carson .

1835

Solomon Higgins................................................

.

1838

1835

Matthaeus Sorin ...

.

1838

1835

Thomas-Jefferson Thompson

1835

Jacob Weaver......................................

.

1850

1836

Rt.-Rev. Jacobus-Osgood Andrew, S.T. D.

.

1839

1836

Comfort Tiffany.........................................................

.

1858

1836

Samuel-B. Martin, M.D..............................................

.

1838

1836

*Georgius-Grimston Cookman .

.

1840

1837

Samuel Ashmead................................................

.

1855

...

...

.

.

.

�10

CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

ACCESSUS.

EXITUS.

A. D.

A. D.

1837

Henricus Holden ....

.

1840

1837

Alexander-L. Hays

.

1841

1837

Jacobus Wright .

.

1859

1837

Thomas-B. Sargent, S. T. D.

1837

Johannes-A. Elkinton, M.D.

.

1840

1838

*Ricardus Battee

.

1848

1838

Martinus-W. Bates, LL. D.

.

1851

1838

Johannes-S. Porter

.

1855

.

1838

Edmundus-S. Janes

.

1839

1838

Manning Force .

.

1843

1838

*Johannes Davis

.

1854

1839

Levi Scott

.

1841

.

.

.

.

1839

*Gulielmus-D. Seymour

.

1841

1839

Robertas Morris .

.

1841

1839

*Rt.-Rev. Beverly Waugh, S. T. D.

.

1858

1839

Jacobus-S. Owens

'.

1845

1840

Jacobus Carrigan

.

1857

1840

Johannes Herr

.

1845

1840

Johannes Buckman

.

1842

1841

Gulielmus Hamilton, S.T.D.

1841

*Robertus Emory, S.T.D.

.

1845

1841

Johannes Kennaday, S. T. D.

.

1852

1841

Jacobus Bishop .

.

1861

1841

*Henricus Antes

.

1856

1841

Fredericus Watts

.

1844

1842

Carolus-W. Roberts

.

1845

1843

Garolus-B. Tippett, S. T. D.

1843

Ricardus-W. Dodson .

.

1847

.

�11

CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

ACCESSUS.

EXITUS.

A. D.

A. D.
.

1851

1843

Archibaldus Wright................................................

1844

Jacobus-J. Boswell................................................

.

1850

1844

Edvinus-L. Janes................................................

.

1845

1844

*Johannes-J. Myers, M.D..........................................

.

1854

1845

Thomas Browne

......

.

1850

1845

David Creamer

1845

Andreas Hay.........................................................

.

1857

1845

*Stephanus-Asbury Roszel......................................

.

1852

1845

Johannes-Price Durbin, S. T. D.

1846

Jesse Bowman.........................................................

.

1859

1846

Ricardus-H. Carter................................................

.

1848

1847

Albertus-J. Ritchie, M.D..........................................

.

1856

1847

Abrahamus-Herr Smith

1848

Daniel-Moore Bates

.

1859

.

1857

.

1860

.

1856

1848

Walker-P. Conway

1848

Johannes McClintock, S.T.D....................................

1848

S.-A. Barton, M.D.

1850

G-ulielmus-H. Allen, M. D., LL. D.

1850

Johannes Whiteman

1850

Christianus Stayman

1850

Johannes-F. Bird, M. D.

1850

Spencer-F. Baird, D. P. S...........................................

1851

Alexander Cummings .

.

•

/ •

1852

Franciscus Hodgson, S.T.D.

1852

Jesse-Truesdale Peck, S.T.D....................................

1854

Aquila-A. Reese, S.T.D.

1854

Johannes Tonner

1855

Pennel Coombe

�12

CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

EXITUS.

ACCESSUS.

A.D.

A. D.

1855
. 1855

Gulielmus-H. Miller

Daniel Pierson.

1857

1855

Carolus-Josephus Baker

1856

Hon. Augustus-O. Hiester

1856

Johannes-Armstrong Wright

1857

W.-E. Tunison .

1857

Edvinus Wilmer

1857

Johannes-O. Harkness.................................................... 1859

1858

Gulielmus-E. Perry

1858

1858 Hon. Johannes-H. Phillips

1858 Hon. Georgius-F. Fort..................................................... 1862
1858

Samuel-A. Williams, M.D.

1858

Bev. Bernardus-Harrison Nadal, S.T.D.

1858

Rt.-Rev. Levi Scott, S.T.D.

1859

Johannes Carson

1859 Gulielmus-Ryland Woodward
1859 Samuel-Y. Munroe

1859

Jacobus Rheem

1860

Isaacus-P. Cook

1861

Jacobus-Fowler Rusling

1862

Josephus-C. De Lacour

�CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

13

Curatorum numerus integer...........................................265
Ex officio decesserunt.............................................................. 225

Supersunt adhuc......................................................................... 40
Evangelii Ministrorum numeros............................................. 95
Ex officio decesserunt................................................................ 72
Supersunt adhuc......................................................................... 13

PRESIDES CURATORUM.
EXITUS.

ACCESSUS.

A. D.

A. D.

*Johannes Dickinson, LL.D......................................

.

1808

1808

*Johannes King, S.T.D.............................................

.

1808

1808

*Jacobus Armstrong................................................

.

1824

1824

*Johannes-Bannister Gibson, LL.D. .

.

1829
1833

1783

1829

*Andreas Carothers

.....

.

1833

*Johannes Emory, S.T.D......................................

.

1834

1834

Johannes-Price Durbin, S.T.D. »

.

1845
1844

1847

1842

*Robertus Emory {pro tern.)

....

.

1845

*Robertus Emory, S. T. D..........................................

.

1848

*Rt.-Rev. Beverly Waugh, S.T.D. {pro tern.) .

.

1848

1849

Jesse-Truesdale Peele, S.T.D...................................

.

1852

1852

Carolus Collins, S.T.D..............................................

.

1860

1860

Uerman-Merrills Johnson, S.T.D.

�CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

14

SCRIB ZE.

EXITUS.

ACCESSVS.

A. D.

A. D.

.

1784

.

1792

1783

* Gulielmus Linn, S. T. D. .

1784

*Thomas Duncan, LL.D.

1792

*Thomas Creigh .

.

1796

1796

*Jacobus Duncan

.

1806

1806

*Alexander-P. Lyon

.

.

1808

1808

*Andreas Carothers

.

.

1814

1820

•

.

1814

Isaacus-B. Parker

.

1820

Jacobus Hamilton

.

1824

1824

Fredericus Watts

.

1828

1828

Samuel-A. McCoskry, S.T.D.

.

1831

1831

*Gulielmus-M. Biddle .

.

1833

1833

Carolus-Bingham Penrose .

.

1837

1837

Johannes McClintock .

.

1848

1848

Gulielmus-Henricus Allen .

.

1850

1850

Jacobus-Gulielmus Marshall

.

1854

1854

Otis-Henricus Tiffany

.

1857

1857

Jacobus-Gulielmus Marshall

.

1858

1858

Gulielmus-Laws Boswell.

THESAURARII.
1784

*Samuel Laird

.

1790

1790

*Samuel Postlethwaite

.

1798

1798

*Johannes Montgomery

.

1808

1808

*Johannes Miller

.

1821

1821

Andreas McDowell

.

1833

�CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

15

ACCESSUS.

EXITUS.

A. D.

A.D.

....

1833

*Johannes-Jacobus Myers, M.D.

1841

*Gulielmus-D.Seymour..................................................... 1854

1854

Jacobus-Gulielmus Marshall.......................................... 1861

1861

Samuel-Dickinson Hillman.

1841

BIBLIOTHECARII.
1784

*Jacobus Ross, A.M.................................................... 1792

1794

*Gulielmus Thomson, A. M...........................................1804

1804

Johannes Borland, A.M..........................................................1805

1807

Johannes Hayes, A. M............................................................. 1809

1809

*Henricus-R. Wilson, A.M................................................... 1813

1813

Josephus Shaw, A/AL................................................... 1815

1815

Gerardus-E. Stack, A.M......................................................... 1816

1822

*Josephus Spencer, A.M........................................................ 1830

1830

Carolus-Dexter Oleaveland, A.M......................................... 1832

1834

*Robertus Emory, A..AL........................................................ 1840

1840

Johannes McClintock, A.M...................................................1848

1848

Jacobus-Gulielmus Marshall,A.M........................................ 1860

1860

Gulielmus-Laws Boswell, A.M.

�PRIM ARII.

EXITUS.

ACCESSUS.

A. D.

A. D.

1784

* Carolus Nisbet, S. T. D.............................................

.

1804

1804

*Robertus Davidson, S. T. D. (pro tem.)

.

1809

1809

Jeremias Atwater, S. T. D.

.

1815

1815

*Johannes McKnight, S. T. D. (pro tem.)

.

1816

1821

Johannes-Mitchell Mason, S. T. D.

.

1824

1824

Gulielmus Neill, S. T. D.............................................

.

1829

1830

Samuel-B. How, S. T. D.............................................

, 1832

1833

Johannes-Price Durbin, S. T. D.

.

1845

1845

*Robertus Emory, S. T. D.

.

1848

.

.

1848

Jesse-Truesdale Peck, S. T. D.

1852

Carolus Collins, S.T.D...............................................

1860

Herman-Merrills Johnson, S. T. D.

.

.

1852

.

1860

PROFESSORES.
PHILOSOPHIC MORALIS
1809

Jeremias Atwater, S.T.D. ;

.

.

1815

1815

*Johannes McKnight, S.T.D...................................

.

1816

1821

*Johannes-Mitchell Mason, S.T.D.

.

1824

1824

Gulielmus Neill, S.T. D..............................................

.

1829

1830

Samuel-B. How, S. T. D..............................................

.

1832

1833

Johannes-Price Durbin, S. T. D.

.

1845

�17

CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

ACCESSUS.

EXITUS.

A. D.

A. D.

1845

*Robertus Emory, S. T. D. . -

1848

.

.

1848

Jesse-Truesdale Peck, S.T D....................................

.

1852

1852

Carolus Collins, S. T. D..............................................

.

1860

1860

Herman-Merrills Johnson, S.T.D.

LINGUARUM LITERARUM GRH3CZE ET LATINZE.
1784

*Jacobus Ross, A. M.

.

1792

1794

*Gulielmus Thomson, A. M.

.

1804

1804

Johannes Borland, A. M.

...

.

1805

1807

*Johannes Hayes, A. M....................................

.

1809

1809

*Henricus-R. Wilson, A. M.

.

1813

1813

Josephus Shaw, A. M.

.

1815

1816

Gerardus-E. Stack, A. M. (pro terni) .

.

1816

1822

*Josephus Spencer, A.^IL..................................

.

1830

1830

Carolus-Dexter Cleveland, A. M.

.

1832

1834

*Robertus Emory, A. M..................................

.

1840

1840

Johannes McClintock, A. M.

.

1848

1846

Georgius-Ricardus Crooks, A.M. (Adjunct).

.

1848

1848

Jacobus-Gulielmus Marshall (Adjunct).

.

1850

1850

Jacobus Gulielmus Marshall

.

1860

HISTORI2E, GEOGRAPHIZE, CHRONOLOGIZE
ET RHETORICZE.
1785

* Robertas Davidson, S. T. D.

.

1804

MATHESIS ET PHILOSOPHIZE NATURALIS.
1786

*Robertus Johnston, A. M.

1792

1821

.

&gt;

.

1787

*Jacobus McCormick, A. M.

.

1811

Henricus Vethake, LL. D.
2

.

1829

�CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

18

PHILOSOPHIC NATURALIS.
EXITUS.

ACCESSUS.

a.

A. D.

1804

* Robertas Davidson, S.T.D.

n.

•

1811

.

1814

MATHESIS.
1811

*Jacobus McCormick, A. M.

1814

Eugenius Nulty, A. M.......................................

1830

Alexander McFarlane, A. M.

1834

*Merritt Caldwell, A. M...................................

1836

Johannes McClintock, A. M.

1840

*Thomas-Emory Sudler, A. M.

1816
•

1840

.

.

1832

•

.

1851

1836

1848

Otis-Henricus Tiffany, A. M. (Adjunct)

■

1851

1851

Otis-Henricus Tiffany, A. M.

•

1857

1857

Gulielmus-Laws Boswell, A. M.

•

1860

1860

Samuel-Dickibson Hillman, A. M.

.

CHEMISE ET PHILOSOPHIC NATURALIS.
1811

*Thomas Cooper, M. D., LL. D.

.

1815

1828

Johannes-K. Finley, M.D.

•

1829

1830

Henricus-D. Rogers, A. M.

•

1831

1835

*Johannes-M. Keagy, M. D.

.

1836

1836

Gulielmus-Henricus Allen, A. M., M. D.

.

1848

1848

Spencerus-F. Baird, A.M., M.D.

•

1850

1850

Erastus Wentworth, A. M., S. T. D. .

1854

Gulielmus-Carlisle Wilson, A. M.

1854

LINGUC ET LITERARUM GRCCARUM.
1811

Johannes Borland, A. M....................................

1812

�19

CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

LINGUARUM RECENTIORUM.
ACCESSUS.

EXITUS.

A. D.

A. D.

1814

Claudius Berard, A. M.

1825

.

Ludovicus Mayer, S. T. D.

, .

.

.

.

.

1816

.

.

.,

.

.

1826

RHETORICS, METAPHYSICORUM ET ETHICORUM.
1821

Alexander Me Clelland, S. T. D.

....

1829

JURISPRUDENTI2E.
1834

Johannes Reed, LL.D.............................................................. 1850

1862

Jacobus-Hutchison Graham, LL. D.

METAPHYSICORUM ET ECONOMISE POLITICAL
1836

*Merritt Caldwell, A.M............................................................ 1848

LINGU2E ET LITERARUM LATINARUM.
1837

*Stephanus-Asbury Roszell, A. M.......................................... 1838

LINGUARUM ORIENTALIUM ET RECENTIUM.
.

1846

Carolus-Edvardus Blumenthal, A.M., M.D.

1854

Alexander-J. Schem, A.M............................................ 1860

.

1854

PHILOSOPHIES ET LITERARUM ANGLICARUM.
1848

Gulielmus-Henricus Allen, A.M., M.D.

.

.

.

1850

1850

Herman-Merrills Johnson, A.M., S.T.D. .

.

.

1860

�CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

20

LINGUARUM LATINH5 ET GALLI CHI.
EXITUS.

ACCESS US.

A. D.

A. D.

1860

Jacobus-Gulielmus Marshall, A.M....................................

1862

1861

Johannes-Keagy Stayman, A.M. (Adjunct).

1862

1862

Johannes-Keagy Stayman, A.M.

1860

Gulielmus-Laws Boswell, A. M.

LINGUARUM GRH1CHJ ET GERMANICHS.

TUTORES ET PKTCEPTORES.
1785

Robertus Johnson, A. M......................................................

1786

1788

*Jacobus McCormick, A. B................................................

1792

1792

Carolus Huston, A. B.................................................

1793

1793

Henricus-L. Davis, A. B.......................................................

1794

1805

Johannes Hayes, A. B..........................................................

1807

1810

Fredericus Aigster, A. B.

1810

Johannes McClure, A. B......................................................

1811

1812

Robertus-C. Grier, A. B........................................................

1813

1826

Johannes-W. Vethake, A.M., M.D. Chem. Prcel.

1827

1827

Johannes-K. Finley, M.D. Chem. Prcel.

1828

1831

1811

.

Olmstead, A. M. Ghem. Prcel.. .

1832

1838

Thomas-Verner Moore, A. B..............................................

1839

1839

*Johannes Zug, A. B.................................................

1840

1839

Gulielmus-Smith Waters, A. B...........................................

1840

1851

Amos-Forry Musselman, A. B............................................

1854

1854

Benjamin Arbogast, A. B.

1856

.......................................

�1864:.
PRIMARIUS.
HERMAN-MERRILLS JOHNSON, S.T.D

PROFESSORES.
GULIELMUS-CARLILE WILSON, A. M.,

CHEMI® ET PHILOSOPHISE NATURALIS PROFESSOR.

GULIELMUS-LAWS BOSWELL, A.M.,

LINGUARUM GR®C® ET GERMANIC® PROFESSOR.

SAMUEL-DICKINSON HILLMAN, A. M.,
MATHESIS PROFESSOR.

JOHANNES-KEAGY STAYMAN, A. M.,

LINGUARUM LATIN® ET GALLIC® PROFESSOR.

JACOBUS-HUTCHISON GRAHAM, LL.D.,

JURISPRUDENT!® PROFESSOR.

�CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

1787.
*Isaias Blair, A. M.
*Johannes Boyce.
*Johannes Bryson.
*Robertus Duncan, A. M.
*Jacobus Gittings.
*David McKeehan, A. M.
*Steel Semple, A. M.
*Jonatban Walker, j, A. M.
*David Watts, j, A. M.

1788.
*Johannes Boyd.
*Thomas Creigh, j, A. M.
* David Denny, A. M.
*Jacobus Duncan, j, A. M.
*Isaacus Grier, A. M.
*Jacobus McClanahan.
*Jacobus McClean.
*Johannes McPherrin.
^Matthceus Sinclair.
*Gulielmus Speer, A. M.
* Johannes Young, A. M.

1789.
Samuel Brown.
*Jacobus Calhoun, A. M.
Jacobus Crawford.
*David Hoge.

*Carolus Huston, j, Tutor, Reip.
Penn. Cur. Sup. Jurid.
*Samuel Mahon.
*Jacobus More.
* Alexander Sanderson.
Jacobus Scott.
9

1790.
* Gulielmus Baldridge.
9 Jacobus-P. Boyd.
*Jacobus-B. Brotherton, A.M.
*Franciscus Dunleavy.
*Josephus-S. Galbreath.
Ricardus Henderson.
*1809. *Thomas-G. Peachey.
*1845. *Johannes Purviance, j.
*Johannes Shippen.
*Robertus Smith.
Johannes Thompson.
*Robertus-G. Wilson, S.T.D.,
Coll. Neo-Caes. 1818., Univ. Ohio
Praeses.
*1851.
12
11
1792.
^Johannes Brackenridge.
*Robertus Callender, A. M.
Gulielmus Carcaud.
*David Casset, j, A. M.
*Johannes Creigh, M. D. Univ.
Penn., A. M.
*1848—75.

�CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

23

*Franciscus Herron, A. M., S.T.D.
*Samuel Davidson.
Coll. Jeff.
*1860.
Georgius Dugan.
*Callender Irvine.
Hayden Edwards.
Johannes Jack.
*J ohannes Foulke.
*Ricardus Johns.
Jacobus Gilleland.
Robertus Knox.
Jacobus Hemphill.
*Franciscus Laird.
*Gulielmus Hunter.
*Gulielmus Laird, M. D.
*Jacobus Laird.
Austin Leake.
*Josias Leake.
*Johannes Lyon, Rhet. et Ment. Randall McGavock.
Jacobus McGill.
Phil. Prof. Un. Op. Coll.
*Alexander Nisbet, j, A. M.
Maxwell McDowell, A. M.
*Gulielmus Noland.
Johannes McJimsey.
*Gulielmus Patten.
*Johannes McKesson.
Austin Wharton.
Jacobus Me Knight.
Jesse Wharton, Reip. Faed. Sen.
Johannes Moore.
20
*Jacobus Postlethwaite.
Samuel Reynolds.
1795.
Carolus Ross.
Austin Smith.
Gualterus Breden.
Jacobus Smith.
*Samuel Bryson.
*Andreas Steel.
*Abrahamus Craig.
*Gulielmus Steel, A. M.
Gulielmus Creighton.
Johannes Steel, A. M.
*Patricus Davidson, A. M.
Johannes Todd.
Samuel Donald.
Isaacus Wayne, A. M.
Gulielmus-Aston Harper.
Robertos Whitehill, e Cong. Jacobus Hasson.
Repr.
*Jacobus Irvine, A. M., M. D.
Johannes Wilson.
*Johannes Kennedy, j, Reip. Penn.
* Gulielmus Woods.
33
Cur. Sup. Jurid.
*Johannes Lyon, j.
1794.
*Thomas McClelland.
McConaughy, A. M,
Gulielmus Brown.
S.T.D., Coll. Jeff., Coll. Wash.
*Ma tthae us Bro wn, S. T. D., C oil.
Neo-Caes. et Coll. Wash. 1823;
Praeses.
LL.D. Coll. Hamilt. 1835 ; Coll. Andreas Moore.
Wash, et Jeff. Praeses.
*1852. *Johannes Nevin.
*Henricus Lyon Davis, S. T. D. Johannes Passmore.
*Georgius Reid, A. M.
Coll. Sane. Johann. Praes.
*Gulielmus-O. Sprigg.
*Alexander Dow.
Gulielmus Sterret.
David Hayes, A. M.

�24

CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

Gulielmus Stuart.
Rogerus-Brooke Taney, j, A. M.,
LL.D. 1831, Reip. Faed. Civ.
Sec., Attorn. Prine., et Cur. Sup.
Jurid. Prine.
*Josias Williams, A. M., S. T. D.
Coll. Jeff.
Josua Williams.
Edvardus Work.
24

1797.
* Gulielmus Breden.
*Jacobus Graham.
* Thomas Grier.
*Robertus Kennedy, A. M.
*Thomas McComb.
*Moses Montgomery,
Edvinus Putnam, A. M.
Henricus-M. Ridgeley, A. M.,
Reip. Faed. Sen.
Jacobus Thompson, A. M.
9

1798.

■

*Jacobus Adair.
*Samuel Agnew, A. M., M. D. Coll.
Jeff. Med.
*Johannes-B. Alexander, j.
*Jacobus Brady, A. M.
*Andreas Buchanan.
*Levi Bull, S. T. D.
Johannes Cooper.
*Gulielmus Downey, M.D. Univ.
Penn.
Jacobus-D. Greason, A. M.
*Jacobus Gustine, A. M., M. D.
Jacobus Guthrie.
*Georgius Hayes.
*Thompson Holmes, A.M., M.D.
Univ. Penn.
*Robertus Houston. M. D.
Josua Knight.

*Amos-A. McGinley, S.T.D.
*Gulielmus-F. Mitchel.
* Alexander Monteith.
*Robertas Proudfit, A. M., S. T. D.,
Lingg. Graec. Rom. q. Prof. Coll.
Cone.
* Gulielmus Rainey.
*Thomas Stockton.
*Johannes Waugh, A. M.
*Renricus-R. Wilson, A. M.,
S. T. D., Lingg. Graec. Rom. q.
Prof.
*Johannes Wright.
*185524

1799.
*Samuel Ball.
* Alexander-H. Boyd, A. M.
Armstrong Brandon.
* Carolus Cummins, A. M., S. T. D.
Coll. Sane. Johann. 1830.
*1863—86.
Jacobus Gilleland.
Thomas Hood.
Johannes Preston.
*Stewart Williamson, A. M.
8

1800.
*Jesse Duncan.
*Georgius-D. Foulke, A.M., M.D.
Isaacus Grier.
*Johannes Hillyard.
* Georgius Stevenson.
5

1802.
Samuel Bell.
* J acobus-Rice Black, A. M., Reip.
Del. Cur. Sup. Jurid.
*Johannes Hutchinson.
* Johannes Lind, A. M.
*Johannes McClure, A. M., Tut.
Gulielmus Patterson.

�CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

25

David Elliot, A. M., S. T. D.,
Coll. Jeff., Coll. Wash., et Acad.
Theol. Occid. Praeses.
*Johannes Fisher.
1803.
Jacobus-H. Miller, M.D. Univ.
*Alexander Boyd, A. M.
Penn., Praes. et Prof. Anat. et
*Jacobus Buchanan.
Physiol. Univ. Wash. Balt.
*Johannes-Ferguson Grier, A. M., *Franciscus Pringle.
S.T.D.
*Jacobus Pringle.
Johannes- 0 'Neil.
*Henricus Shippen, A. M.
* Jacobus Sharon.
*1843. *Jasper Slaymaker.
Johannes Williamson.
11

Crawford White.
Samuel Woods.

8

1805.

(VIII. CAL. MAI.)

1809.

*Georgius Clark, A. M.
Alexander Brackenridge, j, A. M.
*Johannes Clark, A. M.
Jacobus Buchanan, j, A.M., LL.D.
*Robertus Graham.
1842, et Coll. Rutg. 1849 et Neo*Ricardus Gustine.
Caes. 1850, e Cong. Reip. Faed.
*Johannes Hayes, A. M., Tutor,
Repr. Etiam. Sen., Apud. Caes.
Rom. etGraec. Lingg.etLitt.Prof.
Russ. Legatus., Apud. Maj. Brit.
* Georgius Stewart, A. M.
Legatus, Reipublic^e F^ederat^e
Prases.
(vn. CAL. OCT.)
*Henricus-M. Campbell, j, A. M.
*Gulielmus Barr.
*Alfredus Foster, A. M., M.D.
Georgius Buchanan, A. M.
Johannes-N-Caldwell Grier,S.T.D.
Stephanus Duncan, M. D.
Johannes-Hays Grier.
Jacobus Linn, A. M., S. T. D.
Johannes-Walker Grier, Reip.
*Alexander Mahon, j.
11
Faed. Nav. Capel.
Robertus-Smith Grier.
1806.
*Gulielmus Irwin.
Robertus Laverty.
*Jesse Magaw, M.D.
*Gulielmus Mcllvaine.
*David Pringle,
Lloyd Noland.
*Andreas-K. Russell.
Johannes Smith, A. M. et Tutor Samuel Parke.
Neo-Caes.
4 *Gulielmus Williamson.
*Jacob Zell.
15

1808.
*Johannes-W. Armor.
*Gulielmus-A. Boyd.
*Samuel-P. Duncan.

1810.

'

*Johannes-E. Grier, M. D.
Paulus-S. Pierce.

�26

CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

*Samuel-D. Ramsey.
*Thomas-Bull Smith.

Samuel-A. Marsteller, j.
4 Carolus-F. Mayer, j, A. M.
*Jacobus McCormick.
Gulielmus-S. McPherson, j.
1811.
Robertus Patton, j.
Benjamin Collett.
*Georgius-L. Potter.
*Gulielmus Findley, j.
*Jacobus D. Riddle.
*Carolus-P. Gordon, j, A. M.
Jacobus-Sproat Green, j, A. M. Jacobus Sykes.
Neo-Caes. ibique Curat, et Juris- Jesse Taylor.
prud. Prof., Reip. Faed. Dist. Neo- *Georgius Travers.
Gulielmus-M. Worthington, A.M.
Caes. Attorn.
26
Timotheus-J. Harrison.
Johannes-A. Henderson.
1813.
*Georgius-R. Hopkins.
^Johannes Knox, S. T. D. Coll. *Jacobus-B. Beverly.
Wash.
*1858. Lenox Birckhead.
*Jacobus-S. Craft, j, A.M.
*Thomas-M. Read.
*Thomas-B. Veazey, A. M.
10 *Harmar Denny, j, e Cong. Repr.
*1852.
Jacobus-B. Finley, A. M.
1812.
*Dennis Hagan.
*Samuel Alexander, j, A. M.
Josephus-A. Maybin, j, A.M.
Addison Belt.
*Gulielmus McFarlane.
Gulielmus-B. Beverly.
*Jacol)us-G. McNeiley, A.M. Gram.
Thomas-T. Blackford, M.D. Univ.
Sch. Prim.
Penn.
*Gulielmus-D. Mercer, M. D.
*Calvinus Blythe, j, A.M., Sec. Pol. Isaacus-A. Ogden, A. M.
et Att. Gen. Reip. Penn.
*Robertus Ralston.
Johannes Brown.
Jacobus Somerville.
Colin Cooke.
Ricardus Wootton.
*Jacobus Dunlop, j, A. M.
*Gulielmus Young.
15
*Gulielmus Goldsborough, M. D.
Thomas-J. Graham.
1814.
Robertus-C. Grier, j, A.M., Tutor,
LL. D., Reip. Faed. Cur. Sup. *Samuel-D. Blackiston.
*Ephraimus-M. Blaine, M.D. Univ.
Jurid. Ads.
Penn.
Jacobus Hamilton, j, A.M.
Jacobus Brown.
Alexander-L. Hays, j, A. M.
* Johannes Carothers, M.D. Univ.
Jeremias-Furman Learning.
Penn.
Ricardus-Henricus Lee, A. M.
1826, LL. D. 1854, Rhet. Prof. *Jesse-Y. Castor.
*Gulielmus Chambers, M. D.
Coll. Wash.

�CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

*Jeremias Chamberlain, S. T. D.
Coll. Cent., Coll. Louis, et Coll.
Oakl. Praeses.
*1850.
Josias Clapham.
*Thomas-B. Cobean, M. D. Univ.
Penn.
*Gulielmus-H. Denny, M. D. Univ.
Penn.
Festus Dickinson.
Josias Hawkins.
Johannes-J. Linton.
*Johannes-Duncan Mahon, j, A.M.
*1861.
Mardochaeus McKinney, j, A. M.
Humphredus-B. Powell.
Ricardus-R. Randolph.
Jacob Snyder.
Carolus-F. Spoering.
Gulielmus Tingle.
Johannes-F. Tyler.
*Stephanus-Duncan Walker, j, A.M.
*Jacobus S. Woods, S. T. D. *1862.
23

1815.
Franciscus-W. Brooke.
Julius Forrest.
*David-W. Huling, j.
Petrus-H. Ihrie, e Cong. Repr.
David-N. Mahon, A. M., M. D. Univ.
Penn.
Georgius-T. Martin, M. D.
*Carolus-N. McOoskry, M. D. Univ.
Penn., Reip. Faed. Exerc. Chir.
Georgius-W. Nabb.
*Alder Piper.
*Gulielmus-M. Sharp^M. D. Univ.
Penn.
Georgius Sweeny, e Cong. Repr.
Gulielmus Thomas.
David Wills.
13

27

*1816.
Georgius-C. Harrison, j.
Thomas-O. Kelly, A. M.
Johannes-E. Page.
Jacobus Smith.
Gulielmus Stuart.
Ross Wilkins, j, Reip. Faed. Cur.
Dist. Mich. Jurid.
6

1822.
*Thomas-R. Lee.
*Jacobus-Hall Mason.

2

1823.
Johannes-Holmes Agnew, A. M.,
S. T. D., Lingg. Graec. Rom. q.
Prof. Nov. Arc. et Coll. Wash,
et Univ. Mich.
Alfredus Armstrong, A. M.
* Georgius-W. Bethune, A. M., S.
T. D. 1823 et Univ. Penn., Sem.
Neo-Brun. Theol. Past. Prof.
*1862.
Ira-Condit Boice, A. M.
*Gulielmus Cahoone, A.M.
*Alexander-B. Codwise, A.M.
Gulielmus-L. Helfenstein, j, A. M.,
LL.D.
Jacobus Holmes, A. M., S. T. D.
Talbot Jones, j, A. M.,
Abrahamus-J. Labagh, A. M.
Isaacus-P. Labagh, A. M.
* Erskine Mason, A. M., S. T. D.
Coll. Columb., Eccl. Hist. Prof.
Ext. Acad. Theol. Nov. Ebor.
*1851.
*Daniel McKinley, A. M., S. T. D.
*1855.
Johannes-G. Morris, A.M., S. T. D.
Coll. Penn.
*Digby-D.-B. Smith, j, A. M.

�28

CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

Cornelius Van Cleef, A.M.
Carolus Whitehead, A. M.
Gulielmus-H. Williams, A. M.
*Johannes-C. Young, A. M.,
S. T. D. Coll. Neo-Oses. 1839, Coll.
Cent. Ky. Praeses.
*1857.
19

1824.
Gulielmus Annan, S. T. D.
*Johannes-E. Annan, A. M. Math.
Prof. Univ. Miami.
*1826.
Samuel Boyd, M. D. Coll. Med.
Nov. Ebor.
Robertus Bridges, A. M., M. B.
Univ. Penn., Coll. Pharm. Phil.
Ohim. Prof.
Gulielmus-Porter Cochran, A. M.
*Jacobus Culbertson, A.M., M.D.
Univ. Penn.
*1857.
Johannes-M. Dickey, A.M., S.T.D.
Johannes-R.-W. Dunbar, A. M.,
M. D. Univ. Penn., Anat. et
Chirur. Prof. Univ. Wash. Balt.
David Eyster, A. M.
Jacobus Knox, A. M.
*Robertus-P. Lee, A. M.
*Carolus McClure, j, A. M., e
Cong. Repr.
Samuel-A. McCosery, A.M., S.
T. D. Coll. Oolumb., Eccl. Episc.
Dios. Mich. Episcopus.
Isaacus Mcllvaine, A. M.
Samuel Montgomery, A. M.
Gulielmus-B. Norris, j, A. M.
*Jacobus Nourse, A. M.
*1855.
Andreas Parker, j, A. M., e Cong.
Repr.
*Matthceus-B. Patterson, A. M.
*Matthaeus-V. L. Ramsey.
Samuel Smith, A. M.
*Paris Spohn, A.M.

Henricus-M. Watts, j, A.M.
Moses Williamson, A. M.

24

1825.
Johannes-W. Campbell, j, A.M.
Johannes Chamberlain, A.M.
*Johannes-T.-Marshall Davie,
A.M.
*1852.
Pelatias-W. Gordon, A. M.
Gulielmus-H. Gray, A. M.
Josephus-G. Gray, A.M., M.D.
Univ. Penn.
Henricus Haverstick, A. M.
Mattliceus-H. Henderson, A. M.
Samuel-Buthford Huston, A. M., in
Graec. Mission.
Gulielmus-H. Kurtz, j, A. M., e
Cong. Repr.

Georgius-A. Lyon, A. M., S. T. D.
Samuel Maclay, A. M., M. D. Univ.
Penn.
Alexander Macbeth, j, A. M.
Johannes-W. McCulloch, A.M.
Gulielmus-B. Mcllvaine, A. M.
Johannes-C. Reynolds, A. M.
*Nicholas-G. Sharretts, A. M.
Robertus-E. Taylor, A. M.
*Georgius-S. Whitehill, A.M.
Thomas Williams, in Cong. Repr.
20

1826.
Henricus-Ludovicus Baugher,
A.M., S.T.D. 1848, Ling, et Litt.
Graec. Prof. Coll. Penn, et nune
ejusd. Praes.
*Georgius-W. Buchanan, j, A. M.,
Reip. Faed. Dist. Occid. Penn.
Attorn.
Thomas-L. Cathcart, A. M.

�CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

Thomas Craighead, A. M.
Ludovicus Eichelberger, A. M., S.
T. D.
Gulielmus-W. Gerhard, A.M., M.D.
Univ. Penn, ibique Prof.
*Adamus Gilchrist, A. M.
*1861.
Gulielmus-N. Johnston, A.M.
*Robertus-J. Poulson, A.M. *1862.
9

' 1827.
*Ricardus Armstrong, A. M., in
Sand. Inss. Mission, et Instruc.
Pub. Min.
1 Jacobus-M. Campbell, j, A. M.
*Daniel Denny, A. M.
*Petrus-H. Engle, A. M.
Sidneius-Georgius Fisher, j, A.M.
Jacobus-Hutchison Graham, j,
A.M., LL.D. 1862, Jurisp. Prof.
*Alexander Gwin, j, A. M.
*Lorenzo-N. Henderson, A. M.
Augustus-F. Hinsch, A. M.
Jacobus-M. Hopkins, A.M.
Johannes-M. Krebs, Gram. Sch.
Prim., A.M., S.T.D. 1841.
Samuel-M. Magraw, A. M.
Josephus Mahon, A. M. et Coll.
Jeff., Gr. Sch. Prine.
*Gulielmus-B. McClure, j, A. M.
*Jacobus-X. McLanahan, j, A. M.,
e Cong. Repr.
*1862.
Gulielmus-V. Neill, A. M.
Gulielmus-M. Nevin, A. M. Ling.
Lat. Prof. Fran, et Mar. Coll.
Johannes-H. Price, j, A. M.
Daniel-M. Smyser, j, A.M.
Matthaeus Spencer, A. M.
*Alexander-M.tSterritt, j, A.M.
Franciscos West, A. M., M. D.
Univ. Penn.
22

29

1828.
*Jacobus-G. Brackenridge, A. M.
Madison Brown, j, Faed. Cur. Jurid.
Ter. Neb.
*Robertus Bryson, A. M.
-Eefoardus-Pountj Buchanan,KM.
*Jacobus Burnside, j, A.M. *1861.
Gulielmvs-H. Campbell, A. M.,
S.T.D., Sem. Theol. Neo-Brun.
Heb. Prof., Coll. Rutg. Praes.
Thomas Creigli, A. M., S. T. D.
Robertus Davidson, A. M.,
S.T.D., Univ. Tenn. Praes.
*Benjamin Gerhard, j, A. M.
*Johannes-A. Gray.
Augustus-Otto Hiester, j, A. M.
*Johannes-C. Jenkins, A.M., M.D.
Univ. Penn.
Jacobus-Miller McKim, A.M.
Josephus-C. Neid6, A. M.
Benjamin Patton, j, A. M. e
Cong. Repr.
Samuel Pollock, M.D. Univ. Penn.
*Edvardus Ritchie.
*Baker-J. Ross.
*Gulielmus-J. Thompson, A.M.
Jacobus Vanhorn, A.M.
Nathan-G. White, A. M.
21

1829.
David Agnew.
Johannes-R. Agnew.
Robertus Birch, A.M. Yal.
*Jacobus-Hall Bready, A. M.
Josephus Briggs.
Andreas-B. Buchanan.
Thomas-K. Bull, A. M.
*Thomas-A. Carothers.
Jacobus-K. Davidson, M.D. Univ.
Penn.

�30

CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

Gulielmus-H. Davis.
Thomas Forster.
Ludovicus-W. Foulke, M. D. Univ.
Mar., A. M.
*Carolus-Franciscus Himes.
Gulielmus-J. Holmes, M. D. Univ.
Penn.
Edvardus C. Humes.
Johannes-A. Inglis.
*Cyrus-H. Jacobs.
*1836.
*Jacobus-Franciscus Latta, M. D.
Univ. Penn.
*1862.
*Edvardus-J. Lowrey.
Samuel McCulloch.
Johannes-C. McKinney.
Robertus McClelland, Reip.Mich.
Gub., Reip. Fsed.. Sec. Int.
Gulielmus-S. McPherson, A. M.,
M. D. Univ. Penn.
Philippus-N. Meade.
Hiester-Henricus Muhlenberg,

1831.
*Jacobus-W. Bell.
Gulielmus-Steel Bishop, A. M.
*Gulielmus-S. Frisby.
Thomas-Bently Jacobs.
*Armstrong McGinnis.

5

1837.
Gulielmus-M. Baird, j, A.M.
Thomas Bowman, A.M., S.T.D.
Ohio Wes. Univ. 1853, Univ.
Asciburg. Prseses.
Edvardus-Anderson Lesley, j, A. M.
Josua-Albertus Massey, A. M.
*Gulielmus-Brown Parker, A. M.
*1862.
Joshua Sweet, A. M., S. T. D. alibi.
*Johannes Zug, Tutor, A. M.,
LL. B. 1840.
7

M. D. Univ. Penn., A. M.
1838.
Gulielmus-F. Nelson.
Benjamin-M. Nyce.
Albertus-Brown Clark.
Jacobus-O. Palmer.
Carolus Denison, j, in Cong. Repr.
Johannes-B. Patterson.
Georgius-Purnell Fisher, j, Att.
Jacobus-A. Slaymaker.
Gen. et Sec. Pol. Reip. Del., e
*Johannes-Christian Spayd, M.D.
Cong. Repr., Feed. Cur. Dam.
Univ. Penn.
J urid.
Isaacus Van Bibber.
32 *Edvardus-Emilius Leclerc, j.
Benjamin-Addison Massey.
Thomas-Verner Moore, A.M. Tu­
1830.
tor, S. T. D. 1853.
Carolus-Wesley Pitman, j, e
Henricus Aurand, A. M.
Cong. Repr.
*Jacobus Bell.
Alfredus Creigh, j, A.M., LL.D. Josephus-Clubine Rhodes, j, A. M.
Amos Slaymaker, j.
Univ. Kent. 1862.
Jacobus-R. Irvine, A. M., M. D. Jacobus-McFarlane Thompson,
M. D. Univ. Penn.
Univ. Penn.
Gulielmus-Smith Waters, Tutor,
Johannes-L. McKim.
A. M., LL. B. 1842.
Johannes Owens.
6

�31

CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

Georgius-Alexander Coffey, j, A.M.,
Gulielmus-Ryland Woodward,
Reip. Faed. Att. Ori. Dist. Penn.
LL. B. Harv. 1842.
Johannes-Armstrong Wright. 13 Georgius-Ricardus Crooks, A. M.,
S.T. D. 1857.
* Georgius-Bowman Denison, A.M.
1839.
*Uenricus-Mandeville Denison,
A.M.
Samuel Baird, A. M.
Daniel-Elzey-Moore Bates, j, A.M. David-G. Eshleman, j, A. M.
Jacobus-Dundas Biddle, A. M.
Samuel-Georgius Hare, A.M.
Gulielmus-Henricus Butler, A. M. Samuel-Alexander Harrison, A. M.,
Carolus-Manning-Force Deems,
M. D. Univ. Penn.
A. M.,S.T. D. Coll. R. M. et Prof. Ricardus-Beale McAllister, j, A.M.
Jacobus-Gilbreath Hamilton, A.M. *Henricus-Augustus Muhlen­
Jacobus-Alfredus Inness, A. M.
berg, A.M., e Cong. Repr. *1854.
* Gulielmus Lyon, A. M.
*1862. Carolus O’Neill, j, A.M., in Cong.
Johannes Lyon, A. M.
Repr.
Arthurus- Wellington Milby, A. M. Johannes Phillips, A. M.
Johannes-Proctor Officer, A. M. Johannes-Mansfield Sims, A.M.
Abrahamus-Herr Smith, j, A. M.
1857.
Gulielmus-Fletcher Roe, j, A. M. Jacobus-Norton Temple, A. M.
19
1855, Lingg. Ant. Shelb. Coll., Jacobus Wallace, j, A. M.

Lingg. Ant. et Log. et Metaphys.
Mand. Coll., Lingg. Rec. El.
Fem. Coll. Prof.
Jacobus-Brown Scouller, A.M.
Lemuel Todd, j, A.M., e Cong.
Repr.
*Gulielmus Toy, A. M.
*Georgius-Ross Veazey, j, A.M.
Thomas Wright, j, A. M.
17

1840.
Clemens-Edvinus Babb, A. M.
Edmundus-Burke Babb, A. M.
Spencer-Fullerton Baird, A. M.,
M. D., D. P. S. 1856, Chim. et
Phil. Nat. Prof., Smith. Inst.
Sec. Adj.
Johannes-Franciscus Bird, A. M.,
M. D. Univ. Penn.

1841.
Carolus-Josephus Baker, A. M.
Benjamin-FranklinBrooke, A. M.
David-Evans Bruner, A. M.
Georgius-Griffin Butler, A M.
Gulielmus-Brown Carr, A. M., Coll.
Rand. Mac. Lingg. Ant. Prof.
Georgius-David Cummins, A. M.,
S. T. D. Coll. Neo. Caes. 1857.
Albertus-Troup Emory, j.
Henricus-BakerHarnsburger, A.M.
Georgius-Washington Knox, j,
A.M.
Jacobus Lesley, A. M.
Ricardus-Van-Boskick Lincoln,
A. M.
Thomas-Edvinus Massey, A. M.
*Benjamin-Morsell McConkey,
A.M.
*

�32

CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

Carson-Courtland Moore, j.
Banister-Gibson Peacock, A. M.
Johannes-Henricus Reed, A. M.
Wilson-Lee Spottswood, A. M.
Johannes-Keagy Stayman, A.M.,
Lingg. Lat. et Gal. Prof.
Gulielmus-Henricus Stewart, j.
Edvardus Stout, A. M.
Carolus-Henricus Tilghman.
Augustus-Baker Tizzard, A. M.
Gulielmus-Ryland White, A. M.
23

Robertus McPherson.
Robertus-Henricus Pattison, A. M.
Jonas-Johannes Potts, A. M.
Josias Snow, A. M.
Gulielmus-Lebbeus Whitney, j,
A.M.
Leonardus Woodward, A. M.
Gulielmus-Smith Young.
14

1844.

Grafton-Marsh Bosley, A.M., M.D.
Johannes-Davis Boswell, A.M.
Henricus-Donnell, j.
1842.
Jacobus-Morrill Follansbee, A.M.
Alexander-Blain Anderson, j, A. M.
Univ. Soule Prof.
Johannes-Summerfield Battee,
*Johannes-Stansbury Gorsuch,
M.D.
A. M.
*1852—29.
Ricardus-Ridgely Battee, j, A. M.
* Gulielmus-Armstrong Graham,
Perry-Gardner Buckingham.
A. M.
*1857—33.
Jonathan-E. Bulkley, A. M.
Ebenezer-Denny Harding, A. M.
Gulielmus-Rufus Creery, A. M.
Diego-Johannes-Miller Loop, A. M.
Archer-Gifford Miller.
Perley-Ray Lovejoy, A. M. Univ.
*Robertus-Frazer Morris.
Newt. Prof.
Johannes-Ricardus Pattison, A.M.
Josephus-Henricus Martin, A.M.
*Thomas-W.-P. Rider, M.D.
Georgius-Hankins McCabe, j, A.M.
Carolus-P. Wilkins, A. M.
Alfredus-Brunson McCalmont, j.
Benjamin-F. Wright.
12
IsaiasWillis McCord, A.M.
Thomas-Brown Parker, j, A. M.
Gulielmus-M. Penrose, j.
1843.
Samuel-Jacobus Powell.
Ricardus-Hughlett Bryan, A. M.
OtisSenricus Tiffany, A.M., S. T.
Joliannes-Franciscus Chaplain,
D. 1858, Math. Prof.
17
A.M.
Isaac Dillon, A. M.
1845.
Johannes-Lyttleton Harmanson,
Gulielmus-Donland Agnew.
M.D.
Warren Holden, A. M. 1861, Coll. *Johannes-Ha.ys Blair.
Johannes Carson,-j, A. M.
Gir. Math. Prof.
Robertus-Alexander Lamberton, j, Jacobus-Wallace Duncan, j.
A.M.
Josephus Dysart, A.M.
Jacobus R. Finch, A. M.
Washington Lee, j, A. M.

�CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

*Georgius-Willis Foulke, A. M.,
M.D.
*Jacobus-Biddle Gordon, j, A.M.
Johannes Gracy.
Samuel-Henricus Griffith, A. M.
Robertus-Miller Henderson, j,
A. M.
David Knox.
Robertus-Samuel Maclay, A. M.,
Miss, in Chin.
*Johannes McClure.
Josephus Benson McEnally,j, A.M.
*Johannes-Horace Stevens, A. M.
*1860.
Carolus-Henderson Stinson, j.
Isaac-Newton Urner, A.M. 1855,
Coll. Miss. Praeses.
18

1846.
Johannes-Davenport BtackweU,
A. M.
Gulielmus-Plummer Bird, A. M.,
M. D. Univ. Md.
Carolus-Mifflin Boyd, A. M.
*Carolus-Henricus Brown, A. M.
Stephanus-Tilton Brown, A. M.
Robertus-Laurenson Dashiel,ANL
*J acobus-Andreas Devinney, A.M.,
Gram. Sch. Prim.
*1852—32.
Alexander-Severus Gibbons, A. M.
Carolus Hall.
J ohannes-Gulielmus-Fletcher
Hank, M. D. Univ. Penn., A. M.
1859.
*Jacob-Brandt Keller, A. M.
Johannes-Roberts Kennaday, j,
A.M.
Ricardus-Alexander-F. Penrose,
A. M., M. D., Obst. Univ. Penn.
Prof.
Johannes-Arthur Phelps.
3

33

Alfredus-Gulielmus Sims.
*Beverly-Roberts Waugh, A. M.
*1861—38.
16

1847.
Carolus-Wesleius Carrigan, j.
Wesleius Cochran, A. M.
*Gulielmus Field,j, A.M.
Josephus-Lord Gates.
Norman Hall.
Jehu-Newman Hank, Huntsv. Fem.
Coll. Prof, et vice Praes.
Johannes-Lemon Harper.
*Samuel Levis.
DeWitt-Clinton Lloyd, j, A. M.
Jacobus-Andreas McCauley, A. M.
Carolus-Jacobus-Thompson McIn­
tire, j, A. M.
Johannes Mitchel Robinson, j.
Moses Walton, j.
Edvinus-Hanson Webstee, A. M.
in Cong. Repr.
Samuel-C. Wingard, j.
15

1848.
Thomas-Montgomery Biddle, A. M.
Gulielmus-Laws Boswell, A. M.,
Nov. Arc. Coll, et Gen. Coll.
Lingg'. Graec. et. Lat. Prof.,
Math., Lingg. Graec. et Germ.
Prof.
Johannes-Neff Coombs, A. M. 1851.
JOHANNES-AnDEEAS JACKSON CrESwell, j, A.M. 1851, in Cong.
Repr.
Henricus-Clay Dallam, j.
Gulielmus Daniel, j, A. M.
Johannes Summerfield Deale, A.M.
Johannes Greenbank.
*Jacobus-Bernardus Hank.

�34

CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

Garrick-Mallery Harding, j.
Henricus-Martyn Harman, A. M.
J ohannes-Wesleius Heisley, j, A. M.
Gulielmus Ing, A. M.
*Carolus-Gulielmus Keesee, A. M.
Franciscus-Alexander Macartney,
j, A.M.
Jacobus-Gulielmus Marshall, A. MLingg. antiq., Lingg. Lat. et Gall.
Prof.
Benardus-Harrison Nadal, A. M.
Hon. Caus. Eod. An., S. T. D.
1857, Univ. Asciburg. Phil, et
Rhet. Prof.
Jacobus-Gulielmus Nicholls.
Elijah-Barrett Prettyman, A. M.
1853.
Samuel-Aaron Rawlings, j, A. M.
Jacobus-Groves Sewell.
Benjamin-Franklin Snow, A. M.,
Ill. Wes. Univ. Ling. Lat. Prof.
Thomas-Snowden Thomas, A. M.
Johannes Wilson, A. M. Wes. Fem.
Coll. Praeses.
Henricus-Merryman Wilson, A.M.,
M.D.
Johannes-Ogden Winner, A. M.
Archib aldus-Wesleius Wright,
A.M., M. D.
Carolus-Bedford Young, A-. M. 28

Samuel-Alexander Graham, j, A. M.
Thomas-Talbot Hutchins, j, A. M.
Johannes-Jeremias Jacob, A. M.
1854.
Johannes-Henricus Kauffman.
Georgius-DeBonneville Keim, j.
Caleb-Burwell-Rowan Kennerly,
A.M.
Nathaniel-T.-C. Lupton, A. M.
Johannes-Gulielmus Medairy, j,
A.M.
Marcus-Junius Parrot, j, e Cong.
Deleg. e Terr. Kans.
Henricus-Bascom Ridgaway,A.M.
Henricus-Gere Smith.
Jacobus-Henricus Thomas, A. M.,
M. D.
Georgius-Washington Waesche.
Johannes-Henricus Watters, M. D.,
Sane. Lud. Med. Coll. Phys, et
Med. Jurisp. Prof.
21

1850.

Flavel-Clingan Barber, A. M. 1854.
Jesse-Gulielmus Barrett, A.M. 1859.
*Josua-Soule Bowman, j.
*1853Jacohus-McHenry Caldwell, A. M.
Benjamin-Davenport Chenoweth, j.
Josephus-Conner Collinson, A.M.
Jacobus-Basil Duke.
1849.
Gulielmus-Thomas Gough.
Alexander-McNutt Hamilton.
Alfredus-Augustus-Heno Ames,
Arminius-Summerfield Hank.
A.M., M.D.
Jonathan-Perrv Harrison, A. M.
Chapman-Vinson Brooks.
Ricardus-Gassaway Chaney, A.M. Samuel-Dickinson Hillman, A. M.
1851 lion, caus., Gram. Sch. Prim.,
Gulielmus-Daniel Conn, j.
Moncure-Daniel Conway, re. M
Math. Prof.
Gulielmus-Jacobus Hiss, A. M.
Johannes-Redman Coxe, j, A. M.
Phil-Moore Leakin.
Georgius Duffield, A. M.

�CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

Gulielmus-Jacobvs Maclay,
A.M. 1854, Univ. Pacif. Praes.
Johannes-Gideon Markle.
Arcliibaldus-Gifford Marlatt,
A.M. Univ. Wes., Irv. Fem.
Coll. Praes.
Samuel-Ricardus Peale, j.
Samuel-Henricus Reynolds, A. M.
Granville-Ross Rider.
Ricardus-DQrsey Sellman.
Ludovicus-Griffith Sparrow, M.D.
Dugald Thompson.
Carolus-Comfort-Tiffany, A. M.
Gulielmus- Van-Bergan Tudor,
A.M.
Simpson-Talbot Van-Sant, j, A. M.
Gulielmus-Carlile Wilson, A. M.,
Nat. Sci. Prof.
27

35

1852.

Henricus Anderson, M. D.
Jacobus-Taylor Carlile.
Theodorus-M. Carson.
Thomas-Green Chattie, M. D.
Georgius-Jacobus Conner, A. M.,
1860.
Reuben-B. Dietrick, A. M.
Gulielmus-Lutherus Haller.
Ulysses Hobbs, j. A.M.
Christianus-Philippus Humrich, j.
Carolus-Brown Lore, j.
*Jethro-Gorsuch Lynch, M. D.
Thomas-Lyttle ton Lyon, A. M.
Johannes McCarty.
*Theophilus-Norman McCeney, j.
*Samuel-H. Peach, j.
Jonathan-Knowles Peck, A.M.
1861.
'
1851.
Ralph Pierce, A. M., Miss, ad Ind.
Johannes-Maxwell Bailey, A. M.
Thomas Sherlock, A. M.
Georgius-Ricardus Bibb.
Gulielmus-Andreas Snively, A. M.
Johannes-Price Clark, A.M. 1858. Johannes Weller, j, A. M.
Georgius-Banghart Day, A. M.
Josephus-Blake Wilson.
21
Israel-Smyser Diehl, A. M. 1856.
Decius-Wadsworth Edmonston,
1853.
A.M.
Gulielmus-Henricus Engel, A. M. Johannes-Wesleius Awl, j, A. M.,
Jacobus-Munroe Kimberlin, Univ.
1857.
Pacf. Lingg. Antiq. Prof.
Johannes-Emory Clawson, A. M.,
Georgius-Henricus Lowe.
M.D.
Gulielmus-Bumgardner McGilvray, *Jonathan-Jacobus Melson, A. M.
A.M.
*1858—25.
Amos-Forry Musselman, Tutor, j, Gulielmus-Cyrus Rheem, j, A. M.
Agib Ricketts, j, A. M.
A.M.
Philippus Myers, j, A. M.
Albertus Ritchie, j, A. M.
Daniel-F. Rohrer.
Caleb-Sipple Pennewill.
Gulielmus-Carolus-F. Reed, A. M. Augustus Marion Sawyer, j, A. M.
Martin-Thomas Rohrer.
Edmundus-Bayley Seymour, j, A.M.
Jacobus-Sewall Thomas
16 Jacobus-Mitchell Shearer, A. M.,
M. D.
io

�36

CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

1854.

Carolus-Franciscus Himes, A.M.,
Univ. Troj. Math. Prof.
Nathaniel-Garland Keirle, M. D.,
A. M. 1863.
Josias-Forrest Kennedy, A. M.,
M. D. Univ. Penn., Reip. Fsed.
exerc. Chir.
Joliannes-Moore Leonard, A. M„,
Univ. Orient. Tenn. Lingg. Re­
cent. Prof.
Sewell-Taylor Milbourne, j, A.M.
Johannes-A. Munroe, A. M.
Georgius-Philippus Rhinehart.
Augustus-S. Sassaman, A. M.
Henricus-Robinson Torbert, j, A.M.
Johannes-Southgate Tucker, A. M.
1860, Univ. Misso. Prof.
Jacobus-Douglass Wade.
Henricus-Young Weems.
Archibaldus-Georgius Wilson.
Thomas Wilson, A. M.
23

Benjamin Arbogast, A. M.
Gulielmus-Jacob us Bowdle, A.M.,
M.D.
Noah Bowlus, j.
*Samuel-Gulielmus Emory, j, A. M.
*1862—29.
Nehemiah Fountain.
Georgius-Tankard Garrison, A. M.
Asher-Davidson Gibson.
Otis Gibson, A. M. 1860, Miss,
in Chin.
Ferdinandus-Jacobus-Samuel Gorgas, A. M.
Gulielmus-Duffield Halbert, j.
Johannes-Loren Heysinger, A. M.
Johannes-Fletcher Hurst, A. M.
1858.
Johannes Peach, M.D.
Josephus-Benson Perrie, A. M.
Henricus-Hamilton Pfeiffer.
Jacobus-Fowler Rusling, j, A. M.
1856.
Alfredus-Christopher Stone.
David-Harrison Walton.
*Gulielmus-R. Aldred, A. M.
Marcus White, A. M.
20
*1862—33.
Rignal-W. Baldwin, j.
Isaacus-D. Clark, A. M.
Marvinus-Emory Clark, j, A. M.
1855.
Samuel-Middleton Dickson, A.M.
-Noel Eccleston.
E.
Gulielmus-Tell Barnitz, A. M.
Johannes-Calhoun Gilmore, A. M.
Jacobus-Hervey Barton, A. M.
Gulielmus-W. Harnsberger.
Shadrach-Leacock Bowman.
Andreas-Hemphill Dill, j, A. M. Jacobus-Edvardus-D. Jester.
Jacobus-Pede Marshall, A. M.
1859.
Gulielmus-Henricus Eckels, j, A.M. Gulielmus-M. Parsons, A. M.
Johannes-Robertus Effinger, A. M. Jacobus-F. Purvis, A. M.
1859.
Adamus-F. Townsend, A. M.
Jacobus-W. Troxel, A.M.
Thompson-Prettyman Ege, A. M.
Gulielmus-B. Walston.
Ludovicus-McKendree Griffith.
*Cyrus-Franklinus Gulden. *1357—27. Jacobus-D. Waters.

�OATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

1857.
Cornelius-Fletcher Barnes, A. M.
1862.
Gustavus-Claggett Bird.
Gulielmus- W. Brim, A. M.
Daniel-S. Burns, A. M.
Thomas-Nelson Conrad, A. M.
Georgius-W. D. Davis, A.M.
O.-Irving Ditty, j.
Gulielmus-H. Effinger, j.
Franciscus-S. Findlay.
Valentinus Friese, A.M.
Edvinus-Lycurgus Griffith.
Johannes Hays, j.
*Owen Johnson.
*1858—22.
Samuel-J. Jones, A.M., M.D. Univ.
Penn., Reip. Faed. Nav. Chir.
Georgius-B. Keen.
Gulielmus-Fletcher Perrie, A.M.
Benjamin-Franklin Pursel, j.
Josephus-Culbertson Snively.
Andreas-Jackson Wilcox, j.
19

1858.
Josephus-Benson Akers, A. M.
Robertus-Newton Baer.
Silas-Benson Best, A. M.
Jacobus-Iverson Boswell.
Josephus-E. Broadwater.
Johannes-C. Brooking, A. M.
Samuel-Cushman Caldwell, j.
Thomas Care.
Daniel-Mountjoy Cloud.
Philippus-W. Downes, j.
Jacobus-Kent Dukes.
Robertus-Newton Earhart.
Daniel-Webster Friese.
Gulielmus-Henricus Getzendaner,j.
Marcus-Lucius Gordon.
Henricus-Dorsey Gough.
16

37

Thomas-Morris Griffith, A. M.
Gulielmus-Hamilton Griffith, A. M.
*Samuel-O. Hopkins, A.M., M.D.
*1862—27.
*Jennings-Marion- Clarke Hulsey,
*1862—28.
Horatio-Collins King, j, A.M. 1863.
Johannes-Henricus Leas, A. M.
Benjamin- Crispinus Lippincott,
A. M.
Joshua Allen Lippincott, A.M.
Carolus-E. Maglaughlin, j.
Henricus Marriott, M. D. Univ.
Penn.
Johannes-H. Martin, M.D.
Samuel-M. McPherson, M. D. Univ.
Penn.
Alfredus - Foster Mullin, A. M.,
Gram. Sch. Prine.
Thomas-Sargent Reese, A. M.
Albertus-H. Slape, j.
Gulielmus-Jacobus Stevenson.
Gulielmus- Theophilus-Lofthouse
Weech.
Johannes-J. White.
Josephus-P. Wright, A. M., M.D.,
Reip. Feed. Mil. Chir.
35

1859.
Daniel-A. Beckley.
Jeremias-Howard Beckwith, A. M.
1863.
Gulielmus-Emory-Fisk Deal, A. M.
*Zebulon Dyer.
*1862—25.
Alexander-Hemphill Ege, A. M.
David-Clarke John.
Georgius-Whitefield John, Univ.
Asciburg. Lingg. Recent. Prof.
Samuel-L. Lupton, A. M. 1863.
*Gulielmus-Wallace Merrick.
*1862—24.

�38

CATALOGUS DIOKINSONIENSIS.

Isaacus-Brown Parker, A. M.
Thomas-Sargent Parker, j, A.M.
1863.
Jacobus-J. Patterson.
Clayton-O. Penuel.
Jacobus-Alexander-Ventress Pue.
Duke Slavens.
David D. Stone.
Joshua-Dorsius Warfield.
David-Stone Woods.
Johannes-Wesleius Wright.
Georgius-Henricus Zimmerman,
A.M.
20

Petrus-H. Whisner.
Seth-Hart Yocum.

24

1861.

Jacobus-Glasgow Archer.
Jacobus Barton, j.
Henricus-Clay Cheston, A. M.
1863, Gr. Sch. Prim.
Carolus-Henricus Gere.
Elbridge-Hoffman Gerry, M. D.
Gulielmus-Franciscus Godwin,
M.D.
Henricus-Harrison Gregg.
Levi Haverstick.
Gulielmus-Henricus Maxwell.
Johannes-Edvardus McCahan.
1860.
Thomas-Jefferson McOants.
*Henricus-Stoner Munroe. *1861—24.
Henricus- Winslow Abbott.
Benjamin-Franklin Ball.
Carolus-Wesleius Neff.
Georgius Baylor.
Franciscus-Benjamin Sellers.
Philippus-A.-H. Brown.
Carolus-R. Snyder.
David-B. Bruner, A.M.
Johannes-Brown Storm.
*Gulielmus-Laws Cannon. *1863—24. Gulielmus-Henricus Zimmerman.
Georgius-B. Creamer.
17
Jacobus-L. Crook.
Hugo-A. Curran.
1862.
Merritt Eckman.
Jacobus-Valentinus Gotwaltz.
Johannes-Horatius Buckner.
Johannes-H. Grabill.
Thomas-Morris Chaney.
Thomas-Morris Gunn, A.M.
Wilmer Coffman.
Carolus Heydrick.
Gulielmus-Oliver Cornman.
Amos-Preston Gilbert.
Olarentius-G. Jackson, j.
Johannes-Weslieus Landis, j, A. M. Martinus-Christianus Herman.
Josephus-Benson Parker, A.M.,
Jacobus-Henricus Loomis.
M. D., Reip. Feed. Nav. Chir.
Daniel-Webster McCurdy.
Jacobus-W. Sanders.
Isaacus McCurley.
Georgius-Troxel Motter.
Rufus-Edmondus Shapley, j.
Gulielmus-Miller Ogilby.
J.-Lester Shipley.
Alfredus-Newton Weir.
Ricardus-Southron Shreve.
Gulielmus-Princeton Willey.
13
Johannes-S. Stamm.

�CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

1863.

39

1864.
ADSECTURI GRADUM ANNO CURRENTE.

Gulielmus-Reed Cisna.
Asburius-Jones Clarke.
Gulielmus-Daily Clayton.
Georgius-Nathaniel Glover.
Johannes-Criswell Graham.
Jacobus Hart.
Henricus-Francis Isett.
Thomas-Baltzell Long.
Leander Makely.
Gulielmus-Leander McDowell.
Ben-Pulaski McIntyre.
Edvinus-Franklinus Pitcher.
Henricus-Clay Speake.

Augustinus Bierbower.
Sebastianus Brown.
Albertus-Tayler Canfield.
Jacobus-Smith Elliott.
Gulielmus Hamilton.
Johannes Hood.
Henricus-Quincy Keyworth.
Gulielmus-David Luckenbach.
Moses-Allen Points.
Niles-Harrison Shearer.
Gulielmus-Sylvanus Smith.
Theodorus-Tyler Wing.
13
Josephus-B. Zeigler.

12

�CATA10GUS
LEGUM BACCALAUREORUM,
QUI SINGULIS ANNIS PRO MERITO LAUREATI SUNT.

Jacobus-H. Bull.
Jonathan-K. Cooper, A.B. Coll.
J.-N. McAllister.
Jeff.
Gulielmus-P. Orbison, A. B. Coll.
Jonathan-K earsley Henderson,
Jeff.
A. B. Coll. Jeff.
1836.
Jacobus-M. Johnson.
Jacobus-H. Carter.
Gulielmus-C. Lawson.
Hiatt-P. Hepburn.
Alexander Ramsey.
Hugo-W. Reynolds, A. B. Coll.
1837.
Jeff.
A.-Adams Anderson, A. B. Coll.
Thomas-C. Sharp.
Jeff.
Nathan-B. Smithers, A. B. Coll.
Andreas-Gregg Curtin, Reip.
La Fay.
Penn. Gub.
Gulielmus-M. Stewart, A.B. tloll.
Robertus-A. McMurtrie, A.B. Coll.
Jeff.
Jeff.
Johannes Zug, A. B. 1837.
Alfredus Nevin, A. B. Coll. Jeff.
1834, S. T. D. Coll. Laf. 1858.

1835.

1841.

Gulielmus-Smith Waters, A. B.
1838.
1838.
-E. Bailey, A. B. Coll. Jeff.
F.
Edgar-B. Wakeman, A. M.
F.-W. Hughes.
*1862.
Johannes-Jacob Myers,
M. D. *Gulielmus-B. Knox.
Univ. Wash. Balt.

1839.

1842.

Thomas Wright.
Carroll Spense.

Josephus-S. Dillenger.
Jacobus-M. Duncan, A.B. Coll.
Neo-Ctees.
1843.
Johannes-Brown Parker, A. B.
Gulielmus-H. Lamberton.
Univ. Penn.

1840.
*J.-Ellis Bonham.
Johannes Breitenback.

1846.
Henricus-Edgar Keene.
Johannes-Penn Brooke.

�LAUREATI
QUI ALIBI INSTITUTI FUERUNT VEL APUD NOS GRADU

HONORARIO SUNT DONATI.

1810.

1789.
*Robertus Cunningham, A. B.
*Alexander-W. Martin, A.B.

1790.

2

*Jacobus McCormick, Math, et
Phil. Nat. Prof., A. M.

1814.

*Nathaniel-R. Snowden, Coll. Neo. *Gulielmus Watson, A.M.
Caes. 1787, A. M., Curat. *1850.

1816.

1792.

Samuel-Brown Wylie, Prof. Heb.
Graec. et Rom. Lingg. Univ.
. *Robertus Cooper, Coll. Neo. Caes.
Penn., S.T.D.
1763, S.T.D.
*1797.
*Johannes King, S.T.D.
1823.
*Jacobus McCormick, Tut. A. B.,
1810 A. M., Math, et Phil. Nat. *Adamus Hays, A.M., M.D. Univ.
Penn.
Prof.
*Phtlippus Lindsly, Neo. Caes.
*Samuel-Eusebius Maccorkle, Coll.
1804 et A. M. ibique Tut. Lingg.
Neo. Caes. 1772, S.T.D. *isn.
Prof, et Vice-Praes., S. T. D.,
Jacobus Waddell, S.T. D.
5
Univ. Nash. Prteses., in Acad.
Theol. Nov. Alb. Jud. Archaeol.
1800.
Bibl. et Polit. Eccl. Prof. *1855.
Robertus Black, S. T. D.
2

1806.

1824.
Paulus Immel Hettick, A. M.

* Thomas Scott, S.T.D.

1808.
Jacobus-R. Butler, A. B.

1826.
Johannes Buchanan, LL. D., Cur.
Sup. Reip. Md. Jurid. Prine.

�42

CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

Thomas Duncan, LL.D., Cur. Sup.
Reip. Penn. Jurid.
Ricardus-Henricus Lee, 1812, A.M.
*Jacobus McGraw, S. T. D.
Gulielmus Paxton, S. T. D.
*Johannes Sargeant, Neo. Caes.
1795 et A.M., LL.D, et Cone.
1822 et Harv. 1844, e Cong.
Repr., ad Panam. Conv. Amer.
Legatus.
*1852.
6

1827.

1831. •
*Jacobus-C. Biddle, A. M.
Alexander McLeod, A. M.
Jacobus Schoonmaker, S. T. D.
Rogerus Brooke Taney, 1796,
LL.D.

4

1839.
Franciscus Hodgson, A.M., S.T.D.
Del. Coll.
Reverdy Johnson, LL. D., Reip.
Faed. Sen.
2

1840.

David Kirkpatrick, A. M.
Johannes Vethake, Chem. Prsel., *Thomas-Emory Sudler, A. M.,
Acad. Mil. Reip. Faed. ibique
A. M., M. D., Chem. Prof. Univ.
Math. Prof., Math. Coll. Sanet.
Wash. Balt.
2
Johan, et Dick. Coll. Prof.

1828.
Josephus-A. Maybin, A. M.

1841.

*Johannes-A. Collins, A. M.
Edvardtts Cooke, Univ. Wes.'
1838., A.M. et Univ. Wes., S.T.D.
1829.
Coll. McKend, 1854, et Harv.
R.- W. Cushman, A. M.
1855., Univ. Laurent. Praes.
Alexander McFarland, A. M.
2 Jacobus Floy, A.M., S.T.D. Univ.
Wes. 1847.
JohannesM. Krebs, S. T. D. 1827.
1830.
4
Edvardus-H. Barton, A. M., M. D.
1842.
Univ. Penn.
Alexander McClelland, A. M. Coll. Jacobus Buchanan, 1809, LL. D.
Neo. Caes. et Cone., S. T. D. et Lutherus Kidder, A. M.
■ Cone., Rhet. Metaphys. Eth. q. Gulielmus Kingston, A.M., Math.
Viet. Coll. Prof.
Prof., Lingg. Rutg. Coll. Prof.,
et in Acad. Theol. Nov. Bruns. Howard Malcolm, A. M. et Univ.
Brun. 1827, Cone. S.T.D. etUniv.
Crit. Bibl. Prof.
Virid. 1843., Georgiop. Coll, et
Gulielmus-H. Price, A.M.
Univ. Ludob.Praes.,LL.D. Univ.
Johannes Reed, LL.D., Coll. ^Vash.
Ludob. 1857.
Leg. Prof.
4

�CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

43

Robertus Newton, S.T.D. etUniv. Gulielmus-M. Harvard, A. M.
West. 1843.
5 Hugh-Holmes McGuire, A. M.
Henricus-Graham McGuire, A. M.
Bernardus-Harrison Nodal, 1848,
1843.
A.M.
6
* Georgius- W. Bethune. 1823, S.
T. D.
*1862.
Gulielmus-Balthrop Edwards,
1849.
A. M.
Robertus-S. Ashby, A. M.
Edmundus-S. Janes, A. M.
J. L. Kemp, A. M., Math. Univ. Henricus Hickok, A. M.
Josephus-Asbury Morgan, A.M.
Trans. Adj. Prof.
3
J. N. McLeod, S.T.D.
5

1844.

1850.

Johannes-H. Dashiel, A. M.
Gulielmus Arthur, A. M.
Thomas Jackson, S. T. D.
*L ucien- W. Berr 7, S. T. D., Univ.
Elmundus-S. Janes, A. M. 1843,
Ascib. et Univ. Misso. Praeses.
*1861.
S. T. D.
Eccl. Meth. Episc.
Gulielmus Pennington Burgess,
Episcopus.
* Gulielmus Wicks, S. T. D. *is62.
A.M.
3
4

1845.
Gulielmus-H. Gilder, A. M.
Ricardus-A. Morgan, S. T. D.
C.-C. Van-Arsdale,S.T.B.

1847.

1851.
Carolus Collins, Univ. Wes.1837
et A.M., S.T.D., Coll. Em. et
3
Hen. atq. Coll. Dick, et Coll.
Fem. Tenn. Praeses.
Job R. Tyson, LL.D.
2

Johannes Beecham, S. T. D.
Henricus Brewerton, LL. D., Supt.
et Comt. Acad. Mil. Reip. Faed.
1852.
Edvardus Neville, S. T. D.
Osmon-Cleander Baker, A. M.
Josephus Salkeld, A.M.
4
Univ. Wes. 1837, S. T. D. et Univ.
Wes., in Acad. Theol. Cone. Neo1848.
Hant. Prof, et Praeses, Eccl.
Meth. Episc. Episcopus.
Henricus-L. Baugher, 1826,
Johannes P. Gray, M. D., A. M.
S.T.D.
Alexander-Crawford Donaldson, Samuel-Dickinson Hillman, 1850,
A.M.
3
A.M.

�44

CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

1853.
A. B. Ivins, A. M.
Johannes-R. Jarboe, A. M.
Thomas-Verner Moore, 1838,
S.T.D.

1854.

Georgius-Ricardus Crooks, 1840,
S. T. D.
Gulielmus Elliott, A. M.
Bernardus-Harrison Nadal, 1848,
S. T.D.
3
Conway-Phelps Wing, Coll. Ham.
1828, S. T. D.
5

Ricardus-Henricus Lee, 1812,
1858.
LL.D.
Nelson Rounds, Coll. Cone. 1830,
Gulielmus Butler, S. T. D., Miss, in
A. M. Univ. Wes. 1833, S. T. D.
Ind.
2
Robertus-Daniel Chambers, A. M.
1855.
Alfredus Cookman, A. M.
*Gulielmtjs Darlington, M. D., Gulielmus Cox, S. T. D.
e Cong. Repr., LL. D. Yal. 1848, Gulielmus-H. Goodwin, S. T. D.
D. P. S.
*1863-80. Littleton-F. Morgan, S. T. D.
Thomas Daugherty, M. D., A. M. Isaacus- W. Wiley, M. D., A. M.,
Stearns Patterson, A. M., Wilm.
Miss, in China.
7
Fem. Coll. Prof.
*Jacobus-H. Perry, Reip. Fsed.
1859.
Acad. Mil., S. T. D.
*1862.
J. A. Reubelt, A. M., Lingg. Recent.
Georgius-F. Brown, S. T. D.
Prof. Coll. La. et Ascib. Univ.
Thomas Carlton, S. T. D.
Gulielmus-H. Rule, S. T. D.
Gulielmus-G. Deale, M.D., A.M.
*Carolus-H. Zchiegner, A. M. *1860.
Ebenezer-E. Jenkins, A. M., Miss.
7
in Ind.
1856.
Johannes McClintock, Univ.
Spencerus-Fullerton Baird, 1840,
Penn, et A. M. et S. T. D. 1848,
D. P. S.
LL.D., Math, et Lingg. Antiq.
Jonathan-Townley Crane, Neo.
Prof., Univ. Troj. Prseses.
Cses. et A. M., S. T. D.
Otis-Henricus Tiffany, 1844,
Gulielmus-Balthrop Edwards,
S. T. D.
6
A. M. 1843, S. T. D. .
Edvardus-C. Seymour, A. M., in
1860.
Polytech. Nov. Ebor. Prof.
Elias Welty, A. M. .
5 David-W. Bartine, M.D., S.T.D.
Benjamin-Franklin Crever, A.M.
1857.
Gulielmus Dyson, LL. D.
Josephus Castle, A. M. Coll. Hamil. Henricus Slicer, S. T. D.
T.-R.Vickroy, A.B.
5
1835, S.T.D.

�CATALOGUS DICKINSONIENSIS.

1861.
Edvardus Bannister, Univ.Wes.
1838 et A. M., S. T. D., Univ.
Pacf. Praeses.
Edvardus Bates, LL. D. et Harv.
1858, e Cong. Faed. Repr., Reip.
Faed. Attorn. Prine.
* Gulielmus-H. Brisbane, A.M.
*1862.
Alexander-E. Gibson, A. M.
Georgius-S. Grape, A. M.
Georgius-F. McFarland, A. M.

45

Gulielmus Mann, S. T. D.
*1862.
Enoch-Hooven Supplee, A. M.
8

1862.
Gulielmus Cooper, S. T. D.
Jacobus-Hutchison Graham, 1827,
LL.D.
Thomas Sewell, S. T. D.
Gulielmus-Henricus Shock, A. M.
Benjamin Shoemaker, A. M.
5

�SUMM ARIUM.

Numerus integer................................................................................. 1157
E vivis cesserunt stelligeri .
.
.
.
.
.
.318
Supersunt adhuc................................................................ 839

Alumnorum numerus integer....................................................... 988
E vivis cesserunt stelligeri................................................................ 292

Supersunt adhuc

................................................................ 696

Legum Baccalaureorum numerus integer
....
35
E vivis cesserunt stelligeri.................................................................... 2

Supersunt adhuc.................................................................. 83

Alibi institutorum et honorariorum numerus integer
.
.
134
E vivis cesserunt stelligeri.................................................................. 24
Supersunt adhuc..........................................................110

Ecclesiarum pastorum numerus integer
....
317
E vivis cesserunt stelligeri.................................................................. 92

Supersunt adhuc................................................................ 225

Ecclesiarum pastorum alumnorum numerus integer
.
.
241
E vivis cesserunt stelligeri.................................................................. 80

Supersunt adhuc

.

.

.

•

•

.161

�INDEX
CATALOGI DICKINSONIENSIS.

a indicat Laureatos, qui alibi instituti fuerunt, vel apud nos gradu honorario donati.
I indicat Legum Baccalaureorum, qui singulis annis pro merito laureati
sunt.

Armstrong

Abbott

1823 Alfredus
1827 Ricardzes

1860 Henricus-W.

Adair

Arthur

1798 Jacobus

Bannister
a 1861 Edvardus

Ashbey

1798 Samuel
1823 Johannes-H.
1829 David
1829 Jolianves-R.
1845 Gulielmus-D.

Barber

a 1849 Robertus-S.

Aurand
1830 Henricus

Akers

Awl

1858 Josephus-B.

1835 Wesleius-J.

Aldred

Babb

1856 Gulielmus-R.

1840 Clemens-B.
1840 Edmundus-B.

Alexander
1798 Johannes-B.
1812 Samuel

1858 Robertus-N.

1849 Alfredus-A-BI,

1 1838 F-E.
1831 Johannes-M.

Z 1837 A.-Adams
1842 Alexander-B.
1852 Henricus-A.

Baird
1837
1839
1840
«1856

Annan
1824 Gulielmus
1824 Johannes-E.

Gulielmus-M.
Samuel
Spencer-F.
Spencer-F.

Baker

Argobast

1841 Carolus-J.
a 1852 Osmon-C.

1854 Benjamin

Baldridge

Archer

1790 Gulielmus

1861 Jacobus-G.
I

1857 Cornelius-F.

Barnitz
1855Gulielmus-T.

Barr
1805 Gulielmus
a I860 David- W.

Barton

Bailey

Anderson

1850 Flavel-C.

Barnes

Bartine

Baer

Ames

1808 Johannes-W.

1799 Samuel
1860 Benjamin-F.

a 1850 Gulielmus

Agnew

Armor

Ball

Baldwin

1856 Rignal-W.

a 1830 Edvardus-H.
1855 Jacobus-H.
1861 Jacobus

Bassett
1850 Jesse-G.

Bates
1839 Daniel-E.-M.
a 1861 Edvardus

Battee
1842 Johannes-S.
1842 Ricardus R.

Baughei’
1826 Henricus-L.

�48

INDEX CATALOGI DICKINSONIENSIS.

Blackford

Baylor
I860 Georgius

Beckley
1859 Daniel-A.
Beckwith
1859Jeremias-H.

Bedell
a 1830 Gregorius- T.

Beecham
a 1847 Johannes

Bell
1802 Samuel
1830 Jacobus
1831 Jacobus-W.

Belt
1812 Addison

Berry
a 1850
Best

Lucien-~W.

1858 Silas-B.

Bethune
1823 Georgius-W.
a 1843 Georgius-W.

Beverly
1812 Gulielmus-B.
1813 Jacobus-B.

Bibb
1851 Georgius-B.

Biddle
a 1831 Jacobus-O.
1839 Jacobus-D.
1848 Thomas-M.

Bierbower
1864 Augustinus

Birch
1829 Robertus

Birckhead
1813 Lennox

Bird
1840 Johannes-F.
1846 Gulielmus-F.
1857 Gustavus-C.

Bishop
1831 Gulielmus-S.

Black
a 1800

Robertus
1802 Jacobus-R.

1812 Thomas-T.

Blackinston
1814 Samuel-D.

Blackwell
1846Johannes-D.

Blaine
1814 Ephraimus-M.

Blair

1799 Armstrong

Bready
1829 Jacobus-H.

Breden
1795 Gualterus
1797 Gulielmus

Breitenbach
l 1840 Johannes

Brewerton

1787 Isaias
1845 Johannes-H.

Blythe

a 1847 Henricus

Bridges
1824Robertus

1812 Calvinus

Briggs
1829 Josephus

Boice
1823 Ira-Condit

Bonham
1 1840 J.-Ellis

Bosley
1844 Grafton-M.

Boswell
1844 Johannes-D.
1848 Gulielmus-L.
1858 Jacobus-J.

Bowdle
1854 Gulielmus-J.

Bowlus
1854 Noah

Bowman
1837 Thomas
1850 Jesse-S.
1855 Shadrach-Jj.

Boyce
1787 Johannes

Boyd
1788
1790
1799
1803
1808
1824
1846

Brandon

Johannes
Jacobus-P.
Alexander
Alexander
Gulielmus-A.
Samuel
Carolus-M.

Brackenridge
1792 Johannes
1809 Alexander
1828 Jacobus-G.

Brady
1798 Josephus

Brim
1857 Gulielmus- W.

Brisbane
a 1861 Gulielmus-H.

Broadwater
1858 Josephus-E.

Brooke
1815 Franciscus
1841 Benjamin-F.
1 1846 Johannes-P.

Brooking
1858 Johannes-C.

Brooks
1849 Chapman-V.

Brotherton
1790 Jacohus

Brown
1789
1794
1794
1812
1814
a 1816
1828
1846
1846
a 1859
1860
1864

Samuel
Gulielmus
Matthaus
Johannes
Jacobus
Samuel
Madison
Carolus-H.
Stephanus-T. Georgius-F.
Philippus-A.-B.
Sebastianus

Bruner
1841 David-E.
1860 David-B.

Bryan
1845 Ricardus-H.

�INDEX CATALOGI DICKINSONIENSIS.

Bryson

Cannon

1787 Johannes
1795 Samuel
' 1828 'Robertus

Carcaud

Buchanan

Care

1798
1803
1805
1809
1826
a 1826
’ 1828
1829
al842

Andreas
Jacobus
Georgius
Jacobus
Georgius-W.
Johannes
Edvardus- Y.
Andreas-B.
Jacobus

Buckingham
1842 Perry-G.

Buckley
1842 Jonathan-E.

Buckner
1862 Johannes-H.

Bull
1798 Levi
1829 Thomas-K.
I 1840 Jacobus-H.

Burgess
a 1850 Gulielmus-P.

Burns
1857 Daniel-S.

Burnside
1828 Jacobus

Butler
&lt;z 1808
1839
1841
&lt;2 1858

Jacobus-R.
Gulielmus-H.
Georgius-G.
Gulielmus

Cahoone
1823 Gulielmus

Canfield
1864 Albertus-T.

Caldwell
1850 Jacobus-McH.
1858 Samuel-C.

Calhoun
1789 Jacobus

Callender
1792 Robertus

Campbell
1809
1825
1827
1828

Henricus-M.
Johannes-W.
Jacobus-M.
Gulielmus-H.

4

1860 Gulielmus-L.
1792 Gulielmus
1858 Thomas

Carlisle
1852 Jaeobus-T.

Carlton
a 1859 Thomas

Carothers
1814 Johannes
1829 Thomas-A.

Carr
1841 Gulielmus-B.

Carrigan
1847 Carolus-W.

Carson
1845 Johannes
1852 Theodorus-RL.

Carter
1 1836 Jacobus-H.

Cassat
1792 David

Castor
1814 Jesse-Y.

Cathcart
1826 Thomas-L.

Chamberlain
1814 Jeremias
1825 Johannes

Chambers

Clapham
1814 Josias

Clark
1805 Georgius
1805 Johannes
1838 Albertus-B.
1851 Johannes-P.
1856 Isaacus-D.
1856 Marvinus-E.
1863 Asburius-J.

Clawson
1853Johannes-E.

Clayton
1863 Gulielmus-D.

Cloud
1858 Daniel-M.

Cobean
1814 Thomas-B.

Cochran
1824 Gulielmus-P.
1847Wesleius

Cod wise
1823Alexander-B.

Coffey
1840Georgius-A.

Coffman
1862Wilmer

Collett
1811 Benjamin

Collins
&lt;2 1841 Johannes-A.
a 1851 Carolus

1814 Gulielmus
&lt;2 1858 Robertus-D.

Collinson

Chaney

Conn

1849 Ricardus-G.
1862 Thomas-M.

Chaplin
1843 Johannes-F.

Chattie
1852 Thomas

Chenowith
1850 Benjamin-D.

Cheston
1861 Henricus-C.

Cisna
1863 Gulielmus-R.

1850 Josephus-C.
1849 Gulielmus-D.

Conner
1852 Georgius-J.

Conrad
1857 Thomas-N.

Conway
1849 Moncure-D.

Cooke
1812 Colin
a 1841 Edvardus

Cookman
a 1858 Alfredus

49

�INDEX CATALOGI DICKINSONIENSIS.

50

Coombs
1848 Johannes-N.

Cooper
a 1792
1798
11840
a 1862

Robertus
Johannes
Jonathan-K.
Gulielmus

Corn man
1862 Gulielmus-O.

Cox
a 1858 Gulielmus

Coxe
1849 Johannes-R.

Craft
1813 Jacobus

Craig
1795 Abrahamus

Craighead
1826 Thomas

Crane
a 1846 Jonathan- T.

Crawford
1789 Jacobus

Creamer
I860 Georgius-B.

Creery
1842 Gulielmus-R.

Creigh
1788 Thomas
1792 Johannes
1828 Thomas
1830 Alfredus.

Creighton
1795 Gulielmus

Creswell
1848Johannes-A.-J.

Crever
a 1860 Benjamin-F.

Crook
1860 Jacobus-L.

Crooks
1840 Georgius-Ricardus
a 1857 Georgius-R.

Culbertson
1824 Jacobus

Cummins
1799 Carolus
1841 Georgius-D.

Cunningham
a 1789 --------

Curran
I860 Hugo-A.

1814 Gulielmus-H.
1827 Daniel

Devinney
1846 Jacobus-A.

Dickey
1824 Johannes-M.

Dickinson
1814 Festus

Curtin
1 1837 Andreas-G.

Cushman
a 1829 R------ W.

Dallam
1848Henricus-C.

Daniel
1848 Gulielmus

Darlington
a 1855 Gulielmus

Dashiel

Dickson
1856 Samuel-M.

Diehl
1851 Israel-S.

Dietrick
1852 Reuben-B.

Dill
1855 Andreas-H.

Dillinger
1 1839 Josephus-S.

a 1844 Johannes-H.
1846Robertus-L.

Dillon

Daugherty

Ditty

a 1855 Thomas

Davidson
1792
1795
1828
1829

Samuel
Patricus
Robertus
Jacobus-K.

Davie
1825 Johannes-T.-M.

Davis
1794 Henricus-L.
1829 Gulielmus-H.
1857 Georgius-W.-D.

Day
1851 Georgius-B.

1843 Isaacus
1857 C.-Irving

Docharty
a 1851 Gerardus-B.

Donald
1795 Samuel

Donaldson
a 1848 Alexander-C.

Donnell
1844 Henricus

Dow
1794 Alexander

Downes
1858 Philippus-W.

Deale

Downey

1848 Johannes-S.
1859 Gulielmus-E.-F.
a 1859 Gulielmus-G.

Duffield

Deems

Dugan

1839 Carolus-M.-F.

Denison
1838 Carolus
1840 Georgius-B.
1840 Henricus-M.

Denny
1788 David
1813 Harmar

1798' Gulielmus

1849 Georgius

1792 Georgius

Duke
1850 Jacobus

Dukes
1858Jacobus-K.

Dunbar
1824 Johannes R.-W.

«.

�51

INDEX CATALOGI DICSBSOXIEXSIS.

Duncan
1787 Roberins
3788 Jacobus
1800 Jesse
1805 Stephanus
1808 Saaoel-P.
a 1826 Thomas
11839 Jaeobus-AL
1845 Jacobus-W.

Dnnleavy

1812 Jacobus

Dyer
1859 Zebulon

Dysart
1845 Josephus

Dyson
a I860 Gulielmus

Earhart
1S5S Robertus-N.

Eccleston
1856 E.-Noel

Eckels
1855 Gulielmus-H.

Eckman
1860 Alerritt-D.

Edmonston
1851 Decius-W.

Edwards
1792 Haden
a 1843 G-tilielmus-B.
a 1856 G-ulielmus-B.

Effinger
1855 Johannes-R.
1857 Gulielmus-H.

Ege
1855 Thompson-P.
1859 Alexander-H.

Eichelberger
1826 Ludovicus

Elliott
1808 David
a 1857 Gulielmus
1864 Jacobus-S.

Emory
1841 Albertus-T.
1854 Samuel-G.

1837 Josephus-L.

I Engle
|

Gere

1827 Perrus-H.

Eshleman
1846 Durid-G.

1 Eyster
I
I

1861 Car^us-H.

Gerhard
1826 Gulielmus-W.
1338 Benjamin

j

'Gerry

1824

1861 Elbridge-H.

Field

1790 Frmtdscus

Dunlop

Gates

Engel
1351 Gulidma^-H.

1847 Gulielmus

* Getzendaner

I Finch
|

1858 Gulielmus-H.

Findlay
I

Gibbons

1845 Jaeobus-B.

1S57 Franeis-S.

i Finley
1811 Gulielmus
1813 Jacobus-B.

1845

Gibson

1

1854 Asher~D.
1S54 Otis

a1861 Alcjaander-E

Usher
ISOS Johannes
1S27 Sidneius-G.
1833 Georgius-P.

Floy

Gilbert
1862 Amos-P.

Gilchrist
1826 Adamus

a 1841 Jacobus

Follansbee
1844 Jacobus-M.

Forrest
1815 Julius

Forster
1829 Thomas

Gilder
&lt;i 1845 GvliclmHs-H.

Gilleland
1792 Jacobus
1799 Jacobus

Gilmore
1S56 Johannes-C.

Gittings

Foster
1S09 Alfredus

Foulke
1792
1800
1829
1S45

I
I

Johannes
Georgius-D.
Ludovicus-W.
Georgius-W.

Fountain
1854 Nehemiah

Friese
1857 Valentinus
1858 Daniel-W.

Frisby
1831 Gulielmus-S.

Galbreath
1790 Josephus-S.

Garrison
1851 Georgius-T.

1787 Jacobus

Glover
1863 Georgius- N.

Godwin
1861 Gulielmus-F.

Goldsborough
1812 Gulielmus

Goodwin
a 1S5S Gitliclintis-ff.

Gordon
1811
1825
1845
185S

Carolus-P.
Pelatius-W.
Jacobus-B.
Marcus-L.

Gorgas
1854 Ferdinandus-J.-S.

Gorsuch
1844 Johannes-S.

�INDEX CATALOGI DICKINSONIENSIS.

52

Gotwaltz
1850 Jacobus-V.

1855 Cyrus-F.

1850 Gulielmus-T.
1858 Henricus-D.

Grabill
I860 Johannes-H.

1860 Thomas-M.

Gustine
1798 Jacobus
1805 Ricardus

Guthrie

Gracy
1845 Johannes

Graham
Jacobies
Robertus
Thomas-J.
Jacobus-H.
Gulielmus-A.
Samuel-A.
Jacobus-H.
Johannes-C.

Grape
a 1861 Georgius-S.

1825
1825
1828
a 1852

Gulielmus-H.
Josephus-G.
Johannes-A.
Johannes-P.

Greason
1798 Jacobus-D.

Green
1811 Jacobus-S.

Greenbank
1848 Johannes

Gregg
1861 Henrieus-H.

Grier
1788
1797
1800
1803
1809
1809
1809
1809
1810
1812

Isaacus
Thomas
Isaacus
Johannes-F.
Johannes-C.
Johannes-H.
Johannes- W.
Robertus-S.
Johannes-E.
Robertus-C.

Griffith
1845
1855
1857
1858
1858

1798 Jacobus

"Gwin
1827 Alexander

Hagan
1813 Dennis

Halbert
1854 Gulielmus-D.

Hall
1846 Carolus
1847 Norman

Samuel-H.
Ludovicus-McK.
Edvinus-L.
Gulielmus-H.
Thomas-M.

Hamilton
1812
1839
1850
1864

Jacobus
Jacobus-G.
Alexander-McN.
Gulielmus

Hank
1846
1847
1848
1850

1863 Jacobus

Hassan
1795 Jacobus

Haverstick
1825 Henricus
1861 Levi

Hawkins
1814 Josias

Hayes
1805 Johannes

Hays
1794
1798
1812
a 1823
1857

David
Georgius
Alexander-L.
Adamus
Johannes

Heisley

Haller
1852 Gulielmus-L.

Gray

1840 Samuel-A.
1850 Jonathan-P.

Hart

Gunn

Gough

1797
1805
1812
1827
1844
1849
a 1862
1863

Gulden

Johannes-G.-F.
Johannes-N.
Jacobus-B.
Arminius-S.

Harding
1844 Ebenezer-D.
1848 Garrick-M.

Hare
1840 Samuel-D.

Harman
1848 Henricus-M.

Harmanson
1843 Johannes-L.

Harnsberger
1841 Henricus-B.
1856 Gulielmus-W.

Harper
1795 Gulielmus-A.
1847 Johannes-L.

Harrison
1811 Timotheus-J.
1816 Georgius.

1848 Johannes-W.

Hiester
1828 Augustus-O.

Helfenstein
1823 Gulielmus-L.

Hemphill
1792 Jacobus

Henderson
1790
1811
1825
1827
1 1840
1845

Ricardus
Johannes-A.
Matthceus-H.
Lorenzo-N.
Jonathan-K.
Robertus-M.

Hepburn
I 1836 Hiatt-P.

Herman
1862 Martinus.

Herron
1794 Franciscus

Hettick
a 1824 Paulus-J.

Heysinger
1854 Johannes-R.

Heydrick
I860 Carolus

Hickok
a 1849 Henricus

�INDEX CATALOGI DICKINSONIENSIS.

Hillman
1850 Samnel-D.
&lt;z!852 Samuel-D.

Hillyard
1800 Johannes

Himes
1829 Carolus-F.
1855 Carolus-F.

Hinch
1827 Augustus-F.

Hiss
1850 Gulielmus-J.

Hobbs
1852 Ulysses

Hodgson
a 1839 Franciscus

Hoge
1789 David

Holden
1843 Warren

Holmes
1798 Thompson
1823 Jacobus
1829 Gulielmus-J.

Hood
1799 Thomas
1864 Johannes

Hopkins
1811 Georgius-R.
1827 Jacobus-M.
1858 Samuel-C.

Howard
a 1847 Gulielmus-M.

Hughes
1 1838 F.-W.

Huling
1815 David-W.

Hulsey
1858 Jennings-M.-C.

Humes
1829 Edvardus-C.

Hum rich
1852 Christianus-P.

Hunter
1792 Gulielmus

Hurst
1854 Johannes-F.

53

1859 Georgius-W.

Huston
1789 Carolus
1798 Robertus
1825 Samuel-R.

.

Johns
1794 Ricardus

Johnson

Hutchens
1849 Thomas-T.

Hutchinson
1802 Johannes

Ihrie
1815 Petrus-H.

1 1840 Jacobus-M.
a 1839 Reverdy
1857 Owen

Johnston
1826 Gulielmus-N.

Jones

Ing
1848 Gulielmus

Inglis
1829 Johannes-A.

1823Talbot
1857 Samuel-J.

Kaufman
1849 Johannes-K.

Inness
1839 Jaeobus-A.

Irvine

Keen
Georgius-B-

1794 Callender
1795 Jacobus
1830 Jacobus-R.

Irwin
1807 Gulielmus

Isett
1863 Henricus-F.

Ivins
a 1853 A.-B.

Jack
1794 Johannes

Keim
1 1846 Henricus-E.
1849 Georgius-De’B.

Keirle
1855 Nathaniel-G.

Keesee
1848 Carolus-G.

Kellar
1846 Jacobus-B.

Kelly
1816 Thomas

Jackson
a 1844 Thomas
1860 Clarentius-G. ’

Kemp

Jacob

Kennaday

1849 Johannes I.

a 1843 J.-L.

1846 Johannes-R.

Kennedy

Jacobs
1829 Cyrus-D.
1834 Thomas-B. '

Janes

1795 Johannes
1797 Robertus
1855 Josias-F.

a 1843 Edmundus-S.
a 1844 Edmundus-S.

Kennerly

Jarboe

Key worth

a 1853 Johannes-R.

1849 Caleb-B.-K.

1864 Henricus-Q.

Jenkins

Kidder

1828 Johannes-C.
a 1859 Ebenezer-E.

Kimberlin

Jester

a 1842 Luther

1851 Jacobus-M.

a 1856 Jacobus-E.-D.

John
1859 David-C.

4*

King
a 1792 Johannes
1858 Horatius-C.

�INDEX CATALOGI DICKINSONIENSIS.

54

a 1827 David

1822 Thomas-R.
1824 Robertus-P.
a 1826 Ricardus-H.
1843 Washington
a 1853 Ricardus-H.

Knight

Leonard

Kingston
a 1842 Gulielmus

Kirkpatrick
1798 Josua

Knox
1794
1811
1824
1841
11841
1845

1855 Johannes-M.

Lesley
Robertus
Johannes
Jacobus
Georgius-W.
Gulielmus-B.
David

Krebs

1837 Edvardus-A.
1841 Jacobus

Levis
1847 Samuel

Lincoln
1841 Ricardus-Van’B.

1827 Johannes-M.
a 1841 Johannes-M.

Lind

Kurtz

Lindsly
a 1823 Philippus
Linn

1825 Gulielmus-H.

Labagh
1823 Abrahamus-J.
1823 Isaacus-P.

Laird
1792 Jacobus
1794 Frhnciscus
1794 Gulielmus.

Lamberton
1843 Robertus-A.
11843 Gulielmus-H.

Landis
1860 Johannes-W.

Latta
1829 Jacobus-F.

Laverty
1809 Robertus

Lawson
1 1840 Gulielmus-C.

Leake
1792 Josias
1794 Austin

Leakin
1850 Phil-M.

Learning
1812 Jeremias-F.

Leas
1858 Johannes-H.

Leclerc
1838 Edvardus-E.

Lee
1812 Ricardus-H.

1802 Johannes

1805 Jacobus

Linton
1814 Johannes-J.

Lippincott
1858 Benjamin-C.
1858 Joshua-A.

Lloyd
1847 DeWitt-C.

Long
1863 Thomas-B.

Loomis
1862 Jacobus-H.

Loop
1844 Diego-J.-M.

Lore
1852 Carolus-B.

Lovejoy
1844 Perley-R.

Lowe
1851 Georgius-H.

Lowry
1829 Edvardus-J.

Lupton
1849 Nathaniel-T.-G.
1859 Samuel-L.

Lynch
1852 Jethro-G.

Lyon
1792 Johannes

1795 Johannes
1825 Georgius-A.
1839 Gulielmus
1839 Johannes
1852 Thomas-L.

Macartney
1848 Franciscus

Macbeth
1825 Alexander

Maclay
1825 Samuel
1845 Robertus-S.
1850 Gulielmus-J.

Macomb
1797Thomas

Magaw
1806 Jesse

Maglaughlin
1858 Carolus-E.

Magraw
1827 Samuel-M.

Mahon
1789
1805
1814
1815
1827

Samuel
Alexander
Johannes-D.
David-N.
Josephus

Malcolm
a 1842 Howard

Makeley
1863 Leander

Mann
a 1861 Gulielmus

Markle
1850 Johannes-G.

Marlatt
1850 Archibaldus-G.

Marriott
1858 Henricus

Marshall
1848 Jacobus G.
1856 Jacobus-P.

Marsteller' •
1812 Samuel-A.

Martin
a 1789
1815
1844
1858

--------Georgius-T.
Josephus-H.
Johannes-H.

�INDEX CATALOGI DICKINSONIENSIS.

McConkey

Mason
1822 Jacobus-Hall
1823 Erskine

Massey

1841 Benjamin-M.

McCord
1844 Isaias-W.

1837 Josua-Albertus
McCorkle
1838 Benjamin-Addison a 1792 Samuel
1841 Thomas-E.

Maxwell
1861 Gulielmus-H.

Maybin
1813 Josephus-A.
a 1828 Josephus-A.

Mayer
1812 Carolus-F.

McAllister
1 1835 J.-N.
1840 Ricardus-Beale

McCabe
1844 Georgius-H.

Me C ah an
1861 Johannes-E.

McCalmont
1844 Alfredus-B.

McCants
1861 Thomas-J.

McCarty
1852 Johannes

McCeney
1852 Theophilus

McCauley
1847 Jacobtcs-A.

McClanahan
1788 Jacobus

McClean
1788 Jacobus

McClelland
1795 Thomas
a 1830 Alexander

McClintock
a 1859 Johannes

McClure
1802
1824
1827
1845

Johannes
Carolus
Gulielmus-B.
Johannes

McConaughy
1792 David

McCormick

a 1792 Jacobus
a 1810 Jacobus
1812 Jacobus

McCoskry
1815 Carolus-N.
1824 Samuel-A.

McCulloch
1825 Johannes-W.
1829 Samuel

McCurdy
1862 Daniel-W.

McCurley
1862 Isaacus

McDowel
1792 Maxwell
1863 Gulielmus-L.

McEnally
1845 Josephus-B.

McFarland
a 1861 Georgius-F.

55

1824 Isaacus
1825 Gulielmus-D.

McIntyre
1847 Carolus-J.-T.
1863 Ben-P.

McJimsey
1792 Johannes

McKeehan

'

1787 David

McKesson
1792 Johannes

McKim
1828 Jacobus-M.
1830 Johannes-L.

McKinley
1823 Daniel

McKenney
1814 Mordekias
1829 Johannes-C.

McKnight
1792 Jacobus

McLanahan
1827 Jacobus-X.

McLelland
1829 Robertus

McLeod

McFarlane

a 1831 Alexander
a 1834 I.-N.

1813 Gulielmus
a 1829 Alexander

McMurtrie

McGavock
1794 Randolph

McGill
1794 Jacobus

McGilvray
1851 Gulielmus-B.

McGinley
1798 Amos-A.

McGinnis
1831 Armstrong

McGraw
a 1826 Jacobus

McGuire

1 1837 Robertus-A.

McNeil ey
1813 Jacobus-G.

McPherrin
1788 Johannes

McPherson
1812
1829
1843
1858

Gulielmus-S.
Gulielmus-S.
Robertus
Samuel-M.

Meade
1829 Philippus-N.

Medairy
1849 Johannes-G.

a 1848 Hugh-H.
a 1848 Henricus-G.

Melson

Mcllvaine

Mercer

1809 Gulielmus

1853 Jonathan-J.
1813 Gulielmus-D.

�INDEX CATALOGI DICKINSONIENSIS.

56

Merrick
1859 Gulielmus-W.

Milby
1839 Arthurus-W.

Milbourne
1855 Sewell-T.

Miller
1808 Jacobus-H.
1842 Archer-G.

Mitchell
1798 Gulielmus

Monteith
1798 Alexander

Montgomery
1797 Moses
1824 Samuel

Moore
1792 Johannes
1795 Andreas
1838 Thomas-V.
1841 Carson-C.
a 1853 Thomas- V.

More
1789 Jacobus

Morgan
a 1849 Josephus-A.
a 1845 Ricardus
a 1858 Littleton-F.

Morris
1823 Johannes- G.
1842 Robertus-F.

Motter
1862 Georgius-T.

Muhlenberg
1829 Hiester-H.
1840 Henricus-A.

Mullin
1858 Alfredus F.

Munroe
1855 Johannes-A.
1861 Henrieus-S.

Musselman
1851 Amos-F.

Myers
1 1838 Johannes-J.
1851 Philippus

Nabb
1815 Georgius-W.

Nadal
1848 Bernardus-H.
a 1857 Bernardus-H.

Neal
a 1802 Jacobus-A.

Neff
1861 Carolus-W.

Neide
1828 Josephus-C.

Neill
1827 Gulielmus-W.

Nelson
1829 Gulielmus-F.

Neville
a 1847 Edvardus

Nevin
1795 Johannes
1827 Gulielmus-M.
1 1837 Alfredus

Newton

Palmer
1829 Jacobus-C.

Parke
1809 Samuel

Parker
1824 Andreas
1837 Gulielmus-B.
1 1839 Johannes-B.
1844 Thomas-B.
1859 Isaacus-B.
1859 Thomas-S.
1860 Josephus-B.

Parrott
1849 Marcus-J.

Parsons
1856 Gulielmus M.

Passmore
1795 Johannes

Patten
1794 Gulielmus

a 1842 Robertus

Patterson

Nisbet

1802
1824
1829
1859
a 1855

1794 Alexander

Noland
1794 Gulielmus
1809 Lloyd

Norris
1824 Gulielmus

Nourse
1824 Jacobus
Nyce
1829 Benjamin-M.

Ogden
1813 Isaacus-A.

Ogilby
1862 Gulielmus-M.

O’Neil
1803 Johannes

O’Neill
1840 Carolus

Orbison
1 1835 Gulielmus-P.

Owens
1830 Johannes

Page
1816 Johannes-E.

Gulielmus
Matthceus-B.
Johannes-B.
Jacobus-J.
Stearns

Pattison
1842 Johannes-R.
1843 Robertus-H.

Patton
1812 Robertus
1828 Benjamin

Paxton
a 1826 Gulielm/us

Peach
1852 Sa.muel-H.
1854 Johannes

Peachey
1790 Thomas-G.

Peacock
1841 Bannister-G.

Peale
1850 Samuel-R.

Peck
1852 Jonathan-K.

Pennewill
1851 Caleb-S.

�INDEX CATALOGI DICKINSONIENSIS.

■ Penrose
1844 Gulielmus-M.
1846 Ricardus-A.-F.

Penuel
1859 Clayton-C.

Perrie
1854 Josephus-B.
1857 Gulielmus-F.

Perry
a 1855 Jacobus-H.

Pfeiffer
1854 Henrieus-H.

Phelps
1846 Johannes-A.

Phillips
1840 Johannes

Pierce
1810 Paulus-S.
1852 Ralph

Piper
1815 Alder

Pitcher
1863 Edvinus-F.

Pittman
1838 Carolus-W.

Points
1864 Moses-A.

Pollock
1828 Samuel

Postleth waite
1792 Jacobus

Potter
1812 Georgius-L.

Potts
1843 Jonas-J.

Poulson
1826 Robertus-I.

Powel
1814 Humphredus-B.
1844 Samuel-I.

Preston
1799 Johannes

Prettyman
1848 Elijah-B.

Price
1827 Johannes-H.
a 1830 Gulielmus-H.

Rheem

Pringle
1806 David
1808 Franciscus
1808 Jacobus

Procter
1839 Johannes-O.

Proudfit
1798 Robertus

Pue
1859 Jacobus-A.-V.

Pursel
1857 Benjamin-F.

Purviance
1790 Johannes

Purvis

1853 Gulielmus-C.

Rh einhart
1855 Georgius-P.

Rhodes
1838 Josephus-C.

Rickets
1853 Agib

Riddle
1812 Jacobus-D.

Rider
1842 T.-W.-P.
1850 Granville-R.

Ridgaway
1849 Henriczts-B.

1856 Jacobus-F.

Putnam
1797 Edvinus

Rainey
1798 Gulielmus

Ralston
1813 Robertus

Ramsey
1810 Samuel-D.
1824 Mattheeus-V.-L.
1 1840 Alexander

Randolph
1814 Ricardus-R.

Rawlings
1848 Samuel-A.

Read
1811 Thomas-M.

Reed

Ridgely
1797 Henricus-M.

Ritchie
1828 Edvardus
1853 Albertus

Robinson
1847 Johannes-M.

Roe
1839 Gulielmus-F.

Rohrer
1851 Martin-T.
1853 David-F.

Ross
1792 Carolus
1828 Baker-J.

Rounds
a 1854 Nelson

Rule
a 1855 Gulielmus-H..

a 1830 Johannes
1841 Johannes-H.
1851 Gulielmus-C.-F.

Rusling

Reese

Russell

1858 Thomas-S.

Reid

1806 Andreas-K.

Salkeld

1795 Georgius

Reubelt
a 1855 J.-A.

Reynolds
1792
1825
11840
1850

1854 Jacobus-F.

Samuel
Johannes-C.
Hugo-W.
Samuel-H.

a 1847 Joseph

Sanders
1860 Jacobus-W.

Sanderson
1789 Alexander

Sassaman
1855 Augustus-S.

57

�INDEX CATALOGI DICKINSONIENSIS.

58

Speake

Sims

Sawyer

1840 Johannes-M. ’
1846 Alfredus-G.

1853 Augustus-M.

Schoonmaker

Sinclair

a 1831 Jacobus

1788 Matthaus

Scott

Slape

Scouler

Slavens

1858 Albertus-H.
1859 Duke

Sellers
1861 Franciscus-B.

Sellman
1850 Ricardus-D.

Semple
1787 Steel

'

Sergeant
a 1826 Johannes

Sewell
1848 Jacobus-G.
a 1862 Thomas

Seymour
1853 Edmundus-B.
a 1856 Edvardus-C.

Shapley
I860 Rufus-E.

Sharon
1803 Jacobus

Sharp

Slaymaker
1808 Jasper
1829Jacobus-A.
1838Amos
a 1860 Henricus

Robertus
Austin
Jacobus
Johannes
Thomas-B.
Jacobus
Digby-D.-B.
Samuel
Abrahamus-H.
Henricus-G.
Gulielmus-S.

Smithers
1 1840 Nathan-B.

Smyser

Sharretts

Snively

Shearer
1853 Jacobus-M.

Sherlock
1852 Thomas

Shipley
1860 J.-Lester

Shippen
1790 Johannes
1808 Henricus

Shock
a 1862 Gulielmus-H.

Shoemaker
a 1862 Benjamin

Shreve
I860 Ricardus-S.

1827 Matthseus

Spcering
1814Carolus-F.

S,phon
1824 Paris
1841Wilson-L.

Sprigg

Smith

1815 Gulielmus-M.
1 1840 Thomas-C.

1825 Nicholas-G.

Spencer

Spottswood

Slicer
1790
1792
1792
1806
1810
1816
1823
1824
1840
1849
1864

1 1842 Carroll

Speer
1788 Gulielmus

1789 Jacobus
a 1806 Thomas

1839 Jacobus-B.

1863 Henricus-C.

Spence

1827 Daniel-M.

1852 Gulielmus-A.
1857 Josephus-C.

Snow
1843 Josias
1848 Benjamin

1795 Gulielmus

Stamm
1860 Johannes-®.

Stayman
1841 Johannes-K.

Steel
1792 Andreas
1792 Gulielmus
1792 Johannes

Sterret
1795 Gulielmus

Sterritt
1827 Alexander-M.

Stevens
1845 Johannes-H.

Stevenson
1800 Georgius
1858 Gulielmus- T.

Stewart

a 1790 Nathaniel-R.

1805 Georgius
1 1840 Gulielmus-M.
1841 Gulielmus-H.

Snyder

Stinson

Snowden
1814 Jacobus
1861 Carolus-R.

Somerville
1813 Jacobus

Sparrow
1850 Ludovicus

Spayd
1829 Johannes-C.

1845 Carolus-H.

Stockton
1798 Thomas

Stone
1854 Alfredus-C.
1859 David-D.

Storm
1861 Johannes-B.

�INDEX CATALOGI DICKINSONIENSIS.

Townsend

Stout
1841 Edvardus

Stuart
1795 Gulielmus
1816 Gulielmus

Sudler
a 1840 Thomas-Emory

Supplee
a 1861 Enoch-H.

Sweeny
1815 Georgius

Sweet
1837 Joshua

Sykes
1812 Jacobus

Taney
1795 Rogerus-Brooke

Taylor
1812 Jesse
1825 Robertus-E.
a 1831 Rogerus-Brooke

Temple
1840 Jacobus-Norton

Thomas
1815
1849
1848
1851

Gulielmus
Jacobus-H.
Thomas
Jacobus-S.

Thompson
1790 Johannes
1797 Jacobus
1828 Gulielmus-J.
1838 Jacobus-McF.
1850. Dugald

Tiffany
1844 Otis-H.
1850 Carolus-C.
a 1859 Otis-H.

Tilghman
1841 Carolus-H.

Tingle
1814 Gulielmus

Tizzard
1841 Augustus-B.

Todd
1792 Johannes
1839 Lemuel

Torbert
1855 Henricus-R.

1856 Adamus-E.

Toy
1839 Gulielmus

Travers
1812 Georgius

Tucker
1855 Johannes-S.

Troxel
1856- Jacobus-W.

Tudor
1850 GulielmusVan B.

Tyler
1814 Johannes-F.

Urn er
1845 Isaac-N.

Van Arsdale
a 1845 A.-C.

Van-Bibber
1829 Isaacus

Van-Cleef
1823 Cornelius

Vanhorn
1828 Jacobus

Vansant
1850 Simpson-T.

V eazey
1811 Thomas-B.
1839 Georgius-Ross

Vethake
a 1827 Johannes-W.

Vickroy

59

Walston
1856 Gulielmus-B.

Walton
1847 Moses
1854 David-H.

Warfield
1859 Josua D.

Waters
1838 Gulielmus-S.
1849 Johannes-H.
1856 Jacobus-D.

Watson
a 1814 Gulielmus

Watts
1787 David
1824 Henricus-M.

Waugh

|

1798 Johannes
1845 Beverly-R.

Wayne
1792 Isaacus

Woesche
1849 Georgius-W.

Webster
1847 Edvinus-H.

Weech
1858 Gulielmus-T.-L.

Weems
1855 Henricus-Y.

Weir
1862 Alfredus-N.

Weller
1852 Johannes

Welty

a 1860 T.-R.

a 1856 Elias

Waddell

West

j?1792 Jacobus

Wade
1855 Jacobus-D.

Wakeman
Z 1841 Edgar-B.

Walker
1787 Jonathan
1814 Stephanus-Duncan

Wallace
1840 Jacobus

1827 Franciscus

Wharton
1794 Austin
1794 Jesse

Whisner
I860 Petrus-H.

White
1802
1828
1841
1854
1858

Crawford
Natlian-G.
Gulielmus-B.
Marcus
Johannes-J.

�- (
INDEX CA^LOGI DICKINSONIENSIS.

^.60

Wilson

Whitehead
1823 'Carolus

Whitehill
1792 Robertas
1825 Georgius-S.

Whitney
1843.Gulielmus-L.

Wicks a 1844 Gulielmus

Wing

Wilcox
1857

Andreas-J.

Wiley
a 1858 Isaacus-W.

Wilkins
1816 Ross
1842 Carolus-P.

Willey
1862 Gulielmus-P.

Williams
1795
1795
1823
1825

.'

Josias
JoSua
Gulielmus-H.
Thomas

Williamson
1799
1808
1809
1824

Stewart
Johannes
Gulielmus y ‘
Moses

Willis
1815 David

1790 Robertus-G.
1792 Johannes
1798 Henricus-R.
1848 Johannes
1848 Henricus-M.
1850Gulielmus-C.
1852 Josephus-B.
1855Archibaldus-G.
1855 Thomas

1798
1838
1839
1842
I 1842
1848
1858
1859

Johannes
Johannes-A.
Thomas
Benjamin J?.
Thomas
Archibald-W. '
Josephus-P.
Johannes-W.

Wylie
a 1816 Samuel-Brown

a 1857 Conway-R.
1864 Theodorus-T.

Wingard
1847 Samuel C.

Winner
1848 Johannes-O.

Woods
1792
1802
1814
1859

Wright

Gulielmus
Samuel
Jacobus
David-S.

Woodward
1838 Gulielmus-R.
1843 Leonidas

Wootton
1813 Ricardus

Work
1795 Edvardus

Worthington
1812 Gulielmus-M.

Yocum
1860 Seth-Y.

Young
1788
1813
1823
1843
1848

Johannes
Gulielmus
Johannes-C.
Gulielmus-S.
Carolus-B.

Zcheigner
a 1855 Carolus-H.

Zeigler
1864 Josephus-B.

Zell
1809 Jacob

Zimmerman
1859 Georgius-H.
1861 Gulielmus-H.

zug
1837

Johannes
I 1840 Johannes

a

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                    <text>Dickinson College.
THE HISTORY OF A HUNDRED YEARS.
ALUMNI ORATION
DELIVERED AT THE

Centennial Commencement of the College,
Wednesday, July 27TH, 1883,

at 8 P. M.,

BY THE

Rev. Geo. R. Crooks, D. D., LL. D.,
Professor of Church History in Drew Theological Seminary,
Madison, New Jersey.

��PREFATORY NOTE.
In response to the wish of many who heard the address of
Dr. Crooks to have it in permanent form, as also in the interest
of the College, he consented, on request, to allow its publication.
It adds to our satisfaction in sending it forth, that many, not
favored to take 'part in the Centennial Commemoration may
thus have some compensation for their loss. While for the
former its perusal will renew the memory of a great pleasure,
for the latter it will at least instance and type the good things
which sons and friends prepared in honor of that event. The
College, too, will thereby profit, for its history of a hundred
years is the record of such heroic striving and honorable
achievement that it must, in the measure it is known, turn to
its advantage.
The address itself is every way admirable. The story of “
Dickinson has not before been told so fully or so well. To
begin with, there was evidently wide and painstaking research.
Every accessible source of information seems to have been laid
under contribution. From early local annals, from biographies
of men conspicuous in founding and fostering the College or in
conducting its operations, and from records of legislation, were
gathered the facts which so enrich the narrative. Especially
was Dr. Crooks favored in having access to a large collection of
manuscript letters preserved in the Ridgway Library of Phila­
delphia, in large part the correspondence of Dr. Rush and
Dr. Nisbet, having immediate reference to the history of the
College, and now first availed of in making up the record of its
history.
Though not of special relevance to the address, it yet may be
of interest to its readers to state the result of efforts made to
strengthen the resources of the College. On adopting plans for
the Centennial Commemoration, the trustees expressed the
(3)

�4

judgment that the securing of One Hundred and Fifty
Thousand Dollars was the least amount at which the effort
ought to aim; two-thirds of this sum to be for increase of
endowment, and one-third for the erection of a building for
general college purposes. The noble gift of $30,000 by­
Mr. Thomas Beaver, of Danville, Pa., and, shortly after, that,
equally noble, of the Rev. David H. Carroll, D. D., of Baltimore,
Md., of $10,000, both for the first of the designated objects,
greatly cheered those on whom lay the burden of solicitation.
Other donations of smaller amount, but in equal witness of
good-will, had at the date of the Commemoration increased the
aggregate to upwards of $45,000. In the annual meeting of
the trustees at the time of this event, order was taken for the
special appropriation of $20,000 to the erection of a building
for scientific purposes, and thereupon this amount was subscribed,
nearly all by members of the Board. At the social reunion on
the afternoon of the same day, on a proposition to endow a
professorship in honor of Dr. John McClintock, and to bear his
name, $23,000 were subscribed. Including the sums previously
subscribed and paid on the work of thoroughly renovating
East and West Colleges, the Centennial contributions to the
present time aggregate about $93,000. It will thus be seen
that the College enters on its second century not alone with
cause for glorying in the past, but with auspices of cheer. Like
Paul at Appii Forum, we devoutly feel, to thank God and
take courage.
j. a. McCauley.
Dickinson College, July 18th, 1883.
In a note from Dr. Crooks, received after this prefatory statement was in type, he thus
acknowledges his obligation to this correspondence:—“Many of the facts relative to the
founding of Dickinson College, the author of this address has derived from examination
of the unpublished correspondence of Dr. Benjamin Rush and his friends, now in the
possession of the Ridgway Library of Philadelphia. Through the courtesy of its Librarians
the author has drawn freely from this large storehouse of information and desires here to
express his thanks to them. To other friends who have also supplied original documents,
thanks are due and are here gratefully tendered.”

�Early in July, 1763, Carlisle presented an unwonted aspect.
The fort in its centre, the houses, the streets were filled with
fugitives from the surrounding regions. The Indians, for once
bound together in unity by the eloquence of Pontiac, had begun
the work of murder, and had attacked the settlements of the
frontier from Detroit to the Susquehanna. Carlisle and Bedford
were places of refuge for the panic-stricken inhabitants. Later
in the month Colonel Bouquet set forth from this town, where
we are now assembled, with a little army of five hundred sol­
diers to relieve Fort Pitt. As the Scotch Highlanders marched
out upon the main road westward, the people watched their
receding ranks with many misgivings of their coming fate. In
a few months Bouquet returned victorious to Carlisle, bringing
with him wives and children who had been snatched by the
Indians from their .homes in this valley, but were now restored
again. The many affecting scenes of the restoration, of the
recognition by each other of relatives long parted, have been
much dwelt upon by the local historians of the County of
Cumberland.
This was in 1763. In 1783, just twenty years after, it was
resolved by wise and good men, the leaders of public opinion
in the Commonwealth, to found in this same borough of
Carlisle, so lately one of the frontier posts of civilization, a
school of learning. It was a bold undertaking, and yet it
sagaciously forecasted the future. It was bold, for in the mean­
time the war of the Revolution had followed the war of Pontiac.
The country was exhausted; trade had been deranged by enor­
mous issues of paper money; the thirteen colonies, now states,
loosely held together by the Articles of Confederation, were
without real political unity; Washington had not yet surren­
dered his commission as commander-in-chief of the American
armies; the treaty of peace with Great Britain had not yet
been ratified by Congress. Before, therefore, the country had
adjusted itself to its new position, the founders of Dickinson
(5)

�6
1

College had begun their beneficent task. Indeed, this was, in
their minds, a leading part of the adjustment of the country to
the new conditions of its life. “Whereas,” they declare in the
College charter, “ the happiness and prosperity of every country
depends much on the right education of the youth, who must
succeed the aged in the important offices of society, and the
most exalted nations have acquired their pre-eminence by the
virtuous principles and liberal knowledge instilled into the
minds of the rising generation.
“And, Whereas, After a long and bloody contest with a
great and powerful kingdom, it has pleased Almighty God to
restore to the United States of America the blessings of a general
peace, whereby the good people of this State, relieved from the
burthens of war, are placed in a condition to attend to useful
arts, sciences and literature, &amp;c., &amp;c.
“Be it therefore enacted, That there be erected and hereby is
erected and established in the borough of Carlisle, in the County
of Cumberland, in this State, a college for the education of
youth in the learned and foreign languages, the useful arts,
sciences and literature, the style, name and title of which said
college shall be as is hereafter mentioned and defined.
“That is to say, (1.) In memory of the great and important
services rendered to his country by his Excellency, John Dick­
inson, President of the Supreme Executive Council, and in
commemoration of his very liberal donation to the institution,
the said college shall forever hereafter be called and known by
the name of Dickinson College.”
The “forever” of the charter has thus far been made good,
and after a hundred years of vicissitude the college named of
John Dickinson still stands and welcomes another generation,
here gathered to celebrate with appropriate honors its centennial
day.
At this time Pennsylvania was living under its provisional
constitution framed in 1776; there was as yet no wagon-road
over the Alleghanies, and, not till several years after 1783, a
mail from Philadelphia to Pittsburg. The active mind of Dr.
Benjamin Rush had, however, already conceived the plan of a

�7
complete system of education for the State. In an address to
the Legislature, presented in 1786, he gives its outlines: “Let
there be one university in the State, and let this be established
in the capital (Philadelphia). Let law, physic, divinity, the
law of nature and nations, and economy, &amp;c., be taught in it by
public lectures, in the winter season, after the manner of Euro­
pean universities, and let the professors receive such salaries
from the State as will enable them to deliver their lectures at a
moderate price. Let there be four colleges, one at Philadelphia,
one at Carlisle, a third, for the benefit of our German citizens,
at Lancaster, and a fourth, some years hence, at Pittsburg. In
these colleges let young men be instructed in mathematics,
and in the higher branches of science, in the same manner that
they are now taught in our American colleges. After they
have received a testimonial from one of these colleges, let them,
if they can afford it, complete their studies, spending a season
or two in attending the lectures in the university. Let there
be free schools established in every township or district consist­
ing of one hundred families. By this plan, the whole State will
be tied together by one system of education. The university
will in time furnish masters for the colleges, and the colleges
will furnish masters for the free schools, while the free schools
will in.their turn supply the colleges and the university with
scholars, students and pupils.”
Such was the scheme, broad and comprehensive, of which
Dickinson College was a part. It drew for its realization
largely upon the future; but these men knew themselves to
be the founders of a State and provided intelligently for the
years to come.
Yet it was none the less the purpose of Dr. Rush that the
College should be Presbyterian. In a paper from his pen,
entitled “ Hints for Establishing a College at Carlisle,” dated
Philadelphia, September 3d, 1782, he writes thus: “Every re­
ligious society should endeavor to preserve a representation of
itself in government. The Presbyterians suffered greatly under
the old government from the want of this representation. At
present they hold an undue share in the power of Pennsylvania.

�8
They have already excited the jealousy of other societies, and
powerful combinations are forming against them. To secure a
moderate and just share of the power of the State, it becomes
them to retire a little from office, and to invite other societies to
partake of these with them. To prevent the effect of these com­
binations against them, reducing them to their ancient state of
oppression and insignificance, it becomes them above all things
to entrench themselves in schools of learning. These are the
true nurseries of power and influence. In the present pleni­
tude of the power of the Presbyterians let them obtain a charter
for a college in Carlisle. The advantages of a college at Carlisle
are:—1. It will draw the Presbyterians to one common centre
of union. 2. It will be nearly central to the State, and will
command the youth of the new and growing western counties
and perhaps states. Let all the trustees, as well as the principal
of the college and its professors, be Presbyterians. This will
be necessary in order to connect religion and learning; in the
present constitution of things religion cannot be inculcated
without a system or form of some kind.” In accord with
this scheme a petition to the Legislature was drawn up and
signed by sundry inhabitants of Cumberland County, asking
for a college charter. Among the signers are Blair, Snodgrass,
Johnston, Gordon, McMillan and James Crooks.
In all the movement to prepare the way for the securing of
a charter, as well as in the care of the college, after the charter
was granted, Dr. Rush was the master spirit. He writes to
Montgomery, to Armstrong, to the leaders of the Presbytery of
Carlisle, he conducts the negotiations with Dr. Nisbet, he wel­
comes Nisbet to America, he sends forward suggestions to Car­
lisle for the proper reception of the principal of the college
there, he procures subscriptions to the funds, books, philosophi­
cal apparatus, cheers the despondent, urges on every measure of
progress, and ceases not in his labor of love until death. May
20th, 1783, he issues a paper entitled “ Reasons Against Founding
a College at Carlisle,” intended to meet with irony the sectarian
opposition to the obtaining of a charter. Among the reasons is
the following: “A college at Carlisle, from its situation, will

�9
necessarily fall into the hands of the Presbyterians, who are a
most intolerant set of people, and who should not be permitted
to herd together, lest they should awaken the jealousies of other
religious societies, who are at present universally in love with
Presbyterian manners, character and government, insomuch that
in a few years (if Dr. Kush and two or three other hot-headed
fanatics do not prevent it) the whole State, and especially the
Tories and Quakers, will accept the Presbyterian religion.”
Thus the first opposing force encountered by the founders of
the College was sectarian jealousy. Dr. Rush, however, held
firmly to his fundamental principles, that “learning without
religion does real mischief to the morals of mankind,” and that
religion is best supported under the patronage of particular
societies. Ultimately the plans were so far modified that, while
Presbyteriarf control was secured, other religious bodies were
represented, in the Board of Trustees. “The design,” writes
Dr. Rush, March 19th, 1783, “is equally patronized by men of
every political and religious party in the frontier counties of
Pennsylvania. The trustees (who have been named) have been
drawn equally from Constitutionalists and Republicans, from
Old and New Lights. And still farther to remove all jealousies
respecting the Presbyterians, five dr six of the trustees are taken
from the English and Lutheran churches.” Thus, like a wise
general, did Dr. Rush harmonize differences and keep the forces
on which he depended well together. The president of the
State, John Dickinson, a Quaker of the warlike type, was
placed at the head of the Board of Trustees.
In these initial trials of the College Dr. Rush hovered over
it with a watchful, brooding love. He writes to General Mont­
gomery in 1783: “I rejoice to find you in such good spirits
with respect to our College. It will, it must prosper.” His
mind rests, with fondness of recollection, upon the spot where
he and the General first discussed the project. In 1784 he
makes the memorandum: “The first conversation upon the sub­
ject of a college at Carlisle between J. Montgomery and B.
Rush took place at Mr. Bingham’s porch.” Now and then a
letter or a postscript is playfully signed “Bingham’s Porch,” as

�10

though that had been a trysting place where two noble souls
had pledged themselves to each other to do this good work for
the Church and the State. Referring to the opposition encoun­
tered, he writes to Montgomery, near the end of 1784: “I well
remember the inscription over the Foundling Hospital in Paris,—
‘My father and my mother have abandoned me, but the Lord
hath taken care of me.’ Let this be the motto of our college.”
And still again, early in 1785: “Give up our college? God
forbid! No, not if every trustee in the board (half a dozen
excepted) perjured himself by deserting or neglecting his trust.
The reasons and advantages of a college at Carlisle appear the
same to me as they did in the year 1782, when we first pro­
jected it. We must succeed.” His form of speech is suggestive
of deep affection; it is never the college, but “ our collegehe
had taken it to his heart of hearts.
*
As we are here to do honor to the memory of the founders
of Dickinson College, let us pause and dwell for a moment
longer upon the evidences which time has preserved of their
religious spirit. It is customary to contrast the coldness of the
religious life of the eighteenth century with the fervors of the
nineteenth, but the faithful Christians of the former period
fought an unflinching battle with Deism, and among the most
uncompromising in the assertion of their faith were Rush and
Dickinson. “I prefer,” says Dickinson, in a note to the Letters
of Fabius, “the broadcloth of a Locke or a Lardner to the
cobwebs of a Hume or a Gibbon.” “The only foundation,”
says Rush, in his address to the Legislature, “for a useful
education in a republic is laid in religion. The religion I
mean to recommend in this place is the religion of the New
Testament.” In another essay, he defends the use of the Bible
in schools. “The present fashionable practice,” he writes, “of
rejecting the Bible from our schools, I suspect, has originated
with the deists. They discover great ingenuity in their new
method of attacking Christianity. If they proceed in it they
will do more in half a century in extirpating religion, than
Bolingbroke or Voltaire could have effected in a thousand years.”
And then he adds a sentiment which is as useful for the State

�11
of Pennsylvania to-day, as it was a century ago: “ On the ground
of the good old custom of using the Bible as a school-book, it
becomes us to entrench our religion.” The founders of Dickin­
son College had a clear prevision of what would come of the
inroads of the deism, then fashionable; they intended this
school to be a home of New Testament Christianity, and they
embodied their faith in their corporate seal, “Pietate et Doetrina,
tuta Libertas.” In their system of thought, religion and liberty
were connected by the closest ties. “A Christian,” writes Rush,
“ cannot fail of being a republican, for every precept of the Gospel
inculcates those degrees of humility, self-denial and brotherly
kindness which are directly opposed to the pride of monarchy and
the pageants of a court.” The founders of Dickinson College
understood their time; they knew that a great future was before
them, and iff all their thoughts and plans they linked together
that blessed, indissoluble trinity—religion, learning, liberty.
Such were our founders as Christians; the country has for
the century past honored their virtues as patriots. Rush was a
signer of the Declaration of Independence, and but for a doubt
of the expediency of the Declaration at that precise moment,
Dickinson would have been also. Dickinson had helped to
prepare the country for separation from Great Britain by his
“Farmer’s Letters.” Writing under the guise of a prosperous
cultivator of the soil, he so won the people by his argument
that every letter was hailed with expressions of joy. There
are passages in these immortal writings of Demosthenic vigor.
In all the productions of his pen given to the country during the
Revolutionary period, Dickinson is fully abreast of Jefferson
himself; in cogency of reasoning and in fiery appeal he is
second to no man of his time. The conclusion of the Farmer’s
seventh letter sounds like a trumpet peal: “ These duties which
will inevitably be levied upon us are expressly levied for the
sole purpose of taking money. This is the definition of taxes.
They are therefore taxes. The money is to be taken from us.
We are therefore taxed. Those who are taxed without their
consent, expressed by themselves or their representatives, are
slaves. We are taxed without our own consent, expressed by

�12

ourselves or by our representatives. We are, therefore, slaves«2
With such lucid statement the people could not fail to compre­
hend what taxation by the British Crown meant. But more
stirring still, and equalling the Declaration of Independence in
vigor, was the Declaration of the Colonies drawn up by Dick­
inson, and adopted July 6th, 1775, in which were set forth the
causes and the necessity of taking up arms. “We are reduced,”
says this memorable paper, “to the alternative of making an
unconditional submission to the tyranny of irritated ministers
or resistance by force. The latter is our choice. We have
COUNTED THE COST OF THE CONTEST AND FIND NOTHING SO

slavery.
Honor, peace and
humanity forbid us tamely to surrender that freedom which
we have received from our gallant ancestors, and which our
innocent posterity have a right to receive from us. We cannot
endure the infamy of resigning succeeding generations to that

dreadful as voluntary

~i)

wretchedness which inevitably awaits them if we basely entail
hereditary bondage upon them. With hearts fortified by these
animating reflections, we most solemnly before God and the
world declare, that, exerting the utmost energy of those powers
which our beneficent Creator hath graciously bestowed upon
us, the arms we have been compelled by our enemies to assume
we will, in defiance of every hazard, with unabating firmness,
employ for the preservation of our liberties, being with one mind
resolved to die freemen, rather than to live slaves.” When this
Declaration was read to Putnam’s division of the Continental
army, on Prospect Hill, near Boston, “they shouted,” says the
historian, “in three huzzas, a loud Amen.” Thus did Dickinson
point the meaning of the spirit of resistance which had shown
the first pulsations of its vigor in the battle of Bunker Hill,
three weeks before.
But there was a beginning before this beginning. Our
founders had a spiritual ancestry which should be named with
reverence to-day. Princeton, Dickinson, Jefferson, Hampden
Sydney, and Washington Colleges are all the fruits of a little
seed sowed in the soil of Pennsylvania, the early part of the
eighteenth century. They are the progeny of the Log College,

�13

established in Bucks County by the elder Tennent. Let us
gather together the elements of this picture. Mr. Tennent, a
native of Ireland and a thoroughly trained classical scholar,
settled in Neshaminy, about twenty miles north of Philadel­
phia, in the year 1726. Solicitous for the training of ministers
to serve the Presbyterian churches, he built near by his home, a
log house, and there taught sacred and classical learning to the
end of his life. Hither came Whitefield, who found in Tennent
a congenial spirit. “ The place,” writes Whitefield, in his journal,
“ is, in contempt, called the College. It is a log house, about
twenty feet long, and as many broad; and to me it seemed to
resemble the schools of the old prophets, for their habitations
were mean; and that they sought not great things for themselves
is plain from those passages of Scripture wherein we are told
that each of them took a beam to build them a house.” Hither
too came Beatty, afterwards a founder of Princeton, carrying
his pedlar’s pack, and astonishing the head of the college, by
addressing him in correct Latin. Hither came Samuel Blair,
who, entering the Presbyterian ministry, followed the example
of his preceptor, and established a school at Fagg’s Manor, in
this State, where he trained the Rev. Samuel Davies, afterwards
president of Princeton. Hither came John Blair, afterwards
vice-president of Princeton, and Professor of Divinity. Hither
too, if tradition may be trusted, came Samuel Finley, who in
turn founded a school in Nottingham, Pennsylvania, where he
educated in the classics Dr. Benjamin Rush, and James Waddell,
famous as “the blind preacher” of Virginia, and ended his life
in the presidency of Princeton. Here were to be found, by
natural right, the sons of the principal, all of them preachers,
and one of them, Gilbert Tennent, the organizer of a Presby­
terian church in Philadelphia, “chiefly composed of those who
were denominated converts and followers of Mr. Whitefield.”
To the school of Samuel Blair, in Fagg’s Manor, came Robert
Smith, who, after entering the ministry of the Presbyterian
Church, founded at Pequea, in Lancaster County, another
school of the prophets, after the model of the Log College.
From this school went forth Samuel Stanhope Smith, the

�14
founder of Hampden Sydney College and Professor of Moral
Philosophy in Princeton, and John Blair Smith, first president
of Union College, Schenectady, New York. From the school
of Blair, at Fagg’s Manor, went John McMillan, the pioneer
of Presbyterianism in Western Pennsylvania and the father
of Jefferson College. These men founded Log Colleges after
the pattern of the humble structure on the Neshaminy.
McMillan trained in his, hard by his home, one hundred
ministers. Joseph Smith, another pioneer of Presbyterianism
in Western Pennsylvania and a graduate of Princeton, opened
his school of the prophets in a kitchen adjoining his dwelling,
cheerfully surrendered by his wife for the purpose. This kitchen
was the seed out of which Jefferson College grew.
Nor did the zeal for learning terminate with the founders of
these schools; their students were as»ardent in devotion to
knowledge as their teachers. While the Hampden Sydney
College building was in preparation, the young men in attend­
ance put up huts and booths for themselves while pursuing
their studies, and sitting on planks construed their Greek and
Latin and worked their problems in Mathematics. Such zeal
carries us back to the days of Abelard and the Paraclete, with
his thousands of students housed in rude huts about his mon­
astery. The Log College graduates and their associates of the
Presbyterian ministry worked with an intensity which rapidly
consumed them. Few of them lived bevond sixty-five years,
many of them died young. They were teachers of classical
and sacred learning, preachers, and men of unfaltering courage
in times of peril. Such was Duffield, whose church at Mona­
han, ten miles from Carlisle, was protected by ramparts, on
which sentinels stood while the congregation worshipped. Such
was Elder, of Paxton and Derry, who preached with his rifle
beside him in the pulpit, and whose congregation were often
attacked by lurking Indians, when on the way from church to
their homes. They were as strong for liberty as they were for
learning and religion. Tt is but simple justice to say that the
Scotch-Irish preachers of Pennsylvania, all of them of the
Presbyterian faith, were the leaders of their people in the

�15

conflict with Great Britain, and the people trained by them were
worthy of their ministers. The men of Cumberland County
were among the first to condemn in public meeting the closing
of the port of Boston by the British Crown. Immediately
after the battle of Lexington, the county mustered fifteen hun­
dred armed men, from which number several companies were
chosen during the summer of 1775 to go to Boston, as a part
of Washington’s army there. “They were,” say the local historian, “men for the times, inured to toil and exposure, stout
and athletic. They were soldiers who could march, when an
emergency required, without tents or baggage-wagons, carrying
their equipments in their knapsacks. With a blanket they
could sleep on the bare earth, with the open air for their apart­
ment, and the sky for their covering. Many of these men are
known to have remained, from that time, in the military service
of their country for years, and some of them till Independence
was acknowledged and the army was disbanded; others had in
other colonies a soldier’s burial and grave.”*
If we have traced this history with clearness, it will have been
seen that from the Log College of Neshaminy proceeded the
Presbyterian Log Colleges which during the Colonial period
dotted the central and western regions of this State. From
the humble school of the elder Tennent also proceeded the
collegiate system of New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and the valley
of Virginia. “The ministers,” says Dr. Archibald Alexander,
“who exerted themselves in the establishment of the New Jersey
College, were all the friends of the Log College, and most of
them had received their training, both in classical and in
theological learning, within the walls of that humble institution.
Besides Dickinson and Burr, who were graduates of Yale, the
other friends and founders of Nassau Hall are the Tennents,
Blairs, Finley, Smith, Rogers, Davies and others, who had
received their education in the Log College, or in schools
instituted by those who had been instructed there.”f
* Tribute to the Irish and Scotch Early Settlers of Pennsylvania, by George Chambers,
page 95.
f The Log College, pages 82-3.

�16

The debt which this country owes to the Scotch-Irish Pres­
byterians has not been understood, much less acknowledged..
They, in their synod which met in Philadelphia in 1775,
were the first religious body “ to declare themselves in favor of
open resistance” to the king; they issued the first Declaration
of Independence, that of Mecklenburg, May 20th, 1775. They
were, as we have seen, the founders of the schools of learning in
the Middle States and, notably, the founders of Dickinson College.
They were rugged men and could handle with equal power the
sword of the spirit and the sword of steel. Aggressive and
indomitable though they were, they were, for all, lovers of peace,
for they knew well that learning and religion thrive best where
peace reigns. Their love of learning was a deep religious
passion, inspired by the desire to furnish to the then new country
a cultured ministry. They carried in their minds the ideal of a
lofty civilization, and amid the rigors of frontier life established
the beginnings of the culture which adorns society in its most
advanced stage. In their plan of life, the fort which warded
off Indian assaults, the Church, and the classical school were
mingled together and contemporary. Compelled by the neces­
sities of their times, they fought with the one hand and built
with the other. Before the sounds of tlAs savage war-whoop
had quite died away, their chosen sons were construing Demos­
thenes in the Greek’, and Moses in the Hebrew. Their history
has as yet been but imperfectly told; but the time will come,
when the Scotch-Irish Presbyterian of Pennsylvania will take
his place alongside of the New England Puritan, as one of the
founders of learning and liberty in the New World. The race
which has given to the country John Witherspoon, Alexander
Hamilton, James Wilson, Andrew Jackson, Robert Fulton,
Horace Greeley, and others of equal or lesser fame, is one whose
memory men cannot willingly let die.
At the precise point of time when Dickinson College was
chartered, John Witherspoon, a Scotchman by birth, a descend­
ant of John Knox, a fellow-student in Edinburgh of Blair
and Robertson, was president of Princeton; John Ewing, an
American Presbyterian of Irish descent, was Provost of the

�17

University of Pennsylvania; John Blair Smith, an American
Presbyterian, also of Irish descent, was president of Hampden
Sydney College in Virginia. Presbyterian preachers, mostly of
Irish lineage, were organizing the schools which, in time, became
Washington and Jefferson Colleges. James Waddell, whom
Wirt has immortalized, Irish born and Log College bred, was
preaching and teaching in Virginia. The shaping of the liberal
culture of the Middle States was in the hands of ScotchIrish Presbyterians. What more natural than that the founders
of Dickinson College should look to Scotland for a principal of
the new school ? Dr. Rush, when a student at Edinburgh, had
negotiated, in 1767, the transfer of Witherspoon to America.
Witherspoon had at first declined the nomination to the presi­
dency of Princeton, and had recommended in his place his
friend, the Rev. Charles Nisbet, “as the fittest man of all his
acquaintance to be the head of a college.” The two were close
friends, Witherspoon being fourteen years the elder. Subse­
quently the refusal, was reconsidered and Witherspoon accepted
the invitation to Nassau Hall, where he lived, from 1768 to
1794, a life of great usefulness and honor. Who should so
readily occur to Dr. Rush in his eager effort to procure a suit­
able head for Dickinson as Dr. Nisbet? One fact recommended
Nisbet: he had, during the war of the Revolution, been a warm
friend of the cause of the Thirteen Colonies; moreover, he be­
longed to the party in the Presbyterianism of Scotland which
most nearly coincided with the New Side party of Presbyterians
in America. At home he had attained great fame as a scholar;
his pupil, Dr. Miller, of Princeton, says of him, that he was
“ regarded as among the most learned men of Scotland.” Even
there he was frequently called “The Walking Library,” an
epithet applied to him as frequently during his life in the United
States. An extraordinary facility in the acquisition of knowl­
edge was supplemented by an equally extraordinary retentive­
ness of memory. Besides being critically versed in Greek,
Latin and Hebrew, he read with facility French, German,
Italian, Spanish and Portuguese. His attainments in theology
made him the peer of the foremost among Scotch theologians.

�18
An affluent wit gave its charm to his conversation, while his
fine social qualities had secured him a circle of choice friends,
among whom were some wearers of lordly titles. In Scotland
he was faultlessly adjusted to his position, a position without
privations, affording useful labors, ample facilities for study and
a life in the midst of all the refinements of culture. To give up
these for the rawness and newness of a life in a nation just born,
a school just chartered, amid associations which could but im­
perfectly replace those left behind him, demanded a largeness
of sacrifice to which he cheerfully yielded his consent, but
which it is clear now, he only imperfectly understood. What­
ever reluctance he may have had to accept the new position was
overcome by the enthusiasm of Dr. Rush, who saw only a smil­
ing future before both the College and the nation. In their
frequent letters to each other, every point was canvassed and
every consideration that could influence the mind of Dr. Nisbet
received ample justice from Dr. Rush’s facile pen. Dr. Rush
had, no doubt, before his mind the career of Nisbet’s friend,
Witherspoon, the scholar, the patriot, the mighty man in word
and deed. Though but eleven years in the Colonies when the
war of the Revolution began, Witherspoon had become an
American of Americans, had signed the Declaration of Inde­
pendence; and had uttered words, so courageous in its defence
that they will be repeated for centuries to come. Peace had
returned and the wise master-builder was wanted again. Dr.
Nisbet was the chosen man.
By the time of Dr. Nisbet’s arrival, the expectations cher­
ished of him by the trustees of the College, had spread through­
out the State. Had he been a prince, or ambassador from
Prance, our friendly ally, his coming could not have created
greater pleasure. I find in the Pennsylvania Gazette, of July
20th, 1785, this description, by a correspondent, of the reception
given him as he approached Carlisle: “On Monday, July 4th,
the Rey. Dr. Charles Nisbet, principal of Dickinson College,
arrived at this place.’ He was met with his family at the
Spring Forge, five miles from the town, by near one hundred
ladies and gentlemen, about two o’clock, when, being introduced

�19

x

to the whole company, they sat down to an elegant entertain­
ment in a bower erected for the purpose. The afternoon was
spent in the most agreeable manner, each of the company seem­
ing to vie with others, in attention and congratulations to the
Doctor and his family. In the evening they all rode into town
together. The next day the Professors of the College conducted
the students in procession to the church, where they were met
by the Doctor and the principal inhabitants of the village.
After the company was seated, Mr. Ross, the Professor of Lan­
guages, rose and delivered a Latin address to the Doctor, con­
gratulating him on his safe arrival, and anticipating the great
advantages to the College and the State from his taking charge
of that institution. This was followed by an English address
to the Doctor by Mr. John Montgomery, Jr., one of the students
of the College. The joy manifested by the whole village in
seeing the completion of their wishes respecting the establish­
ment of the College, by the arrival of Dr. Nisbet may more
easily be conceived than described. Indeed, if we may be
allowed to form a judgment of the future importance of the
College from the great politeness and hospitality with which
the Doctor was received and treated at Lancaster, at Yorktown,
and the whole country through which he passed on his way to
this town, from the Doctor’s abilities, extensive learning and
amiable manners, from the late and rapid increase of the num­
ber of students, and from the natural situation of the College,
there can be little doubt of Dickinson College rivaling in a few
years, both in reputation and in number of students, the oldest
seminaries on the continent.”
A beautiful Idyl! We are for the moment in Arcadia, where
Apollo, god of light, tunes his lute and peace smiles and reigns.
It was the scholar’s triumphal progress, a tribute to learning
by the plain people of the county of Cumberland. Here, too,
Dr. Rush’s active mind had anticipated every possible event.
He had written to his friend Montgomery, “ Would it not be
well to ring the court-house bell on Dr. Nisbet’s arrival?”
The people of the borough did much more, in the way of
showing honor, as we have seen. Dr. Nisbet soon found that

�20
i

whatever was needed to give permanence to the College was yet]
to be done, that its money resources were slender, that he must
encounter all the trials of a builder who has yet to lay his
corner-stone,—in short, that he was in a new world. It is no
disparagement of his many fine qualities to say that he was
not fitted for the work of a pioneer. He was refined, sensitive,
unused to dealing with men of all sorts and conditions. He
was a total stranger to the hardy self-reliance so characteristic of
American life. Unfortunately too, his home was assigned him
at the Barracks, and he was thereby shut out from close contact
with society. The uncurbed Letort Spring at that time over­
flowed the lowlands on either side of its channel. He was
soon prostrated by fever, and while suffering from consequent
low spirits offered his resignation, which was reluctantly accepted.
In his letter of resignation, he says of himself: “ I hope the
/ trustees will consider the great loss I have sustained in health
and circumstances, being without a charge in a distant country,
unable to fulfil or remove myself at my own expense, and
having no benefice to return to.”
The letters of Dr. Nisbet to Dr. Rush during 1785-6 must
have been exasperating to that large-hearted philanthropist.
From the first Dr. Nisbet’s wife and children were dissatisfied. In
the month of his arrival at Carlisle h£ writes to Rush: “My wife
and children are unhappy and laying plans to return to Scot­
land and to convey me thither. I know not where this will
end. Perhaps all emigrants are uneasy for some time, even
when they recover afterwards. When I consider my present
position I am often filled with melancholy, and consider myself
a deposed minister, a deserter of my charge.” He complains
that fever has almost destroyed his memory and weakened the
activity of his other faculties of mind. “Yet,” he adds, “it
perplexes and grieves me to be obliged to leave a people who
are so kind, and among whom I promised myself so much
satisfaction.” By September, 1785, his letters to Dr. Rush
betray much irritation. “The meanest thing I know,” he
writes, “is to decoy a poor man out of a peaceable and estab­
lished station, into a climate like a frying-pan, and then bid him

�21
kill himself if he is the least uneasy.” And in the same month
again: “I only wish to get quietly and as quickly as possible
out of the country.” He negotiated for a ship to carry him
home again; and but for the fact that he would not sail in one
commanded by an Irish captain, would have sailed in the winter
of’85-6. By the spring of 1786 his health had rallied, and he
consented to a re-election. With heroic purpose he addressed
himself to the duties of his position, suppressing his disgust and
showing an example of herculean energy in work. Without
appearing to overtax himself he carried on concurrent lectures
in Moral Philosophy, Logic, Philosophy of the mind, BellesLettres and systematic Theology, teaching after the method of the
Scotch universities, which must have been imperfectly adapted
to the raw and untrained youth under his charge. His lectures,
some of which are preserved in the College and Ridgway
libraries, ranged over the whole field of ancient and modern
learning. To me Dr. Nisbet is most admirable in this, that
under circumstances so depressing he stood manfully to his task,
and remitted not his devotion to the College till death gave him
rest. He saw and spoke freely of the defective condition of
higher education in the United States. In November, 1786,
he presents a formal report to the trustees: “ There are forty
students in the grammar school; besides these, twenty attend
the Professor of Mathemattics, and have begun the study of
Natural Philosophy. The same twenty attend the Professor of
geography, chronology and history as much as their attend­
ance on the other classes will permit, and lately began the study
of Logic and Metaphysics as a preparation for that of Moral
Philosophy. The students are in great want of books, as none
fit for their use are sold here.” From these facts Dr. Nisbet
draws an unfavorable augury of the future of the College, and
expresses the opinion that the academy at York, and the gram­
mar school at Hagerstown “already surpass it in popularity.”
From his letters to his intimate friend, Judge Allison, of Pitts­
burg, we also get glimpses of his inner feelings and the hardy
courage with which he held on his way. Writing to the Judge
in 1792, he gives this account of himself: “My occupation is

�22

/

to read lectures on Logic, Metaphysics and Moral Philosophy, to
which I premise a short account of the Greek and Latin classics,
a course of lectures on the History of Philosophy and another
on Criticism. I sometimes explain a classic critically in the
beginning, before the class is fully assembled. We have a sort
of four classes, though as most of our students are at their own
disposal, they attend several at the same time. You may be sure
our lectures are very imperfect, for we are yet in the day of
small things. I have only mentioned this summary for your
own private satisfaction, as I would not wish it to be known in
Scotland what poor doings we are about in America.”
All this must have been depressing to the trustees, yet Dr.
Rush was not depressed. No lack of good fortune could chill
the fervor of his zeal. He knew that America was not Europe,
and that there must be seed sowing and culture before the
harvest is gathered in. The resignation and discontent of Dr.
Nisbet were a heavy blow to him, but he bated not one jot of
heart or hope. Unquestionably Dr. Nisbet was a century in
advance of his fellow-citizens here; it has required the century
to enable us to reach the ideal he had in his mind. Princeton
is just founding her school of philosophy; the University of
Pennsylvania is becoming more and more a true university;
the Johns Hopkins School would not have been possible even
fifty years ago. Dr. Nisbet was harassed, too, by the narrow
views of higher education held by many of the trustees whom
he served. If he chafed under the hard necessities of his posi­
tion, it was very human. Let us to-day do honor to his memory,
and resolve not to rest till the College is made all he wished it
to be.
Though, in its administration, Presbyterian, Dickinson College
was not distinctively a church institution. It was founded for
the benefit of the State, and to the State its founders looked for
aid. Pennsylvania was then an inchoate commonwealth; it had
been for nearly a century governed jointly by a popular assem­
bly and the representatives of the descendants of Penn. Carlisle
had been surveyed and laid out under proprietary authority; at
that time all the region westward of the new borough, was liter­

�23

,

ally Penn’s woods. The State was poor, yet out of its poverty
it gave help to this school of learning, whose life was to be
interwoven with its own destinies. The grant of the charter
was soon followed by a gift of money and of ten thousand
acres of land; before the close of the century still other gifts
followed. In 1826, in a season of dire extremity for the College,
the legislature voted a grant of $3000 yearly for seven years.
Without being committed by any pledge or covenant to the
support of Dickinson, Pennsylvania was its fosterer, and for all
that the good old Commonwealth has done for us we desire to
record our grateful thanks on this centennial day. That the
bond between the State and College was intended to be close is
seen in the history of the period. The language of the charter
shows it, the oath taken under the charter by every trustee to
be true and faithful to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
shows it, the constant reference of the founders of the College
to its influence on the State’s future shows it. Rush, in all
his planning for higher culture, was planning for the rearing of
great citizens for a great commonwealth. His ideal was a loftier
one than we have yet reached, but the service of the State gave
his ideal color and form. In his essay, addressed to the legis­
lature, on “ The Modes of Education Proper for a Republic,” he
speaks with the loftiness of a seer: “Let our pupil be taught
that he does not belong to himself but that he is public property.
Let him be taught to love his family, but let him be taught at
the same time, that he must forsake and even forget them when
the welfare of his country requires it. He must watch for the
State as if its liberties depended on his vigilance alone, but he
must do this in such a manner as not to defraud his creditors
or neglect his family. He must love private life, but he must
decline no station, however public or responsible it may be, when
called to it by the suffrages of his fellow-citizens. He must love
popularity, but he must despise it when set in competition with
the dictates of his judgment or the real interests of his country.
He must love character and must have a due sense of injuries, but
he must be taught to appeal only to the laws of the State to
defend the one, and punish the other. He must love family

�24

honor, but he must be taught that neither the rank nor the
antiquity of his ancestors can command respect without personal
merit. He must avoid neutrality on all questions that divide
the State, but he must shun the rage and acrimony of party
spirit. He must be taught to love his fellow-creatures in every
part of the world, but he must cherish with a more intense and
peculiar affection the citizens of Pennsylvania and the United
States.”
We have departed far from this ideal, but it may do us good
to gaze on it for a moment. We have been in some respects,
during the century, narrower than Rush and Dickinson and
their coadjutors, but we are broadening our views again.
Their scheme was impracticable; it was not possible even for
good men in a board of college trustees to rid themselves of
political and sectarian jealousies. The care of higher education
has passed from the State to the churches, and instead of a State
we have a churchly system. Nothing less than this change
could satisfy the intense religious spirit of our c^itury. We
have gained- much thereby and perhaps have lost something.
The growth of a true university system has no doubt been
retarded, but the moral and religious culture of young men
has been more certainly assured. The gifts of single citizens
for higher learning have reached a largeness which the State
could not possibly have reached a century ago, and which the
State even now does not emulate. We look now to private
bounty to do what the State did but imperfectly when Dick­
inson received its charter, and we do not look in vain; Some­
thing has been lost, however, of the fervor of citizenship, of the
sense of obligation to enter into the service of the State, of the
recognition of the claims of public duty upon all cultured men.
Our ideal and that of our fathers are similar but not the same.
They would build up the citizen; we, the man. They were
intensely political; we, except in great crises of fate, everything
but political. They dreamed the dream of a common people
swayed by the educated few; we have realized the fact of a
common people thinking for themselves, and deciding of them-j
selves, the State’s destiny. Perhaps the true mean will be found,

�25

in time, between our fathers’ scheme of life and that of their
sons. At all events let us be duly thankful to-day to the dear
old Commonwealth, in whose bracing air of freedom our college
has, for a century, lived. For all the help of the State, for all
its loving care of Dickinson College, we desire to-day to record
our gratitude.
In 1798, the present College campus was bought of the Penn
family for one hundred and fifty dollars. Until then, the work
of teaching had been done in a small two-story house on Bedford
Street near Liberty Alley. On the ground thus purchased the
plan, discussed for several years, of erecting a suitable building
was carried into effect. In 1792, Dr. Nisbet had expressed
serious doubts of the expediency of erecting a permanent struc­
ture in Carlisle. He writes to Dr. Rush: “ I have no private
ends to serve in wishing that the students might have proper ac­
commodations, and that the College were in such a situation as
to admit of increase, which, I think, cannot be the case if it is
established in this dirty town, where students must wade through
deep mud several times a day at the risk of their health, and
afterwards be cooped up like pigs, in narrow apartments and
mean houses, and in such numbers in one room as renders it
almost impossible for them to continue their studies.” He is
scandalized by the fact that “in the town there are pools that
could float a boat.” On this point, the trustees thought more
wisely than the College Principal, and the building was erected,
but just at the point of completion it was burned down, Feb­
ruary, 1803. Nassau Hall, Princeton, was destroyed by fire
very shortly before. Dr. Nisbet, who was in this period of his
administration bitter against the trustees, on account of the tardy
payment of the salaries of the faculty, writes of the event to
his friend Judge Allison, in this strain: “You must have heard
that our New College was burned down on the 3d current. We
had been bothered by our trustees to make our College conform
to Princeton College. We have now attained a pretty near con­
formity to it, by having our new building burnt down to the
ground. But it could not stand, as it was founded in fraud and
knavery. I have been meditating on Jeremiah xxiii, 13,—

�26

‘Woe unto him that buildeth his house by unrighteousness, and
his chambers by wrong; that useth his neighbor’s service without
wages, and giveth him not for his work.’ ” In August of the
same year, the corner-stone of a new edifice, the present West
College, was laid. Before its completion Dr. Nisbet died, after
a laborious service of nineteen years, July 18th, 1804. Thus
passed away a noble soul misplaced. Dr. Nisbet must have
often tried Rush’s temper, yet Dr. Rush says of him: “Few
such men have lived and died in any century.” In the midst
of an environment of circumstances, in many ways disagreeable
to him, still he fought the good fight and endured to the end.
Peace to the memory of the great scholar, preacher, theologian,
wit.
In reviewing the history just narrated, so full of the painful
experience of hope deferred, of imperfect sympathies, of honest
but unfortunate antagonisms, we must not fail to do justice to
the good and wise men, who planned and labored for this school
of learning. To Dr. Rush, of all the founders, belongs the
honored name of Father of Dickinson College. What buoyant
hopes were his! What unwavering love for the child of his
affections! In all the labors required, whether the collec­
tion of funds, the choosing of professors, the details of manage­
ment, his energy and zeal were conspicuous above the energy
and zeal of other men. His letters to the trustees, written when
he could not meet them, are full of the loving wisdom which
always wins the affection and support of one’s fellows. “ What­
ever you conclude upon,” he writes in one letter, “shall find in
me the same support, as if it had been proposed by myself. I
have no will of my own in the great work of humanity in
which we are engaged.” And again : “ The difficulties in the
establishment of our College are now nearly at an end. We
have passed the Red Sea and the wilderness. A few of us have
been bitten by the fiery serpents in the way, but the conscious­
ness of pure intentions has soon healed our wounds. We have
now nothing but the shallow waters of Jordan before us. One
more bold exertion will conduct us in safety and triumph to the
great objects of our hopes and wishes.” He appreciated the

�27

inconveniences which the faculty were compelled to bear, in the
narrow quarters where the College work was done, but exhorts
to patience: “The credit of our College will not be impaired
by our professors teaching in the school-house, which is, at
present, occupied by them. The foundation of the reputation of
the College of Princeton was laid in a private room at Newark,
by that great man of God, the Rev. Mr. Burr. It is said that
before the time of the Emperor Constantine, the churches had
wooden pulpits but golden ministers, but after he took Chris­
tianity under his protection, the churches had golden pulpits but
wooden ministers. If we have golden professors, the frugal size
and humble appearance of our College will not prevent its
growth, or injure its reputation for study and useful learning.”
And again: “If there should be any deficiency of patience or
self-denial on the part of the teachers, let it be supplied out of
the stock of the public spirit of the trustees. Let us reflect
that we are doing infinitely less for our posterity than our
ancestors did for us, and that without their sacrifices, we should
never have known the inestimable advantages of religion and
learning. It has pleased God to call us into existence at an
important era. In such eras great men have been formed and
good men have delighted to live. Let us show ourselves worthy
of our present station in the country, and thank God for the
opportunity he has afforded us of imitating the example of the
Saviour of the world, by fresh acts of self-denial and benev­
olence.”
The enthusiasm of Dr. Rush was needed, for dark days were
at hand. Dr. Nisbet was succeeded by the versatile Dr.
Davidson as pro tempore President. Could Dr. Davidson have
been induced to accept the principalship permanently, no doubt
the College would have bounded forward on a prosperous
career; but he preferred his pastorate at Carlisle, and decided to
devote himself wholly to that. The Rev. Jeremiah Atwater
was elected in 1809, and resigned in 1815 in consequence of col­
lisions with the trustees in relation to internal discipline. All
the operations of the College were suspended from 1816 to
1821. During Dr. Atwater’s term of office, the brilliant

�28
Thomas Cooper held the chair of chemistry. It is difficult to
say what Thomas Cooper was not: English-born, and Oxford*]
bred, versed both in medicine and law, companion of French!
Girondists, an antagonist of Edmund Burke, a calico printer, a
practising lawyer, a judge, a college professor and then a college
president, he combined, like Priestley, devotion to physics,
with an accompanying interest in every study that touches
human welfare. His commentary on Justinian was issued
from his study in Carlisle, and may be claimed as one of the
contributions of Dickinson College to literature. His ability
was unquestioned, but his strong political prejudices made his
appointment distasteful to many of the lovers of learning in the
United States.
After an interval of five years, the College was reopened
with Dr. John M. Mason, one of the chiefs of Presbyterianism,
as Principal. It was a condition of his acceptance that he
should select his own Faculty. Henry Vethake became Pro­
fessor of Natural Philosophy and Mathemetics, Alexander
McClelland of Belles-Lettres and Philosophy of the mind,
Joseph Spencer of Languages, and the Rev. Lewis Mayer of
History. This combination promised well, especially as the
State came forward with a grant of $10,000 in five annual pay­
ments. Dr. Mason was in impaired health, having already had
two strokes of paralysis; he had accepted the post of Principal
in the hope that a change of climate and labor would restore
him. His hope was disappointed ; and in 1824 he resigned his
office, and retired wholly from public life. By the appointment
of the Rev. Lewis Mayer to the chair of History, the Theological
Seminary of the German Reformed Church was, for a time, con­
nected with Dickinson College. “This event,” says Dr.
Gerhart, “marked the most important epoch in the history
of the German Reformed Church. It introduced a new ele­
ment of power, which revived its energies, developed its re­
sources, restored its theology, established its character, ex­
tended its influence, and supplied it with able and efficient
ministers.” The combination existed till 1829, when the
Seminary was removed to Mercersburg, where Rauch, and

�29
Nevin, and Schaff made it illustrious. Of Dr. Mason’s faculty
none has left such a tradition of oratorical power as
McClelland. His fame still lingers in Cumberland County.
When announced to preach in the Presbyterian church of the
borough, seats, and aisles, and windows would be packed with
hearers, who listened with rapture to his brilliant rhetoric.
The chronic plague of the institution, the interference of the
trustees with the administration of discipline, still followed all
its steps. In the revised statutes of 1822, it was provided that
in all the cases adjudged by the Faculty to demand dismission or
expulsion, the facts should be presented in writing to the trus­
tees, who alone had authority to determine whether the penalty
should be inflicted. The maintenance of order under such cir­
cumstances was simply impossible.
Another statute sheds
light on the character of the times. It runs in these words:—
“ If any student shall fight or propose to fight a duel, or be in
any way concerned in promoting or abetting it, or in the giving
or accepting a challenge, or shall reproach, traduce or treat
contemptuously any student for having refused to accept a
challenge, he shall be expelled.” One duel, perhaps the only
one in the history of the College, fought in 1815, resulted in
the death of an only son, and this statute was probably a warn­
ing against a repetition of the offence.
The prospects of the College were now dark indeed. The
Rev. Wm. Neill, a native of Western Pennsylvania, a graduate
of Princeton, and a successful Presbyterian pastor, was called to
the presidency. In his autobiography Dr. Neill rehearses his
difficulties with great simplicity and candor. Dr. Mason’s
resignation had shaken public confidence in the fortunes of
Dickinson. Funds were lacking, and only from forty to fifty
students were in attendance. “ An annual allowance,” says Dr.
Neill, “for the term of seven years, from the State treasury, was
obtained by dint of hard pleading and perseverance, by an act
of the Legislature, on condition that a report of the state of the
Institution should be laid before that body yearly, till the ex­
piration of the said term.” Under the new auspices there was
a brief period of prosperity: six professors were chosen, and the

�30

students increased to one hundred in number. But the old
trouble—the interference of the trustees in the administration of
discipline—reappeared. The election of a number of members of
the Board from one Christian denomination raised a cry of
sectarianism, and the affairs of the College were brought before
a committee of the Legislature for investigation ; a rebellion of
the students completely shattered authority. “We never/’ says
Dr. Neill, “recovered from the effects of this insurrection; one
of the remote effects was that the whole Faculty left the College
and it was closed for several years.”
Wearied with the fruitless struggle Dr. Neill resigned in
1829. His successor, the Rev. Samuel B. How, entered on his
duties in 1830. Once more the lovers of the College rallied to
its support. Says the College historian, Professor Himes:
“ A new course of study was made out and fuller statutes. The
Alumni Association issued an address full of encouragement.
Among the signatures of the committee was that of James
Buchanan. At the Commencement of 1830, the procession
moved to the church escorted by a troop of horse and several
companies of volunteers. The Alumni oration was delivered
by William Price, Esq., of Hagerstown, Maryland, and the
question, ‘Would it be expedient for the United States to
establish a national university?’ was discussed by Benjamin
Patten, Esq., and Hon. John Reed.” But the old organic trou­
ble returned to plague all parties. While discussing, in 1832,
changes of the charter the trustees resolved to close the school.
The light went out in darkness.
In tracing this history of alternating hope and disappoint­
ment the causes of disaster have plainly appeared. The first
was the interference of the trustees with the faculty in the
details of government. “The trustees,” says Dr. Neill, “had
too many meetings; the subjects of discipline were always dis­
posed to make their appeal directly or indirectly to the higher
court; and from their ex parte statements of their case, which
they had opportunity of making in families of trustees resident
in the borough, a sympathy was enlisted in their favor and the
authority of the Faculty was put in jeopardy.” The second cause

�31

was sectarian jealousy. Though predominantly, Dickinson Col­
lege was not exclusively Presbyterian. “We had,” says Presi­
dent Npill, “suspicions and contests for pre-eminence. The
hue and cry, sectarianism! religious domination! was used as
a handle by which we were dragged before the legislature of
the State, where a tedious and vexatious investigation was had
without convicting anybody of misdemeanor, for there was no
evidence.” The College lacked unity, and lacking unity it
lacked power.
One practicable course remained, and only one, namely, to
pass the College over to other hands, to make it strictly and
wholly the institution of some one Church. It might, it is true,
have become a State university, but the entire charge of any
school of the higher learning is contrary to the settled policy
of Pennsylvania. During these years of struggle, the Metho­
dists had grown into a great and prosperous body, and Dickin­
son College was offered to them. On March 12th, 1833, the
trustees were summoned to consider a proposal of transfer from
the Baltimore Annual Conference of the Methodist Episcopal
Church. The Philadelphia Conference was soon after associated
with the Baltimore in the negotiations. “The transfer of this
large interest,” says Professor Himes, “to the control of the
Methodist Church was, in the language of the trustees, a proper
expedient for the effectual and direct promotion of the original
design of the founders of the College. A committee with
plenary powers, after carefully considering the subject in sessions
running through a week, reached an affirmative decision. The
mode of transfer was very deliberately considered in all its legal
J aspects, and finally it was regarded as most desirable that it
should be accomplished by the gradual resignation of the trus­
tees then in office, and the election in their stead of those provi­
sionally appointed by the conferences?’
On a beautiful July morning in 1834, the writer of this
address left Philadelphia with his parents for Carlisle. A
journey of a day brought the travellers to Columbia, and another \
of more than half the night by stage, to Harrisburg. Setting
out early the next morning, the tedium of the slow progress was

�32
relieved by the charm of the conversation of Chief Justice
Gibson, who, though unknown to us, was as affable as an old
and cherished acquaintance. What a scene of calm repose lay
before the wondering eyes of the city boy! The old College
graceful in its unadorned simplicity, the budding green of the
newly planted trees of the campus, the haze of the blue that
softened the aspect of the mountains on either side, made a
picture which stamped itself forever on the memory. Nor care,
nor grief, nor toil, nor absence can corrode one of its outlines,
or dim a single tint. Surely this was “the Happy Valley” shut
in and consecrated to quiet meditation and blissful thought!
A school had been opened, and under Alexander F. Dobb, a
thorough drill-master of the English style, boys and youth were
making good progress in the classics. Woodward was already
there, and Rhodes, and Waters, and the Lyons, and the elder
Lamberton, and Knox, and Zug, and others whom I cannot now
name. A sweet homelike feeling pervaded the school, for this
was the blossom time of tender hope. The old tree which had
borne the blasts of half a century was putting forth the promise
of a new fruitage. On the 10th of September, the procession
of President, trustees and scholars was formed and we marched
to the plain old church in Methodist Alley, where Dr. Durbin
delivered his inaugural address. How many such processions
had Carlisle seen, how many openings and reopenings whose
bright promise had faded away into the darkness of the night,
and whose broken hopes had saddened devoted hearts? Would
this one, bald in its simplicity, foretoken success or failure ? It
meant success; not because the new organizers were more tena­
cious of purpose than the old, but because Dickinson College
had now become one in and with itself. Hereafter it was to
have but one spirit; but one purpose, and that avowed; one
source of sustenance, the Church, of which it was to be the
organ. Poverty was before it, trials were before it, but in all
the poverty and all the trials it was understood that Dickinson
College was to live or to die, as it was sustained or not sustained,
by the Methodist Episcopal Church.

�33
,

The two churches, the giver and the receiver of this valuable
property, were not alien from each other. Presbyterianism and
Methodism had been in some measure linked together, in the
preceding century, through the labors of Whitefield. The great
Oxford evangelist and the Tennents had been of one heart and
purpose; the spirit of religious revival of which the one was
the messenger, had broken into the Presbyterian body, and had
produced the excision of the New Brunswick Presbytery, and
the division of Presbyterians into “the Old Side” and “the New
Side.” It is needless to say that the great development of
education in the Middle States was due to the New Side or
revivalist Presbyterians. “We of the Presbyterian Church,”
says Dr. Archibald Alexander, “are more indebted to the men
of the Log College for our evangelical views and our revivals
of religion than we are aware of. By their exertions, and the
blessing of God on their preaching a new spirit was infused
into the Presbyterian body; and their views and sentiments
respecting experimental religion have prevailed more and more,
until at last opposition to genuine revivals of religion is almost
unknown in our Church.” The grandfather and grandmother
of Dr. Archibald Alexander were awakened under the preaching
of Whitefield. In the year 1743 a great revival in Virginia
among the Presbyterians resulted from the reading of a volume
of Whitefield’s sermons brought over to America by a young
Scotchman. Gilbert Tennent, in Philadelphia, and William
Tennent, Jr., in Freehold, propagated Whitefield’s spirit and
were imitators of his earnest evangelism. Though not recog­
nizing the fact, the two churches were kindred, and working
towards the same end,—the spread of the great evangelical revi­
val which had its origin in the early years of the eighteenth
century. Under such conditions and under the liberal policy
of-the new government, Presbyterian and Methodist students
sat side by side as brothers on the same class benches, and
to-day our Alma Mater cherishes the memory of Thomas Verner
Moore as tenderly as that of any son who has borne her name
and done her honor in the world.

�34

The new Board of Trustees had wisely determined not to ,
open the College till $40,000 had been raised for endowment.
By May, 1834, pledges to the amount of $48,000 had been
secured. After a suspension of two years and a half the work
of education began again; with twenty students distributed into
two classes, and with seventy scholars in the grammar school;
by the year 1836 the number of students had increased to one
hundred and two, and in 1837 the first class under the Methodist
administration, represented here to-day by our beloved Bishop
Bowman, was graduated.
Come to me ye memories of long past years, and bring before
me again those beloved, those idolized men, the members of our
first Faculty. I see Emory, the picture of manly vigor, walking
up the chapel aisle and taking the oath of office administered
by Judge Reed. Durbin, whose large, lustrous eyes fascinate the
beholder, reads once more, with slow and measured accent, the
morning lesson from the chapel pulpit, and offers the simple
prayer of childlike faith and trust. Caldwell, the Christian
Aristides, tender and just, sits again in his chair, and with slow
and hesitating speech unfolds the intricacies of mathematics or
clears up a dark point in psychology. McClintock, as radiant
as Apollo and as swift, too, as a beam of light, amazes us by the
energy with which he quickens our minds. Allen, massive in
form and solid as his own New England granite, moves among
us to show us how transcendant power can be blended and inter­
fused with a sunny temper. But what shall I say of him, the
man of genius of that brotherhood, whose lips had been touched
with celestial fire, orator, administrator, the matchless John P.
Durbin I In the class room his conversation was more brilliant
than the text which he explained. His fertile and suggestive
mind wandered from point to point, and we sat exhilarated as
new vistas of truth, one after the other, opened before us. Or
it is Sabbath morning and he occupies his throne, the pulpit.
The text is “ Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him, and
given him a name which is above every name;” the theme, the
humiliation and exaltation of Christ. The first propositions are
so simple that they seem to be truisms, the first manner is so

�35

didactic that but for the composure of the speaker* you would
resent the attempt to fix your attention by such methods. State­
ments are made so obviously convincing that you wonder you had
never thought of them before. He holds you and you cannot
choose but listen. All the time the enchanter is weaving his
spell about you and preparing for the triumphant assertion of
his power. Suddenly, as suddenly as the lightning’s flash, his
vehemence and passion burst upon you. The torrents of feeling
which he had until now sternly repressed, flow forth with
irresistible force. He has made no mistake; he has calculated to
a nicety his possession of your sympathy, and you are borne
along by him whithersoever he will. His port and bearing have
changed; his manner is that of one fully conscious of mastery
over the hearts of his fellows, and his voice, vibrant with
emotion, searches all the recesses of the soul. You are absorbed,
captured, and when all is over you are aware that for a time
you had wholly lost consciousness of yourself.
It abates nothing from these facts that Dr. Durbin’s power as
an orator declined after he had committed himself wholly to
administrative tasks. In his later years he lived among us less
as an orator and more as a statesman;
“With shoulders, fit to bear
The weight of mightiest monarchies.”

He himself never grieved over the change, and welcomed the
men who increased in public favor while he decreased; for he
was careless of fame, solicitous only to do his appointed work
thoroughly well. It was characteristic of him that he destroyed
most of his private papers and forbade the writing of his life.
The members of our first Faculty taught as much by their
virtues as by their formal lessons. They have gone to their
graves. Allen, the last of the company, whom we had hoped
to have with us to-day, has joined his colleagues in the better
land. Of their successors it does not become me in this place to
speak. In 1848 Caldwell and Emory died; McClintock was
called by the Church to another post, and only Allen remained,
to become a few years later President of Girard College. Their

�36

successors, Peck, Baird, Collins and Johnson, and Tiffany, and
Marshall, and Dashiell, and others whom I will not tarry to
name, not forgetting the present distinguished Faculty, con­
ducted the College often in the midst of sore discouragement,
but always with undying faith. They were animated by the
spirit of Rush when he said, in 1783: “Our College, it must,it will prosper.” Since 1834 it has steadily prospered; it has
been loved, not always with a clear vision of its needs, but
still tenderly loved. Through the forbearance of the detachment
of the Confederate army which held Carlisle for several days
during 1863, neither grounds nor buildings were harmed. God
be thanked that when grim-visaged war ruled the hour, this
homage was paid to the mother of us all.
Brothers, my task is done. I have rehearsed, very imper­
fectly to be sure, the story of a hundred years. It is a story of
devotion which, despite many vicissitudes, has not failed of its
object; of the cares and prayers, of the labor and pains of a
succession of strong men, given without stint that this College
might live. Our College is hallowed to us by the aspirations
of patriots who were founders of American liberty; by the
fragrant memories of saints who were beloved in two great
churches. What thoughts have in these hundred years been
turned towards it; what anxieties expended upon it! From
their graves, our fathers call to us to cherish this product of
their heart and brain, of their love for our country and their
love for God. How well, too, has this school vindicated their
wisdom, in the long succession of worthy men who have gone
from it to do their duty in the world. Our mother stands
before us to-day clad with the honors of a century. Sweet
mother! though poor, making many rich. As she has lifted
us up, let us in return give her a queenly seat; her true place
is among the highest, the greatest, the proudest of the schools.
Thus, in ennobling her, we ennoble ourselves; and each of us will
feel a deeper joy in saying, “I, too, am a son of Dickinson.”

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