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Fdoc 3150. /O- as .
HARVARD
COLLEGE
LIBRARY
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REV. zi'T^RD h:t:rccck. I d.il:'.
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BEMINISOBNOES
IRST COLLEGE,
HISTORICAL, SCIENTIFIC, BIOGRAPHICAL AND
AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL:
OF OTHER AND WiDEB LIFE EXPEBIENCES.
(with FOUB FLATB8 ASD A OEOLOGIGAL MAP.)
By EDWARD HITCHCOCK.
NORTHAMPTON, MASS.:
PUBLISHED BT BBIDGMAN & CHILDS.
1863.
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A I
EcLuuii ^icojo.z s"
.-^ty^'
•^0 (;(
Entered according to Act of Congren, in the year 1863,
By Bbidghax A CniLoa,
In the 01oTk*s Offlee of the District Gonrt of the Dbtrlct o£ tf «M«chaaetta»
BOSTON: ,
SnSBOTTPBD AMD PRUrrSD BT W&IOm AMD PORBX.
Ko. 4 Spring Lane.
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At ihe Annual Meeting of the Tnutees of Amherst College, held Joly 7,
186S,
Voted, That the Trastees receive with unaffected satiefiictjon the informa-
tion communicated by Bev. Dr. Hitchcock, that he has prepared copious
Reminiscences relating to the history of this College, with which he has been
so prominently and honorably connected from the oiganization of the Insti-
tution, and that we shall welcome its publication with deep interest and
grateful pleasure.
A true copy of the Record.
Attest: L. BOLTWOOD, Beeretartf.
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PEEFAOE.
I bave now beelii connected with Amherst College during the
whole period of its legal existence, that is, evef since it obtained a
Charter, which was thirty-eight years ago. It had, indeed, com-
menced operations four years earlier, and graduated fifty-three;
but, with perhaps one or two exceptions, I had become acquainted
with them all, as well as with the officers. With the 1,520 who
hare rince graduated, I have of course been acquainted, because I
hare given them all courses of lectures, and heard their recitations
in the department assigned me. For I have never been prevented,
in any year, fitnn giving my assigned course of instruction, either
by sickness or absence. I have also known personally, and as
firiends, every Instructor who has been connected with the College.
I can say the same wiUi respect to all the Trustees, and other per-
sons officially related to the Institution, and with most of the early
and later benevolent individuals who have founded and sustained it
% have also been cc^izant of, and shared in, all the seasons of
prosperity through which it has passed, and during the season of
its deepest pecuniary exigency and its subsequent relief, I was its
responsible head. Professor Snell is the only man living who
has been here as long, for he was appointed Tutor in 1825, and
Fhifessor in 1829.
In view of these facts, the inquiry has often arisen in my mind,
whether it might not be a useful service, and perhaps a duty, to put
upon paper such reminiscences of Amherst College as seem to me
worthy of preservation. For I am sure that I should be able to
give many such, in relation to some of the interests of the College,
that are unknown to others. Till recently, I have been prevented
firom such an effort, by several circumstances. One was the great
pressure of other literary labors. Another was the knowledge,
that the College had in manuscript, a history of the earlier periods
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Yl PREFACE.
of the Institution, by Noah Webster, Esq., and that, within a few
years, Dr. Humphrey had been appointed by the Trustees to prepare
a regular history, and I feared that for me to bring out any thing
on the same subject, unsolicited, might look like interference, and
even presumption. But, having completed, in 1860, a very labo-
rious work, a Report on the Geology of Vermont, and having lei-
sure, I began to put down in my private journal, facts respecting
the College, for the perusal of my children after my decease. But
Providence, having given me more strength during the winter, to
study, my notes have been so multiplied, that the question has
arisen whether I should not offer them to the public while I live, if
I am able to finish them. I have not seen Mr. Webster's or Dr.
Humphrey's Histories, and know nothing about their contents.
But I can hardly suppose there will be much interfbrence between
my Reminiscences and their Histories. I do not profess to give
either a complete history or complete biographies, but only such
facts as I happened to learn, or were connected with my own
experience. Hence I have < at liberty to state many facts which
I should have not thought proper to introduce had I been writing
a history under the direction of the Trustees, nor would it have
been proper fi>r me, in such a case, to have given my opinion as fo
measures, so freely as I have done. As I am alone responsible, I
have felt at liberty to use greater freedom of speech. Even if
many of the leading &cts are the same in my Reminiscences as in
their Histories, I hope my efibrt will not be regarded as useless,
provided I have been able to add numerous facts known only lH
myself. It will probably need other volumes of Reminiscences
before all the facts respecting Amherst College shall be brought
out, which its friends will hereafter regard as worthy of preser-
vation.
If, on any points as to the founding and managing of a College,
I have expressed opinions in which some of my colleagues of the
present Faculty do not agree with me, I trust no one will imagine
that I do not approve of the general policy, both of Trustees and
Faculty. That policy is, indeed, essentially the same as has always
been followed. But I have never known it more successfully car-
ried out than by the present Faculty, nor does it seem to me that
Amherst College ever before had its various departments of instruc-
tion so ably filled as now. If, on a few unimportant points, I may
have expressed different views from theirs, I cannot believe that
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\
PREFACE, VU
any one will regard it as evidence of hostility, or a desire to find
&nlt, or would wish me to withhold suggestions founded on nearly
two-score years of observation. Or if I have shown too much zeal
for those departments to which most of those years have been
devoted, I shall hope that my life-long labors and sacrifices to
make this branch of the College respectable, may plead my apology.
I have now been for months on the bed of sickness, balancing
between life and death. I have, therefore, just sent in to the
Trustees, a resignation of my connection with Amherst College, to
take effect at Commencement, July 9th, at the close of my 38th
collegiate year. The chief remaining objection to the publication
of this 'work viz.': my connection with College, seems to me
therefore to be taken out of the way, for although the Trustees
did not accept my resignation, I have in &ct ceased to have any
connection with the operations of the College.
I trust this book will be found to possess an interest extending
beyond the affairs and particular firiends of Amherst College, for
it contains a large amount of fitcts, anecdotes and principles, drawn
from almost every portion of my life, and ahnost all parts of the
world, as I have intimated on the title-page. The friends of the
College are indeed very numerous and wide spread, but I trust that
general readers will find enough here to repay their attention and
perusaL The publishers are of opinion that my portrait, prefixed
to the work, would add to its interest with very many. I cannot
agree with them in this opinion, and had set myself resolutely
against any thing of the kind, but I yield the point with as good a
grace as I can.
God bless Amherst College, now and in all coming time, with
an connected with it, and all its graduates.
EDWARD KETCHCOCE.
Sept; 1, 1668.
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CONTENTS,
SECTION I.
BlOGBAPHIOAIt KonosSy , 1
SECTION II.
Statistical Histobt, 43
SECTION III.
HuTOBT or Tmi CjuipnsTSy Xiabobatobt and Libeabt, • 71
SECTION ly.
Fdtamoial Hutobt, 117
SECTION V.
HlSTORT OV TSMPBSAKOB JS THB COLLBOE| ... 151
SECTION VI.
Seuoious Hibtobt, .,,,•.., 159
SECTION VII.
SCBNBBT AND GeOLOGT, 211
SECTION VIII.
PbBSONAL HUTOBTy 261
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REMINISCENCES.
SECTION I.
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES.
When I began to put down the following Eeminiscences
of Amherst College as a matter of private reference, I had
no definite plan of arrangement in my mind, expecting, indeed,
that they would be brief and desultory. But as they grew
under my hand they have fisdlen naturally under the following
heads or sections : —
L — ^Biographical Notices*
n. — Statbtical History.
in. — History of the Cabinets, Laboratory and Library.
IV. — Financial History.
V- — History of Temperance in the College.
VL — Religious History.
YU. — Scenery and Geology.
Vniw— Personal History.
The names of the individuals referred to under the first
head, will mostly, though not exclusively, be found upon the
Triennial Catalogue.
Zefhaniah Swift Moore, D. D.
Dr. Moore, the first President, stands at the head. He
had been called in 1815 from the professorship of languages,
in Dartmouth College, to the presidency of Williams College,
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2 REMINISCENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
and he accepted it with the understanding that said college
should be removed to some other part of the Ck)mmonwealth.
He gave his views on that subject in his Inaugural Address,
which (probably for that reason) was never published. As a
majority of the trustees were opposed to its removal, the
subject was allowed to rest for three years, long enough to
convince both parties that they were right. Accordingly,
when the trustees of Amherst Academy pre9ented a memorial
to those of Williams College, an active controversy com-
menced, in which Dr. Moore took as decided a part as was
proper for him in favor oi removal. The effort failed, and
a new College ^as started at Amherst, which invited
Dr. Moore to its presidency. He accepted, and about half
of the students at Williams followed him. It must have
required a good deal of moral courage and strong faith to
induce him to take the lead of so gigantic an enterprise,
environed with so many difficulties, and opposed by so many
enemies. Bat he was the right man to start the new College
honorably and successfully.' His career was short, and
probably his constitution was shattered by the agitations and
perils through which he passed, so that it yielded to a slight
attack of disease. But he was not to be taken unawares, and
before his sickness had devoted his property to the same
object for which the College was founded, viz. : the education
of pious indigent young men. His venerable widow survived
him thirty-eight years ; and though she had full liberty by his
will to use the principal of the $4,000 left to the College, if
necessary to her comfoH, yet so scrupulously anxious was she
that its amount should not be diminished, and that her hus-
band's wishes should be fully carried out, that at her decease
it had increased, I believe, to not less than $7,000. Her
memory, like that of her husband, is a fragrant one at
Amherst, and we are all ready to say, CHve her of the fruit
of her hand* ; and let her aum works praise her in the gates.
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CBOSBT, TAYLOR AND SMITH. 8
Joshua Crosby.
BeT. Joshua Crosby was a quiet, devoted pastor in the
town of Enfield, and in him the new enterprise found a cor-
dial sympathizer. He could not bring splendid talents or
wealth, or a wide influence to aid in it But he could give it
his fervent prayers, his unremitted attention, and its advocacy
in the sphere which he occupied, and these were just the
things most needed in its earlier stages. For seventeen
years did he stand by the institution in every exigency, until
he was called to a higher sphere of duty in another world.
James. Taylor.
The Rev. James Taylor, of Sunderland, was a man of
similar character, and proved alike faithfuL He could always
be depended on, and was never absent from the meetings of
the trustees because difficulties and discouragement hedged
np their path. He lived only eleven years after the organi-
fiUion of the College. But he did not die tiU he had seen his
prayers answered by an influx of more than two hundred
students, giving an earnest of permanence and wide usefulness.
Nathai^iel Smith.
In Mr. Taylor^s parish was a layman of unusual excellence
of religious character, who entered with all his heart into the
new enterprise, as did also his excellent wife, and as they
were possessed of more property than the clerical members
of the Board, his benefactions were frequent and liberal at a
time when money had an almost priceless value. This gentle-
man was Nathaniel Smith, Esq., who passed away in the
same year with his beloved pastor, and whose character was
happily delineated by Dr. Humphrey, in a published sermon,
entitled " The Good Arimathean." Without the benefactions
of Nathaniel Smith, it is doubtful whether Amherst College
could have been carried through its early conflicts. Still
more important was it that his gifts were sanctified by the
fervent, effectual prayers of himself and consort
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4 REMINISCENCES OF AMUEBST COLLEGE.
Col. Rufus Graves.
Another layman who had much to do with the starting
of this College was CoL Rufus Graves, then a resident
of Amherst. He was a man of peculiar characteristics,
rather sluggish and indolent in his movements, yet, under the
control of ardent piety easily affected himself, and therefore
strongly affecting others. In this enterprise he was a perfect
enthusiast, and went into it with all the zeal and perseverance
of Peter the Hermit Whenever he could get a chance to
address a group, large or small, he would pour out his whole
heart, and his tears, too, as I have witnessed, and though
rather clumsy and rude in speech, he would deeply enlist the
sympathies of his audience. No one could hear him who did
not see that he was most thoroughly convinced of what he
said, and of the immense importance of the enterprise for the
good of the world ; also, that he had prayed over it till he
felt assured God was on his side, and neither reasoning nor
ridicule could shake his faith.
And here let me say that the leading characteristic of the
principal advocates of this enterprise was this same deep
religious conviction that it was God's work and for Gk>d's
glory, and therefore they might hope for success. They were
not actuated by the desire of distinction, but by the love
of Christ and the hope of the spiritual good of the world.
It was the same spirit that actuated the Apostles and early
martyrs, and in modem times, the Pilgrims, in their exodus
to this country. In short, it was the most powerful principle
that ever moves the human soul. And it needed just such
men, whom no obstacles could discourage, nor worldly ridicule
divert. It did not demand men of eminent talents or station,
but those of eminent piety. And because it had such, the
work was successful.
According to Dr. Humphrey the Constitution and system
of By-Laws adopted by the Trustees of Amherst Academy
in 1818, for raising $50,000, as the basis of the new College,
*' was drawn up with care and legal advisement by Col. Rufus
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BAMUEL F. DICKINSON. 5
Graves.'* The Preamble to that Constitation breathes a spirit
as decidedly missionarj as the New Testament itself, and its
authorship might well be coveted: for it fixed the religious
character of ^e institution and stands as a powerful warning
against apostacj and the diversion of funds to other objects.
Ck>L Graves gave considerable attention to some branches
of science, espedallj chemistry, and formerly lectured on that
subject in Dartmouth College as well as in Amherst Academy.
He did the same also, for a time, in the new College, before
the appointment of a professor. He lived to a venerable old
age, and his last years were spent in Ohio.
«
Hon. Samuel F. Dickinson.
Another early and indefatigable laborer in this enterprise
was Hon. Samuel F. Dickinson, of Amherst. He stood high
as a lawyer and his advice was ofteli needed by his clerical
co-laborers. He was one of the most industrious and perse-
vering men that I ever saw. He was very much employed
in the settlement of estates and labored day and night in his
profession. He was also a man of very decided religious
principles, and when once satisfied that he was in the path
of duty, his face was as a flint, and he reminded one of the
early Puritans. After he had seen the College firmly estab-
lished, he went West and became connected in some capacity
with the secular afiairs of Lane Seminary, at Cincinnati,
where he died at the age of sixty-two.
From all that I can learn, I have no doubt that Samuel F.
Dickinson and Col. Graves had more to do in forming and
executing plans for the founding of Amherst College than any
other men. They, I belive, first conceived and labored hard
to execute the plan of endowing a professorship in Amherst
Academy for preparing ministers and missionaries. And
when they found that they could not succeed in this, instead
of abandoning the whole matter, they enlarged their plans
and undertook to found a new college with the same object in
view, rightly judging that their first plan was too narrow to
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6 BEIONISCENCBS OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
meet the feelings of Christian benevolence. All these plans
were discussed over and over again bj these two gentlemen.
Col. Graves was ardent and impulsive, and thought to be
visionary, so that it needed the cooler and more practical
judgment of Mr. Dickinson to prevent extravagance in
opinion and give confidence to the public. Mr. Dickinson
was so full of business that he could not go abroad much to
present the claims of the proposed institution, but Col. Graves
had leisure enough and needed only to be guided by his friend's
wise counsels.
Db. Cowles and Elisha Bidlings.
Several other laymen, who were among the early friends
and patrons of the college, — ^most of them £rom its very incep-
tion, — ^may as well be mentioned here. Having but little
acquaintance with Dr. Bufus Cowles, I cannot say much of his
particular efforts; but as a respectable inhabitant of Amherst, I
do not doubt he did all he could to aid in the work. With
Deacon Elisha Billings, of Conway, I was quite intimately
acquainted, and know how well adapted he was to be an
efficient pioneer. He had received a public education and
possessed superior abilities. He had also a remarkably
accurate knowledge of men. But his clear views of religious
doctrines and inflexible adherence to the faith of the Puritans,
made him the steadfast friend of every effort to connect
learning and religion and to raise up men qualified to defend
and propagate the Gospel of Christ. His support of the new
institution was no halting, lukewarm advocacy. He had not
abundant means, but did what he could as to pecuniary aid.
Yet rarely was his seat vacant at the meetings of the Board,
and his fervent prayers and wise and encouraging counsels
were most efficient elements of final success. Though in
moderate circumstances as to property, yet so liberal were his
benefactions as exceedingly to embarrass his widow and
children. But they, too, endowed with the same spirit,
Struggled through their pecuniary embarrassments. His wife,
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BILLINGS AND LELAND. 7
indeed, who long survived her husband, was an extraordinaiy
example of eminent pietj and devotion to benevolent objects,
conjoined with extreme humility. When the effort was being
made to nuse $50,000 to start the College, she circulated the
life of Franke so widely that the copy was worn out. She
believed, and so did all the men and women who founded
Amherst College, that the principles adopted and acted upon
by Franke as to trust in God and the power of prayer, to be
scriptural, and such essentially let it be always remembered,
were the principles on which Amherst College was founded.
The type of the piety of its originators was that of Spener
and Franke in earlier times, and of MuUer in our own times.
Grod save the institution irom ever coming to regard such
fitith and prayer as dangerous enthusiasm I I do not mean
that the founders of Amherst College would endorse all the
views of Franke or Muller. But their doctrine as to the
safety of trusting in God in every exigency and of specific
answers to special prayer in respect to things temporal as well
88 spiritual, was most firmly believed and acted upon in this
work. Again and again would they have given it over in
despair if they had not felt sure that Grod would appear for
them if their faith failed not. Hence, when they had no
funds, they were more importunate in prayer and would not
let Grod go without the blessing. Does not the result show
that they stood upon safe ground ? During many of the early
years of this institution, the enterprise, judged of by merely
secular sagacity and wisdom, would seem certain to fail, and
its failure was confidently predicted by many a wise and many
a good man who had not the faith of its founders.
Hon. John Leland.
Hon. John Leland, the Treasurer of the College for the first
fourteen years of its legal existence, came to reside in Amherst
about the time when the first efforts were made for its endow-
ment, and was a liberal donor. And ever afterwards, when
the College was passing through exigencies, his benefactions
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8 BEtflNISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
were not wanting. His piety was of that stamp which appre-
ciated the need and the value of the movement. But it was
as Treasurer during the most trying pecuniary days of the new
institution that his greatest sacrifices were made. Funds
must in some way or other be obtained, and the trustees could
see no way but to resort to borrowing. Yet they had nothing
to offer as security to the lender. It became necessary, there-
fore, for individuals to become personally responsible. Others
sometimes came to his aid ; but I am assured that during
most of his term of office he was holden to creditors for college
debts to an amount sometimes nearly equal to his whole
property. This is a reponsibility which not many men have
benevolence enough to assume, especially with a large and
perhaps invalid family dependent upon them. I . have often
thought that this great service the College has but poorly
appreciated. Yet Deacon Leland has nevertheless ever con-
tinued the friend and helper of the institution. It was but
yesterday (November 28th, 1861,) that I found him in his
sick chamber, sustained in the prospect of dissolution and
amid severe pain, by those great principles for which he has
made many sacrifices during a long life. Blessed Saviour, I
know that Thou wilt not forsake him as he goes into the dark
valley.
At a date almost two years later, I am happy to say, that
Deacon Leland recovered from his sickness, and though very
old and feeble, I trust God has something more for him to
do on earth before He calls him to the work of a higher
sphere.
Hon. Edward Dickinson, LL. D.
Hon. Edward Dickinson succeeded Deacon Leland as
Treasurer, in 1835, and has occupied the place ever since
with great fidelity and success. He is the son of Hon. S. F.
Dickinson, already described, and has not proved recreant to
the spirit of his father. He has been with the institution in
many of its darkest hours, and lived to bring its financial
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AUSTIN DICKINSON. 9
etmcerns triumphantly out of their embarrassments, and he
will need only the co-operation of his colleagues to keep them
upon hi^ vantage ground. The confidence placed in Mr.
Dickinson by the public has been manifest by the numerous
eminent political offices to which he has been called. He is
still in the full vigor of mature life.
Lucius Boltwood.
Lucius Boltwood, Esq., was appointed Financier, or as it is
now called, Commissioner of the Charity Fund, in 1834, and
Scribe of the Trustees, in 1828, and has filled both offices ever
since. He has been familiar with all those even from the
beginning who have taken an active part in starting and
building up the institution, having been a law student in Hon.
S. F. Dickinson's office when the first efforts were made and
the first discussions carried on in that office concerning it.
All the financial matters in his department he has managed
with much skill, and often lent the Treasurer his credit when
needful to borrow money. His object by these sacrifices has
not been to gain reputation, but to sustain and carry forward
the College towards which he has done much. To him as
well as to Mr. Dickinson, I am indebted for many of the
statistical and financial facts detailed in the following pages,
and which were fast passing into oblivion.
Kev. Austin Dickinson.
An individual deserves notice here who never had any
official connection with the College, but was a native of
Amherst, and one of the most efficient instruments of its
establishment, — ^I refer to Rev. Austin Dickinson. His plan
through life was to influence men without letting them know
that he was acting on them at alL He was a man of superior
abilities, a graduate of Dartmouth, and an eloquent and
effective preacher. But he was never a settled pastor. He
felt his mission to be rather to start and bring into operation
new plans for doing good; and though some of his plans
1*
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10 BEMINISC£!NGES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
appeared bold and quixotic, he had great skill in bringing
them about. With his vigorons pen he struck many a heavy
blow in favor of Amherst College, himself quite out of si^t.
While in Tennessee, he undertook and succeeded beyond all
expectations in raising funds to endow Maryville College.
On his way back he started in Richmond the first religious
paper in the southern States, "The Family Visitor," for
which he obtained several thousand subscribers, and which
was subsequently united with " The Christian Observer." In
1826, he started "The National Preacher," in New York,
which has been continued ever since. His last and perhaps
most important enterprise was to get the secular newspapers
to introduce religious intelligence into their finlnmTiflj which
is now so universaL
Col. Trask.
. With Col. Israel E. Trask, of Springfield, I had not much
personal acquaintance. I recolect him chiefly as a gentleman
of fine personal appearance, and we know that he was a
liberal subscriber to the fifty thousand dollars fund. What
other special efibrts he made to promote the object I know
not
Hon. John Hooker.
I should make similar remarks in relation to another Spring-
field gentleman numbered among the earliest Trustees, viz. :
Hon. John Hooker. Maintaining an honorable position in
the legal profession and on the bench, the sanction of his
name and infiuence to the new enterprise must have been
highly important and beneficial. How much money he con-
tributed to it I have not ascertained; but he took a deep
interest in the plan, and doubtless did what iie could to
promote it.
S. V. S. Wilder.
The name of S. V. S. Wilder, Esq., of New York, does not
appear on the list of Trustees till 1824. Nevertheless he
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WILDER AKD WEBSTER. 11
took an active part in the enterprise before a charter was
obtained. And when a commif tee of the Legislature appeared
in Amherst to look into the affairs of the proposed Collegiate
Institute, and its enemies attempted to show that the subscrip-
tion was good for nothing, Mr. Wilder rendered great service
bj cashing note after note which were brought forward as
worthless. He was also a liberal subscriber to the funds of
the College. He had been a silk merchant in Paris, and
while there had done much to promote the cause of evangelical
religion. He was a principal means of starting the first
French Bible Society, and was associated with Baron Cuvier
and others as its Directors. When he returned to this country
he made special efforts to build up Orthodox churches in
regions where Unitarianism had well nigh obliterated vital
godliness. He felt therefore a deep interest in the effort to
found an institution which should be decidedly religious in its
character, and yet whose standard of scholarship should be so
high as to command the respect of alL "Mr, Wilder was
afterwards unfortunate in his pecuniary affairs and resigned
his place on the Board and rarely afterwards visited Amherst,
though he still lives, because, as he told me, he could not now
do as he once did before the committee of the Legislature ;
that is, he could not contribute to supply the wants of the
institution.
Noah Webster.
Noah Webster, Esq., was living in Amherst at the time the
college enterprise was started by the Trustees of the Acad-
emy. For a time he was President of that Board, and he
sympathized with the movement as his Address at the laying
of the comer-stone of the first edifice shows. Although Mr.
Webster's literary reputation was not then as high as after-
wards, his advocacy of the new plan no doubt tended to render
it reapectable among literary men. How much he aided the
work pecuniarily I do not know; but presume he did not
Digitized by VjOOQIC
12 BEBONISCENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
refuse to patronize with his purse what he recommended with
his pen and his influence.
Hon. William B. Calhoun, LL. D.
Hon. William B. Calhoun has now heen a member of the
Board of College Trustees for thirty-four years, longer than
any one except Dr. Vaill. And all that time he has been a
most consistent and efficient friend of the institution. His
high standing as a scholar and in political and social life has
given great influence to his judgment and opinion, and he has
ever stood by the College in all its exigencies. It has passed
through some of the most trying of these during his connection
with it; yet his friendship and influence could always be
relied upon in the darkest hour, and though Providence had
not put abundant pecuniary resources into his hands, his influ-
ence has opened the purses of others more highly &vored in
this respect. In short, Amherst College has no one on its list
of patrons and friends who has been more judicious in council,
or shown more consistency in friendship, than William B.
Calhoun.
John Tappan.
Another name stands on the list of Trustees from 1834 to
1854, to which the College is most deeply indebted. I mean
that of John Tappan, Esq. How early he enlisted in its service
I cannot say ; but during those twenty years, and many of them
were years of great trial, his aid was invaluable. For he is
one of those men who do more than they say. It was not his
ambition to give a large sum at one time and let that answer
for the whole. But he watched his opportunities, and when
he saw chances offering for giving a start to important enter-
prises he took care to give them such a headway by his sub-
scriptions as to ensure a like liberality from others, and thus
secure their success. In this way I am sure that three
important enterprises were made successful by his benefac-
tions and counsel : one in relation to the cause of Temperance ;
Digitized by VjOOQIC
TAPPAN, ALDEN, EDWARDS AND CHILD. 18
another in regard to the Lihraiy, and a third in Ichnology.
The details in i-egard to these efforts I hope to give when I
come to my own pemonal connection with the Ck)llege. But
these were only a part of the occasions when Mr. Tappan's
liberality towards the College was dbplayed.
Ebenezeb Alden, M. D.
Dr. Ebenezer Alden, of Randolph, has now been for twenty-
one years one of our most efficient, judicious and valuable
Trustees. His extensive knowledge of educational institu-
tions and official connection with so many of a benevolent
character, and his high standing as a physician, have made
his services peculiarly valuable. Nor has his aid been parox-
ysmal and inconstant. No man has been more punctual at
all meetings, or stood more firm in all exigencies than he.
He was a member of the Board during that period of deep
declension, which reached its lowest point in 1845, and he did
much to get the yhip off from the breakers into the open sea.
His confidence in the College was shown in the fact that he
carried two sons through it who have been men of great
usefulness as ministers.
Henry Edwards.
Of an analogous character have been the services of Henry
Edwards, Esq., of Boston, who became a Trustee in 1844.
Familiar with the details of business as a merchant, and
extensively acquainted with men of wealth and benevolence,
and by his mild and amiable manners adapted to win their
confidence, and being always ready to speak a good word for
the College, his aid has been invaluable. May he live many
years to help advance the interests of the institution.
Hon. Linus Child.
Hon. Linus Child is another layman, who resigned his
place five years ago, but is still alive, and for twelve years
was a wise and trusty counsellor and advocate of the College.
He was ever prompt to attend the meetings of the Board, and
Digitized by VjOOQIC
14 REMINISCENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
to seoond efforts in tho intervals between the meetings for
obtaining funds, and for other purposes, and as he come into
the Board in its darkest day, he had abundant opportunity to
show his fidelity to a cause which was then unpopular.
Alpheus Hardt.
In the same class I place Alpheus Hardy, Esq., of Boston.
Though he has been a Trustee only since 1855, so valuable
and efficient have been his services that we cannot but hope
that his connection with the College may be long, continued.
One special service which he has performed, is the establish-
ment of three annual prizes for improvement in extempora-
neous speaking.
Other Trustees and Friends.
I shall not go into detail in respect to those younger lay
members of the Board who were our graduates, for they have
mostly been elected since I left the presidency, and I am
not familiar with particular services which they may have
rendered. I only know that the prestige of the names and
influence of gentlemen so distinguished as they have been on
the bench, and in social and political life, has been very valu-
able, and that they have been prompt to render any private
services to the College which have been asked. Judge J. C.
Perkins, of Salem, has been a Trustee since 1850 ; Hon.
A. H. Bullock, of Worcester, since 1852 ; Judge Henbt
Morris, of Springfield, since 1854 ; Dr. Nathan Allen, of
Lowell, since 1857, and Hon. E. B. Gillbtt, of Westfield,
since 1861. I ought to add that Dr. Allen and Dr. Alden
have been indefatigable in their efforts to shape the plans and
advance the interests of the new department of Hy^ene and
Physical Culture.
Of several other distinguished laymen whose names appear
on the Triennial Catalogue as Trustees, I have not much to
say, because I know but little. I do know, however, that
Hon. William B. Banister, who was fourteen years a
Digitized by VjOOQIC
BANISTEB, MACE, FOSTER, ETC. 15
member, was a most faithful and constant coadjutor, and that
he did much to sustain the institution, by his prayers, his
influence and his benefactions. The same may be said of
Lieutenant-Governor Arhbtrono, who was a member sixteen
years, and remembered the institution liberally in his will.
Hon. Samuel C. Allien was a Unitarian of the Socinian
school, one of the few gentlemen of that denomination who
have been on theBoard. But being a man of enlarged views,
he cordially and efficiently sustained the institution for sixteen
years without any attempt to counteract Orthodox views.
Hon. David Mack was a citizen of Amherst, and a Trustee
fincxn 1836 to 1854. He was a man of great decision of char-
acter and a devoted Christian, and liberal in his benefactions.
He was a member of the Board's Prudential Committee for
many years, and never shrunk from any duty he could perform
or pecuniary sacrifice he could make. Hon. Geobqe
Grennell was a Trustee twenty-one years, from 1838 to
1859, and though oflen prevented by business from being
present at^the meetings of the Board, the College ever found
in him a cordial friend, and its object, as we might pre-
sume from his reli^ous character, was ever dear to him.
From 1838 to 1852 Hon. Alfred D. Foster was an active
member of the Board, and a judicious counsellor. He did
not resign his place during the season of the College's deep-
est depression, though his faith nearly gave out. His nice
sense of propriety is seen in another fact. Though he had
carried a proteg^ (Prof. March) through Amherst College, who
proved to be one of its brightest ornaments, yet because his
own son graduated at another institution, so nice was ly^.
sense of propriety that he resigned his place on the Board.
But they would not accept his resignation.
His Honor Lieutenant-Governor William Gray ivas a
member of the Board one year, from 1825 to 1826 ; His
Excellency Levi Lincoln from 1828 to 1829 ; Hon. Samuel
Howe from 1826 to 1828 ; Hon. Eliphalet Williams from
1829 to 1830; Hon. Samuel Lathrop from 1829 to 1834;
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
16 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
Hon. Jonathan Leayitt from 1825 to 1829 ; Hon. Lewis
Strong from 1825 to 1833 ; Hon. James Fowler from 1826
to 1838; and His Excellency Marcus Morton from 1825 to
1837. These gentlemen were all friendly to the College and
the prestige of their names was no doubt serviceable to it.
But I am unable to state particular acts of theirs in its
behalf. The three first named, as well as Mr. Fowler, I
believe, were Unitarians, but thb fact did not seem to make
their support of the College less cordiaL Governor Morton,
either from pressure of business or inattention, neglected for
more than three years to attend the annual meeting of the
Board, and therefore, at the end of his twelfth year, by a rule
of that bo^y^ his membership ceased.
The Charter of the College was granted in 1825, in
February. By that instrument the first five vacancies in a
Board of seventeen Trustees were " to be filled and their
places ever after supplied by the General Court in joint ballot
of both Houses." The following is a list up to 1861, of the
members who have been thus elected: — His Honor Lieu-
tenant-Governor Gray, Hon. Elihu Lyman, Hon. Samuel O.
Allen, Hon. James Fowler, Hon. Samuel Howe, His
Excellency Levi Lincoln, Hon. William B. Calhoun, Hon.
Samuel Lathrop, Hon. George Grennell, Hon. Linus Child,
Hon. Samuel Williston, Hon. Jonathan C. Perkins, Hon.
Edward B. Gillett, Dr. Nathan Allen.
Tims far the Legislature have been ready to elect such
candidates as the friends of the College proposed, and without
exception, these gentlemen have been cordial and efficient
friends of the institution.
Hon. Samuel Williston.
I have omitted one name of a layman from the list
of Trustees, wliich, though first introduced in 1842, will in
all future histories of the College head the list of its benefac-
tors. I mean that of Hon. Samuel Williston. He was not
old enough nor wealthy enough, when the College was started.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
SAMUEL WILU8T0N. 17
to aid in laying its foundations. But Providence reserved
him for the time when he was needed to save the institution
from sinking under its embarrassments, and then gave him
the disposition to come to the rescue. How he was led to do
this, it will be more convenient to describe in another connec-
tion. I shall here give only a few facts of his early history
and the mode in which he acquired the means for his princely
contributions to the cause of education.
Mr. Williston was the son of Rev. S. Payson Williston,
of East Hampton. As he grew up, it was his purpose to
obtain a public education. But in the course of preparation,
his eyes failed him and he devoted himself for a time to
teaching, thus acquiring a deep interest in educational insti-
tutions. But he was not able to resume his studies, and
with sadness turned to other pursuits to obtain a living,
little did he imagine what a field of usefulness Providence
was opening before him. His wife, as a means of procuring
a little money for some benevolent object, commenced the
covering of buttons. The enterprise succeeded so well that
it was repeated, and at length Mr. Williston went into it
more and more, as he found the demand increasing. And
this was the principal means, though afterwards kindred
manufactures were added, by which he gained so much
property as to pass in the country for a millionaire. But it
needed Divine Grace to dispose him to turn his funds into the
educational channel, though not to the neglect of objects more
strictly religious. Yet, in all his efforts to found and sustain
seminaries of learning, the chief motive was the bearing they
would have upon religion. This was the object mainly
of founding WUliston Seminary in his native place, to which
he has already given certainly not less than $85,000 or
$90,000. The results have already been highly gratifying,
not merely in the education of so many of our youth for
important posts in life, but in the conversion of so many
during their academic course, and thus giving a right direc-
tion to their acquisitions.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
18 BEMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
What Mr. Williston has done for Amherst College, I have
already in part described', in mj valedictoiy address, when
leaving the presidency. But I propose to go still more into
the details in a subsequent part of these Reminiscences. The
aggregate of his efforts for education, in connection with
religion, is a grand picture of Christian benevolence. One
would think that the retrospect in his old age as well as that
of his noble wife, who still survives, must be highly gratifying.
May they long live to do much more in this great work before
they are called to higher rewards !
I do not suppose that the hope of acquiring a worldly repu-
tation, or a name in time to come, was among the motives by
which Mr. WOliston was actuated in his benefactions, save
that every man who consecrates the fruits of his industry to
the good of the public, 'desires that they should be duly appre-
ciated, and that his example, by being known, may lead others
to do likewise. But it is interesting to observe how Grod's
Providence has so ordered it that he could not have taken a
surer method to secure a world-wide reputation while he lives,
and to send a glorious name down to the remotest posterity,
than by founding and fostering institutions of learning with a
religious basis. Already he is well known as a liberal bene-
factor of learning in this country and in Europe, and amid
the revolutions of society the thing most likely to survive
century after century is its literary institutions. This is a
fulfilment of God's promise, them that honor Me I will honor.
It is singular that wealthy men who are without religion but
who desire (as who does not) to transmit an honored name to
posterity, should not oflener see how easily it might be done
by building up literary institutions. But for the most part
while they will lavish fortunes upon buildings, and parks, and
ornaments, as private residences, which will hardly survive
their own short lives, they can so rarely be induced to attach
their names to an Academy, a College, a Professorship, a
Library, or a Cabinet, feeling as if all bestowed upon such
objects were lost money.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
TAILL AND FISKE. 19
Dr. Vaill.
I would now briefly notice other early friends to the insti-
tation who belonged to the clerical profession. And I would
first mention the man still living who has been longer than
any other officially connected with the College, and its steadfast
friend and advocate. I refer to the Rev. Dr. Joseph Vaill,
now settled in Palmer. I believe that he was also a member
of the Board of Trustees of Amherst Academy when the plan
of a college was first developed. At any rate he was made a
member of the College Board in 1821, when it first started,
and ever since he has continued a member, that is for foity
years. Barely during all that time has he been absent from
its meetings, or shrunk from the most arduous and trying
labors in its behalf. It has been particularly as an Agent to
obtain funds that he has done the most to sustain it He
was even dismissed from the ministry once in order to take
this office, one of the most thankless and trying of all con-
nected with the institution. Gentlemanly and bland as well
as Christian in his demeanor and intercourse, and deeply
convinced of the importance of the object, he pleaded the cause
of the College with much success, and had it not been for the
funds which he obtained, I know not how it could have been
carried forward. True we became convinced that the institution
must cease to be longer a beggar before the community ; but
so long as it was such Dr. Yaill faithfully presented its claims,
and since that time in other relations, especially as a member
of the Prudential Committee, for years he has done his part
promptly and successfully. He may now be regarded as a
patriarch of the institution.
Db. Fiske.
Another similar patriarch, who died in 18da, was Rev. Dr.
John Fiske, of New Braintree. He, too, was a member of the
Board in 1821 ; but when a charter was obtained in 1825, he
was left out till 1829, when he was again elected, and continued
in the office till the time of his death, in all thirty years. He
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
20 REMINISCENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
was a man of strong intellect and admirable judgment, con-
joined with piety of the true Puritan stamp. He was just the
man to stand by the institution while passing through an
exigency. For having once settled his course by the chart of
duty, and put his hand to the helm, none of the cross currents
of popular favor or popular frowns could change it by the
smallest rhumb. No plea of conflicting duties or important
business at home, or of poor health, by which not a few men
excuse themselves from meetings where unpleasant and trying
responsibilities must be assumed, ever kept him away from the
meetings of the Board. Amherst College never had a wiser
counsellor or a more consistent and devoted friend than Dr.
John Fiske.
Dr. Packabd.
A similar friend the College had in Rev. Dr. Theophilus
Packard, of Shelbume. From the very first he was decidedly
and actively engaged in promoting the new enterprise, and I
have been told by a gentleman who heard it, that in the
Convention that met in Amherst at the invitation of the
Trustees of the Academy, in September, 1818, no speech there
made was so able or effective as that of Dr. Packard. Yet
he was then and continued tiU 1825, a member of the Board
of Trustees of Williams College. His decided efforts for the
removal of that institution to Hampshire County drew upon
him a great deal of popular odium.
Dr. Packard continued a member of the Trustee Board till
1854, the year before he died, at the age of eighty-six, and
though for a few years before his death his powers were so
impaired that the College might say non tali auxilio tempus
eget, yet he continued to visit us and to take as deep an inter-
est as ever in the institution. No man had ever been more
punctual to all his engagements, through evil as well as good
report, than he. No matter though the meeting promised to
be a most discouraging one, the treasury without funds, the
number of pupils diminishing, and the enemies of the College
Digitized by VjOOQIC
CLABK AND ELY. 21
begiiming to exult over its apprehended downfall, yet Dr.
Packard would be sure to be there to pray and speak enconr-
aging words to those who were trying to keep the wheels in
motion. Dr. Packard's forte was intellectual philosophy, and
he made special efforts to sustain that department, and even I
believe instituted some prizes. He had one of the most acute
minds in the country, and if his habits had been a little more
scholarly and his reading commensurate with his thinking, no
one would have gone before him in psychology. \_See my
published Sermouj at hisfuneraL]
Daxiel a. Clabk.
Key. Daniel A. Clark was pastor of the West Parish
Church in Amherst at the period when the College was
started, and he cordially lent his efforts to promote the object,
as his published sermon, a Plea for a miserdUe Worlds testi-
fies. He was, as is well known, one of the ablest sermonizers
in our country ; yet after sitting for a fortnight on an ecclesi-
astical council called to consider charges against him by some
of his people, although the charges were not proved, and he
was sustained by the council, still I became convinced that
he was greatly deficient in the qualities of a good pastor, and
it was not long before he was dismissed at his own request.
He was no doubt a firm friend to the new enterprise, and
labored hard to help it forward.
Dr. Ely.
Another early and long tried supporter of the College was
the Rev. Alfred Ely, D. D. His name does not appear
among the Trustees tUl 1825, nor can I say whether he was
among the very earliest pioneers in this work. But after that
for twenty-nine years, till he resigned on account of the
infirmities of age, I know that he was a steadfast and efficient
friend of the College. He was one of those men whom we
always expected to see at our anniversaries and other public
occasions, and whose presence and countenance always gave
Digitized by VjOOQIC
22 REMINISCENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
US new coarage, for we felt confident that God would soBtain
an institution for which such men would honestlj and ardently
labor and praj.
De. Watland.
The name of President Wayland appears among the Trus-
tees for five years. But how much interest he took in the
enterprise I am unable to say. That of Rev. Dr. Jonathan
Going, another Baptist clergyman, was on the catalogue from
1823 to 1831, but although I saw him at the annual meetings,
I have no facts to state as to his particular efforts. I pass by
that of Dr. Joseph Lyman, a Trustee for three years, for the
same reason ; also that of Dr. John Brown, for seven years
among the Trustees ; also that of Dr. John Nelson, who was a
Trustee nine years. I wish I could say more than I am able
respecting Rev. Experience Porter, who was a Trustee from
1821 to 1825, and whom I recollect as a man of strong mind
and decided character, who would throw all his energies into
any cause he espoused. He must have taken a prominent
part in this enterprise, or he would not have been selected as
one of the first Trustees. My impression is that he died not
long afler 1825.
OTHER CLERICAL FRIENDS.
Were I to attempt to give outlines of the life and character
of the other clerical gentlemen whose names appear among
the Trustees, or even of their specific services in behalf of the
Ck)llege, the brief limits which I have prescribed to myself in
these biographical sketches would be exceeded. Besides, so
noiselessly, and as it were naturally, have they promoted the
interest of the College, that it seems a matter of course, and it
would not be easy to collect the details together. I refer to
Prof. B. B. Edwards, elected in 1848 ; Dr. J. S. Clark, in
1852 ; Dr. W. P. Paine, in 1854 ; Dr. J. Leavitt and Rev.
E. S. DwiGHT, in 1855 ; and to Dr. L. Sabin, in 1862. Two
of them are deceased, and of them I would say a few words.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
EDWABDS AKD CLARK. 23
I refer to Prof. Edwards and Dr. Clark. Both of them
were distinguished in the numerous relations they sustained
to our literary, benevolent and religious institutions, for their
freedom from all extravagance and excess in their plans and
opinions, and for the soundness of their judgments, — in other
words, for practical wisdom. They were also distinguished
ibr their enlarged and liberal views, and for their charity
towards all mankind. Hence they showed such a kindness in
their address, and such a readiness to help every good cause,
that their aid seemed almost indispensable to every important
literary or benevolent enterprise. Probably no Trustee of the
College found so many calls upon his services by the friends and
authorities of the College as Dr. Clark, and to no other man
did individuals resort for advice and sympathy so frequently.
In another place I shall state the important part taken by
Prof. Edwacrds in the matter of a library. I would here only
refer to a feature of his character which I have always
regarded as an index of the true nobility of his nature, and
the generous liberality of his views. It is well known that
his forte was polite and sacred literature, and that he did not
make pretensions to any thing more than a general acquain-
tance with science. Yet in those branches of science with
which I am acquainted, I know that he kept well posted and
rejoiced.in their progress. He rose above the narrow view
that there is an antagonism between science and literature, so
that as he had given himself mostly to the latter, he must look
with a jealous eye upon the former. With the missionary.
Rev. Dr. Perkins, he believed that " it is the combined light
of aU trtUhy scientific as well as religious, that is to render so
perfect and glorious the splendor of the millenial day," and
moreover that literature and science are mutually dependent,
and you cannot depress the one without sinking the other
also. These enlarged views are so finely exhibited by Prof.
Edwards, in a letter addressed by him to me on the occasion
of the dedication of the new Cabinet and Observatory in 1848,
Digitized by VjOOQIC
24 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
and moreover present so interesting a phase of the subject,
that I cannot withhold it : —
"AxDOVBR, June 26, 1848.
" Rev. President HrrcHcocK :
"Dear Sir, — It is with sincere regret that I must decline your kind
invitation to be present on Wednesday. Indispensable engagements
will detain me here. In common with multitudes I rejoice that you
have been so favored in the Providence of God as to finish your
edifice and fill it with such inestimable treasures. Nothing coold
be more appropriate than such a collection in the Connecticut Valley,
BO full of beauty, so crowded with yisible and tangible proof of
Divine wisdom, where the natural sciences can be studied under such
preeminent advantages. I rejoice, also, from my belief that these
studies are specially fitted to liberalize the mind and bind together
the scholars of our country and of all nations. No persons in
England, — where illiberal feelings towards us have too much pre-
vailed, — have done more to cement the two countries together than
the students of natural science. None there feel or express for us
more generous and ennobling sentiments than some of the leading
members of the Royal and the Geological Societies. One of
them, before ho showed me the wonders of science which adorn his
dwelling^ pointed out what waa particularly precious to him, — an
admirable portrait of Profl Silliman. The president of the Geologi-
cal Society said in my hearing, that he honored the city of Boston, —
that it was doing more for the cause of popular education than all
England. A third individual, who had travelled many years in the
East, remarked to me, that no men were more respected for their
knowledge and gentlemanly character than American missionaries.
The principal paper read before the Royal Society in the evening
when I was present, was written by an American physician on the
coast of AfHca.
'* Any thing which removes a prejudice, or promotes a kindly feeling
between us and our parent State, is a matter for heartfelt gratitude.
England, with all her faults, is a noble land. No where is there so
much moral worth, such attractive specimens of social and Christian
character, so much that adorns humanity. With England and the
United States are bound up to a great degree the hopes of the world.
Long may the scholars of the two countries love and labor like
brethren. Rich and boundless fields of knowledge are still open
before them all.
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
DR. HUMPHREY. 25
" Agidn expressing my sorrow that I caDnot be with you on Wednes*
day, and hoping that eyery auspicious circumstance may combine to
render the day pleasant and the occasion interesting,
" I am yours, very faithfully,
"B. B. Edwabdb."
Dr. Humphrey.
To attempt to give the details of Dr. Humphrey's life
would be to write a volume. I shall give only the leading
&cts of his history as they are condensed in a sermon which
I preached in the College chapel soon after his death, entitled,
ITie Moral Subltmitt/ of a Completed Christian Life*
Dr. Heman Humphrey's birthplace, March 20th, 1779, was West
Simsbuiy, in Connecticut. From thence his father, Solomon Hum-
phrey, removed to Burlington in the same State, when Heman
was six years old. His hopeful conversion occurred in the winter
of 1798-9, when he was twenty years old. He was then a laborer
on the farm, often as a hired man ; yet he was for several years a
teacher, but did not think of a public education till some years after
his conversion. Having engaged his services to a farmer who lived
on the opposite side of a river, a spring freshet prevented his going
over for some time, and the delay turned hia thoughts towards
college. He graduated at Yale College in 1806, in a class of forty-
two, among whom were Dr. Gardiner Spring, of New York, still
living, and the late Mr. Gaulladet, of Hartford. He studied theology
with Rev. Asahel Hooker, of Goshen, and was licensed to preach by
the Litchfield Congregational Association in October, 1806. March
16th, 1807, he was settled in Fairfield over the Congregational
church, where he remained ten years, and was permitted to see one
powerful revival. He was installed over the church in Pittsfield, in
November, 1817, where he remained six years, and witnessed two
revivals of extraordinary power. In 1823 he was transferred to
Amherst College as its President, where he remained twenty-two
years, and saw seven marked revivals of religion. Since 1845 he
has passed a retired but not inactive life among the beloved people
whom he left more than twenty years before. And on the Sd day
of April, 1861, he was called to enter a higher and broader sphere
of labor in the immediate presence of God.
Men naturally inquire in respect to distinguished characters, what
was the amount of their native talent, and of their literary attain-
2
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26 REMINISCENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
ments. Dr. Humphrey, in giving the character of his intimate
friend, Dr. Ncttleton, has said just wliat I should say of liim on
these points : <* In my estimation," ho says, *' Dr. Nettleton was a
great man — not great merely as he was good, but great in the com-
mon meaning of the term. He was not a learned man. His Master
never gave him time to distinguish himself as a scholar. He had
too much work for him to do in his vineyard to allow it. Though
he had a good, substantial public education. Dr. Nettleton made no
pretensions to high attainments in classical literature, or in any
of the abstruse sciences. In the latter he might have excelled, had
not his soul been fired with higher and holler aims.** — Memoir of
NetOeion, p. 868.
But though this estimate of Dr. Humphrey's literary standing may
be essentially true, it is also true, that the writings of very few
Christian authors in our land are more generally known, or more
highly appreciated, or more influential, than his. How shall this be
explained ? Chiefly by the marks of sound wisdom and Christian
fideli^ and earnestness which so characterize them all, and they are
also full of vivacity and strong emotion. We see that the senti-
ments come from a clear head, and a warm heart. Moreover, they
are based upon common sense, and commend Uiemselves to every
man's judgment as a safe guide. His writings are quite voluminous ;
not so many set treatises, indeed, say nine or ten, but an almost
endless number of short articles in our periodicals or religious
newspapers, or in occasional sermons and addresses. For this kind
of writing he had unusual qualifications, such as sound, sterling
sense, ready wit. Christian kindness, and a vigorous Saxon style.
Of course he has had large audiences; yet probably not one of
his hearers or readers ever received an impression from him
unfavorable to religion, morality, sound learning, good manners,
patriotism, or charity. This is saying a great deal ; and it must
have formed a soft pillow for liis head as he lay down to die.
Another very important inquiry we raise about men, is, what
are their religious sentiments } Here, too, in describing those of
Dr. Nettleton, I think Dr. Humphrey has given his own. " In his
theology Dr. Nettleton was neither * a high nor a low ' Calvinist.
While he admired the illustrious Genevan reformer, and subscribed,
ex animo, to all the leading doctrines of his immortal Institutes, he
called neither Calvin nor any other man master. He was an
Edwardean rather than a high Calvinist; and yet profound as his
veneration was for * that greatest of theologians,' as Dr. Chalmers
styles j^esident Edwards, he thought it liis duty to investigate every
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DR. HUMPHREY, 27
sabject, for himself. With his little duodecimo Bible, or his Qreek
Testament, always in his hands, he was one of the most independent
thinkers that I have ever known. Upon the foundation of the
apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ himself being the chief comer
stone, he stood like a pillar upon the eyerlasting rock.**
It was, as we think. Dr. Humphrey's strong practical wisdom,
under the control of firm Christian principle, that formed the chief
element of his greatness, and the secret of his wide spread reputa-
tion. His long life gave an opportunity for testing this wisdom in
so many circumstances, and with such success, that in all parts
of our land, and even in the fatherland, the highest respect was
entertained for his opinions, and the strongest confidence in his
judgment. So that probably in almost any assembly in our land,
had another Aeschylus said, O? yttp SoKhv ilKaiot^ ill* eivat eUtif &c.,
(he was more anxious to be righteous than to seem so,) all eyes
would have been turned upon Dr. Humphrey, as they were upon
Aristides.
It is interesting to look at the path marked out for Dr. Humphrey
by Providence, and to see how each successive stage was wisely
adapted to prepare him for those that followed. We can see many
good reasons why his lot was cast in early life among the poor, and
why he came so late into public life. One was, ;that he might have
that thorough physical triuning on the farm, which should give him
a constitution that could go through with a twenty years' conflict in
the establishment of this institution, without breaking down. Another
was, to teach him how to exercise that rigid economy which he
found indispensable in the same work. A third was, that he might
know how to sympathize with, and assist, the numerous young men
originating from the same straitened circumstances, who would here
pass under his charge. Of the seven hundred and ninety-five who
graduated during his presidency, by far the largest part were of this
description, and experienced his fostering and guiding influence.
In the second stage of his course, that is during his ministry at
Fairfield and at Pittsfield, we can see some things of the same antici-
pative charater. One was, that God gave him, as a bosom friend,
the man most honored of God of all others in our land as an instru-
ment of revivals, and most wise in their management, — I mean Dr.
Nettleton, — and then God permitted him to witness in his own
church, several of the most remarkable displays of converting grace
known in the annals of the country. Do we not see the reason why
such wise instruction and such rich experience on this subject were
given him, when the history of his administration here tells us that
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28 BElflNISCENCBa OP AMHERST COLLBQE.
he was allowed to witness seven revivals } And how important it
was that these should be wisely conducted, we learn, when we find
that of the seven hundred and ninety-five graduates during his
presidency, four hundred and thirty became ministers of the Gospel ;
eighty-four of whom were settled in Massachusetts, and thirty-nine
became foreign missionaries. How important that these should
receive correct instruction as to the treatment of perhaps a thousand
revivals which they have since witnessed.
Another fact should be mentioned in this connection. Dr.
Humphrey was among the very first in our land to move in the tem-
perance reformation. As early as 1810 he preached ten sermons on
the subject, and in 1812 he wrote an address to the churches advo-
cating pledged abstinence from spirits, and it was published by the
ministerial association to which he belonged. How important that
he should thus early enlist in this cause, when only a few years after
he was to be placed at the head of a community which above all others
needs to be pledged against intoxicating substances, and to be well
drilled soldiers of the temperance army.
How obvious then that all the earlier discipline and events of
Br. Humphrey's life pointed significantly to his last and greatest
work in this institution. That he was willing to leave one of the
most delightful villages in the land, in spite of the remonstrances of
a large and affectionate church, and enlist in a cause which was then
unpopular, and which if ever successful, would triumph only after a
long and bitter conflict, shows how ready he was to make sacrifices,
when the cause of religion and learning demanded it. The fact
is, and it ought never to be forgotten, that a leading object in
the effort to establish this College was, to counteract the influence
of certain deadly errors in religion, which were undermining and
sweeping away the ancient landmarks. Then too, local prejudices
and the competing interests and jealousies of those of the same
faith, were roused to desperate opposition. But Dr. Humphrey, with
a strong bodily constitution, great Christian kindness, yet inflexible
firmness, and armed with faith and prayer, offered himself as a
champion to meet this Goliath. Some of us now present, who were
with him through nearly the whole of the long struggle, can testily
how faithfiilly, how courageously, how patiently and perseveringlyy
he stood at his post. The truth is, God was on our side, and he gave
us this token of it, that while in outward and material interests
we were straitened, high spiritual prosperity was ours ; as numerous
revivals and the large proportion of graduates who devoted them-
selves to the ministry and to missions testified. God was leadii^
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DB. HUHPHBET. 29
U8 ; and outward trials were no proof to the contrary. For, as a
recent remarkable man has declared, '* God's way leads always into
trial, so far as sight and sense are concerned. Nature always will
be tried in God's ways."— JfttZfer** Lif^ of Trust, p. 214.
It has been many years since Dr. Humphrey left the more actire
scenes of public professional life, and took up his residence among
the people of his former charge, who have cherished him as a
precious treasure, and confided in him as a father. But his has not
been an idle life, as sereral Tolumes, and almost innumerable
smaller effusions of his pen testify. His bodily powers, and mental
Tigor especially, have held out very remarkably. Of this we haye
a striking proof in a sermon on the present disastrous condition
of our country, delirered by him no longer ago than our late
National Fast, January 4th, 1861. It Ib said that its delivery indi-
cated the Tigor of early life; and as a literaiy production, it is
certainly a remarkable efihsion for a man over fourscore years old.
On questions relating to slavery, he has always been regarded as
consenratiye ; but when he saw it rending asunder this fair Union,
it roused into intense action the whole soul of the Christian and the
patriot. ''And now," says he, ''when instigated by the demon
slavery, traitors are plotting for the overthrow of the Government,
may I not speak what I think in this presence ? I shall not be
hindered. My heart Ib ftill of the matter. Every drop of my old
blood is quickened." The torrent of argument and feeling, of
rebuke and expostulation which followed, will bear comparison as
to eloquence and power, with any which this painftd subject has
elicited from the pulpit, the forum, or the press.
Tell me now, my friends, is not here a noble example of a com-
pleted Christian life ? See this venerable man, long an inhabitant
of the land of Beulah, and now drawing near the banks of Jordan,
ascending that same mount of glory where Paul stood, when he
was ready to be offered. He could look back upon sixty years of
faithAil service since first he professed religion ; and with not one
dark stain upon the picture of a life consecrated to the cause of
Christ and of learning. Yet how many monuments of success and
of God's blessing rise up on the long pathway, not to foster pride,
but to awaken gratitude. And then turning towards the celestial
city, what glories come pouring in from the Sun of Righteousness,
which is its light I Tell me, ye Christian young men before me,
whether here is not a scene of moral sublimity more worthy of your
aspirations than any which worldly ambition can offer ?
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80 ' BEMINISCENCE3 OP AMHERST COLLEGE.
Dr. Humphrey preceded me two years in his comiection
with the College. Professor N. W. Fiske came one year
earlier than I did. Professor S. M. Worcester also joined as
Tutor at the same time with Dr. Humphrey, and was made
Professor in 1825. In the same year Rev. Solomon Peck
was made Professor of Latin, which post he occupied 'seven
years. He was an able and faithful teacher, and cordially pro-
moted the great object of the institution. He Was afterwards
very useful as Secretary of the Baptist Board of Foreign
Missions. But within a few years, as I understand the matter,
he has been rather unceremoniously dropped from that office.
Professob Samuel M. Worcester.
Professor Worcester remained connected with the College
nine years after I joined it, and I always regarded him as
well adapted to his place ; always genial and gentlemanly in
his feelings, frank and unsuspicious, and though sometimes
discursive in his public performances, never wanting in appro-
priate words ; decided in his principles and piety, and cor-
dially attached to the objects of the institution. Since leaving
Amherst, as is well known, he has &ithfully sustained the
duties of the ministry in Salem, and still lives to do good.
For many years he has experienced severe domestic affiio-
tions, such as a miracle alone can remove; but he has borne
them with true Christian fortitude.
Professor Nathan W. Fiske.
I shall make no attempt to delineate the character of Pro-
fessor Fiske, since it has ah-eady been done by Dr. Humphrey.
His mind and scholarship were of a high order. He was
most remarkable for acuteness of intellect, though capable of
grasping great plans and principles ; but when once he got
started in pursuit of a truth, he would track it to its hiding
place, though he had to go through a Cretari labyrinth. He
was a diligent student, and not well fitted to come in contact
with men in the rough and tumble of life. He seemed to
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PBOFESSOB FI8KE. * 81
"Want what scholars are so apt to want — a knowledge of com-
mon things, so that when they mix with men they do things,
which though not wrong, are odd, and are laughed at Thej
shrink awaj from the world and live in a sort of seclusion.
Professor Fiske had a remarkably ready and keen wit,
which was sometimes so keen that it wounded deeper than
he intended. His power of description was almost une-
qualled. I will give two examples, where wit and graphic
description are combined.
In his joumeyings through Syria and Palestine, where he
died, he turned his attention to coUecting geological specimens
for our Missionary Collection, and with much success, as the
shelyes of our cabinet testify. In a letter written after
putting up a box of these specimens, I find the following
amusing remarks :•—
''The noise of breaking this specimen," says he, "as I was but a
few feet from the door of the hoase, brought out an old woman, in a
filthy Arab dress. She drew her MandU (mantle) down oyer her
forehead, holding it with her left hand under her chin, leaving her
right hand firee for gestures, and her lips at liberty for speech, and
with a little fierce looking black eye, and sallow, shriyelled &ce, she
came at me with a tremendous volley of Arabic, in a shrill screech,
frightful enough to make one's hair stand on end. Not a word could
I understand ; only I used my Yankee faculty of guessing that she
was scolding the impudent and thievlDg Frank ; and that if I did
not somehow silence her noise, the whole neighborhood would be
roused, and what woes might then betide me, not even a Yankee
could guess. I had no Arabic to explain, or apologize, or entreat :
but for my good luck, I had that very morning learned Arabic
enough to say, ShoO'hi'dahf what is that ? and this was the whole
length and breadth of my vocabulary. So I put my right hand, first
on my breast, then to my forehead, (the Arabic mode of salutation,)'
and with a smile and tone as gracious as I could make, held out my
specimen, and pointing to one of the little shells in it, said, ' Shoo-
hi-dah ? Shoo-hi-dah ? ' She raised her eye-brows, relaxed a little
her grasp of the Mandil, and looked at the shell, and cried, Mlah^
AUaht hi-dah bwak. O God, God, that is bwak : then resumed her
fUrious scolding and yelling. I carefully laid down the stone on s
block, and picking up a little pebble, held it out and said, ShoO'hir
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82 BEBOmSGENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
ddh^ ^e.f ^c, and thus finally calmed her down, and niade mj escape.
Had I known KcUyr Khyr ak, I certainly should have closed with it.
*< A day or two after, I walked through the same yard, and found
my specimen lying where I laid it down, and then I quietly put it in
my pocket.
"In this trip, (from Beyroot to Aheih and BhamdQn,) I hare
gathered oysters and clams, and I cannot tell what other fish,
cooked, (you perhaps know when,) in old Pluto's or Vulcan's
kitchen, and pickled down (or rather up, for I found some of them
on summits thousands of feet high,) and preserved by the help
of Neptune, and for aught I know the mermaids too : for all which,
the geologists will thank them ; more grateful, I imagine, than the
poor donkeys, whose burdens are often increased by not a few
pounds' weight of these ante-mundane delicacies. At Abeih, I
boxed for you, what a Carolinian would call a ' mighty big * lump,
weighing less than a ton. It will doubtless prove a JadalUef (a
rock to be thrown away) should it ever reach you. All I sliall ask
of you, provided it thus terminate, is, that you will bestow on thd
innocent fishes a decent burial beneath the turf."
In this same collection one notices with melancholy interest
several specimens from Mount Zion, obtained by Professor
Fiske only a few weeks before he himself was laid there m
the Protestant burying ground near the tomb of David. The
fact is, his constitution was too much enfeebled before he left
home, to endure the heat and miasms of the climate in Syria
and Palestine and the exposures of travelling. His friends
had tried in vain to draw him out of his study at an earlier
date, nor did he go till his symptoms admonished him that
without amendment he must soon sink. He seems to have
been fully prepared for the summons. His views of religious
truth had always been remarkably clear, and his life consist-
ent, and many a conscience testified to his unusual power in
the lecture room and the pulpit, as do also his published
discourses. That faith held out to the last, and even when
through weakness the mind was scarcely able to maintain its
balance, we can see that faith was triumphant, as the following
letter dictated by him just at the close of life will show : —
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FI8KE AND ABBOT. 88
" Jbrusalbm, May 18, 1847.
^Ber, Edwabd Hitchcock, D. D., President of Amherst College .
"To you, my dear friend and brother* and head of our beloved
colleagues in instruction, and President of the Trustees, I was
expecting to address a letter from Beyroot, hoping, on or before my
arriyal there, to meet letters from Amherst, and from my friends in
America, helping me to decide the path of duty, as to the remaining
months of this summer. But the great Head of the Church is
distinctly telling me that I have nothing more to do with earthly plans.
I am prostrated under the disease called dysentery, which has
hitherto ba^ed all attempts to^arrest it. I am, by a kind Providence,
in the fiunily of Doctor McGowan, the eminently skilfhl physician
connected with the English mission in this place, and besides having
the best medical attention, I have the cheering presence of the Rev.
lir. Whiting, as nurse and Christian friend. My time and strength
compel that other circumstances should be learned from another
person. My support in this trying hour is drawn solely, I trust,
from the great and precious promises, connected with those peculiar
doctrines of the Cross, which you and I have long professed to love.
My hope of salvation rests om^he merits and grace of Him who
suffered in Gethsemane and on'Calvaiy, for lost sinners . I lean upon
them as the Lord my strength, and the Lord my righteousness — all
my salvation and all my desire. Worthless and guiltly as I am, I
feel that He will not forsake me, but carry me safely through the
great conflict. To you and the dear brethren, I have many words
to say, but cannot utter them."
Professor Abbot.
Jacob Abbot was appointed Tutor in 1824, and Professor
of Mathematics in 1825. He remained till 1829, when he
resigned to engage in what has since been his life work, the
writing of books for the young, which have become well known
and highly useful all over Christendom. He had a remark-
able power of interesting children, and delighted in gamboling
with them. He had a good deal of mechanical ingenuity, and
succeeded well in experiments in Natural Philosophy. But
he evidently thought that such a work, in a new and poorly
furbished institution, whose ultimate success did at that time
seem doubtful, was not the sphere marked out for him bj
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84 REMINISCENCES OF AMHBllST COLLEGE.
Providence, but rather the more important work in which he
has since been so eminently successful.
Professor Hovey.
To Prof. Abbot succeeded Sylvester Hovey. He was a son
of Mrs. Elisha Billings, of Conway, by her first husband. He
was educated at Yale, where he took the first appointment,
became afterwards a Tutor, and studied f6r the ministry there.
He then became Professor of Natural Philosophy in Williams
College, from whence he was transferred to Amherst, in 1829.
He was a man of extensive erudition and of enlarged views ;
of kind and gentlemanly demeanor, and of consistent, devoted
piety. But he had no great mechanical skill, and hence did
not succeed very well as an experimentei^— certainly compared
with his successor, who was then an Adjunct Professor, but
took no part, I believe, in the manipulations of the lecture-
room. Prof. Hovey's chief difficulty, however, was a wretched
state of health. Consumption had marked him as its victim,
and though he struggled manfully with disease, he succumbed
at last, and continued Professor at Amherst only four years-
His amiable and accomplished wife went before him with the
same disease. He spent one year in Europe, where he pur-
chased, chiefiy of Pixii, of Paris, the most important part of
our Philosophical Cabinet, and the nucleus of our Library.*
He also resided one winter at St. Croix, in the West Indies,
where he turned his attention to Natural History, and made
valuable collections in . conchology and geology. These, by
his will, were presented to Amherst College. The concho-
logical collection was afterwards merged in the much larger
one of Professor Adams, to satisfy that gentleman's notions of
unity, and though in the catalogue due credit is given, I doubt
not, to all specimens donated by Prof. Hovey, yet I always
considered it a great wrong thus to destroy the individuality
of a collection made with great care and expense, and forming,
as in this case, almost the only memento of an amiable and
accomplished man who thus testified his love for aa institution
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HOYEY AND SNELL. 85
for which he would gladlj have done more. The geological
part of his donation still remains entire, although increased bj
some other gifts. But this was less valuable than the con-
chological collection. I do not suppose that Prof. Adams
intended to do any injustice to Prof. Hovej ; but he thought
all the specimens in any branch of natural history should
belong to only one collection, and I could not convince him to
the contrary. For convenience and unity this is indeed desir-
able. But when collections of much size have been made,
with care and expense, and then given — ^not sold — to a col-
lege, it is pleasant to successors to preserve them as mementos,
and sometimes it would be little short of sacrilege to break
them up. So it would be regarded, for instance, were the
collection of crystals, in the Garden of Plants, in Paris, made
by the Abbe Hauy, to be distributed among the other
minerals in that establishment.
PHOFESSOB SnELL.
Ebenezer S. Snell was appointed Tutor in 1825. In 1829
he was made Adjunct Professor with Prof. Hovey. I believe
he devoted himself chiefly to mathematics till the death of
Prof. Hovey, in 1833, when the fuU professorship was thrown
upon him, and from that time to the present he has continued
its honored incumbent. He was the son of Rev. Dr. Thomas
Snell, of Brookfield, one of the earliest friends and supporters
of the College, though being for several years a trustee of
Williams College, he was never appointed a trustee at
Amherst But as early as 1821 he was made one of the
Overseers of the Fund, and fOled that office till 1855. He has
ever been a most faithful and efficient friend of the College.
He died in 1862. Prof. Snell had three traits of character
which eminently fitted him to take this post. The first was a
habit of strict fidelity and prompUiess in the performance of
every duty. With him there was no tardiness, no shrinking
from any duty which it was in his power to perform — ^no
shirking of responsibility himself nor allowing students to shirk.
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36 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
No one not familiar with college life knows how important
such characteristics are in the officers. However fascinating
and splendid a man may he in his puhlic performances, if he
cannot be depended upon for a punctual and persevering per-
formance of his ordinary and most minute duties ; if on any
pretext whatever his duties are left for others to perform, he
is a nuisance to the CoUege. Professor Snell's example has
always tended to keep the ship at Amherst steadily on her
way.
Another very important trait was his remarkable mechanical
skill He has been in the habit of constructing a considerable
part of the philosophical apparatus with his own hands, and
the best judges could scarcely distinguish his articles from
those made in Paris, London or Boston. This ability has been
of great importance in an institution so destitute of funds as
Amherst College. The admirable care that has been taken
of its fine Philosophical Cabinet is due to the same superior
skill. It contains also several new and ingenious instruments
invented by the Professor, which have excited much interest
among scientific men.
I might mention as another important trait his strong
experimental conviction of the truth of evangelical religion,
such a conviction as would lead him to be willing to make
great personal sacrifices for its defence and promotion, as ho
must do if permttiently connected with the new institution.
He was willing to take hold of this as a life work. It was
easy to find men of ability who would do very well for a time
in order to make a professorship at Amherst a stepping-stone
to some more attractive post. When they had become popular
there, they would listen to some louder call made Providential
by a larger salary or a more conspicuous station, and without
much apparent misgivings they could leave the College to
endure as it could the removal of a popular officer. But such
were not Prof. SncU's views of duty, and for thirty-eight years
to this date (1863) he has scarcely been absent a month from
his post, except one recent trip to Europe. It is such men
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JONAS KING. 87
that give character to a college, especially in its earlier and
feebler days.
Rev. Jonas Kino.
Tho name of Rev. Jonas King appears on our catalogue as
Professor of Oriental Literature from 1822 to 1828, and
doubtless, without some explanation, posterity will suppose
that gentleman to have been here lecturing and giving
instruction in Oriental Literature. But in fact,' except on
a flying visit, he did not ireside during that period nearer to
Amherst than Athens, in Greece. Among the founders of
the College were some, and in the community generally there
were many, who supposed that one of the most effectual
modes of converting the heathen was to bring some of their
young men to this country and collect them in seminaries,
as was attempted at Cornwall, in Connecticut Another
notion was that young men going as missionaries, say
to the Orient, had better learn some of the languages
of Asia in this country. One of the Trustees (S. V. S.
Wilder,) had been a principal means of sending Mr. King
to Greece, and it was thought that afler a few years' residence
there, he would be eminently fitted to become a professor in a
college founded expressly for the purpose of educating men to
be ministers and missionaries. Hence his name was continued
so long upon the catalogue. And it did serve like a national
flag to designate to the world the grand object of the institu-
tion, and though the notions which probably led to the
f^pointment are no longer considered as correct, and though
Mr. King never gave any instruction in the College, yet it
will show to all who shall hereafter manage the affairs of the
College, how prominent was the missionary enterprise with
the founders of the College, and whenever that object is lost
sight of, or thrown into a subordinate place, then are the
funds and cabinets perverted and the incumbents living by
robbery.
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88 BEMINISCENCBS OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
Professor Olds.
Professor Gamaliel S. Olds left the same year in which I
joined the College, having been Professor of Mathematics and
Natural Philosophy four years. He had previously been in
the same professorship in Williams College and also in
Burlington, Vermont, and he was likewise settled in the
ministry in Greenfield, where he published an able work on
Episcopacy. He was undoubtedly a man of superior talents
and acquirements, though I think rather clumsy as an experi-
menter. But he was one of that sort of men who could not
work comfortably with others. He afterwards resided in Ohio
and lost his life ftom an unruly horse.
Professor Estabrook.
With Professor Joseph Estabrook I had little acquaint-
ance. He was Preceptor of Amherst Academy when the
College was introduced, and being of respectable talents and
scholarship, — a graduate of Darmouth College, — ^he was
appointed with the title Professor of Languages, which was
changed the third year to Professor of Greek and Latin Lan-
guages. I know not why he left at the end of the third year,
but he did so, and went subsequently to Tennessee, where he
became President of East Tennessee University. After a
successful administration of several years, he resigned, and
turned his attention to mining operations, in which I have
been told he was less successfuL
It will be seen that in 1825 the number of professors was
considerably increased, and most of them labored together for
quite a number of years, four of us (Humphrey, Hitchcock,
Fiske, and Snell,) for twenty years, and two of us (Hitchcock
and Snell,) for thirty-eight years, to 1863. The College had
now got under ftiU headway with six professors and one tutor,
and one hundred and fifty-two students. Previous to that year
the six tutors employed had all been graduates of other
colleges, but after that time the fifty-eight (including three
Digitized by VjOOQIC
PARK, SMITH AND HAVEN. 89
instructors,) have all been graduates of Amherst College.
The president and professors in 1825 were all alumni
of other colleges, excepting mjself, who never graduated at
any coUego^ though recipient of an honorary A. M. from
Yale. Dr. Humphrey was a Yale graduate. Professor
Fiske, of Dartmouth, Professor Peck, of Brown University,
Professor Worcester, of Harvard, and Professor Abbot,
of Bowdoin. Tutor Snell alone graduated at Amherst,
in 1822.
Other Professors.
The names of several other gentlemen appear as Professors
upon our Triennial whom I shall pass briefly over, not because
they did not stand high as instructors, but chiefly because they
remained here only a few years, and left us for wider fields
of usefulness. In other spheres they have risen high for the
most part, save where accident- and death cut short their
career. We couilM^an honor that we can reckon them
among our instructors, and we well remember the pang it
cost us and the heavy blow it gave the College when they felt
it to be their duty to leave. But as their reputations were
chiefly obtained elsewhere, it does not fall within the scope
of these Reminiscences to go into much detail as to their
history.
Among those names is that of Professor Edwards A. Park,
who staid with us only about a year and was in feeble health,
but who showed enough of intellectual and moral power to
make it less surprising to us in Amherst to see him since take
his stand at the head of American theolo^ans.
Professor Henry B. Smith remained with us three years.
In him, too, we saw the rapidly developing germ which has
lifled him into the front rank among the scholars and
theologians of our country.
These gentlemen occupied the chair of Intellectual and
Moral Philosophy. It was subsequently filled by Professor
Joseph Haven, whose character as a teacher, a preacher and
Digitized by VjOOQIC
40 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEOB,
an author here, during eight years, was a sure precursor
of his eminent success at the head of a Theological Seminary
at the West.
Rev. Jonathan B. Condit has several times ohanged his
position from pastor to professor and the reverse, but has
always had distinguished success and was much beloved, as
he was during his three years at Amherst.
Professor William C. Fowler came here from Middle-
buiy, where he had been Professor of Chemistry ; but here,
for five years, he occupied the chair of Bhetoric and Oratory.
Since he left the place he has retired from professional life.
Rev. Thomas P. Field filled the same chdr for three
years and then tore himself away in spite of strong efforts to
retain one so able and acceptable, and has since occupied an
important place as pastor of a church in New London.
Rev. William A. Peabodt, a graduate of Amherst,
entered upon the professorship of Latin in 1849, with the
fairest prospects, and soon secured the ^^pand respect of alL
But alas, within one year, violent disease tore him from us.
The same office was ably fOled for four years by Rev. George
B. Jewett, also a graduate of the CoUege, and for many years
a successful teacher of the young in Lowell. Professor Jewett
distinguished himself as a preacher, and felt so strong a love
of the pastoral office that he left us and was settled in
Nashua, New Hampshire. But there he and his excellent
wife met with a terrible accident in crossing a railroad track
and he was maimed for life. He still lives, however, and
struggles manfully with his calamities, and we have a hope
that he may so far recover as to do much yet for the cause
of God and man.
Professor John W. Mallet was a young man from Dub-
lin, in L:«land, through whose University he passed, and then
spent years in the German Universities. His talents and
attainments were of the highest order in almost every depart-
ment of science, but he has been particularly distinguished in
analytical chemistry, and such a chair was created for him in
Digitized by VjOOQIC
THE PBESENT FACULTY. 41
Amherst. But there was not enough encouragement to retain
him here, and he accepted a professorship in Alabama Uni-
versity, where he became fixed also by marriE^, and whether
he can ever escape from the clutches of secessionism would
seem doubtfuL
Though I have entered into some detail as to the history
and characteristics of three of the present Faculty, because
they have been so long connected with the College, I shall not
make the same attempt in respect to the more recent members,
because it has not been my intention, save in the way of
statistics, to give my impressions of the present coUege officers.
I can only say that the present gratifying condition of the
institution is a sufficient testimony to the ability and fidelity
of its officers. Of Dr. Stearns I said in my Valedictory
Address, '' How peculiarly gratifying is it, as I leave my post,
to find one ready to assume it, in whose Christian cluuracter,
learning, ministerial ability and correct judgment, not only
myself but the trustees, the faculty and the public have entire
confidence." I now have the gratification of repeating this
high encomium after it has been tested by years of trial.
The success of Prof. W. S. Clabk in procuring the means
for the erection and the skill displayed in the construction of
the new Laboratory, and to a great extent the Gymnasium,
testify to his great energy and ability, while his popularity as
a lecturer on chemistiy shows his skill in controlling the minds
of men. The same traits along with distinguished bravery
have shown themselves thus far in his military career.
The present healthy and efficient condition of the difficult
departments of Rhetoric and Oratory shows the ability and
fidelity of its accomplished incumbent, Prof. J. G. Vose. He
also is jusdy and highly esteemed as an able and popular
preacher.
The same remarks will apply to Dr. J. H. Seelte and his
department of Intellectual and Moral Philosophy, as well as
to his ability and success as a preacher of the GospeL The
Digitized by VjOOQIC
42 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
repeated efforts to draw him away from Amherst show the
high appreciation of the public for his services.
The amiable and learned gentleman, Prof. Edward Tuck-
ERMAN, who has charge of Botany and History, is less con-
cerned in giving instruction in College than would be desirable;
for we all know his eminent ability and especially that as a
lichenographist he takes the precedence of all others in our
country.
As to the younger members of the faculty, the Professor of
Latin, E. P. Cbowell, and the Assistant Professor, W. L.
Montague; the Assistant Professor of Greek, R. H. Mather,
also the Instructor in Mathematics, W. C. Estt, I can speak
with strong confidence, because they were educated here, and
I have known them long and intimately. If sterling abilities^
accurate scholarship, amiable manners, untiring industry and
high religious principle, can give success and distinction in
instruction, we may safely anticipate it in their case.
It is not proper that I should give any flattering estimate
of the ability and adaptedness of my son, Edward Hitch-
cock, Jr., for the new department of Hygiene and Physical
Education. All I can say is that thus far it has seemed to be
carried forward successfully.
Some of the earlier and older of the College Faculty with
whom I was long associated (Professors Shepard, Adams
and Tyler) I shall notice in another place seemingly more
appropriate.
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
BTATISnGAL HISTOBT. 48
SECTION II.
STATISTICAL fflSTORT.
Under the tenn statistics I place the number of students
and instructors, the studies pursued and the public buildings.
The contents of the buildings as well, and the funds of the
institution, might also be appropriately included ; but I prefer
to reserve those points for distinct consideration.
Every officer of college knows that this is the questi<»i most
frequently put to him in the community : How many students
have you now in the institution? If it is small, nine out of
ten conclude the college to be in a bad condition ; if large, in
a good condition. But the professor knows that unimportant
circumstances have a good deal to do with numbers, and that
sometimes the reason why a college overflows with students is
that it has lowered the standard of scholarship or of discipline
more than other institutions. Numbers only show the estima-
tion in which a college is held by the public, but does not
settle its real merit Nevertheless if a college Uke Amherst
at its conmiencement does not secure public patronage, it
could not maintain itself long for want of funds. It has had
to pass through one long and trying exigency of this sort^
as the following table of its members from the beginning
will show:— -
Digitized by VjOOQIC
44
BEMINISGEKGES OP AMHEBST COLLEGE.
TEAS.
§
â– a
1
1
1821,
1822,
1823,
1824,
1826,
1826,
1827,
1828,
1829,
1830,
1831,
1832,
1833,
1834,
1835,
1836,
1837,
1838,
18397
1840,
1841,
1842, '
1843,
1844^
1845,
1846,
1847,
1848,
1849,
1850,
1861,
1852,
1853,
1854,
1856,
1856,
1857,
1858,
1859,
1860,
1861,
1862,
1863,
J3
24
42
iO
33
-»1
39
Jl
44
':44
60
40
JlZ
47
80
28
21
80
30
26
19
29
38
25
41
43
42
33.
53
49
45
52
47
48
51
58
42
6
21
29
41
24
40
47
47
74
40
46
50
60
52
63
50
59
48
43
35
27
-^4
83
27
23
30
36
29
43
52
43
35
54
59
50
60
49
43
56
66
49
42
19
32
41
31
45
55
53
72
47
60
60
64
60
77
72
73
57
47
41
40
43
42
29
80
35
36
35
62
55
49
41
61
58
59
65
60
54
61
71
60
50
76
31
40
87
89
60
61
67
62
53
87
00
72
86
70
76
70
60
87
88
44
32
82
34
34
85
60
62
68
40
63
67
06
66
64
64
66
74
67
53
78
60
126
136
152
170
200
211
207
188
195
227
239
243
252
189
169
167
142
129
124
121
118
120
160
166
176
182
190
195
211
237
218
229
221
235
242
220
235
220
3
5
20
25
80
28
40
39
32
60
38
88
39
39
38
62
42
57
44
82
28
21
29
30
96
18
80
80
25
41
42
42
87
53
46
44
51
46
47
49
54
85
Totals,
2,237
1.520
I have followed the annual catalogues in giving the numbers
in the classes in the different years. And since the collegiate
year begins in the sununer or autumn, and the civil year in
January, the graduates are put down a year in advance of tho
Digitized by VjOOQIC
NUMBER OF STUDENTS. 45
same men on the annual catalogae, so that to find out how
monj of the seniors in any given jear graduated, we must
look to the graduates of the next jear. Thus in 1844 there
were thirty seniors, and hj looking at the graduates in 1845
we find that they all graduated. But in 1836 there were
sixtj seniors, while against 1837 there are only fifty-one grad-
uates, showing that nine of the class did not take diplomas.
On the other hand, against 1853 we have thirty-three seniors,
but thirty-seven graduates against 1854, showing that four
were added to the class during the year.
By inspecting the preceding table it will be seen that the
influx of students in the early years of the College was very
great, showing that a chord had been struck to which public
Christian sentiment responded. The numbers gradually rose
till in 1836 they reached two hundred and fifty-nine. But
from that time an equally rapid diminution took place, till
within nine years only one hundred and eighteen students
belonged to the College — ^less than half the number in 1836.
The causes of this change in public feeling will perhaps be
better understood when we come to give facts about the finan-
cial history of the institution. But it was hard work to stop
this ebbing tide, which would soon have left the ship on dry
ground. The flood did, however, slowly come back, so that
in 1854, nine years more, the numbers were doubled. Yet up
to this time they have never reached the influx of 1836.
The whole number of graduates on the preceding list, from
1822 to 1863 inclusive, is one thousand five hundred and
twenty. The whole number that have entered the Fresh-
man Class in the same period, or rather from 1821 to 1862, is
two thousand two hundred and thirty-seven. It might seem
at first thought that this is the whole number that have ever
belonged to the College, and that by deducting from this num-
ber the sum of the graduates, we could determine how many
have failed to go through. But this would leave out all who
have joined the higher classes. To find out how many have
done so I have found a difficult and laborious task. But by
Digitized by VjOOQIC
46
BEMimSCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
collating and oomparing the catalogues I have obtauied the
approximate number that have entered the higher classes
during the different years, from 1823 to 1863. I present
them in the following table, thinking that the details maj be
of some service.
It ought to be stated that where students fall back from a
higher to a lower class, or leave college and subsequently
return, their names will be repeated in the catalogues as enter-
ing twice, as in fact they do. As an offset to this> those
persons are not included in the following list who enter college
say at commencement, but never join it, or if they do, do not
continue members tiU the time of making up the catalogue ;
and the number of such students is considerably large. We
must hence regard the following numbers as a tolerably near
approach to the exact numbers.
â–
I
i
TEAB.
i
g
TEAB.
g
g
1
1
•?
1
1
•?
1
1822, . .
^
2
8
1844, . .
8
1823,
.
2
9
1845,
8
1824, ,
-
2
4
1846,
10
1825,
.
12
1847,
5
1826,
..
2
10
1848, â–
12
1827,
1
7
1849,
18
1828,
1
14
1850,
8
1829,
1
5
1851,
6
1830,
2
13
1852,
5
1831, .
.
19
1853,
10
1832, .
-
1854,
14
1833,
4
1855,
9
1834,
4
1856,
14
1835,
_
1857,
7
1836,
2
1858,
8
1837,
1
1859,
12
1838,
5
1860,
9
1839,
3
1861,
5
1840,
-
1862;
10
1841
2
3
1842,'
.
Totals, .
60-
149
361
1843, . .
1
1
8
Total Seniors, Juniors, and Sophomores,
Total Fraahmen,
670
S,237
3,807
Digitized by VjOOQIC
WHOLE NUMBER OF STUDENTS. 47
The preceding list shows us that 556 have joined the upper
classes from 1821 to 1862. This added to 2,237, the number
of Freshmen to 1862, makes 2,807, equal the whole number
who have joined the College since its commencement De-
ducting from this the number of graduates, equal 1,481, it
leaves, the appalling number of 1,326 who have never gradu-
ated. This is equal to about forty-seven per cent ! very nearly
one-half I Some of these, however, went to other colleges and
graduated there, but I am afraid the number of such was not
very large. The fact is the failure of young men who attempt
to obtain a public education is frightfully large. If we should
go farther back than the College, how many never got so far
as to offer themselves at its gates. And if sixty or seventy do
enter, I never knew the case in which some of them did not
fail to appear at recitation, and of those who enter, if the cata-
logue be delayed a few weeks, others drop off; at the close of
the term a still larger number, and at the end of Freshman
year the stampede is often quite large. The causes are various.
Some are affected by an incurable home-sickness ; others find
that they have overrated their scholarship, and will have to
straggle desperately if they remain to hold on even at the tail
of the class ; others are driven away by abuse from the older
classes; but at Amherst the most prolific cause is poverty.
And as this College was founded specially for indigent students,
the numbers who fail to go through may be larger than at
almost any other college in the country, because so many
extremely poor resort to that institution. But though such
young men often become quite useful, yet it is sad to blast at
once so many bright hopes, not only of students but of their
friends.
A second point in the statistics of the College relates to the
instruction which has been provided for the students. Though
at first the professorships were few, yet the great numbers that
fiocked to the new College compelled the Trustees to make
more ample provision than their funds would justify ; for from
the outset they had taken the high ground that they should
Digitized by VjOOQIC
48 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
give as thorough an education as any of the New England
colleges. At Rrst this could not be realized, especially in the
physical departments, for the want of apparatus and specimens.
But in thorough drilling and scholarship they soon redeemed
their pledge, and though they could not send forth their grad-
uates with the prestige of the older seminaries, it was found
that in the professional seminaries Amherst giuduates did not
fall behind any others, as I have been assured by gentlemen
connected with some of those seminaries.
The following is a list of the Professorships, Preceptorsbips,
Tutorships, and Lectureships in the College to the present
time, (1863,) the number of years they have been continued,
the number of changes of incumbents, and the years when
only isolated instruction was enjoyed :-^
I. — PBOrSSSORSHIPS.
1. Divinity t Moral Philosophy and Metaphyties, from 1821 to
1835 : change of incumbents in 1823.
2. Maihcmaiics and Natural Philosophy, from 1821 to 1863:
change of incumbents in 1825, 1829, 1888, and 1834.
3. Latin and Greek Languages, 1821 to 1825, and 1838 to 1847 :
change of incumbents in 1824, 1825, 1838, and 1836.
4. Oriental Literature, from 1821 to 1828. (No instruction.)
5. Oreek Language and Literature, and BeUes Lettres, 1825 to
1838.
6. Latin and Hebrew, 1825 to 1833.
7. Rhetoric and Oratory, 1825 to 1863 : change of incumbents in
1835, 1838, 1844, 1853 and 1856.
7. Chemistry and Natural History, 1825 to 1863: change of
incumbents in 1845 and 1852.
8. Divinity, 1835 to 1845.
9. Intellectual and Moral Philosophy, 1835 to 1863: change of
incumbents in 1836, 1847, 1850, and 1858.
10. Natural Theology and Geology, 1845 to 1868.
11. Greek and Hebrew Language and Literature, 1847 to 1863.
12. Latin and Modefn Languages, 1847 to 1854 : . change of incum-
bent in 1850.
13. Latin Language and Literature, 1858 to 1863.
14. Zoology and Astronomy, 1847 to 1852.
15. Chemistry, Botany and Zoology, 1852 to 1858.
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
INSTRUCnON. 49
16. Afudytieed Chemisiry, 1854 to 1856.
17. Moral and Chruiian Seienee^ 1854 to 1863.
18. History, 1855 to 1858.
19. Botany, 1858 to 1863.
20. Sygiene and Physical Education, 1860 to 1863 : change of
incumbent in 1861.
II. — Prbcbptobships akd Tutorships.
1. Laiin and Greek, 1824 and 1825, and 1844 and 1846: change
of incambents in 1825 and 1844.
2. MaihcfncUics, 1827 to 1829, 1859 to 1860^ 1862 to 1863 : change
of incumbenta in 1859 and 1862.
3. Rhetoric and Oraiory, insulated instruction in 1838.
4. Modem Languages, 1827 to 1831, 1835 to 1841, 1848 to 1850,
and 1854: change of incumbents in 1828, 1831, 1835, 1841, 1848,
1849, 1850, and 1854. Insulated instruction in 1854.
5. Oriental Literaiure, 1852 to 1867.
6. AgricuUwre, 1852 to 1856.
7. LaHn and French, 1855 to 1858, 1858 to 1863 : change of incum-
bent in 1858.
8. Oerman, 1858 to 1868.
9. Greek, 1859 to 1863.
10. I^rench, 1862 to 1868.
11. Number of Tutors. In the yean 1821, 1824, 1825, 1827,
1828, 1829, 1830, 1838f 1844, 1847, 1853, 1854, 1860, and 1861, one
Tutor. In 1822, 1823, 1830, 1834, 1836, 1839, 1841, 1842, 1846,
1847, 1851, 1852, 1857, 1858, 1862, two Tutors. In 1833, 1835, 1837,
1849, 1855 and 1856, three Tutors. In 1832, four Tutors.
III. — Lbctubeships.
1. JPblitieal Economy, Insulated course in 1832 and 1885, 1852
and 1853, 1860 to 1863: change of incumbent in 1835, 1852.
2. Anatomy. Insulated course in 1835, 1886 to 1861, 1861 to 1863 :
change of incumbent in 1836 and 1861.
3. History, 1854 and 1855, 1858 to 1863.
4. Zoology, 1858 to 1863.
Bat though this table shows the Professorships, it does not
show who filled them. I therefore add another table showing
who were the incumbents, and how long each one has labored,
whether in one, two or more capacities, up to the year 1863-4,
or during the first forty-two years of the College : —
3
Digitized by VjOOQIC
60
REMDmCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
NAMES.
4
Z. S. Moore, .
H. Httinphrej,
E. Hitchcock, .
W. A. Steams,
G. S. Olds, . .
J. Abbott,
T. Hovey,
£. S. Snell, .
J. EfitabtMk, .
N. W. Fiske, .
William S. Tyler, .
Jonas King, .
Solomon Peck,
Samuel M. Worcester,
Jonathan B. Condit,
William C. Fowler,
Aaron Warner,
Thomas P. Field, .
James O. Vose,
Charles U. Shepard,
Edwards A. Park, .
Henry B. Smith, .
Joseph Haven,
Julias H. Seelve, .
Amos D. Gridley, .
William A. Peabody,
George B. Jewett, .
Edward P. Crowell,
Charles B. Adams, .
William S. Clark, .
John W. Mallet, .
. Edward Tuckerman,
Edward Hitchcock, Jr.,
Lvraan Colman,
Henry S. Kelsey, .
James Humphrey, .
Charles Moller,
Ernest Rovel, .
Joseph Deloutte, .
Victor Manget
Edward P. le Prohon,
Jabez B. Lyman, .
Augustus Wimmer,
James L. Merrick, .
John A. Nash,
George Howland, .
Wilham L. Montague,
Richard H. Mather,
Lucius Field. .
William S. Burt, .
Elijah L. Coe, .
2enas Clapp, .
3
23
10
9
88
4
4
4
84
3
83
87
6
7
9
3
6
9
3
7
18
1
8
8
5
3
1
4
5
5
11
2
8
8
35
Digitized by VjOOQIC
INSTRUCTORS.
51
NAMES.
s
&
^
Bela B. Edwards, .
Joseph S. Claric, .
William P. Paine, .
Story Hebard,.
Ezelciel Riissel!,
Horace B. Hackett,
Jastin Perkins,
Timothy Dwight, .
Edward P. Humphrey,
Ebenezer Burgess, .
Elbridge Bradbury,
Thatcher Thavcr, .
Wellington IL Tyler,
Charles Clapp,
Solomon B. Ingram,
Calvin E. Park, .
Amos BuUard,
George C. Partridge,
Clinton Clark,
John Hnmidiivy, •
Jesse 6. D. Steams,
Roewell D. Hitchcock,
Charles £. Washbnm,
Thomas S. Miller, .
Henry M. Spofford,
Rowland Ayres,
David Torrey,
Lewis Green, .
Marshall Henshaw,
Francis A. March, .
Albert Tolman,
Leonard Humphrey,
William Howland, .
Henry L. Edwards,
William C. Dickinson,
John M. Emerson, .
Samuel Fiske,
John E. Sanford, .
George N. Webber,
ReuTOn M. Benjamin,
John M. Greene, .
Edwin Dimock,
Edmund M. Pease, •
AsaS.Fisk, .
L. S. Rowland,
John Ayery. . •
Samuel C. Allen, .
William B. Calhoun,
Alfired Post, .
Charles H. Hitchcock,
Amasa Walker,
1
15
8
5
4
Digitized by VjOOQIC
52 REMIKISGENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
After all, the preceding tables, without some explanation,
will convey some erroneous ideas as to the instruction that has
been given in the College. Thus bj looking at the names of
Jonas King and James L. Meirick, we should suppose that
the College had enjoyed eleven years of instruction in Oriental
Literature from highly competent officers. Whereas, in fact,
about half a dozen lectures by Mr. Merrick, delivered only
once, constituted the whole. But as the names of these gentle-
men were continued on the catalogues many years, they were
transferred to the Triennial. So Professor Gridley never
joined the College. Professor J. A. Nash, I believe, never
gave any instruction on Agriculture; nor Hon. W. B. Calhoun
more than one course on Political Economy; nor Dr. Post
but one course on Anatomy. With these exceptions all the
services represented on the above schedule have been actually
performed. But in several cases the instruction given by
gentlemen occupied but a small part of the. year, and they
were absent from the town most of the time.
The statistics of instruction would be incomplete without
giving some idea of the manner in which the time of the classes
is apportioned to the different departments.
Not until within a few years has it been customary to give
on the annual catalogue a tabular view of the College exer-
cises, and therefore accurate comparison between the present
and the past is not possible. But I will try to put into an
arithmetical form the distribution of the studies in 1862-3.
It should be stated that all the tutors and most of the
instructors have given their aid exclusively, with the exception
of some aid to the Rhetoric, to the departments of Mathematics
or the Languages. No extra assistance has ever been given
by them to the department of Metaphysics, Chemistry or
Natural History — ^I mean in the way of instruction.
Li the academical year 1862-3, were thirty-eight weeks of
term time. There are three exercises upon five days of the
week, and two exercises upon the sixth day. Sometimes two
lectures take the place of one exercise. In such case, in the
Digitized by VjOOQIC
EXERCISES, — STUDIES.
53
following estimate they are ranked as one. The number of
exercises in the several departments are given precisely as in
the catalogue, without any allowance for examinations and
holidays. The total number of exercises in the whole course
amounts to 2,508.
Sophomore Yea/r.
Greek, . . . .
203
Greek, . • . .
112
Latin,
179
Latin, • . . .
148
Hathematicfl,
160
Mathematics and Physics, .
149
Khetoric, .
70
Rhetoric, . . . .
101
Paley,
16
Chemistry,.
68
Dschenberg,
12
Physiology,
18
Mineralogy,
6
Modem liangnages, .
62
History, • • • .
13
646
646
Juwior Tea/r.
Semor Tear.
Fbysics, . . . ,
. 190
Mental and Moral Philoso-
Greek,
. 156
phy, . . . ,
204
Rhetoric, .
94
Geology, . . , ,
57
Modem Languages, .
â–º 76
Constitutional Law, .
54
Latin, . . . .
72
History, . . . «
58
Botany,
. 28
Butler's Analogy,
. 48
BibUcal Literature, •
. 24
Rhetoric, .
. 39
Mmeralogy,
. 6
Elective Studies,
. 36
Mineralogy,
. 24
646
Natural Theology, .
18
Political Science,
. 12
Zoology, .
. 11
Bible Lectures, •
9
670
Adding the above numbers together for the different depart-
ments, and they will stand as follows, showing the amount
of time devoted to each department : —
Mathematics, (273) and
Rhetoric and Oratory, . 304
Physics, (226), . . 499
Mental and Moral Philoso-
Greek, .... 471
phy, including Constitu-
Latin, .... 394
tional Law, ... 258
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54
BEMnnSCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
Modem Langaages, •
Histoij, (including Eschen
berg), . * . .
Chemistiy, • . .
Geology, . . . ,
Batler*8 Analogy,
Elective Studies,
Mineralogy,
Natural Theology, (Includ-
ing Paley,) .
. 128
. 83
. 58
67
48
86
. 86
84
BibUcal Studies, . . 88
Botany, .... 28
Physiology, (exclud'g gym-
nastic exercises,) . . 18
PoHtical Science, . . 12
Zoology, .... 11
2,508
It may give a clear idea of the relative attention given to
the different branches, if I assume 100 as the whole amount
of exercises, and then the portion of time given to each will
be as follows : —
Mathematics, (10.88,) and
Physics, (9.01,) . . 19.89
Greek, . • • . 18.77
Latin, • . • . 15.70
Bhetoric and Oratory, . 12.12
Mental and Moral Philos-
ophy, .... 10.27
Modem Languages, • 5.10
History, • . • . 8.80
Chemistry, • . . 2.31
Geology, .... 2.27
Butler's Analogy, .
. 1.88
Elective Studies, .
1.48
Mineralogy, •
1.48
Natural Theology, .
1.85
BibUcal Studies, .
1.81
Botany, .
1.11
Physiology, .
.71
Political Science, .
.47
Zoology, .
.48
99.80
It would be interesting, could I state the division of the time
of instruction among the different departments in the earlier
periods of the College. But no proper data remain. I can
only remember that when I had charge of Chemistry and
Natural History, about four exercises per week were allowed
me — ^which is scarcely less than the time now given to these
subjects, although since that time they have prodigiously
expanded and become much more important In all the
other branches the standard of scholarship is greatly raised.
This is particularly manifest in Greek and Latin, of which
students now have more knowledge at the close of Freshman
year than formerly at the end of the course.
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PUBUC BUILDINGS. 55
The first list of the coarses of lectures delivered in College
given in the catalogue for 1826, is as follows : —
1. — Chemistxy.
2. — ^Mineralogy.
8.— Botany.
4. — Geology.
5. — ^Kataral Philosophy.
6.— Greek Literature.
7. — ^Roman Literature.
8. — ^Rhetoric and Oratory.
The corresponding list for 1863 is as follows : —
1.— Bhetoric and English Lit-
erature.
2. — Classical Literature.
8. — ^Natural Philosophy.
4. — Mental Philosophy.
5. — Moral Philosophy.
6.— History of Philosophy.
7.— Biblical Theology.
8.— Natural Theology.
9. — ^PuUic Economy.
10.— Chemistry.
11.— Anatomy and Physiology.
12. — Zoology.
18.— Botany.
14. — Mineralogy.
15. — Geology.
16.— History.
Public Buildings.
In no waj is the progress of the College more distmctly
marked than by the additions to its public buildings. Fortu-
nately the means are at hand for showing this progress, not
onlj by description, but by pictorial representations. My
oldest daughter (Mary,) a few years ago got hold of two
yiews of the College, one taken in 1821 and the other in 1824,*
which, though rudely sketched, she was able to bring into the
octavo form to correspond with those that appeared later in
the annual catalogues. These views were taken from the
south-west, as were all the subsequent ones, for this is the
only point from which all the buildings can be seen, except
the gymnasium. For they all front the west or south-west.
Hence photographers have chosen the hill on Mr. Greorge
Baker's farm, from which they took the sketch that appeared
in the catalogue of 1847 and that also which appeared in
* The view taken in 1821 forms the frontispiece; that in 1824 we insert in
this place. A more recent one will be given farther on.
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66 BEBQNISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
1858. The gymnasium being on the north-east side of the
College grounds and on a lower level, is hidden bj the other
buildings.
The first building erected in 1820 was the present South
College, a dormitory building 100 feet long and four stories
high, containing thirty-two rooms, each intended to accommo-
date two students. It was built by subscription and in little
more than three months. Hence it is without architectural
ornament Indeed I doubt whether any architect of judgment
and taste was consulted. This was unfortunate, as the pattern
thus started was followed for the two next dormitory buildings
and the College Chapel. Hence they form an unsightly row
of brick and mortar — ^mere hollow parallelepipeds divided
into compartments called rooms. Had some architectural
taste been exhibited in the first building, it would have been
copied, and almost without any additional expense. But to
prepare men for the Christian ministry was the grand object,
and every thing not essential to this was conscientiously
avoided. It was not till the erection of the Woods Cabinet
in 1848, that an exhibition of good taste in the buildings
where young men are educated, was thought promotive of the
main object instead of needless waste.
In 1822 a second dormitory building was erected north of
the first one, and of the same size, leaving space between them
for a chapeL It is the present North College, but for many
years on the catalogues it is called Middle College ; a third
one having subsequently been erected (in 1828) farther north.
Both in the sketch of 1821 and that of 1824, the meeting-
house of Amherst West Parish is seen upon the left considerably
north-west of the College, and the hill between them is repre-
sented as continuous. So it then was ; but some years after-
wards the deep valley that now exists between the site of the
church and the colleges was excavated, in order to fonn a
terrace in front of the South College. The meeting-house was
taken down in 1829, after a new one (that now existing) had
been built on the west side of the street This also was con-
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Digitized by VjOOQIC
CHAPEL BUILDING. 57
Btracted with such a sad want of taste, that it has e^^er been a
bjeword and a butt of ridicule.
On the sketch of 1824 maj be seen in front of the colleges
a small pTramidal structure, say fifteen feet high, in which the
College bell was placed. I recollect this to be standing in •
1825. But it was too tempting an object to unruly students,
who at length capsized it, and whether it was ever restored to
its normal position I have forgotten. I have forgotten, too,
why the meeting-house bell was not used for College purposes.
Probably, however, there were objections in the parish, as it
is well known that many citizens of Amherst were strongly
opposed to the College.
In 1826 and 1827 the chapel building was erected, so called
because the chapel room is the largest But it was intended
to embrace nearly all the public rooms essential to a college, —
the lecture and recitation rooms — a philosophical cabinet — a
laboratory — and a natural history cabinet, and a library. All
these rooms, not less than ten or twelve, it contained. But in
subsequent years some of the departments found the accom-
modations inconvenient or too narrow, and sought better
quarters. This gave opportunity for multipljdng the lecture
and recitation rooms, and for providing a side chapel of
sufficient size to contain all college at prayers or evening,
religious, and other meetings. It was unfortunate, however,
that the plan of the building did not pass under the eye of
some competent and responsible architect
The means of erecting this building were obtained in part
from a legacy left by Adam Johnson, of Felham, the condition
of which was that the chapel should bear his name. It seems
that his will was at first set aside by the judge of probate, but
the College went into a litigation on the points, and got that
decision reversed. Yet the expenses reduced the legacy so
that $4,000 only was received, and the Trustees, in 1828, '^ in
testimony of their grateful remembrance of the munificent
donation," voted " that the apartment in said building occupied
as a chapel shall hereafter forever be called Johnson Ghapd;
3*
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68 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
and that the words Johnson Chapel be inscribed in large and
distinct characters over the middle door or principal entrance
of the apartment aforesaid." The remainder of the funds,
certainly not less than $11,000, were borrowed or sabscribed.
The Trustees appointed a committee as early as 1825, ^ to
advertise for proposals for the erection of a chapel and another
college building of the same dimensions with those now exist-
ing." The chapel was built, as we have stated, in 1826, but
the dormitory building not till the early part of 1828, and then
only by increasing the college debt. The accommodations
being now provided for nearly two hundred students, the
Trustees did not feel constrained to erect any more edifices
for several years, as they began to feel heavily the pressure
of debt. They did, however, in 1884, make a movement to
erect another on the south border of the hill corresponding to
North College, which stood on lower ground, and its largest
diameter at right angles to the general front. The ground on
the south side was graded to the same level, but no hall or
dormitory building was ever erected there.
The first President's house was built in 1820, and was
occupied first by Dr. Moore, while he lived, and then by
Dr. Humphrey, till 1833, when a movement was made by the
Trustees to erect a new President's house on the top o£ the
hill opposite the College, and to sell the old one. It wad
hoped that enough might be realized from this sale and from
some old and rather doubtful subscriptions, to make $5,000,
which was the estimated cost of the new house. An impres-
sion was wide-spread in consequence of some sickness in
Dr. Humphrey's family, that the old house was damp and
unhealthy, and one of the more ardent of the Trustees said
in the meeting, '^ Gentlemen, you must either build a new
house for your President, or lay him and his family in yonder
graveyard." This argument was conclusive, and during 1834
and '35 the house was built, not by contract, but by days'
works, and the consequence was, that when the bills were aU
in, they amounted to about $9,000. I happened to preside
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president's houses. 59
at the meeting of the Tnistees in 1835, during Dr. Hum-
phrej's absence in Europe, when these bills were presented,
and I noticed that nobody could be found who felt a responsi-
bility for such large bills. The old house was sold to Profes-
sor Fowler, for about $2,500, leaving an additional debt upon
the College of $6,000 or $7,000. The new house is indeed
large, commodious, and in good ajrchitectural proportions. But
in my judgment its location is not near as good for a Presi-
dent's house as that of the old one. It is too near the Col-
lege, and overlooks it too much, and is too much overlooked
by the College. For a President should not be obliged to see
every small impropriety of students, because he must notice
them all ; and this will be apt to awaken prejudices against
him. The old house was much better situated, and Professor
Fowler, by furring out the walls, made it perfectly dry and
healthy. I have, therefore, always regarded the building of
this new house as unfortunate, although done ftom the very
best of motives. It threw a great weight into the wrong
scale of the pecuniary affairs of the College, already far too
much depressed.
Soon after this time a reverse began to come over the Col-
lege. Its debts pressed heavily, the public became nervous
under such incessant demands for aid^ and the number of stu-
dents rapidly diminished, thus rendering outward assistance
more necessary. Hence the struggle was for existence rather
than the erection of new buildings, and it was not till the ship
had reached the bottom of the gulf and began to rise on a new
wave, that another new edifice was thought of. As I had the
principal concern in getting up this, I desire to say that I
proceeded on an entirely different principle from that which
seems previously to have governed. My principle was never
to take one step towards the actual erection of a public edifice
till the entire funds were in our hands. In all the buildings
which I was the means of erecting subsequently I acted on this
principle, and am satisfied that it is the true one, both pruden-
tiaUy and religiously. Its importance and the contrary prao-
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60 BEBnmSCENOES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
tice of 80 man J excellent men may lead me to recnr to it again
in another connection.
Soon after I entered upon the Presidency of the College,
say near the end of 1845 or the beginning of 1846, the plan
entered my mind of attempting to nuse money to build a
Cabinet. I was stimulated also by the offer of Professor C. U.
Shepard to deposit his collections here if a good building were
provided. ' I went to Boston to make a preliminary effort, but
without much success. On my return, however, I met Hon.
Josiah B. Woods, of Enfield, who expressed a conviction that
he could obtain the means for such an object, and I persuaded
him to attempt it. He did succeed so weU that the Trustees at
commencement in August, 1846, voted to erect ^'a fire proof
building for a cabinet of Natural History and an Astronomical
Observatory." This was done in 1847, at an expense of
$9,000, constituting the present Woods Cabinet and Lawrence
Observatory, to which two other buildings have since been
attached. It was completed and nearly filled with specimens,
so as to be publicly dedicated June 28th, 1848. That occa-
sion, however, was not simply a dedication of the new building^
for a little before that time other gratifying changes had taken
place in the condition of the College so great that the Trustees
felt as if some public recognition of the blessings was proper,
and they chose this occasion, giving a general invitation to the
benefactors of the CoUege to be present The prominent ones
were there, either by letter or in propria persona^ and many
interesting addresses full of valuable reminiscences were made.
The principal one was by Hon. William B. Calhoun, and was
an admirable performance.
The architect of this building was Henry A. Sykes, Esq.,
of Springfield, a man of consistent piety, of good taste, and
thorough acqmdntance with his profession. I said to him, I
want you should make both the Cabinet and the Observatory
octagonal, and of such dimensions as you can with the money
we have on hand, taking care not to leave us a cent in debt. .
Adapt the building to the shape, size, and position of the hill,
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WOODS CABINET. 61
and give it such a form that other buildings can be added to
it hereafter, without marring the plan. When it was finished,
some of our good friends who had never seen the architecture
of Europe, were greatly scandalized because the building had
so many angles, and its longer axis or front was not perpen-
dicular to the face of the row of buildings behind, but quite
oblique, conforming to the cre^t of the hilL But gentlemen
who have studied the architecture of Europe, and the effect
of form and position, have again and again expressed to me
their admiration of this building in connection with its sur-
roondings. Nor will future additions to this pile detract from
its harmony and beauty, if made by a skilful architect. This
is the first building on the College Hill that showed any thing
like architectural symmetry and effect, except the President's
house. It 13 no wonder that it should greatly disturb the
ideas of a man whose highest notion of architectural beauty
is a right angle and a parallelopiped.
The improved condition of the College gave new impulse
to its friends to attempt the improvement of its various depart-
ments. Among other wants those of the Library attracted
particular attention. As early as 1844, Hon. David Sears
made an effort to meet this want, by establishing the Sears
Foundation of Literature and Benevolence, and though for
the present its income is not large, yet it requires $120 to be
annually expended in the purchase of books. John Tappan,
Esq., also gave $1,000 about the sanie time, for the purchase
of books. But the germ of the greatest effort made for this
object, I find in an informal meeting of a few friends of the
College from Salem, (Judges Perkins and Huntington, and
Richard P. Waters, Esq.,) in order to start a subscription.
I know not whether George Merriam, Esq., knew of this
effort, when, about the same time, lie subscribed $1,500 for
the same object Professor B. B. Edwards seized upon this
offer, and brought the subject before the Trustees in 1850,
who directed an effort to be made to procure means for ei-cct-
ing a libi'ary building and increasing the number of books.
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62 BEBKINISCENCES OF AHHEBST COLLEGE.
Professors Tyler and Jewett acted as agents, and when $15,000
were procured, $10,000 were devoted to the building. It was
planned by Mr. Sykes, begun in 1852, and completed and
dedicated in 1853, when an Address was delivered by
Professor £. A. Park. A sketch of it was given in the
Annual Catalogue for 1852. It was buUt entirely of the
beautiful, unhewn gneiss of Pelham. This was the first time
such a use was made of this stone ; but it was subsequently
employed by Professor Tuckerman, in building his elegant
private mansion, and still more recently in the Gymnasium.
As to the location of the Library, there was a diversity of
opinion. The two places selected by different parties were
that on which the Library now stands, which was the site
of the residence of Rev. Dr. David Parsons, formerly pastor
of the village church, and the other a spot north-east of the
Woods Cabmet, towards Williston Hall. Professor B. B.
Edwards, who had taken a prominent part in the whole
enterprise, was decidedly in favor of the Parsons place. But
unfortunately the Trustees had sold it, and could not repur-
chase it but at a very high price. Yet Dr. Edwards would
have it done. Says he, in a private letter, ^ You will pardon
my zeal in this matter. I have taken a deep interest in the
Library and in the Library building, and have had my heart
set on living to see a neat and tasteful edifice on the Parsons
estate, the only good locality. Better give two thousand
dollars for that property and invest the money subscribed for
a building tiU the lot would be paid for in that way." Per-
sonally I felt no strong bias on this question, though I saw
that Professor Edwards' view was probably the true one, and
I felt that great deference was due to one who had been as it
were the soul of the whole enterprise. It was finally settled
in entire accordance with Professor Edwards* opinions, and no
one I presume could now be found who would not acknowl-
edge that the location is admirable, and that any other spot
would have been a great mistake.
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APPLETON CABINET. 68
Though the new Cabinet and the old one in the College
Chapel building afforded room for very many specimens, yet
some of the collections appeared to great disadvantage — some
of them were placed in different rooms, and all in the chapel
were peculiarly exposed to fire. Besides, some of the foot-
mark specimens were too large for any of our rooms, and X
felt a strong desire to see some new and enlarged means for
arranging the collections. About that time Hon. Samuel
Appleton died and left $200,000 to be disposed of by his
executors for benevolent and scientific objects. Possibly this
might be such an object as he had in mind. I therefore
addressed the following letter. to the executors: —
<' Amhebbt, Nov. 25th, 1853.
" To the Hon. Nathan Afpletok and the other Executors of the
WUl of the IcUe Hon, Samuel Appleton :
*' Gbntlehbk, — I have hesitated long before addressiDg you, lest
I should seem an unwelcome intruder. But at length I venture to
lay before you the following statjsment as briefly as possible.
"From several quarters I have learnt that the late Hon. Samuel
Appleton has left in your hands a large legacy to be appropriated to
objects of beneYolence, of science, &c. I would fain hope that the
following case may have some claims upon your consideration.
** When the late Professor C. B. Adapas became an instructor in
Amherst College, he presented it with a large collection in Zoology,
especially of shells, whose Talue he then estimated (in 1847) at five
tliousand dollars. From that time to the day of his death, he labored
indefatigably and under most favorable circumstances, to increase
the collection, so that they now contain 400 species of vertebrated
animals, 5,000 species of articulated animals, 8,000 species of shells,
and 200 species of radiated animals. They are put up in cases
and arranged in a very superior manner for exhibition and study.
Of shells I believe this is regarded by eminent naturalists as the
finest in the United States ; and I saw but few in Europe superior.
It now occupies three rooms in our chapel building. This building
contains, also, a chapel room, a chemical laboratory, and four reci-
tation and lecture rooms ; so that in fact it is more exposed to be
burnt down than almost any building that I know of. Besides, tlie
rooms are widely separated from one another, and are poorly
adapted to an exhibition of the specimens so as to make them
accessible to scientific gentlemen.
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64 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
*' Now what we want is a Zoological Cabinot, essentially fire-proof^
and separated from all buildings exposed to fire ; large enough to
contain all the collections in one room, with a lecture room attached.
We have an admirable site for such a building, near the spot where
stands the 'Lawrence Observatory,' and the 'Woods Cabinet.'
Moreorer, I know of a gentleman who will give two thousand
dollars towards such an object, and allow any other person, who will
supply the other four or five thousand dollars necessary, to attach
his name to the edifice. I should hope, after conversing with an
architect, that (6,000, and certainly that $7,000 would be sufficient for
the purpose. And my suggestion is, whether this may not be such
an object as Mr. Appleton had in view when he made his noble
legacy. He was, while living, a benefactor to Amherst College,
having given $500 to the library just erected, and $600 to com-
mence the endowment of an Agricultural Professorship. But it is
not simply or mainly as a benefaction to the College, that I Tenture
to ask for such a donation. It is in behalf of the cause of science
generally in this country. Whenever large collections of natural
objects of any kind have been made in our country, at great sacri-
fice of time and money, (this has cost nearly twenty years of hard
work,) it is very desirable that they should be safely preserved and
placed in a situation favorable for the inspection of gentlemen of
science. The College is unable at present to do this ; having only
the funds necessary to carry forward the ordinary course of instruc-
tion. How appropriate that a name so honored as that of Appleton,
should be placed upon an edifice erected for such a purpose !
'' I beg leave to state another consideration. I have now been
nearly twenty years engaged in collecting fossil footmarks, and hare
just presented the whole (value firom $2,000 to $3,000,) to the Col-
lege. As a consequence, the friends of science have furnished me
with nearly an equal sum, with which to purchase new specimens.
This has been done to a large extent. But my geological cabinet is
entirely full, and it needs a whole room devoted to the footmarks.
They are now scattered in various rooms, and out of doors. If
brought together they would form a point of great interest to scien-
tific men. Such a room might easily be provided in the basement
story of a Zoological Cabinet, with almost no increase of expense.
" Being desirous of presenting other testimony than my opinion
to the importance of this object to the cause of science, I requested
that of Prof. Agassiz and Dr. Augustus A. Gould, gentlemen well
acquainted with our Cabinet and eminently qualified to judge of its
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â– i
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Digitized by VjOOQIC
APPLETON CABINET. 66
Talue. Extracts from their answers I enclose; and beg leave to
subscribe myself,
** With high respect, jour obedient servant,
• "Edwabd Hitchcock.'*
This letter was dated Nov. 23, 1853, and though I learned
that it was looked upon favorably, I received no definite
answer till Nov. 2181^ 1854, the day before I left the Presi-
dency. Then it appeared that the trustees on the estate had
exceeded my request, and appropriated $10,000 to the erec-
tion of an Appleton Zoological Cabinet. Mr. Williston,
Professor Clark and myself, were appointed a committee to
have charge of its construction and erection, and we employed
Mr. Sykes as the architect. • The trustees on the estate were
Hon. Nathan Appleton, Hon. William Appleton and N. I.
Bowditch, Esq., gentlemen well known for their enlarged
appreciation of objects of public utility.
The Appleton Cabinet was erected in 1855, and is one
hundred and ten feet long and forty-five feet wide, two stories
high, with a lecture room over thirty feet square attached.
The lower room is an Ichnological and the upper a 2k)ologicaI
Cabinet As the lower room has brick waUs and a fioor of
cement, except the side rooms, it is as near a fire proof build-
ing as is consistent with the presence of wooden cases, espe-
cially in the upper room, and a wooden fioor. It has also a
wooden cornice, which might take fire if the college building
north of it were to bum. I have urged the Trustees to guard
some of these points more carefully, as might be done with
Uttle expense, and I hope it may yet be done.
Originally it was intended that this Cabinet should be
placed on the west side of the Woods Cabinet, where danger
from fire would have been much less. The building commit-
tee agreed upon this spot, but their opinion was overruled by
that of the prudential committee, or at least some of them, on
the ground that the appeai*ance would be unsightly. I plead
for that place as the site, because I wanted the lecture room
near where the cabinet of specimens is. Luke Sweetser said
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66 BEBUNISCENGES OF AKHEBST COLLEGE.
if that was a point of great importance he would attach a
lecture room to the Woods Cabinet^ if it could be done for
$1,000. On that ground I yielded my objections, and the
Appleton Cabinet was located on ttie south wing of the dor-
mitories, thou^ none of us then thought, I presume, that it
would there be more exposed to fire. Thus the change of
location was the means of the erection of the Geological
Lecture Boom. •
I know I shall be believed, when I speak of the high grat-
ification I experienced in being able to announce the success-
ful termination of mj efforts to erect this Cabinet, in mj
Valedictory Address, on leaving the Presidency. In that
address I had written thus: '^.To secure a new building to
receive the Zoological coUection, with the still more exposed
collection of fossil footmarks, has long been with me an
object of strong desire and efforts ; and it is among the deep-
est of my regrets on leaving the Presidency that it remains
unaccomplished.'' The scenes of such an occasion, borne
down as I was by wretched health, would be of course sad-
dening. But how kind in Providence to send me as some
offset the news of my success in this enterprise only a few
hours before I was formally to leave the Presidency, that I
might announce it in a postscript I And then by continuing
my connection with the CoUege, I could have the almost
entire control and superintendence of the new building, so as
to plan it according to my wishes and judgment. We made
up our minds, for the sake of securing as much room as possi-
ble, to expend the ten thousand.dollars in the building alone,
leaving the cases and other fixtures to be otherwise provided
for. In the lower room these were so simple as to cost but
little, and in the upper room, Hon. S. Williston provided, at
no small expense, for the wall cases, while the horizontal ones
had already been prepared by the College, as one of the con-
ditions on which Professor Adams presented his collections to
the institution. The other expenses of this Cabinet will be
noticed in another place.
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NINEVEH QALLEBY. 67
The Geological Lecture Boom, already referred to, was
erected rather late in the autumn of 1855. Mr. Sweetser
declined having his name affixed to it.
The Nineveh Gallerj, like the Appleton Cabinet, was built
bj individual Kberalitj. In another place I shall describe the
manner in which the articles it contains were obtained. But
their multiplication rendered some distinct rendezvous impor-
tant. Mj mind was turned towards Enos Dickinson, Esq.,
of South Amherst, whom I had long known as an industrious
and substantial fanner, of superior intelligence and sound judg-
ment, of firm and consistent pietj, and liberal in his benefactions.
It so happened that the spot where I wanted to erect the
I^eveh Galleiy was the site of the old church where for thirty
years he had attended meeting, where he was baptized and
made a precession of religion, and he remarked that if he
should desire to leave his name any where on earth that would
be the spot. He also appreciated the object, and erected the
Gralleiy in 1857, at an expense, including the frescoes, of $567.
It is attached to the Woods Cabinet, and though a small
room, it is probably as large as the original passage in the
palace of Nimroud from which the sculptured slabs were
taken. A marble slab on the outside contains the inscription,
The Dio^ikson Nineteh Gajllert, and another slab on the
inside the names of all the donors to the Gallery. Similar
slabs have been placed upon and within all the rooms of the
Cabinets, both to give a name for each to the visitor, and to
let posterity know to whom we are indebted for the means of
filling them with specimens, in the hope that others in timQ to
come may be stimulated to go and do likewise. I know that
some benevolent men feel a little sensitive at having their
beneficence thus engraved in marble. But for such an object
and with the view of thus doing a double good with their money,
why should they be reluctant to have the simple facts stated ?
Our next public buildings were the result of a calamity. In
the winter of 1857, the North College was destroyed by fire,
the result of carelessness in a student's room* Hon. Samuel
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68 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
Williston at once offered to place upon its site an edifice three
stories high, eighty feet by forty, the lower story of which
should be a chemical laboratory ; the second story rooms for
two literary societies, and the upper story an alumnus hall, at
an expense of about $15,000, provided the Trustees would
at once proceed to erect a new dormitory building at the same
cost. The Trustees accepted the offer and the two buildings
were erected that season, viz., in 1857, the same season as the
Nineveh Gallery. The former were formally dedicated the
next year with an address by Rev. H. W. Beecher. There
was an insurance of $5,000 only on the building burnt, and
towards $5,000 more were obtained by subscription. For the
third $5,000 the College had to resort to borrowing. The
new dormitoiy contains forty-eight rooms and occupies a
commanding site on the east side of the college grounds.
The other building was called and is labelled Williston Hall,
and its architectural proportions are very fine. With this
building on the north and the Appleton Cabinet on the south,
the long, unomamented, cheerless row of intervening buildings
is greatly relieved. The architect of Williston Hall was
Charles E. Farkes, of Boston. The new dormitory building
and the gymnasium were also planned by him, according to
correct architectural rules.
Only one other public building remains to be described, and
that is the gymnasium, seventy feet by fifty, built of unhewn
Felham gneiss. It is massive in appearance, without much
architectural beauty, though in conformity with architectural
rules. It was built in the autumn of 1859, so far as it could
be, and the mortar froze badly. But the walls will probably
st€md many years, even if there be no adhesive power in the
mortar. The expense also was much increased by the
attempt to complete the building in 1859. Hence what niight
have been built for $8,000 or $9,000, cost $10,000, and its
completion was delayed till the autumn of 1860, after alL
The largest subscription was by Dr. Benjamin Barrett, of
Northampton, viz., $1,000, and hence the building is called
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FUBUO BUILDINGS AND THEIR COST. 69
the Babbett Gthnasium. Subecriptions were obtained by
Professor W. S. Clark, Professor W. S. Tyler, and some others,
to the amount of about $5,000. For the other $5,000 the
College resorted again to borrowing. It has been the means,
however, of introducing a new department into the College,
which has been called that of Hygiene and Physical Education,
and which promises to be decidedly useful.
Let me now present a recapitulation of the public buildings
that have been erected by Amherst College, as to their date
and cost.
1820.~The first President's House cost, • • .say $4,000 00
1820.— Sonth College (Dormitory,) cost, . . . 10,000 00
1822.~Kiddle College, present North College, . . 10,000 00
1827.— Chapel Building, ' 15,000-00
1828.— North College, 10^000 00
1834.— New President's Honse, 9,000 00
1847. — ^Wood's Cabinet and Lawrence Observatory, . 9,000 00
1863.— Library Building, 10,000 00
1855.— Appleton Cabinet, 10,000 00
1855. — Geological Lecture Boom, .... 1,000 00
1857.-^ineTeh Gallery, 567 00
1857.— Williston Hall, 15,000 00
1857.— East College, 15,000 00
1860.- Barrett Gymnasium and fixtures, . . . 15,000 00
$138,567 00
It thus appears that over $180,000 have been expended
for the public buildings of this institution, all but one of which
(North College) are now standing. The fixtures, such as
cases, tables, chairs, &c^ have probably cost $10,000 more,
paid partly by the College and partly by individual bene&c-
tors, especially Mr. TVilliston.
It may not be amiss for me to name the most prominent of those
mechanics who have erected the College Buildings. Col. Warren
S. Howland, a carpenter and joiner, has now labored for the College
more than forty years. The two President's houses he built by con-
tract, and more recently the Nineveh Gallery, and has had a part in
almost all the buildings. Mr. Hiram Johnson, a mason, built the
Chapel and the North College. The more recent buildings— ^e
Appleton Cabinet, WiUiston Hall and East College, were put up by
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70 BEHINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
George P. Shoals, of East Hampton, and the Gjmnasinm by B. B.
Myers, of Northampton. The library was built by its architect^
Henry A. Sykes, on contract.
Perhaps I ought also to state a few facts in respect to the other lite-
rary institutions that have existed in Amherst. The Academy, from
which the College sprung, was incoiporated in 1816, and has always
been in operation till within a year or two, when it has been super-
seded by a High School, for which a large and tasteful building has
been erected a little north of the Gymnasium. The Academy has
accomplished a good deal, but it was always cramped for the want
of Ainds, and it is doubtAil whether it will ever be resuscitated.
In the year 1825, Martin Thayer, Esq., erected an elegant prirate
residence on Mount Pleasant, one of the finest spots in New Eng-
land, far finer than its flat name implies. He bad not lired there
more than a year, however, before his amiable wife died, and be
converted the building into a Seminary by the addition of two large
wings. Here Messrs. Colton and Fellows, graduates of the College,
opened a school with a plan analogous to that of the German Gym-
nasia. It flourished. for a time wonderftilly, and it had as many
instructors as the College. But, like most similar schools in thia
country, it soon went down because it became top-heavy: that is, an
influx of students led the proprietors to make more outlays for
instruction than their means would justify. Subsequently, however,
the Bev. J. A. Nash maintained a respectable family school in this
spot, which is continued to the present time by his son, Henry
C. Nash. Both these gentlemen were graduates of the College.
Neither the Mount Pleasant Institution, nor the Academy, have
fhmished a large number of recruits for the College, especially of late.
The fact is, it is not well that students should fit for College in the
country town where it is located. If they do they are apt to form
undesirable acquaintances in the College, and to learn so much of it
that the charm of novelly is broken. Hence I have always advised
parents, even those who reside in Amherst, who would have their
sons pass through Amherst College, to send them somewhere else
for preparation.
In 1862, Dr. W. J. Walker offered $20,000, provided others
would add $20,000 more, for the erection of a new hall devoted to
the uses of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy. The required
$20,000 was contributed by several gentlemen, (Williston, Hitch-
cock, etc.,) and at Commencement, in 1868, the Trustees voted to
proceed at once to the erection of the building, under the name of
Walkbr Hall. They also appropriated $10,000 for remodelling
and repairing the Johnson Chapel.
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THE PHILOSOPHICAL CABINET. 71
SECTION III.
HISTORY OF THE CABINETS, LABORATORY AND LIBRARY.
!• The Philosophical Cabinet.
The apparatus in the department of Natural Philosophj, for
several of the first jears of the College, was totally inadequate
to the wants of the department But after Professor Hovej
took the chair of Philosophy, and was about to go to Europe,
the Trustees in 1830 passed the following resolution: —
^Setobfedj That immediate measures be taken to nuse the
.sum of three thousand dollars for the purpose of making addi-
tions to the philosophical apparatus, and that Professors Hitch-
cock and Hovey be appointed as agents to procure aid of
benevolent individuals for this object" I have no very
distinct recollections about this agency : but somehow or other,
the money was obtained, and with it Professor Hovey pur-
chased, chiefly in Paris, of Pixii, a large part of the apparatus
still in use in the philosophical department Among the rest
were a fine Transit Instrument and Astronomical Clock,
which were never mounted till the Astronomical Observatory
was erected in 1847. A fine apparatus room or cabinet had
been provided in the chapel building, with a lecture room
adjoining, and there for over thirty years Professor Snell has
had a watchful care of the instruments, adding a great many
others, either by purchase or by his own manufacture, so
that at present the collection is very complete, containing
instruments of research as well as demonstration. Among
the larger instruments added by Professor Snell is a Repeat-
ing Circle and one of Spencer's best Microscopes. It con-
tains also those ingenious instruments of his own contrivance
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72 REMINISCENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
and construction for the illustration 'of waves in air and water
and the phenomena of polarization.
At the dedication of the Astronomical Observatory in 1848
I remarked, that ^ we should be verj faithless and ungrateM
to doubt that the same Providence which has done so much
for us the past year will send us a fitting telescope if it be best
for us to have one, and send it too, just at the right time.** In
mj Valedictory Address in 1854 I was enabled to say, "IMb
prediction, through the liberality of Hon. Rufus Bullock, has
been fulfilled ; and a noble telescope has just been placed in
yonder dome, which through the great skill and indefatigable
industry of Alvan Clark, Esq., who has constructed it, is one
of the finest instruments of its size that ever graced an observ-
atory; and its mounting has some important improvements
never before introduced. In the hands of Mr. Claris it has
already introduced to the astronomic world two new double
stars never before recognized; one of which is probably binary.
This discovery has already been confirmed and admowledged
by one of the most accomplished observers in Great Britain.
May we not hope that this glass will perform another service
for science by stirring up some generous heart to endow a
professorship of astronomy in our College at no distant day?
This, certainly, is at present one of the most pressing wants
of the institution."
I might add that thb prediction or anticipation has also been
inlfilled by the late donation of Dr. Walker, to endow a
professorship of mathematics and astronomy.
2. Chemical Laboratory.
I have already given some idea of the state of preparation
in the College for chemical experiments when I joined it Not
only was I obliged to lecture in the fourUi story and in a sort
of chapel, but there were no instruments or ingredients worth
naming provided by those who preceded me. For four gentle-
men had lectured on that subject before me, viz. : Col. Rufus
Graves, Professor Olds, Professor Amos Eaton, and a Mr.
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OBf
y
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CHEMICAL LABOBATOBT. 78
Ck>tting, who was aftervt'ards appointed State Geologist in
Georgia.
I must have given at least two fourth story courses of
lectures. But when the chapel building was erected in 1826,
an opportunity was presented for fitting up a Laboratory.
The basement story at the east end was mostly above ground
with cellar rooms adjoining. I had ample space for a large
lecture room, apparatus room, and office, and means enough
were furnished for supplying economically furnaces, cisterns,
gasometers, and apparatus. The only difficulty was that the
room was beneath all the others and partially under ground.
But at that time the idea generally was that such was the
proper place for a laboratory. Because the chemist eliminates
many mephitic gases, therefore place him where he cannot get
them out of his room ; or if they do escape through the ceiling
they will let ail in the nxftns above him get a whiff of the
atmosphere which he is obliged to breathe in concentrated
purity. Nevertheless, I spent at least a third of my time for
eighteen years in that laboratory, and found it in most respects
very convenient. I do not doubt that its dampness and the
unwholesome gases which I got rid of only by opening the
doors and windows, have contributed to bring on and aggravate
those pulmonary and bronchial difficulties that now press so
heavily upon me, and will soon terminate my days. But
probably a person in good health need not fear active employ-
ment in such rooms. I have found analytical chemistry to be
more trying in such a place than the mere preparation for
lectures, because the former requires such long continued
attention.
When Williston Hall was built, in 1857, the old laboratory
under the chapel was abandoned and a new one fitted up with
ample space and with all the fixtures and apparatus found in
the best furnished laboratories of Europe. Professor W. S.
Clarke, liberally furnished with means by his father-in-law,
Hon. S. Williston, even went to Germany to procure all he
deemed important for demonstrative and analytical chemistry.
4
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74 REMINISCENCES OF AMHEB8T COLLEGE.
Ample provision is made in this laboratory for aooommodating
students in analytical chemistry independent of the lecture
and apparatus and furnace rooms. With such abundant
means it will need only chemical ability, industry and pene*
verance to make this laboratory not only an efficient arm of
the College, but an important means of advancing the science.
The old laboratory has been converted partly into a recitation
room, partly into a lecture room for Professor Shepard in
mineralogy and applied chemistry, and partly into his office
and apparatus room, and he is quite satisfied with them«
3. NATURiX HiSTOBT GaBINETS.
When I came here, in 1826, a natural history sodety
existed among the students, which had begun to bring
together specimens chiefly in mineralogy, geology and
mammalogy; but they were t<k> few to be employed in
lecturing. I therefore took up the business of collecting. I
had, however, in previous years, obtained a few hundred
specimens, mostly in mineralogy and geology, and the Trustees
in 1826 'Woted that Professor Hitchcock be requested to
deposit his private geological cabinet in the Cabinet of the Col-
lege.*' Previous to this time, I believe, the Natural History
Society had presented the whole or a part of their collections, so
that so far as numbers were concerned, our cases looked quite
respectable. But to one acquainted with natural history,
probably the larger part would come under the ironical title
of Jactalites ; that is, specimens to be thrown away. How-
ever they did a very good service so long as no better collec-
tions were near. And it is a fact that some of the ablest
naturalists who have graduated here, (ex. qr. Shepard and
Adams,) started in these days of meagre scientific illustration.
Their fewness led such men to study what we had with more
attention, and that awakened the desire to see and possess
more; and in these two facts, conjoined with good native
talent and scholarship, you have tbe elements of able nat-
uralists.
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DONOBS. 75
In 1830 I was appointed to make a geological survey of
Massachusetts, and this opened a door for the introduction of
numerous specimens. The Gk>yemment, indeed, directed that
a collection of the rocks and minerals of the State of moderate
size. should be collected for each of the colleges. They
amounted, I believe, in the first survey, to al>but eight hun-
dred. I also collected four times as many for the State
Cabinet, and nearly as many for myself. Having deposited
the latter in the Cabinet, the Trustees, feeling under obliga-
tion to Williston Seminary, or rather to its founder, presented
to it the collection of eight hundred specimens.
Another way which has been a prolific one of increasing
the Cabinet in all its branches, organic and inorganic, is by
securing the help of the graduates of the College, especially
the foreign missionaries. The Zoological Museum has in this
way been often enriched. But in the Woods Cabinet is a
collection of rocks and minerals, chiefly from Asia, of more
than twelve hundred specimens, sent in a great measure by
missionaries, or by men on missionary ground. Many of these
specimens possess a special interest from the sacred localities
from which they came* But they are numerous enough from
some extensive regions to give a tolerable idea of the geology :
as for instance, Syria and Palestine, especially Mount Leba-
non, Armenia, and the north-west part of Persia, and the
Ghaut Mountains of India. They have been sent by the
following gentlemen : —
Rev. Story Hebard, Syria.
Rev. Justin Perkins, D. D., Ooroomiah, Persia.
Bev. Benjamin Schneider, D. D., Boorsa and Aintab.
Rev. Oliver P. Powers, Central Turkey.
Rev. Henry J. Van Lennep, D. D., Smyrna and Constan-
tinople.
Rev. James L. Merrick, Tabreez, Persia.
Rev. Joel S. Everett, Smyrna.
Rev. George E. Whiting, Abeih, Mt Lebanon.
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76 BEMINISCENGES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
Rev. Daniel Bliss, Bejroot.
Bev. Orson P. Allen, Eastern Turkey.
Bey. David T. Stoddard, Ooroomiah.
Bev. Henry Lobdell, M. D., MosuL
Bey. H. B. Morgan, Antioch.
Bev. Heniy Homes, Constantinople.
Bey. Pliny Fisk, Palestine.
Bev. Cyras Hamlin, D. D., Constantinople.
Bev. J. L Bobertson, D. D., Greece and Constantinople.
Bev. Daniel Door, D. D., Ceylon.
Nathan Ward, M. D., Ceylon.
Alexander G. Paspati, Constantinople.
Homan Hallock, Malta and Smyrna.
Bev. Elijah Bridgman, D. D., Canton, China.
Bev. Henry Ljrman, Samatra.
Bev. Ebenezer Burgess, Ahmednuggar and Sattarah.
Bev. Joseph Goodrich, Sandwich Islands.
Bev. Ephraim Spaulding, Sandwich Islands.
Alonzo Chapin, M. D., Sandwich Islands.
D. L McGowan, M. D., China.
The above are all missionaries. Those which follow were
travellers, mostly on missionary ground : —
Prof. Nathan W^ Fiske, in Greece, Syria and Palestine.
Prof. Edward Bobinson, D. D., in Palestine.
Prof. Sylvester Hovey, in Italy.
Prof. J. A. Bichards, in Egypt.
Sixteen of the above missionaries were graduates of
Amherst College, and from them came the largest amount
of specimens. Mr. Hebard was a good geologist and
furnished a large collection of the rocks of Mount Lebanon.
Mr. Van Lennep, though he did not send so many specimens,
did send a geological map of the region around Sm3rma, his
native place, and I should have offered it to the scientific
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DONORS TO THE CABINET. 77
journals had not the English geologists so recently described
that region. Mr. Burgess also gave a paper before the
American Scientific Association on the geology of India and
the Gape of Good Hope, and the specimens he furnished for
our Cabinet are numerous and fine. But no one made such
sacrifices and efforts to obtain specimens as did Dr. Perkins
in his various joumejs across Armenia and in Persia, as the
shelves of our Cabinet testify. In one instance he brought
on a fever by his efforts to secure specimens from the top
of a peak of the Ararat range, and when other means of
packing specimens fuled, he employed the extra articles
of his wardrobe, and some pairs of pantaloons reached
Amherst thus filled with rocks instead of human limbs, and I
have alwa3rs regretted that I did not suspend one pair in the
Cabinet as a memento of zeal and perseverance in the cause
of science by one whose zeal for the salvation of men wais a
far stronger passion.
I cannot likewise but refer to the extraordinary success of
Professor Fiske in obtaining not less than two hundred speci-
mens in Syria and Palestine. Before leaving this country he
had never given any special attention to these subjects or felt
in them any special interest. But when he reached Syria no
naturalist could have kept his eyes more widely open upon the
rocks or have seized upon a greater variety of specimens than
he did, although in very feeble health. His labels too were
unusually full and graphic, as I have shown by copying two
of them in another place. His habits of thorough investigation
and careful attention to minutiae was finely exhibited and show
how he would have excelled as a naturalist had circumstances
led him to make natural history an 6bject of professional pur-
suit Those who cherish his memory will look with melan-
choly interest upon the numerous specimens in the Cabinet
from Mount Zion collected by him only three or four weeks
before he was himself laid there near the tomb of David.
Upon the decease of Prof. Hovey it was found that he had left by
will^ seyeral valuable collections to the College. The largest con-
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78 BEMINISCENCiS OF AMHERST GOLLEGB,
ai8ted of several thousand specimens, illostrating 1,000 species of
shells, with corals, echinoderms, &c., mainly from the West Indies.
Another was made up of 225 specimens, chiefly fossil sheila and
wood from ttie same islanda. The fossil wood was from Antigua,
and gives a fine idea of such petrifactions. The shells are mainljr
of the most recent kind enveloped in marl. These came into
possession of the College in 1839.
The year previously Prof. C. U. Shepard had preaented a coUec^
tion of the rocks and minerals of Connecticut, amounting to 800
specimens. These were collected during hia survey of that State in
connection with Dr. Fercival.
But though in this way numerous apecimena might come into pos-
aession of the College, of great value, yet I had some years earlier
felt the need of obtaining some funds for procuring apecimena of
foaaila and rocka from Europe. Having Increaaed my collection of
aimple minerals to nearly 2,000, and obtained perhaps 1,000 apeci-
mena of American rocks in 18S6, 1 proposed to give theae to the
College provided the Trusteea would appropriate |I1,000 to be ex-
pended in the increaae of the Cabinet. The offer was accepted, and
it waa ** voted that the Trustees comply with Profeaaor Hltchcockfa
propoaition, and place one thouaand dollara at the disposal of
Prof. Hitchcock to be expended by him, under the direction of the
Prudential Committee, in the purchase of apecimens and hooka
in Natural History." About one-third of this appropriation was
expended in 1889, in procuring the following collections firom
Heidelberg in Germany : —
A collection of 600 apecimena of the rocka and their characteristic
fossils of Continental Europe, embracing the entire series with
printed labels in German, French and English. This ia a very
inatructive collection, though from the progreaa of geology it needa
to be labelled anew.
An economic collection, from the aame part of the world, of 800
apecimena, embracing a large part of tlie rocka and minerals
employed in the arts, with most of the ores of the metala.
A collection of 50 varieties of precioua stonea, embracing not
less than 200 specimens, a large part of which are cut and polished.
These collections cost a little over $800, or about one-third of
the thousand dollars voted by the Trustees. But the financial
embarrassments of tlie College were becoming more and more
severe, and I did not feel justified in calling for the remainder ; nor
have I ever done it. I have no idea on tliat account of declining to
fulfill my part of the contract; though I hope the Trustees may
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DONORS TO THE CABINET. 79
remember it should the time come when some very desirable acqui-
sition of specimens might need their special help.
Another collection, obtained by Prof. Hoyey, in Rome, consists
of 172 polished square pieces of alabasters, antique marbles, porphy-
ries and granites, imbedded as mosaic in black and white marble.
I am not sure whence the funds were obtained for this purchase, but
think they came from the College treasury.
Some years later, I obtained from Heidelberg, in Germany, a
collection of 500 specimens of Organic Remains, extending through
the entire series of rocks, all named and rery instructive. I am not
sure whether this collection was obtained by way of exchange or
paid for from a fhnd in my hands contributed by individuals for
obtaining additions to the Cabinet. They cost about $100.
During 1858 and 1854, 1 obtained the following collections from
M. Krantz, an extensive mineral dealer in Bonn, on the Rhine : —
100 specimens of fossils from the Permian Formation and Moun-
tain Limestone.
124 species of Coal Plants from Silesia.
50 species of Fossil Fishes.
Casts of the bones of Mastodon, Megalonyx, Zeuglodon, Igua-
nodon, Pterodactyle, Plesiosaurus, Mystriosaurus, Holoptychius,
Labyrinthodon, Encrinites, &c., &c.
These collections cost about $200 besides freight. Of this sum,
$84 was frirmshed by the fimd already referred to as in my hands,
for such purposes. The remainder was met by specimens of min-
erals and footmarks sent from my private duplicates to Mr. Krantz.
In like manner I obtained, by exchanges with Dr. John C.
Warren, of Boston, several valuable specimens, for example :
All that remains of the Tusks of the great Newburgh Mastodon.
Wooden models of the entire Tusks.
Plaster cast of the entire head of a small Mastodon. Price, $50.
In 1861, 1 deposited in the Cabinet the following casts :
The head of a Megatherium, mounted.
Small Models of the Iguanodon, Megalosaurus, Labyrinthodon,
Pterodactyle, Ichthyosaurus, and the Plesiosaurus, representing
those of the natural size lately erected in the Crystal Palace, in
London.
In the opening of 1862, we received the head (cast) of a Deino-
therium, the largest of quadrupeds, which cost $100, and which was
presented to the Cabinet by myself and Ephraim Brown, Esq., of
Lowell, each of us having contributed an equal amount.
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80 BEMIMISGENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
The sum presented for the purchase of footmarks in 1863, pror-
ing more than sufficient for that purpose and the necessary fixtures,
I suggested to some of the donors other desirable objects to which
the surplus might be applied, specially casts of rare animals.
Among them are two fine slabs of the tracks of the Cheirotberium.
Then comes a magnificent specimen of the head of a Mososaurus.
Others are the paddle of a Pliosaums, a Gljptodon, heads of Arch-
egosaums, Crocodilus and Cephalaspis, Crioceras, Faleotherium,
Anoplotherium, SlTatherium, a series of notable Trilobites, etc.
Last of all, we bare the promise of a cast of the Megatherium. We
had for years been aiming at such an acquirition through the efforts
of Simeon Brown and my oldest son. But we failed, until last March
I addressed a letter to Joshua Bates, Esq., the eminent London
banker, and ere long received the following gratifying reply : —
"LoHPOK, May 22, 1863.
<'Dear Sir: — ^Your letter of the 16th March reached me in due
course. I was not aware until to-day, that it had been so long
unanswered, but I intended from the moment of its receipt, to send
to your College the casts of the Megatherium, and Prof. Owen
recommended that I send it complete. It has been ordered, and in
due time will arrive at Boston, and I have great pleasure in pre-
senting it to your College, with many thanks for the interesting
contents of your letter, and for the pleasure I have had in reading
your books. I remain, dear sir, very truly yours,
''Joshua Batss."
In 1847, when Professor Adams joined us, he presented to the
College a collection of 2,200 specimens of the rocks and minerals
of Vermont, 1,200 of which are claystones. Some of the latter are
the most remarkable ever found. But few fossils are in this collec-
tion. Prof. Adams baring kept them back for names, and by one
mishap and another they never reached us. My son, C. H. Hitch-
cock, has been able to supply this deficiency in a measure, and also
to add several hundred other specimens collected during his geolog-
ical survey of Yermont, whose Report has recently been published.
Not far from the same date, Monsieur E. Desor, a French geolo-
gist, who spent some years in this country, presented the College
with a suite of the fossil shells found in the Paris Basin, as it is
called, amounting to 124 species.
From other individuals we have received valuable specimens.
For example. Prof. E. Daniels of Wisconsin, sent us 82 specimens
of the rocks of Kansas ; Major David Hoyt, who was murdered in
Digitized by VjOOQIC
ICHNOLOGICAL CABINET. 81
the civil wars of Kansas, and who crossed the Rocky Mountains
with Gov. Stevens on a railroad survey, forwarded 28 specimens
from the Missouri River, among the Rocky Mountains ; the Rev. H.
P. Herrick presented 60 specimens of Tertiary Fossils from the
western coast of Africa, under the equator ; Rev. William Walker
sent a remarkable specimen, whether concretion or fossil I cannot
decide, from the river Nazareth, in Africa, 100 miles frt>m its mouth.
These cases are akin to many others that were noticed when giving
an account of the missionary collection from Asia and the Sand-
wich Islands.
Some of the College classes have felt a desire to leave some
memento in rock, (joLtre perennitis,) which should remind others of
their existence and form a pleasant quickener of reminiscences at
their reunions in subsequent years. The class of 1857 performed
the Herculean task of digging up and transporting a bowlder weigh-
ing over eight tons nearly half a mile, and placing it in front of the
Woods Cabinet. It is so unique on account of its strisB that I gave
a description of it in the American Journal of Science.
The class of 1859, chose a large slab of the beautiftd serpentine
of Rozbury, in Vermont, and placed their name upon it in the
vestibule of the Woods Cabinet.
The Ichnological Cabinet.
My collection of fossil footmarks was begun in 1835.
For as soon as I had turned my attention to Ichnology I com-
menced the accumulation of specimens, and from that day to
the present I have never ceased to gather in all which I could
honestly obtain. For no other part of the cabinet have I
labored so hard or encountered so many difficulties. True, for
some years at first I had the field essentially to myself, and
had I then been fully aware of its richness and extent, I might
have secured a large amount of specimens at a reasonable rate.
But the subject opened upon me gradually, and the disclosures
made by my writings attracted others into the field who became
uncompromising competitors in the way of collecting, and with
some it became a matter of trade. The consequence was that
the value of specimens rose to almost fabulous prices. The
man who had made the largest collection was Dexter Marsh,
of Greenfield, who was himself a quarryman and bad the
ambition, as he told me, to get together the largest collection
4*
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82 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
in the world. He succeeded, if we take into account the
quality c^ the specimens. But, poor man ! he died before his
work was done, having, in my opinion, hastened his decease by
excessive labor in the hot sun in getting out beryls and other
minerals. His executors sold his collections at auction. I
knew they would sell high, for I was one of the appraisers and
we marked them high. But I could not see those fine speci-
mens all scattered through the land without making an effort
to raise some money to secure some of them, and I adopted
this plan. My collection of footmarks had become so large
that in the opinion of so good a judge as Professor C. U.
Shepard its value was not less than $3,500 ; and that it could
be disposed of for at least $2,000 in cash. In a circular to
several benevolent gentlemen I offered to present this to the
College if others would furnish me with six or seven hundred
dollars with which to secure some of the slabs at Marsh's
auction. It so happened, or rather as I view it Providence so
ordered it, that I first addressed John Tappan, Esq. He
responded by a subscription of $500. To this extraordinary
liberality I attribute my success in filling up the present large
cabinet. For so high a standard had imitators. Hon. David
Sears soon added another $500; Gerard Hallock followed
with $250, Hon. E. P. Prentice with $150, and several other
gentlemen with $100 each. So that I went to the auction
with nearly $2,000 in my pocket Moreover the* stream of
benevolence which had thus been diverted into this channel
did not cease to flow with the Marsh sale ; but almost to the
present day new and liberal increments have continued to be
made to the funds in my hands chiefly devoted to footmarks ;
so that they have risen to $3,800. Among the donors was the
widow of Hon. Abbott Lawrence who sent me $300, although
I suggested as a maximum only $100. Had Mr. Tappan
headed the subscription with $50r-^uid I could not reasonably
have expected more — ^probably I should have been compelled
to see it close at $500, and the Ichnological Cabinet would
have been a meagre affair compared with what it now is.
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' SALE OF MABSH'S FOOTMARKS. 83
Wben I reached Greenfield to attend the auction in Sep-
tember, 1853> I found several naturalists there firom Boston
Tvith pockets well lined who came with the intention — as thej
bad a right to do— -to take the whole of Mr. Marsh's collection
for the Boston Society of Natural History. I told them that
there were many duplicates in the collection, enough if divided
to supply both the College and their Society. But if they
insisted upon monopolizing the whole, I had made up my mind,
having $2,000 on hand, to be very benevolent towards the
widow by compelling them to pay very liberal prices. They
seemed to feel th^ reasonableness of my suggestions, and they
found as I stated that there were enough specimens for us
both. My bill went as high as $700, and theirs higher.
Since this auction I have continued to lay out large sums
in the purchase of footmarks. To Boswell Field, who lives
on the most remarkable known locality, and has disinterred
more tracks than any other man, I have paid not far from
$4,000. His prices have indeed been generaUy high, but
when the specimen was unique, I must give him what he
asked, or leave it for some one else ; and Mr. Field has, in at
least two cases, presented specimens to the Cabinet which I
have estimated at $300.
To persons not familiar with the value of natural history
specimens, the idea of giving $150 for a broken slab of stone
a few feet square, (I have several 8]|)ecimens that cost me that
sum,) seems extravagance and folly. I may mention an anec*
dote in point Afler the auction at Greenfield, I employed a
wagoner to transport my specimens to the railroad. I hap-
pened to be a little out of sight, and heard him describing to
a citizen standing by the sums I had paid for them. ^ The
man," said the citizen, '^who will waste money like that,
should have a guardian placed over him." I could not
restrain a loud laugh, which brought us into conversation,
when I said, " you will at least acknowledge that my insane
prodigality is a good thing for Mrs. Marsh."
I must acknowledge, however, that in no enterprise in my
Digitized by VjOOQIC
84 BEBONISCENCBB OF AMHERBT COLLEGE.
life have I been obliged to work so hard, and exerdse so
much strategic skill to avoid paying exorbitant prices, and
even being defeated, as in the collection of this Icbnological
Cabinet. The high prices paid at the auction (one slab sold
for $375,) produced an impression of the great value of these
relics throughout the Valley, and exorbitant prices were
attached to them wherever found. But very few, however,
knew enough about the different kinds to distinguiBh the rare
and valuable ones. Bat since I had studied them all, I found
that whenever I expressed any particular interest in a speci-
men the presumption was that it was rare, and the price went
up accordingly. I was obliged, therefore, to exercise a good
deal of prudence, and show much sang frcid^ or I could not,
with my small means, make much headway. I worked as
quietly as possible, with my plans locked up in my own
bosom, yet with inflexible resolution and perseverance, looking
constantly to God for help. I felt that such a collection would
illustrate a curious chapter of His Providence towards our .
globe, and that the larger the collection, the more full the
illastration. I expected myself to make only a beginning;
but I wanted to provide the means for my successors to carry
forward the work which they never could do if the specimens
are scattered all over the world, or rather if all the varieties
are not found in some one cabinet. Large as the collection
now is, I have been ofieh pained to see very fine spedmens
taken out of my hands by those who could pay more for them
than I could, and carried, I know not whither.
In such circumstances, I have tried to be as economical as
possible in the use of the money in my hands for this purpose.
Whenever I could, I have myself gone to the quarries and
dug out the specimens. When not too large, also, I have
transported them on my own business wagon. Again and
again, have I entered Amherst upon such a load, generally,
however, preferring not to arrive till evening, because, espe-
cially of late, such manual labor is regarded by many as not
comporting with the dignity of a professor. I have not,
Digitized by VjOOQIC
INCIDENTS. 85
however, in general, paid much attention to such a feeling,
except to be pained by seeing it increase, because its preva-
lence would change the character of the Ck>Ilege, by driving
away those who are obliged to do their own work.
During these twenty-six years' experience in gathering
these footmarks, I have met some very' unique examples of
human nature. While some of my countrymen in the lower
classes of society have shown a shrewdness and generosity
that made me feel proud of New England, others have exhib-
ited a selfishness and meanness that made me exclaim, par-
vum parva decent. For instance, suppose on your arrival at
a locality of footmarks, one had preceded you with whom
you were on friendly terms, but who was so anxious to pre-
vent your obtaining any specimens, that he had mutilated the
good ojies that were accessible, which he had not time to
remove ! Alas, if I had not known this vandalism practiced
several times by professedly respectable naturalists, I should
not mention it.
Some of my experiences have been quite amusing. Having
found some impressions which I called tracks (Harpagopus
Hudsonius) in the sidewalks of Greenwich Street, in New
York city, I requested a moulder to take a plaster cast of
them, which he did. But on going to the spot again some
hours later, I was told that some one else had meantime taken
casts of them ! although he could not have known that they
were of any value ; but it shows how prone men are to follow
an example. A large crowd had gathered when I took the
first cast, and I was told afterwards that all wliich saved me
from being voted a fit subject for a lunatic asylum, was the
testimony of a young lady, in one of the adjoining houses,
who had attended my lectures on geology at Amherst, and
who testified that I was no more deranged than such men
usually arc.
"Are you finding gold there?" was, perhaps, the most
usual inquiry when men saw me breaking rocks. " No," said
ly to a wagoner, one day, " I am getting some of these curioup
Digitized by VjOOQIC
86 BEBOKISCENCBS OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
impressions, which are evidently the tracks of animals,** ai
the same time handing him a specimen. Looking at it a
moment, he cast it indignantly from him, exclaiming, " Foh !
is that all?*' and passed on. Bepeating the experiment
shortly after, with another man, he, after looking some time
attentively at the specimen, exclaimed, ^ Well I vum ! that
ar is kinder cute, aint it ? **
But though this has heen a laborious work, it has been
intensely interesting. It was emphatically a new field, and
every step I had to feel my way where no one had gone
before me ; but as I pried open, one after another, the folded
leaves of this ancient record, it revealed a marvellous history
of the ancient Fauna of this Valley. It was a new branch
of Paleontology, whose title-page had scarcely been written
in Europe, but I had stumbled upon materials enough almost
to fill the volume. Up to this hour I have been trying to
spell out the hieroglyphics; and even now, I presume the
woric is only begun. Success to those who come after me,
and may they find in the cabinet which I leave them many
curious archives which they shall decipher.
It is well known that the pleasure of these investigations has been
marred hj painful controversy. After groping my way alone and
unaided for many years it was the last thing I should hare appre-
hended that mj claims to the original investigation of the footmarks
should be denied. I claimed not that I first found them, but only
that I first scientifically investigated and described them. This,
according to Falej in his Moral Philosophy, would make me the dis-
coverer ; for he says, " he alone discovers who proves." (Book V.)
But I never claimed to be the discoverer unless in this sense. I
shall not, however, go into the argument here as I have done else-
where. (See ** Ichnology of New England,'* page 191, also ** Spring-
field Republican " for May 14th and 21st, 1859.) But perhaps I ought
in justice to others as well as myself to put down certain fiicts
which probably will be denied by none now that the controversy has
subsided.
The first tracks in stone noticed anywhere on the globe, so far as
we know, were ploughed up by Pliny Moody, in South Hadley, in
1802y while a boy. This slab is now in our collection, (No. ^.)
Digitized by VjOOQIC
BISTORT OP FOOXMABES. 87
But though the impressions were then spoken of as the ** tracks of
poultry " or '' of Noah's Baven,'* no account of them was given to the
public nor the attention of anj scientific men called to them, and it
was only after I had been for some time investigating the subject
that I accidentally learnt of the existence of this slab. But it was
undoubtedly dug up earlier than any fossil footmark on the globe
that has been preserved.
The first scientific account of fossil footmarks was given by Bev.
Dr. Duncan of Edinburgh, in 1828, viz., of some at Annandale in
Scotland.
In 1881 by Mr. Scrope in England, and in 1884 in Qermany by
Frof. Kaup, tracks were described.
In 1886, in the January number of the *' American Journal of
Science and the Arts," I described seven species of the tracks in the
Connecticut Valley. These were brought into notice as follows :^
In March, 1885, Mr. W. W. Draper, of Greenfield, walking home
from church with his wife noticed on some slabs of flagging stone
lying by the sidewalk, impressions wliich he thus described to Wm.
Wilson, in front of whose house the slabs lay, <*here are some tur-
key tracks made 8,000 years ago." Mr. Wilson soon after showed
them to Dr. Deane, who described them to me by letter the same
week, as " the tracks of a turkey in relief," and showed a correct
appreciation of their nature and value.
In the six following years I brought out five papers in the jour-
nals, containing over a hundred pages and 26 plates, describing 82
, species, including my first paper, before any one else had described
one species, and before they had scarcely been noticed by any other
writer.
With some noble exceptions, such as Professors Silliman and
Buckland, the views which I advanced in my first paper in 1886,
were received with great scepticism by scientific men and others on
both sides of the Atlantic. So it continued for several years. The
State Geologists of New York, for instance, contended that these
impressions were probably fucoids and not tracks. But in 1841,
five eminent geologists who had been appointed by the American
Scientific Association to examine the subject, reported that "the
evidence entirely favors the views of Professor Hitchcock." A few
years more and there was a general acquiescence in those views.
Nor was it till the tide had turned tiiat any one sought to share the
honor or the odium.
Up to this time, (1862,) I have published about 550 pages~860 of
them quarto— with 116 plates on the Ichnology of the Connecticut^
Digitized by VjOOQIC
88
BEMINISCENCBS OP AMHERST CX>LLEGE.
in eleren commnnications in tlie " American Jonmal of Science," one
in the '^Transactions of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences,"
and two Reports to the Government of Massaclrasetts. In mj first
paper I described seven species ; in my Final Report on the Geology
of Massachusetts, 27 species ; in my paper before the American
Academy, 62 species ; and in my Report on tlie Ichnology of New-
England in 1858, one hundred and nineteen species. Whatever be
the merits of this last work, its publication in such good style by
the Government, is a noble testimony to the liberally of the State
towards science. I distinctly informed the Legislature that it was
merely a matter of science, yet they ordered its publication without
reading it ? Is there any other State in the Union that would have
done it ? Which of them would not have felt, when offered a man-
uscript on Ichnology, as did the French Government when the
friends of the Abbe Hauy interceded with them to help him.
'* There is no connection," said they, ** between the public contribu-
tions and Crystallography.** But whoever would see how this deed
of Massachusetts is viewed in Europe, let him read the review of
my Ichnology in the " North British Review."
A few weeks ago (June, 186B,) I laid before the American Acad-
emy of Arts and Sciences a Supplement to ike Ichnology of New
JEngland MfMch makes 58 foolscap pages of manuscript, with XYIII.
quarto plates, and a description of 86 new species. The Academy
allowed me to publish the last 11 pages of this communication in
the American Journal of Science for July, 1868.
The following list will show to whom the Ichnological '
Cabinet is indebted, and how much, up to 1861. I put down
half the sum given to the building as this cabinet occupies its
lower half.
Hon. Samuel Appleton, for half the buildmg,
Edward Hitchcock, in specimens,
John Tappan, Esq.,
Hon. David Sears,
Mrs. Abbot Lawrence, .
Roswell Field, Esq., in specimens,
Gerard Hallock, Esq., (N. Y.,) .
William Miles, Esq., (N. Y.,)
Hon. E. P. Prentice, (Albany,) .
John Clarke, Esq., (Northampton,)
Hon. Edward Dickinson, (Amherst,)
William Dickinson, Esq., (Worcester,)
$5,000 00
2,000 00
500 00
500 00
800 00
800 00
250 00
200 00
160 00
100 00
100 00
100 00
Digitized by VjOOQIC
DONOBS TO THE FOOTUABES.
89
f 100 00
100 00
50 00
50 00
50 00
50 00
60 00
26 00
26 00
26 00
25 00
26 00
25 00
25 00
26 00
26 00
John M. Donbleda/, Esq., (K. Y.,)
James H. Welles, Esq., (N. Y.,) .
Hon. Jonathan Phillips, (Boston,)
Hon. Samuel Williston,
Hon. Albert H. Porter, (Niagara Palls,)
Prof. Edward Tuckerman, .
George Merriam, Esq., (Springfield,)
Hon. John C. Gray, (Boston,)
Dr. Nathan Allen, (Lowell,)
William Ropes, Esq., (Boston,) .
Hon. Horatio G. Knight, (Easthampton,)
J. P. Williston, Esq., (Northampton,)
Edward Barrett, (Northampton,) .
Gilbert A. Smith, Esq., (S. Hadlej,) in specimens.
Plinj Moodj, Esq., (S. Hadley,) in specimens.
Bey. Plinius Moodj, (S. Hadlej,) in specimens,
$10,175 00
To the above ought to be added several hundred dollars
devoted to this object from the Natural Historj Fund of the
College, and about $50 worth of Eeports on Ichnologj which
I promised and gave to donors, so that the cost of the building
and cabinet cannot be less than $11,000, It is a noble list
For though it has cost me a large amount of effort, yet no
labor could have succeeded if I had not had remarkable
materials to work upon. .
Excepting the few hundred dollars from the Natural His-
tory Fund (how much of which has been expended for this
object I am unable to say exactly) the Ichnological Cabinet
has cost the College only about $140, which were appropriated
for tables — ^the upright glazed cases being the old cast-off ones
from the Natural History Booms. And yet this is the col-
lection that most attracts the attention of visitors, because
there is none like it in any part of the world.
At the commencement of the present war I supposed any
efforts to increase the Ichnological Cabinet would be of no
avail ; and that I should never be instrumental in adding any
tiling more to that collection. But Providence has ordered
otherwise. A fine collection of tracks was offered me by Mr.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
90
REMINISCENCES OF AMHSBST COLLEGE.
Field, before the war, for $2,000. The next year he came
down to $1,000, and the last year to $dOO. Hon. Josiah B.
Woods offered to be one of eight to raise this sum. I wrote
numerous letters, and during the last winter not only obtained
the $800, but $400 in addition ; with which I not only pur-
chased the collection containing from 8,000 to 10,000 individ-
ual tracks, but was able to put up all the necessary cases and
fixtures in a new room never before used for this purpose,
without any call upon the College treasury. And I have
lived to see the walls of this new room, the north-west comer
room of the Appleton Cabinet, entirely covered with specimens ;
a result almost as marvellous to me as a miracle. Moreover,
this addition has enabled me to make discoveries in Ichnology
of great importance. I record with pleasure the names of the
benevolent gentlemen who have Aimished tlie means for this
work.
Chester W. Chapm,
Ssq., ...
Fred. D. Allen, Esq., .
Hon. G. H. Gilbert, .
Hon. J. B. Woods, .
Hon. David Sears,
Hon. Sam'l Williston,
Enos Dickinson, Esq.,
$300 00
160 00
126 00
100 00
100 00
100 00
76 00
John Tappan, Esq., . $60 00
J. P. WUUston, Esq.,. 60 00
E. H. Sawyer, Esq., . 60 00
John B. Gough, Esq., 26 00
Gen. W. Williams, . 26 00
Hon. Bliphalet Williams, 26 00
A. Lyman Williston, Esq., 26 00
The Zoological Cabinet.
Previous to the year 1839 the collections in Zoology in the
College were meagre. I had a few hundred shells showing
most of the Linnean genera, and had gathered together a few
hundred specimens in the other departments of the subject.
In 1839 we came into possession of Professor Hovey's legacy,
which contained 1,000 species of shells and some good corals.
Dr. Blodget, of Key West, had also presented us with a great
variety of sponges and sea fans, so that I was able to give the
classes a tolerable idea of all the great classes and orders of
the animal kingdom. But when Professor Adams joined us
in 1847 he brought so much larger collections as to cast all
Digitized by VjOOQIC
PBOFESSOB ADAMS. 91
the others into the shade, and ere long thej all were absorbed
in his, but whether the original specimens can now be distin-
guished I do not know.
Pbof. Charles B. Adams.
Professor Charles B. Adams, a native of Dorchester, came
to Amherst College from Yale College, and joined the Sopho-
more Class in 1831. He graduated in 1834 with the highest
honors. While attending my lectures he became decidedly
interested in natural history, and went into it with an energy
and a zest that made it the business of his life. The first
circumstance that made me acquainted with his predelictions
was his bringing to me a very complete Pantological Chart,
showing a very extended knowledge of the different branches
of knowledge. It produced in my mind at once a hopeful
augury of his future eminence. I saw that he would be
something more than a mere collector. He would not be sat-
isfied till he had traced out the relations of the natural objects
he met And it has happened that in all his publications he
has shown a remarkable power of classification.
In 1836, Professor Adams was called to a tutorship in
Amherst Collie. I selected him, also, as my assistant in
Chemistry, and never had a more able one. Having soon
after, myself, accepte(} an appointment as Geologist to the
First District of New York, I secured his services as my
assistant, and we commenced our explorations in Duchess
County. But the magnitude of the undertaking, my feeble
health, and a desire to do something more in Massachusetts,
led me to resign the New York survey, and of course Pro-
fessor Adams withdrew also. Some time after, I had an
opportunity to recommend him strongly as Professor of Chem-
istry and Natural History, to a new college, which was started
with much eclat in Missouri, I believe by Rev. Dr. Ely, of
Philadelphia. He went there, and after laboring hard for
some time, was starved out, and had to send to his father in
Boston, to get money enough to bear his expenses back.
Some time after^ he accepted the chair of Chemistry and
Digitized by VjOOQIC
92 BEMINISCEKOES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
Natural History in Middlebuiy College. While there he waa
appointed State Geologist of Vermont He entered upon
that work in 1845, and continued in the office till his death,
in 1852. He published four Annual Eeports, making four
hundred pages, which exhibited his characteristic ability. But
in consequence of some diversity of views between him and
the Legislature on pecuniary matters, his Final Report was
never called for or prepared, and most of the benefits of the
survey were lost ; and not long ader his death, the entire
collection of specimens made by him were burnt up with the
State House. After Professor Adams' death, the survey was
committed to Professor Thompson, who also died soon, with-
out leaving any Report He was succeeded by Judge Young,
who was likewise stricken down before having done much.
Finally, in 1856, the work was committed to myself, and by
the help of very competent assistants it has been carried
through, imperfectly, indeed, but a Report of one thousand
pages, in two quarto volumes, and thirty-eight plates, has
finally been published. The history of the surrey is certainly
one of the saddest on the records of science, and we feel more
like dedicating our labors to the dead than the living.
For some reason, I presume that Professor Adams' situa-
tion at Middlebury had become less pleasant, and he began to
look out for some other position. His thoughts turned natu-
rally to his Alma Mater, where I, who had always tried to
befriend him was President, and he frankly inquired whether
we had not a place for him. We had no vacancy, but our
Cabinets needed a Curator who would fill them up, and we
had no Professor of Astronomy, and so we made up a chair
of Zoology and Astronomy, knowing Professor Adams to be
amply qualified to take charge of the latter, both theoretically
and practically. But Zoology was his first love, and though
he would hear the recitations in the latter science, he could
not, to much purpose, direct his mind into a new channel.
But in Zoology he worked like a giant I never knew a man
who would do as much in collecting, arranging, and ticketing
Digitized by VjOOQIC
PROP. ADAMS' DONATIONS. 93 .
BpecunenB as he. He gave his whole time to it, regardless
of the laws of health, which with him was not the most
Tigorous. So economical was he of time, that in going from
his cabinet to his meals he had learnt to move upon a trot,
and I am afraid that too many midnight hours saw his lamp
burning. He had two characteristics fuUy developed, which
are indispensable to form the distinguished naturalist The
one was the power of giving a logical attention to minutise, and
the other the power of grasping great principles and using
them for the arrangement of details. Hence it was that his
labors were received as authority on both sides of the Atlantic
How sad to think that such a man was cut down in the veiy
prime of life I
From the time when Professor Adams first turned his
attention to natural history he had been accumulating a cabi-
net — ^that is for twelve or thirteen years, in 1846. I know not
what circumstances led him to devote special attention to
oonchology and entomology. But in these branches his col-
lections were &r the richest. Previous to his appointment at
Amherst he intimated to me his intention to present all his
collections in natural history to the College in case he should
go there* The intimation came first from him and not in con-
sequence of any thing said by me. On certain conditions he
at length presented the following specimens and books. [^See
Visitor's Guide to the OabinetSf hy O. H. Hitchcock^ pp. 77, 78.]
Professor Adams estimated the value of this collection at
$5,000, and he gave it on the following conditions : —
1. ''A fund not less in yalue than the above mentioned, shall be
established, the income of which shall be used'foreverfor increasing
the collections of books of Natural History, and of specimens in
Natural History belonging to Amherst College."
2. << This ezpenditore shall be made by myself during my official
connection with the College, and subsequently by the officers of
instruction who shall have charge of the department of Natural
History, and shall be subject to such regulations as the Trustees of
the College may deem requisite to secure its fkithfiil appropriation
to the objects specified above."
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^94 REfiaNISGENGBS OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
Other conditions required the famishing of 1,200 to 1,500 aqnare
feet of glazed tables and plaster blocks for the specimens, also
expenses of removal, &c. At my suggestion he added the follow-
ing : << In case any of my sons shall be students in Amherst College,
they shall not be required to pay the regular term bills." Alas I two
of these sons, having enlisted in the army, have died within a few
months ; a third one, after joining College, has been ever since on
the invalid list, so that there is no hope that any but the fourth and
youngest, will avail himself of this assistance towards a public
education.
Prof. Adams closed these conditions with the following sentence,
worthy to be engraved upon his monument : —
''The gift, with these conditions, is made with a view to contribute
in some small degree, to the exhibition of the glorious plan of
creation, especially of organic beings, as this exists in the Mind of
the Creator."
Before leaving Middlebuiy, Professor Adams had spent a
winter in the island of Jamaica, in the West Indies, where he
had made a considerable part of the collections above described.
After getting established at Amherst, he sought and obtained
leave of the Trustees to spend another winter on the Isthmus
of Panama, from whence he brought large treasures, especially
in conchology. Before his death, indeed, he had nearly doubled
his collections ; but most of this addition was made at the
expense of the College, as the Trustees continued his salary
while he was absent obtaining specimens. Since his death,
also, my youngest son, as Curator of the Cabinet, has been
carrying on the work of collection and of arranging and
naming the specimens. Mj oldest son also has aided in
mounting several specimens in comparative anatomy, and
Professor Clark added some of the larger animals. The
following have been added since Professor Adams' death :-^
Mammalia, (skeletons 88,) 185 specimens.
Birds, 550 specimens of 200 species, (200 species of eggs and
nests.)
Reptiles, 140 specimens.
Fishes, 180 specimens.
Invertebrates, nearly 800 specimens.
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THE GORILLA. 95
I ought to haye mentioned earlier, that as far back as 1848, 1 pro-
cured, at my private expense, a six-foot Manikin, a human skeleton,
large models of the eye, ear, and other organs, with 48 casts of
human crania, and 20 of other mammifera. Of these I will give a
fuller account under the head of Personal History.
Several important specimens have recently been received for the
Zoological Museum, since this enumeration was made. Among
them are the stuffed skin and skeleton of the African Gorilla, pre-
sented by Bev. Wm. Walker, of Gaboon, West Africa. No other
cabinet in the country, at this date, is so largely represented by
specimens of this animal. It being the nearest approach of the
animals to man, these specimens have attracted great interest, par-
ticularly as they so clearly show the falsity of the notion that the
gorilla could ever have changed into man by the '* law of selection."
The skin was stuffed by Jillson, of Feltonville, and the skeleton
mounted by my oldest son.
Edward C. Jones, Esq., of New Bedford, has just presented the
College with a fine set of the bones of the head of a sperm whale —
specimens of great pecuniary value, as well of intense scientific
interest and of great novelty in collections, especially away from
the searcoast.
Other interesting objects, are the skeletons of moose, caribou,
horse, beaver, bear, fox, etc., and the preserved skins of the Asiatic
bear and wolf, and American beavers.
By the terms on which Prof. Adams made his valuable donation,
the Zoological Cabinet has made larger drafts upon the College
treasury than all the other cabinets combined. The following were
the principal expenses during the lifetime of Prof. Adams : —
For horizontal cases, (see conditions,) • • • . $890 00
For trays, . . • • 200 00
For stoppered jars, 100 00
Fitting up the Cabinet, 41 00
Kemoving specimens from Vermont, .... 132 00
Income of the Natural History Fund for six years, . 1,700 00
$3,068 00
Till the last year of Profl Adams's life, he had appropriated all
the income ($800, annually,) of the Natural History Fund, to Zool-
ogy. The last year of his life we made an agreement which was
intended to be permanent, that at least on^-tldrd of the income
should go to Geology, and that has been the rule ever since. Botany,
also, has come in for its share one or two years. But probably
DigitizecUay VjOOQ IC
96 REMINISCENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
about $1,500 have been devoted to Zoology since his death, so that
the Zoological Cabinet, as it now is, must have cost the College at
least $4,000. But this is a very small sum for so splendid a collec-
tion, which no naturalist would reckon worth less than f 15,000.
I think I never saw a man all of whose operations were
such perfect clock-work as those of Professor Adams. He was
rigidly exact in the performance of his duties, and could tole-
rate no delinquency or irregularity in others. Hence be could
not always get along agreeably when associated with others in
a common enterprise. Towards the close of life he became
exceedingly tenacious of his own plans, and would rarely submit
to modify them at all, however strongly advised. Knowing
that I had always been his friend, he had in earlier days
paid a good deal of deference to mj advice; but not so towards
the close of life. I told him emphatically that if he took the
ground with the legislature of Vermont that they must vote
money for the publication of his report before he would write
it, when they had supposed no more money would be needed,
that they would assuredly refuse and never call for it But
he persisted, and my prediction proved true. The year before
he died he made up his mind that he must go again to the
West Indies, and wished me to present his request to the
Trustees. I did so, but being in doubt whether the interests
of the College would allow a third excursion to the tropics, I
merely stated the case to the Trustees, but neither advo-
cated nor opposed the request They referred It to a commit-
tee to grant or deny it He called on me soon after and
severely reproached me for not advocating the measure.
Alas ! what a pity that I did not then take decided ground
against his going, and thus have saved his life. Instead of
this I concluded that as a choice of evils it would be best to
yield to a passion for science so unconquerable and which
promised valuable results to the Cabinet He went, and
stopping at the hospitable residence of a friend in St Thomas,
was advised to keep within doors till the yellow fever had
subsided. But his love of science set at nought the suggestions
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PROFESSOR ADAMS. 97
of prudence, with the remark that there was no fever among
the shell fish, and a little exposure brought on the fever of
which he died. This was a real martyrdom in the cause of
science. His ardor for new discoveries led him to force his
way through all obstacles to reach the tropics, and then made
him deaf to the suggestions of prudence, and he fell a victim
to disease just at that period of life when maturity of mind and
judgment and a vast accumulation of facts had prepared him
to bring out results of high importance to the cause of learning.
But why should we murmur when all the circumstances seemed
so completely under the guidance of Providence !
There are some points in the conditions on which Professor
Adams gave his collections to the College on which perhaps I can
say something that can be of use. One relates to the purchase
of books, which is one of the uses to which the income of the -
Natural Histoiy Fund may be applied. I happen to know, both
from conversation with him and from his five years' example, that
the 'grand object to which he intended to have that fund applied
was the purchase of specimens ; for he well knew that in such a
large Cabinet as ours, $300 annually would do little more than keep
it from deterioration. Hence he forbids the use of the fund for
building cases or any other fixtures for the exhibition of specimens.
But from the great cost of works on Natural History he presumed
that the ordinary increase of the library might leave out some
works most desirable, and therefore he meant to give the professors
of Natural History the power to make up the deficiency. But he
did not mean to make this fund a substitute for that share in the
library funds to which Natural History would be entitled by equal
division. At one time there was a division of a considerable fund
for the purchase of books among the different departments, and he
became convinced that the proper proportion was withheld from
Zoology because it could be supplied from the Natural History
Pund. He at once directed a note to the Trustees asserting that
the Cabinet which he had presented had become forfeit by a viola-
tion of one of the conditions on which it had been given. I was
able to convince him that he was mistaken as to the fact, and per-
suaded him to ask leave of the Trustees to withdraw his communi-
cation. But suppose that in future that should actually be done
which he supposed had been, and his heirs were able to show in
court, by the communication above referred to, what were Professor
5
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98 BEMINISGENCfiS OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
Adams' ricws on this point, is there any doubt what the judge would
decide in the case ? For has not a donor the right to define his own
conditions ?
By another of the conditions of Professor Adams' gift, the income
of the fund is to be expended *' by tlio officers of instruction who
shall liave charge of the department of Natural History." The
recent creation of a Chair of Hygiene and Physical Education, and
the transference of Anatomy and Physiology to it from my profes-
sorship, awakens the question whether the professor of these sciences
is to have a voice in this distribution ; in other words, do Anatomy
and Physiology fall within the province of Natural HLstory } It is
certain that the Natural History of man embraces his anatomical
structure and the ftinctions of his organs. So the lower animals
cannot even be classified unless their Comparative Anatomy be
studied, and in fact this important science forms a necessary part
of Zoology. And the very specimens that most fiilly illustrate
Zoology do also illustrate Comparative Anatomy, and vice versa.
I refer chiefly to skeletons. I can hardly doubt, therefore, that the
professor of 'Hygiene and Physical Education, (embracing Anatomy
and Comparative Anatomy as well as Comparative Physiology,) is
entitled to a place among the dispeners of this fund, and his depart-
ment entitled to a share of it.
BOTAHIGAL SpKCIKBHS.
Dried botanical specimens being less necessaiy and usefbl in
giving instruction in Botany than specimens in other departments
of Natural History, because living plants are so easily accessible
everywhere, very little effort was made early to secure them for
the College Cabinet. As already stated, however, I had collected
nearly all the species of plants growing in the vicinity of the Col-
lege, and had prepared a catalogue of the same, within 40 or 60
miles of the College. The Junior Class of 1829 made the following
request which was complied with by publishing a pamphlet of 64
pages : —
'*To Prof. E. Hitchcock — Respected Sir: Understanding that
you have prepared in manuscript a catalogue of the plants, which
are found in the vicinity of this place, the members of the Junior
Class, now attending your lectures on the subject of botany, in the
belief that their knowledge of the science, and the interest of their
botanical tours, may be increased by the possession of such a work,
request you to consent to the favor of its publication."
The botanical specimens now in possession of the College belong
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BOTANICAL SPECIMENS. 99
to three distinct sorts. I will indicate the sources from whence they
have heen obtained, so far as I am able.
1. Dried Plants.
The first donation of these was by Prof. Adams, although a few
hundred species of plants in the vicinity had been previously pre-
pared, I believe, by members of the College. Prof. Adams gave : —
1. 1,000 species of plants from the Middle and Western States.
2. Large collections of British plants.
3. Miscellaneous specimens of tropical plants.
At a much later date I presented my entire collection, with all the
duplicates of the plants, cryptogamian as well as phenogamian,
which I had collected in the vicinity of the College.
Alio a good collection of plants from the Vosges Mountains, sent
me by Hons. Mougeot, a distinguished French botanist.
Prof. Isaac P. Holton presented a collection of plants obtained by
him in New Grenada, South America.
Dr. Blodget, who Aimished so fine a collection of sponges, sent
also many interesting sea weeds.
Some ladies in Salem sent us some beautiftilly prepared sea weeds
from our coast.
In 1860, Dr. George L. Goodale, a promising young botanist of
the class of 1860, was employed to arrange all the preceding dona-
tions into a single College Herbarium, which has been done imper-
fectly, and the number of species is 4,000.
2. Smoothed Sections of Wood.
175 of these were obtained by Prof. Adams, mostly from tropical
regions, (the West Indies and Ceylon,) while connected with the
College. They are quite instructive, and should be multiplied.
8. Dbied Fruits and Seeds.
The first of these were brought from the West Indies by Prof.
Hovey. Afterwards Prof. Adams made large additions, so that now
we have the seeds or fruits of about 400 species, mostly from tropi-
cal regions. This collection also might easily be extended.
Summary of Species and Specimens of Naiwral History in the
Woods and AppUton Cabinets,
I except the Shepard Cabinet, which will be subsequently
described. '
Bocks and Fossils of Continental Europe, .... 600
Bocks and Fossils from England, . . . • . • 600
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100 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
Rocks and Fossils from Asia, 1,200
Rocks and Fossils from the West Indies, . • . • 225
Rocks and Fossils of the United States, .... 2,200
Rocks and Fossils of Massachusetts, 3,200
Rocks of Connecticut, 800
Rocks and Fossils of Vermont, 2,200
Fossils of the Paris Basin 124
Simple Minerals, 1,900
Organic Remains fr^m all the Rocks, 500
Organic Remains from the Permian formation, . • • 100
Coal Plants from Silesia, 124
Fossil Fishes, 60
Tertiaiy FossUs firom Africa, 60
Rocks from Kansas, 32
Rocks from the Rocky Mountains, 28
Economic Collection from Europe, 300
Polished Marbles, Alabasters, &c.y 172
Manikin and Casts of human and other Crania, • • . 65
Mammals, stuffed and skeletons, 150
Birds, (species,) . • • ^ 270
Nests of Birds, ... * 70
Eggs of Birds, (species,) 175
Reptiles, (species,) 150
Amphibia, (species,) 85
Fishes, (species), 250
Crustacea and Vermes, (species,) 200
Insects, (species,) 4,800
Mollusca, (species,) 8,000
Animals of Mollusca, (specimens,) 155
Radiated Animals, (species,) 250
Amorphozoa, Sponges, Sea Fans, &c., (specimens^) • . 368
FOSSIL FOOTMABKB.
Number of indiyidual tracks, * 20,000
PLJLNTS.
Dried Plants, (species,) 4,000
Smoothed Sections of Wood, 175
Seeds and Fruits, 400
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PROFESSOR 0. U. SHEPARD. 101
Professor C. U. Shepard's Cabinet,
As already stated, it was the offer of Professor Shepard to
deposit his Cahinet at Amherst that led us to make Tigordtis
efforts to erect the Woods Cabinet A brief description of
that Cabinet, with some notices of its author, seem desirable in
this place.
CharlQs Upham Shepard, son of Rev. Mace Shepard, of
Tiverton, Rhode Island, graduated at Amherst in 1824, his
mother and her family having come to reside in that town after
the death of her husband. He had spent a year at Brown
University, and there, or even earlier, he had begun to pick up
the minerals and rocks around him and gradually to get them
named. Indeed, when at a quite tender age he saw a boss of
white quartz on his father's land, he fancied that it might be
marble and began to make experiments to determine its nature^
showing an innate fondness for pursuits that were to occupy
his future life. When he reached Amherst it was not teachers
or collections that seemed to develop a taste for natural his-
tory, except that Dr. Moore encouraged him and lent him the
Journal of the Royal Institution. But being in a new and
unexplored re^on he was stimulated to search out its mineral
and botanical riches. Instead of finding collections at Amherst
to study, his own furnished Professor Eaton with the means
of lecturing. On leaving College he went to study with Mr.
Nuttall, at Cambridge, an eminent botanist, and made up his
mind to make natural history his life work instead of studying
a profession, although strongly advised by President Eirkland
not to depend on so uncertain means of support
WhUe yet in College he had fitted up a laboratory in his
mother's ante-€ellar and there began to lecture to members of a
select schooL From that day to the present he has continued
to give instroction in chemistry and natural history as a Lec-
turer or Professor. He lectured chiefly in Botany and Conch-
ology for fifteen years in Yale College, sustained by a fund
raised by the Alumni. He has given twenty-six courses of
lectures as Professor of Chemistry in the Medical College of
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102^ BEBONISCENCES OF AMHERST GOLLEQE.
South Carolina, in Charleston, his last course closing only a
short time before the attack on Fort Sumter. In 1845 he
was appointed Massachusetts Professor of Chemistry and Nat-
ural History in our College, and has retained that place to the
present time, though since the establishment of a separate
chair of Chemistry, his lectures have been confined chiefly to
Mineralogy and Astrolithology (Meteorites.)
From the day when a mere boy he began to pick up stones
on the shores of Rhode Island to the present day, Mr. Shepard
has been incessantly gathering in new specimens, casting out
the old ones when he could find those better. He has shown
extraordinary skill and judgment in selecting specimens, and
it seems as if he formed a centre of attraction towards whidi
the best specimens naturally flowed. But the attraction con-
sists in a thorough knowledge of his business, in a correct taste,
in promptness of action, in a thorough and perseyering devo-
tion to the work, and in a willingness to make great sacrifices
and incur much expense to accomplish his object. Scarcely
an important locality of minerals is known in the United States
east of the Rocky Mountains, even though it be in the wild
mountains of Georgia or of Arkansas or Missouri, which he
has not visited again and again, and there has he gathered
together those duplicates which, taken to Europe in the ten
excursions he has made thither, have been better than gold in
exchanges for rare transatlantic specimens.
See, now, a synopsis of this forty years' unfaltering devotion
to a darling object Simple minerals and meteorites have been
the first objects of his labors, while geology and zoology have
come in, as it were, incidentally ; and yet the incidental results
are often superb.
1. Simple Minerals : over 10,000 specimens, none of which have
suffered the slightest artificial alteration; all of them are very select
and many superb ; in some species superior to any existing cabinet
— as the rutiles for instance, where we see a multitude of crystals
some weighing nine pounds. Actual inspection only can giro an
idea of the selectness and richness of this collection.
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PBOFESSOB SHEPARD'S COLLECTIONS. 108
2. Technological Collection. This emhraces the gems and other
minerals that have heen cut and polished. It embraces 500 speci-
mens, many of them of exquisite beauty.
8. Meteorites. This collection was begun in 1828, and now con-
tains specimens from 170 localities, weighing 1,000 pounds. The
earliest meteor represented fell in France in 1492, and the most
recent one in Ohio, in May, 1860. One specimen from South Africa
weighs 828 pounds; another from the same quarter 178 pounds.
This is decidedly the largest collection of meteorites in the United
States, and in Europe not more than two or three, (say that in
Vienna and the British Museum,) are larger, taking into account
the number of meteors represented and the entire weight. It is cer-
tainly remarkable that a single individual in the interior of New
England should without any extraordinary pecuniary means have
been able thus to hold a successful competition with most of the great
governmental collections of Europe, in these most rare and expen-
sive of natural objects. It gives us an impressive glimpse into the
composition of other worlds !
4. Geological Collection. This contains above 6,000 specimens,
many of them very superior — ^from all parts of the world. They
are grouped together according to the countries from which they
came, commencing with British North America, then the States of
the Union, beginning with Kew England, then the West Indies,
England, France, and Continental Europe. The Sauroid Fishes of
Scotland and other ichthyolites are represented by superb specimens ;
as are the coal measures ; the fossil footmarks are very fine ; so are
the tertiary fossils of the Southern States and the auriferous rocks
of the same region ; as well as the fossils of the mesozoic rocks of
Europe.
5. Zoological Collection. This embraces about 5,000 species of
shells which, away from the proximity of Prof. Adams* 8,000 species,
would be regarded as very large. The fishes, reptiles, echinoderms
and radiates are numerous and fine.
6. Dried Plants. These amount to 6,000 species, the larger part
from the United States.
In pecuniary value the Shepard Cabinet may be safely estimated
as follows : —
Meteorites, $25,000 00
Simple Minerals and Technological Collection, . 20,000 00
The other Collections, 5,000 00
$50,000 00
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104 BEMmiSCENGES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
Such ia the magnificent result of forty years' labor, continued
with remarkable tenacity and singleness of purpose. It is not
my purpose to give the whole history of Professor Shepard,
any more than that of the other gentlemen whose names have
been introduced ; otherwise I should speak of his skill as an
analytic chemist, of the numerous new mineral species he has
described, the volumes on mineralogy he has written, and the
numerous papers of his on that subject and on meteorites,
which the scientific journals contain. But the great work of
his life has been the accumulation of the above Collections.
These are now exhibited in the best possible light in the
Woods Cabinet, and awaken the admiration of every intelligent
visitor. The European tourist will rarely meet even there
with cabinets so well lighted and arranged, and with speci-
mens so rich and select He will find larger collections, but
few that are so complete and satisiactory^
4. Arch^ological Cabinets.
In a literal sense all the geological cabinets are ArchsBolog-
ical ; but that term is usually limited to what is ancient in
human history, and so I use it here. We have some collec-
tions that are embraced in it, although their procurement was
rather incidental. The most important is
I. The Nineveh Gallery.
Key. Mr. Marsh, American Missionary at Mosul, in Mesopotamia,
on or near the site of ancient Nineveh, was the first, I believe, who
sent specimens to this country, disinterred from its ruins. These he
presented to Williams College. Learning this fact, and knowing,
also, that Dr. Henry Lobdell had joined the same mission, I address-
ed him a letter inquiring whether he could not secure some speci-
mens from Mr. Layard, for Amherst, from the same ruins, promising
that I would see to the expenses of transportation. These, I knew,
must be heavy as it was necessary to transport the specimens on the
backs of camels 500 miles to Scanderoon, on the Mediterranean,
and thence 5,000 miles by ship.- I)r; Lobdell took hold of the work
at once and forwarded several valuable slabs. These were placed
for a time in tlie north-east room of the Library Building ; but in
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NINEVEH GALLEBT.
106
anticipation of obtaining more Bpecimens I was led to make efforts
to procure a Kinereh Gallery, and was successful, as I have more
fully described in another place. I also succeeded in obtaining
subscriptions, sufficient with the offer of $200 on the part of the
Trustees, to defray all the attendant expenses. The following is
a list of the contributions : —
Enos Dickinson, building and frescos, .
Trustees of the College,
Anthony Jones, Esq., of Boston, .
J. P. Willlston, Esq., of Northampton,
George Merriam, Esq., of Springfield,
Abner Kingman, Esq., of Boston,
Thomas W. Williams, Esq., of New London,
Richard P. Waters, Esq., of Salem, .
Eliphalet Williams, Esq., of Northampton,
John Clarke, Esq., of Northampton, .
Gerard Hallock, Esq., of New Haven, .
* Daniel L. Harris, Esq., of Springfield,
George H. Williams, Esq., of Brooklyn, N. T.,
, $567 00
. 200 00
. 100 00
. 50 00
50 00
83 00
. 30 00
. 30 00
30 00
. 25 00
. 20 00
. 20 00
. 10 00
I shall not attempt to delineate the character of Dr. Lobdell,
because it has been so fuUy and faithfully drawn out by Prof. Tyler,
although an affectionate remembrance of such a man would lead
me to say much. He^^ras one of those men who condense life into
a narrow space, so tbt^t all their powers are set to work under high
pressure, and, of course, are soon exhausted. I doubt some whether
such men ever could work moderately, because the impelling power
of the mind within 1b always in a state of high tension. We mourn
that the frail engine is so soon torn to pieces ; yet sometimes such
men accomplish more for the race than the prudent octogenarian.
The experiment, however, is a hazardous one ; and though a Martyn,
or a Lobdell, occasionally appear, yet biography records the names
of multitudes who with the like impulsive tendencies have not their
moral or intellectual power, nor are thrown by Providence into like
favorable exigencies.
Dr. Lobdell labored with great zeal to get together the second
collection of objects for our gallery. He even went once or twice
to Nimroud to superintend the excavation of the sculptured slabs, as
is fully described in Prof. Tyler's Memoir. There, also, may bo
found the fullest description yet ^ven (made out by my youngest
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106 REMINISCENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
son C. H. H.) of the contents of the Kinereh Gallery, of which the
following is a summary ; —
1. Sculptures, — I. Two human figures, with eagles' heads, and on
one the whole, and on the other, half of the sacred tree. This is
the Nisroch of Scripture. 2. Two-homed Divinity, with ¥rings, a
basket and a cone, 7 1-2 feet high. 8. A three-homed Divinity like
the last. 4. ICing Sardanapalus II. who built the palace, just re-
turned from hunting or war, and making a religious oblation. This
Dr. Lobdell humorously said was the first king ever sent to the
United States. 5. A filleted Divinity similar to Nos. 2 and 8 — ^but
he holds in one hand a branch of the sacred tree, and the other is
lifted up as if speaking. A considerable part of all these figures is
covered with cuneiform inscriptions. Mr. John Avery, who gradu-
ated in 1861, is the only person who has made any attempt to deci-
pher these inscriptions. By sending to Europe he procured some
works that aided him and satisfied himself that they are essentially
the same on all the slabs, and of no great importance. They are
also most of them a good deal mutilated by sawing the slabs to
reduce their weight. .
2. Bricks, — Six of great size, chiefly from the jMdaces of' Sarda-
napalus and Sennacherib, at Nimroud, and one from Babylon. All
of them have inscriptions— that from Babylon put on by a stamp,
and, therefore, an example of the earliest printing known.
8. Antique Gems, Pottery, 4*^^. — Babylonian, Sassanian, and
Assyrian seals and cylinders, cut gems from Arabia, (probably
modem,) and fragments of pottery, with inscriptions.
4. Modem articles now used in Mesopotamia, such as bracelets,
shoes, lamps, spoons, pipes, escritoires, locks, &c., more than a
hundred.
5. Coins, — Commencing with Alexander the Great, and embracing
numerous silver and copper coins of the Selcucidse, Assacidss and
Sassanida, also Roman coins from Vespasian to Alexander Severus ;
over 200 mostly copper Cufic coins of the old Mohammedan princes ;
also numerous modem coins chiefly from other donors. The whole
amounted to about l,O0O, and were arranged and named with much
skill by Professor Tuckerman. -But here for the first time in the
history of Amherst College we have to record a serious loss by
theft. About 40 of the best antique silver coins were stolen in the
summer of 1861 by breaking open the case containing them. There
was evidence that it was done by some one acquainted with the value
of coins to some extent, and not merely to get at the silver. But
thus to steal from a public institution articles obtained by a devoted
Digitized by VjOOQIC
PBESC08. 107
missionary) and intended for the public good, indicates a degree of
depravity and meanness which Dr. Lobdell never found among the
Arabs and Eoords of Mesopotamia. It is only a man destined for,
or at any rate deserving the gallows who would do it, and our only
consolation is that such men like rattlesnakes, hyenas and alliga-
tors, are rare.
Dr. Lobdell obtained most of these coins from Dervishes, and
doubtless with money we might in some measure supply our loss, if
some other missionary on the same ground would be at the trouble
to do it.
It increases our interest in the contents of the Nineveh Gallery
to learn, as we do from Professor Tyler's Memoir, that to get
together and prepare for the journey the various articles, was about
the last earthly labor of Dr. Lobdell. He left the arrangements
incomplete, and we are indebted to other missionaries, especially
Rev. Mr. Williams, for carrying them through.
The frescos in the Nineveh Gallery represent other objects
dug out of the ruins of the ancient city, by Layard, and figured
by him. They are as follows : 7. A winged, human-headed lion.
8. Sennacherib in his chair of state before Lachish. 9. Pish god.
10. Sphinx. 11. Assyrian spearsman. 12. Archer. 18. Slinger.
14. Eunuch. 15. Assyrian emblems of the Deity. 16. Pish god.
17. Winged horse. 18. Griffln. 19. Monkey. 20. Bull.
These were executed with much skill by Mr. A. Lydston, of
Springfield.
Three other small collections of virtu we had placed in the
Nineveh Gallery ; but with the coins they have been removed to the
Library Building. These collections are as follows : —
1. Sulphur casts of the medals struck by Napoleon Bonaparte,
during his reign, 185 in number. These were presented by Henry
Edwards, Esq.
2. Plaster casts of the heads of illustrious men, mostly ancient.
These were bought by Professor Hovey, in Italy : 48 specimens.
8. Copper medals struck by the Government of the United States :
84 specimens. Bought by the College.
2. Cabinet op the Society op Inquiry.
The Society of Inquiry has existed almost co-equally with
the College, its object being to inquire into the physical,
intellectual and moral condition of the world, and hence to
discuss questions of personal duty. It has a library of
considerable size and a collection of a few hundred objects
Digitized by VjOOQIC
108 REBOKISCENOES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
from foreign countries illustrating the arts and habits and
especiallj the polytheism of foreign lands. These were sent
chiefly by missionaries, some of whom were formerly members
of the Society. These objects were formerly in one of the
rooms of North College, which was destroyed by fire, but
most of them were rescued without much injury and are now
exhibited in a fine room in the upper story of South College.
By an increase of specimens, as could easily be done, this
room might be made one of the most attractive spots in
College. The Society is entirely in the hands of the
students and has always been one of the most uesful of the
literary societies.
3. Indian Relics*
In 1853, Professor Edward Hitchcock, Jr., presented a
collection of 721 specimens of the relics of the Aborigines
of our country, and these he has subsequently increased to
1,100. They were collected by his own exertions through
many years. They are placed for the present on the floor
of the Zoolo^cal Cabinet^ although obviously out of place.
We need much an Archaeological room for thfese, the coins,
and some other things which have been described.
Pecuniary Value op the Cabinets.
It can only be an approximation to the truth which we can
make as to the pecuniary value of our Cabinets : firsts because
the price of such objects is not well settled in our country,
and secondly, because it varies so much at different times.
The following estimaite, I trusty is not above the truth, that is,
the collections would bring as much in times of peace and
prosperity : —
Rocks of Continent of Europe,
Rocks from England, .
Rocks from Asia, .
Rocks from the United States,
Vilae.
600
fSOOOO
600
800 00
1,200
600 00
2,200
1,200 00
Digitized by VjOOQIC
SUMMARY OF THE CABINKI8.
109
Rocks from the West Indies,
Rocks and Fossils of Massachusetts, .
Rocks and Fossils of Connecticut,
Rocks and Fossils of Vermont, .
Fossils of the Paris Basin, .
General Collection of Fossils, «
Fossils of the Permian Formations, .
Plants, Fishes, &c., from rarious quarters,
Simple Minerals,
Economic Collection from Europe,
Polished Marbles, &g.,
Fossil Footmarks, 20,000 tracks,
Zoological Cabinet, viz.,
8,000 species of Shells, 5,000 Articulated
Animals, 250 Radiated Animals, 700
Vertebrate Animals, 868 Amorphozoa,
in all,
Plants— 4,000 dried, sections, 175, seeds,
400, . .•
Nineveh Qalleiy^ in all,
Indian Relics,
Cost of the Cabinet Buildings, including
the Astronomical Observatory and two
Lecture Rooms,
Fff^v— 1,000 Coins, 185 Sulphur Casts,
48 Plaster Casts, 84 Copper Medals,
Value of Professor Shepard*s Collections,
as already stated,
Bp«cinMiM.
Taloe.
225
$100 00
8,200
1,600 00
800
400 00
2,200
500 00
124
60 00
500
260 00
100
50 00
180
100 00
1,900
1,000 00
800
150 00
172
80 00
• •
11,000 00
1,100
15,000 00
1,000 00
1,000 00
500 00
20,567 00
850 00
$56,997 00
$50,000 00
It is now almost fifty years since I began to collect speci-
mens in natural history, but during a considerable part of the
time it has been my pastime rather than my employment,
though always on the lookout for opportunities to add to my
store. For nearly forty years Professor Shcpard has given
an almost undivided attention to this work, as did Professor
Adams, for twelve or thirteen years. Both my sons also have
devoted much time for several years to accomplish their part
of the work of filling up our rooms, so that I do not tliink it
Digitized by VjOOQIC
110 REMINISCENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
exaggeration to saj that the collections owned by, or deposited
in, Amherst College have required se^^nty or eighty years* labor.
Providence so ordered it that three of us who had labored longest
should bring together on this hill the result of our labors.
ESTIBIATE OF THESE CaBINETS BT SCIENTIFIC MeN.
In August, 1859, the American Association for the
Advancement of Science, held its meeting of five hundred
members at Springfield. By the railroads, the [citizens of
Amherst and the members of the College, they were invited
to visit Amherst They did so, en masse, and the following
description of the excursion, that appeared in the American
Journal of Science, and was probably prepared by Professor
B. Silliman, Jr.,. will give an idea of the impression made
upon the party by the cabinets as weU as the sceneiy.
** The weather throughout was as fine as possible, and the excursion
to Amherst College, under the escort of the venerable and distin-
guished Dr. Hitchcock, was an occasion long to be remembered as
one of the golden days of life. Members seemed lost In admiration
of the romantic loveliness of the scenery surrounding the College,
and in the unexpected extent, richness, and high condition of the
scientific collections, unequalled, certainly, by those of any other
college of- the United States. Here Dr. Hitchcock has built up a
lasting monument of his original labors in the curious department
of footmarks on the Connecticut sandstone. This vast collection,
vast both in the numbers and magnitude of its specimens, is now
preserved in * Appleton Hall,' a new building erected specially for
its accommodation, and on the ground floor of which these curious
records of lost races, once denizens of this lovely Valley, are ^spread
out to the inspection of visitors. Ko one can form an adequate
notion of the interest of these remarkable collections, without a
personal inspection.
** Whatever the Blade stone of Mecca may prove to be, meteorite
or porphyry, the scientific pilgrim to Amherst will be rewarded by
an inspection of the largest and most important collection of meteoric
specimens in the world, excepting that of the Imperial Museum
of Vienna. ♦ * * ♦
'* The mineralogical collection of Professor Shepard, at Amherst,
is worthy of most particular notice. In the richness and splendor
Digitized by VjOOQIC
USES OP CABINETS. Ill
of its selections, the mineral species arc nowhere in America, and
seldom anywhere, so well represented. Choice specimens seem to
hare come to this celebrated collector's hands, like the fabled fish
of the weird fisherman. Whatever was most rare or choice from
any lopality, appears to have fonnd no rest until it was safely placed
on his shelves.
** No wonder, then, that amid such surroundings, and with beauty
and festive speech at the hospitable table covered by the fair hands
of Amherst ladies, the Association was beguiled to view the glories
of a midsummer sunset over the picturesque ranges of the North-
ampton hills, or that they returned to' Springfield late in the evening,
full of the praise of the day and its rich entertainments."
In a History of American Conchology, by George. M. Tryon, Jr.,
of the Philadelphia Academy of Natural Science, appears the fol-
lowing notice of the Adams Cabinet. *'Tbe splendid collection
belonging to Amherst College is a noble monument of the unflagging
assiduity and scientific attainments of the late Professor C. B.
Adams, who formed it. It embraces types of all his species, and
fiill suites of the shells of the various West India Islands, and of
Panama. It is esteemed by competent judges the most valuable
collection for study in the United States."
The Uses of Cabinets in a College.
In an age when such strenuous efforts are made almost
everywhere throughout the civilized world, by governments,
by institutions of all grades, and by individuals, to gather and
arrange natural ol^ects, it may seem superfluous to inquire as
to their use in a college, where its trustees profess to give a
liberal education, and to ignore no great branch of knowledge.
But I know full well that their cut bono is sometimes asked
by men who profess to entertain very large views of college
education, but having devoted themselves to some other
speciality, are only slightly acquainted with natural history.
It may be well, therefore, to state the most important uses to
which collections of this sort are applicable in a college.
1. They are indispensable to give students a knowledge
of the natural productions of different parts of the earth, and
without which, their views would be narrow, and they would
be liable to constant blunders in their literary productions.
Digitized by VjOOQ IC
112 BEMIinSCENGES OF AMHERST COLLEQE.
2. When studied they help very much to sharpen the dis-
crimination and teach students how to distinguish between
the apparent and the reaL Indeed, as a means of mental
discipline, no branch of knowledge goes before natural history,
though from the very limited attention usually given to such
subjects, this effect is but slightly realized.
8. They are indispensable, also, to give facilities to any
students who have a natural taste and fitness for such pur-
suits, to qualify themselves for future distinction in them, and
this they can do, if the collections are good, without interfer-
ing with recitations in other branches, by devoting those leisure
hours to the cabinets, which most give to useless recreation or
something worse.
4. They deeply interest and instruct the community sur-
rounding a college, and all who visit it, and thus give reputa-
tion to it. Visitors cannot be shown much in mathematics,
or the classics, as they pass through college haUs, unless
particularly well acquainted with the subjects, and even large
libraries are all seen at a glance. But almost every one will
see enough in nature's products to awaken interest, inquiry
and admiration. This explains the fact that as nuiny as
fifteen thousand visitors annually have registered their names
in the Amherst Cabinets, small and retired as the place is.
The College could not afford to lose the influence in favor of
the institution thus spread through the country. It turns
the attention of many young men to this place, and when they
learn that in all other respects the institution stands high, this
feature often brings them here, in spite of the claims of rival
colleges. This is not indeed the most important thing in the
College. But we need to combine all the influences we can
to enable the College to maintain the high position it has
taken, and to continue its upward course.
5. These cabinets form an anchor to steady the College in
stormy times. Such periods of trial not unfrequently come,
when the temptation is to give up the ship, or transfer it to
some other place. But though it be easy to transfer able
Digitized by VjOOQIC
USES OP CABINETS. 118
teachers and funds, and even libraries, large cabinet build-
ings, with costlj fixtures, cannot so easily be changed, and the
friends of the College would be quite apt to rally around the
fruit of seventy-five years of labor which they contain, since
mere money cannot make their place good.
6. These cabinets are indispensable to learn young men
how to defend and illustrate religion. This is their most
important use. For I hesitate not to say, that, however other-
wise well educated a scholar is, he cannot defend Christianity,
or even natural religion, from the subtle attacks which of late
years have been drawn from natural history, from geology
and zoology ; for instance, if he has not seen, and to some
extent studied the specimens on which these objections are
founded, he must see and examine rocks and fossils before
he can understand the discussions raised by geology on the
age of the world, on the eternity of matter, on the preadamic
existence of suffering and death, on special Divine interven-
tions in nature, and on tlie extent of the deluge. He must
study animals and plants, or he cannot refute the advocates
of the development hypothesis or the plurality of origin of
the human species. Where else but in college can those who
mean to be ministers of the Gk)8pel acquire such knowledge?
Surely not in our theological seminaries, nor in the families of
private clergymen. The abstract, metaphysical way of treating
those subjects which they may learn elsewhere, will only excite
the ridicule or contempt of the able, sceptical naturalist.
On the other hand it is only by the study of cabinets that
theological students can learn how to use with ability those
numerous illustrations and confirmations of religious truth
which of late years have been derived from natural history.
The larger part and the most striking of the proofs and illus-
trations regarding the Deity and his attributes, have been
derived from this department of knowledge. It is a rich
field, and furnishes, besides the ease just indicated, numerous
striking confirmations and illustrations of «ome of the most
precious truths of revealed religion, as the works of McCosh,
Hugh Miller, Dana, Harris, Chalmers, and many others show.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
114 BEMINISCEKGES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
Now in a college founded expressly to raise up men to
defend and preach the Gospel, and nearly half of whose
graduates have entered the sacred office, is it not of great
importance that the means should he amply furnished for
making them acquainted with the grounds on which religion
has been attacked, and from which it has also been amply illus-
trated? I should be content if only instruction enough were
given in geology and natural history to qualify the graduates
to understand the religious bearings^ of these sciences. The
larger the cabinets the easier to give them this instruction.
But I am afraid that but a small part of our graduates have
attained to such knowledge. I doubt whether many of them
would feel qualified to defend religion against the sceptical
geologist or zoologbt
7. Finally, large cabinets are necessary to enable instructors
to make new discoveries in science, and trace out new religious
illustrations. With small collections the prospect of finding
undescribed objects would be small. And in this fact, not in
want of ability, do we see a reason why so few professors of
natural history add many new facts to their departments, or
suggest new illustrations of religion. True, the want of the
great standard books on these subjects published in Europe in
our libraries, is another almost equally powerful obstacle to
new discoveries as the want of specimens. But what a pity
that in both these ways our professors should be deprived of a
credit they ought to have the power to attain, and be com-
pelled to put into the hands of European naturalists every
object apparently new which they meet, because they are
afraid to describe it, lest it should have been already described
by transatlantic naturalists.
It is for such reasons that I have felt justified in devoting
so much time and effort during thirty-eight years, to build up
and fill the Cabinets at Amherst. I have no expectation or
wish to give the subjects of natural history here an undue
prominence, but only to make them subserve the objects I
have specified, and to do something towards sustaining the
credit and popularity of the institution. All the departments
Digitized by VjOOQIC
THE UBBARIES. 115
ought to unite in an object so important to science and religion,
not forgetting that ^ united thej stand, divided they fall/' and
that what strengthens one strengthens the whole, and what
weakens one weakens the whole.
5. The Libbabies.
When the College was started and efforts to obtain subscrip-
tions were made extensively, of course the library was not
forgotten, and quite a lai^ lot of books were obtained. But
most of them, though excellent for giving instruction in prac-
tical piety, were not well adapted for a literary institution. It
was not till 1829 that any effort was made that enabled the
institution to obtain standard works in literature sj^ science.
In connection with the subject of temperance John Tappan,
Esq., made a donation of $500, which became the nest egg for
nearly $4,000, with which Professor Hovey made very valu-
able purchases of books in Europe. The details of this case
are too interesting to be lost, and I shall give them in connec-
tion with the history of temperance.
In describing the erection of the present library building I
have given some account of the donations and efforts of Hon.
David Sears, John Tappan, Esq., Greorge Merriam, Esq., and
others, to increase the library. Mr. Sears' first bequest was
made in 1844, and another in 1847, each of the estimated
value of $5,000, to form a Permanent Literary and Benevolent
Ihind, one object of which was the formation of a library. A
portion of the income is to be annually added to the principal,
so as to make it an accumulating fund, to whose increase, so
far as any conditions have yet come to light, there is no limit,
and Mr. Sears actually gives directions how it shall be treated
when it reaches $200,000. A pari of the income at present
is used for the purchase of books to conmience the Sears
Foundation; especially are $120 annually to be thus used
for the next sixty yea]*s. Here then are obviously the means
for an immense library for future generations. How soon
it will become a powerful feeder to the constant wants of a
Digitized by VjOOQIC
116 BEMINISCENOES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
college library I am unable to detennino after reading over
many times the elaborate papers of Mr. Sears conveying the
property. Moreover, the slightest deviation from the
conditions stated, will forfeit the whole.
As early as 1842 John Tappan had given $1,000 for the
purchase of books, which furnished an invaluable addition.
Not much more was done to increase their number till the
bequest of Mr. Sears above described. Next came the effort
already described in giving an account of the library building,
by Mr. Geoi^e Merriam's donation of $1,500 and the subscrip-
tion which followed, by which that sum was raised to $15,000.
Of this sum, $10,000 were used in 18^2 for & building, and
the remainder for books.
Many years ago a plan was started among graduates of the
College to endow an Alumnus Professorship, and a considerable
amount was subscribed towards it. But as the project lingered,
it was finally concluded to change the object, and rabe, if
possible, $5,000 for books, to be expended by the graduates
themselves. Dr. Geoi^ Shepard started the subscription
witl» $1,000, and the sum was finally secured, and has now, I
believe, all, or nearly all, been expended.
By the death of Hon. Jonathan Phillips, in 1861, it appeared
that he had left in his will the sum of $5,000 to be expended
in books. This, I believe, has not yet been laid out.
As the result of these various efforts the College library now
contains over 22,000 volumes. Each of the two literary soci-
eties, the Athenian and Alexandrian, possess 5,000 volumes,
and the Society of Inquiry, 200 volumes. The whole num-
ber of books in the libraries of the College is 32,200 volumes.
We wish that all the other great interests of the institution
were as well provided for their future increase as we have
seen this to be. And surely it should be a leading object with
the friends of the College to get the funds into such a state
that all its departments should have substantial means of a
steady support and expansion, in spite of all outward fluctua-
tions and reverses in their condition.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
FINANCIAL HISTORY. 117
SECTION IV-
FINANCIAL HISTORY.
For the first quarter of a centorj Amherst College had to
depend entirety on the patronage and benefactions of individ-
uals. She expended no small sum in repeated efforts to obtain
a charter, and afterwards in a succession of applications for
pecuniary assistance from the government of the State ; but
not till the year 1846 did she receive a dollar from the public
treasury. Those only who have had the experience know how
much more of money than is anticipated is required to start
and carry onward and upward a literary institution of high
character. Did they know it beforehand not a few would
shrink from the effort because apparently hopeless. The effort
was particularly difficult in the case of Amherst College,
because the founders from the first took the high ground that
education in the new seminary should be as thorough and
elevated as in the oldest and best colleges of the land. And
this promise they carried through, so that from the first the
graduates at Amherst have been able to stand shoulder to
shoulder with those from all other institutions, in the profes-
sional schools and in public life. The very earliest of the
classes furnished such men as Professor E. S. Snell, Dr. David
O. Allen, the missionary, Professors Bela B. Edwards, George
Shepard, of Bangor, and Charles U. Shepard.
But the ability to sustain so high a standard was not the result
of large benefactions from wealthy men. For a time, indeed,
the agents danced attendance upon such. But Providence did
not mean that the main object of the enterprise should be thus
frustrated, and that was, to enlist the religious public generally
—to make it, in fact, a religious college. Hence its founders
Digitized by VjOOQIC
118 BEHINISGBHCBS OP AHHBRST OOLLBQB.
were obliged to resort to the community in general, and the
subscriptions ranged from two or three thousand dollars down,
it is said, to six cents. Certain it is that during the erection
of the two first dormitory buildings, subscriptions were made
in small quantities of building materials; of days' works in the
erection, and of food for the workmen, so that for the first
building, certainly, no great debt was incurred, although its
cost could hardly have been less than $10,000. But the men
engaged in the enterprise were borne onward by such fervid
enthusiasm that the idea of running in debt was a small
matter. In one instance they brought joiners to do the work
before the materials were procured, and then went out and
presented this fact as a reason for making subscriptions, and
were successful.
The large number of students that flocked to the new Ck>l«-
lege soon after its commencement, though yet unrecognized by
the civil authorities, and encountering powerfiil opposition,
greatly encouraged its founders and led them to the conclusion
that God sanctioned their efibrts, and therefore they were
bound to provide accommodations and instruction for all who
came, even though heavy debts might be incurred ; for who
could doubt that God would raise up men in his own time to
liquidate such debts ? Accordingly it was resolved to proceed
at once to erect a second dormitory building, which would at
once be filled. Money was obtained in part by subscriptions.
In addition to the Charity Fund of $50,000, which had been
filled up in 1819 or 1820, but which could not be used for
building, another subscription for $30,000 was started, and I
believe nominally filled up, though much of it was never paid,
and probably all that was paid, as it came in slowly, was
needed for current expenses, so that for erecting the new
building it was necessary to depend on borrowing money.
But here was a difficulty. What security could the Trustees
or Treasurer give for the payment ? They had nothing but a
single building, of no value except for a college, and the
Charity Fund yet only partially collected. They could, how-
Digitized by VjOOQIC
DOtJBTTOL EXPEDIENTS. 119
ever, borrow of that fund as it came in, and thej did so to what
extent I know not But I must think the right ioAo this was
veiy questionable. For it was in fact converting money which
had been obtained for educating indigent young men, to other
purposes, since there was no adequate security, and had the
whole enterprise failed I doubt not this course would have
been quoted as a perversion of funds. The CJollege, after a
long and desperate struggle, triumphed over its pecuniary
embarrassments, and was therefore able to pay all its indebt-
edness to the Charity Fund, and hence the correctness of this
course was never called in question. Nor has it been subse-
quently, when money has been borrowed from the endowments
of professorships, to erect buildings. I exonerate every one
of the men who have acted on this principle from any inten-
tional infringement of right or justice or obligation. For
every one of them would go to the stake rather than violate
the feeblest dictate of conscience. But such men may mistake
in judgment, as well as others. My own opinion is that they
did in this instance. But I may be alone in these views ; for
I believe it is not an unusual occursence in the like circum-
stances for men wiser and better than I am, who act as trustees
of some public trust, to borrow from their own funds when
they cannot offer sufficient security to moneyed men to induce
them to make loans. But how can they be justified as a board
of trustees in doing what they would not probably do if acting
as individuals in their own private affairs ?
The Trustees of Amherst College, however, did find not a
few, who, either because they judged it a safe investment or
more probably from a benevolent regard to the enterprise,
were willing to lend their money to carry it forward. And
the opportunity was largely improved. To erect a second
college building, and in 1826 the chapel building, required at
least $25,000, and several thousands more to meet other
expenses. We need not, therefore, be surprised to find that
in 1827 the College was over $30,000 in debt. The following
details of this indebtedness liave just been handed to me
Digitized by VjOOQIC
120 REMINISCENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
(February, 1862) by my venerable friend, Hon. John Leland,
who was then College Treasurer. I give the list because it
shows some of the names that were willing to ti-ust the College
in those early times, though most of them demanded ample
security, and because it shows how much was borrowed from
the Charity Fund.
Hon. T. Wlnthrop, of Boston, f 1,500 00
Deacon Warren, of Charlestown, 1,000 00
Rev. Warren Fay, of Charlestown, .... 700 00
Hev. Mr. Tolman, 500 00
Hon. Heman Lincoln, ....... 500 00
Rev. James Taylor 70 00
Rev. Mr. Colbum, 350 00
Rev. E. Perkins, 530 00
Silas Cowles, 1,000 00
John Hopkins, Northampton, 4,000 00
Mrs. Phebe Moore, (Dr. Moore's widow,) . . • 2,000 00
Jason Mixter, Hardwick, . . . . • . . 1,666 67
Mrs. Dr. Humphrey, 600 00
Hon. John Hooker, 700 00
Sunderland Bank, 8,000 00
Charity Fund, . . •• 10,860 00
Sundry debts, 1,200 00
$30,166 67
Whether this debt ever rose higher than $30,000 I have
not been able to determine. But I do know that up to 1846
it hung like a terrible incubus upon the Trustees, the Treas-
urer, and the whole College, and came near proving its ruin.
It was a desperate conflict for a quarter of a century, and
had not the men engaged in it been able, energetic and self-
denying, it would have choked the institution to death. It is
easy to see how watchful the Treasurer must have been to
meet the interest and. the payment of the numerous notes as
they became due. In most cases the payment of one note
could be made only by borrowing somewhere else, or becom-
ing personally responsible, as Deacon Lehmd and Lucius
Digitized by VjOOQIC
EARLY SACRIFICES. 121
Boltwood sometiines did, probably nearly to the extent of
their private property. When an exigency peculiarly trying
occurred, a meeting of the Trustees would be called, and some
plan would be devised to save the College ; and I am assured
by Mr. Leland, and I doubt not the same has been true since
the present Treasurer came into office, that no note or demand
that was due ever failed to be met in season to pi'event its
being protested, which is certainly a strong testimony to the
fidelity and ability of the Treasurers and all concerned.
There was one pecuniary exigency of the kind above described,
which I ought to have mentioned earlier, becanse it happened almost
at the commencement of the enterprise, and I happen to have a list
of the men who came to the rescue. After the utmost efforts, the
Charity Fund fell $16,000 short of the sum aimed at ($50,000) as
essential to make any subscription good ; and this, too, just before a
committee of the legislature were to examine into the affairs of the
College, with sagacious enemies, determined to prove the whole a
fraud and a failure. The following ten men signed a bond to pro-
vide for the pajrment of the lacking $15,000 : —
Samuel F. Dickinson, Jarih White, David Parsons, Elijah Bolt-
wood, Hezekiah W. Strong, Enos Baker, John Leland, Calvin
Merrill.
Of Mr. Dickinson I have spoken in another place. Jarib White
was one of the wealthy farmers of the town, who had lately become
a merchant, and during the whole struggle labored with a true Puri-
tan spirit. Dr. Parsons was the pastor of the church in Amherst,
and highly respected through the land. Bli|jah Boltwood for a long
time kept the hotel in Amherst, on the site of the present Amherst
House. Hezekiah W. Strong was a respectable lawyer and mer-
chant, who was always ready to help on the work. Enos Baker was
a respectable farmer, who lived near the College, as was also Calvin
Merrill, men, it seems, ready to stand in the breach in perilous
times. Of John Leland I need say nothing more in this place.
It is an interesting fact that these men, who took this risk upon
tiiem, after having subscribed in other ways as much as they thought
it their duty to give, were able to provide others to take this respon-
sibility upon their shoulders. But the entire country, at least the
central part of New England, had been gone over by agents, and
they would have failed had not the legislature sent a committee to
investigate the affairs of the enterprise, and its enemies threatened
6
Digitized by VjOOQIC
122 REBdNISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
also to make a formidable ikttack. Under these circumstances gen-
tlemen were found without difficulty who made up a purse of $15,000
to meet the exigency, and relieve the generous signers of the bond.
See in this result the benefit of having active enemies when engaged
in a good cause. Sanballat, and Tobiah, and Geshem, are a very
useAil class of persons, when God's proridential hook is in their
nose and his bridle between their lips.
To meet all the wantg of the College and the interest and
payments on the debt, it became necessary to resort to the most
vigorous measures. As early as 1826 the Trustees had applied
for aid to the State legislature. This was repeated in 1830,
and several times afterwards, at intervals of a few years.
But constantly repulsed, they made energetic appeals to indi-
vidual liberality, by means of agents. At the conmiencement
of the enterprise every man acted as agent, though some were
specially appointed. But in 1829 Rev. Dr. Vaill received a
permanent appointment, and up to 1845 devoted much time
to the work. In 1841, when he was reappointed, he left his
pastoral charge that he might devote his whole time to the
worL In 1832, several other gentlemen were appointed
agents, with Dr. Humphrey at their head, viz.. Prof. Fiske,
Dr. Vaill, Rev. Sylvester Holmes, Rev. Calvin Hitchcock
and Rev. Richard S. Storrs, to make an appeal to the public
for $50,000. At another time an attempt was made to raise
$100,000 ; but I cannot ascertain how far these efforts were
successful. I only know that the most vigorous labors of the
agents were barely sufficient to keep the wheels in motion,
and pay, often tardily, the rather small salaries of the officers
and the interest on the debt The Rev. Dr. Vaill, the general
agent, was industrious and faithful, and very successful, when
we consider the obstacles in his way. He struggled manfully,
and carried the College forward for years, when without his
efforts it must have become bankrupt.
But this was a Sisyphean labor, and all concerned found
that the stone would work farther down hill, in spite of all
their efforts to push it upwards. For though they w^re able
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EFFECTS OF DEBT. 123
to keep the College in operation, and even perhaps at times
considerably to reduce its indebtedness, yet other effects unan-
ticipated, but of serious import, followed.
1. In the first place it prevented nearly all improvement
in the means of instruction, such as apparatus, cabinets and
books; also all improvement in the external aspect of the
College, such as its buildings and grounds. Every thing wore
the appearance of poverty and dilapidation, such as unpainted
buildings, and muddy and break-neck sidewalks ; and if the
educated man looked in upon the libraries and cabinets he
saw that they were very meagre, and not fit for a college in
the nineteenth century that made such pretensions.
2. The inevitable effect of such a state of things was a
reduction of the number of students. In the first fifteen years
it had gone up rapidly to two hundred and fifty-nine, but in
the nine following years it had sunk to one hundred and
eighteen. The students and the public saw that every thing
was going wrong, and though they understood very little of
the cause, they preferred to go where there was progress. It
gave the enemies of the institution also a fine opportunity to
disparage it, and to show that they were right in predicting
its ephemeral existence.
3. The unpopularity of the College was made still greater
by the repeated applications that were made through agents
for pecuniary aid, year after year. The public at length
became exceedingly nervous under these solicitations, and even
the best friends of the College began to despair of its success
unless some different system could be adopted.
4. Such a state of things almost inevitably produces the
impression, both in College and abroad, that some particular
officer or officers have become unfit for their place, and should
resign. In this case the suspicion fell upon Dr. Humphrey,
and nothing but his resignation, it was thought among students,
graduates and some trustees, could stop the extraordinary
stampede which must soon leave the College without inmates.
A famous case of discipline a few years before had implanted
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124 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEQE.
sfrong prejudices against the Doctor in many minds, and now
the pretence was that he had reached incipient dotage,
although not over sixty-five. He did resign ; but his subse-
quent history showed that he was as well qualified, physically,
intellectually and spiritually, as he had ever been, for the place,
and had there been iunds enough to carry on the CJollege inde-
pendently, I fancy that we should never have heard any thing
of the unpopularity of Dr. Humphrey. Indeed, he lived to
see the institution raised out of the slough, and he found that
no man was more popular or respected than he whenever he
came back on public occasions.
But though we who were behind the scenes and managing
the ropes knew the cause, it did not make the fact any the less
certain that the College had reached a painful crisis, and that
something must be done or it would soon be too far gone for
resuscitation. For eight or ten years I had watched its down-
ward tendency with great anxiety, and each Commencement
season seemed to my desponding temperament more like a
College funeral than a holiday. Yet I was hardly prepared
for a suggestion made to me about the time when I assumed
the Presidency in 1845, whether it would not be best to change
the College into an Academy of a high grade. I knew that
the enemies of the institution began to exult in the prospect
of a result even more disastrous than this; but I hardly
expected such a suggestion from a Trustee of excellent judg-
ment. The fact, however, will show into how trying a condi-
tion the College had sunk, and that it was not a mere
hallucination of my morbid fancy. The Trustees and officers
knew the grand cause of our troubles ; but the world around
us imputed it to our inefficiency and want of personal popularity
that we did not keep the institution so popular and at so high
a standard as to attract more students.
But what could we do to arrest this downward tendency
and recover our lost position ? This was the question that
met me with emphasis when called to assume the Presidency
in 1845. Two things seemed indispensable. The first was to
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AGREEMENT WITH THE PROFESSORS. 125
stop the College from running in debt The second was to
cease soliciting the public for aid through agents. The follow-
ing plan occurred to us. Let the instructors propose for a
limited period to take the College into their hands and agree
to carry it forward for whatever sum may be derived from tuition
and other ordinary sources of income, provided the Trustees
will discontinue the services of their agent. This proposal
met the views of the Trustees, and the following are the details
of the plan as finally adopted.
1. The income from term bills and from the property of the
College, which now yields income subject to be used to pay debts or
defray the current and ordinary expenses of the College, shall be
placed ander the direction of the President and Professors, being
collected and disbursed in the manner it now is, and shall be used
solely for the payment of salaries and the cnrrent expenses of the
College, as the President and Professors may jadge expedient, and
no part thereof shall be used for paying interest or principal of the
College debt.
2. The salaries of the President and Professors in the College
shall be for the President, $1,000, and' for each Professor, $800 per
annum, or in that proportion,* and shall be determined and divided
by them from the income of the College, as above named, &c.
8. The President and Professors may perform all the duties of
instmction, or under their recommendation the Trustees will appoint
a Tutor or instructor, in either branch of instruction in College, to
be compensated from the frmds placed under the direction of the
President and Professors.
4. The appropriations to be made for chapel services, for repairs
of the buildings, the Laboratory, the Philosophical Department, the
care of the Library, expenses of Commencement, of attending to
wood, fires, lights, &c., in College and around it, and for all ordi-
nary current expenses, shall be under the direction of the President
and Professors, and defrayed from the funds aforesaid.
5. (Essentially embraced in No. 6.)
6. The arrangements above proposed shall take effect whenever
the President and Professors shall all signify their assent thereto in
writing, signed by them, and delivered to the Secretary of the
Board of Trustees, who shall enter the same on the records of the
Board, &c.
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126 BEMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
7. The agency for the solicitation of flinds from the commnnity
shall cease with the termination of the present collegiate year, and
sooner if the agent shall have previously secured or collected the
sums already suhscrihcd.
It la to he understood that the Trustees in agreeing to the fore-
going arrangements, while they manifest great confidence in the
wisdom, ability and fidelity of the said Professors, do in no wise
surrender their charge and trust of the great interests of Amherst
College. Nor is it conceived, either by said Trustees or Professors,
that the amount of instruction to be given in College is to be dimin-
ished, nor the standard of education lowered. To elevate that
standard and improve the finances of the College, are the objects in
view. — Records of the Trustees, p. 127.
The officers of instructioD in 1845, when this arrangement
went into effect, were myself as President, and Professors
Warner, Fiske, Snell, Shepard and Tyler. I find a written
assent on the Trustee Records, as required by the above
agreement, of all the gentlemen except Professor Warner,
who had only recently joined the College. But as be was
known to be in favor of the plan it was suffered to go into
operation.
In my Report to the Trustees the next year, after the plan
bad been in operation a little more than a year, I stated that
though impossible to determine exactly what would be the
amount of our salaries, we bad then received as follows:
Myself, $550, each professor $440. But Hon. Samuel Wil- .
liston had generously presented us with $300, and Hon.
Andrew W. Porter with $200, increasing my receipts to $710
and those of the professors to $525. What amount was real-
ized the next two years, I am unable to state, but at the close
of the three years' trial, when the pecuniary state of the
College was wonderfully changed, the Trustees directed the
Treasurer to pay the officers whatever deficiencies had existed
in their salaries, with interest. This was neither suggested
nor expected by the professors, who made the sacrifice uncon-
ditionally. Nor was this the first time when they were called
to such a sacrifice, for only the year before they were rcquestr
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PROFESSORS WARNER AND TYLER. 127
ed to yield $200 of their salaries, which they did cheerfully.
As shown by the above agreement they were then reduced per-
manently by that amount. From 1827 to 1836, it had been
$800. It was then raised to $1,000, and continued thus till
1845. The three following years we got what we could, and
in 1848 it was raised to $900. Since then it has been made
higher once or twice, and is now $1,200. That of the Presi-
dent is $1,500, with enough from perquisites, including $100
for preaching, to raise it to nearly $2,000. «
Prof. Aaron Warner, D. D.
Knowing thoroughly the gentlemen with whom I was asso-
ciated, I felt confident that if the experiment we had under-
taken would succeed in any hands, it would be theirs. I have
already given some facts respecting all of them, showing my
views of their character, save Professors Warner and Tyler.
The former had indeed but recently joined us, but he had
shown himself in other important positions to be of the right
stamp for carrying on a great Christian enterprise. As p&stor
of a church in Medford, and professor in the Gilmanton Theo-
logical Seminary, he was well known by literary and religious
men. Though talented and well acquainted with the various
branches of literature, yet all his acquirements were subordi-
nated to piety, and wherever duty pointed he followed, and
whatever sacrifices that demanded were cheerfully made.
His work was performed ably yet noiselessly, not to gain
popular applause but to satisfy his conscience and please God ;
and though he resigned his place several years ago, he still
resides in the town, the amiable, Christian gentleman, devoted
to letters and to doing good.
Prof. W. S. Tyler, D. D.
William S. Tyler joined the senior class in 1829, at
Amherst, and graduated in 1830, with the second honor.
He served as tutor from 1832 to 1834. In 1836 he was
appointed Professor of Latin and Greek, which chair he held
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128 BEMHOSCENCBS OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
till 1847, when he became Professor of Greek and Hebrew,
which place he still holds, so that he has been professor twenty-
seven years, and it is thirty-one years since he became con-
nected with the Faculty. He has ever been an indefatigable
student, and most faithful in every position he has occupied.
He has not those qualities which give a man brilliant success
at first, but become less attractive after a time, and even make
him, perhaps, unpopular. On the other hand, his early efforts
were not very successful in securing popular favor. But those
who could read character best saw in his superior natural abili-
ties, his unflinching fidelity and habits of study, the germ of
future eminence. Accordingly his course has been steadily
onward and upward in scholarship, in reputation as an instructor
and a Christian. The numerous learned articles he has pub-
lished in the journals, and his notes upon the classics, have given
him a high rank among American scholars, and his work on
Prayer for the Colleges, and the Life of Dr. Lobdell, have
given him a like rank among religious writers. The Univer-
sity of Cambridge, in testimony of their high sense of his
merits, conferred on him in 1857 the degree of Doctor in
Divinity.
The qualities which have made Professor Tyler so great a
blessing to the College, have been his promptness and fidelity
in every literary duty, and his energetic efforts for the reli^ous
welfare of the students. It is one thing to have an officer in
college brilliant and talented, sure to be applauded in an off-
hand speech, but negligent in his daily duties, and refusing all
extra labor, and quite another thing, to have one always at
his post five minutes before the time, performing with equal
promptness unpleasant as well as pleasant duties, not seeking
by story-telling and other clap-trap, to get applause, but
striving thoroughly to drill and to fix principles in the minds
of his pupils ; not waiting to be compelled, but voluntarily
offering to perform, extra duties in those exigencies that are
frequently occurring in the management of a college. Dr.
Tyler has always belonged decidedly to the latter dass, and
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THE EXPERIMENT. 129
lias done Teiy much to make the machine move freely and
easily. Equally prompt and faithful haa he been in public
and private efforts for the religious welfare of the students.
This duty he has regarded, not only theoretically but practi-
cally, as paramount to every other, although not in conflict
with any other, nor its performance an apology for the neglect
of any other. But if they should come into conflict, he would
give religion the first attention. It is this principle, imper-
fectly acted upon, that has given Amherst College its strongest
hold upon the religious conmiunity, and the secret power by
which it has done what it has for the world. And no one has
done more than Dr. Tyler, to g^ve a practical elucidation of
the principle.
It was with no misgivings then that I took hold of this
financial experiment with such men, most of whom I knew
thoroughly by having labored with them so many years. I
knew that they engaged in this enterprise from religious
motives, and therefore, as I remarked in my Valedictory
Address ten years afterward, " if we took hold of the work
with but feeble hope, we had an iron will." Before the close
of the first year, however, we had an indication of the salutary
effect of the experiment in the receipt, as already mentioned,
of $500 from Hon. S. Williston and A. W. Porter. It seemed
to say to us, we will help those who are trying to help them-
selves, and we had repeated evidence afterward that such was
the effect upon men who a Uttle while before had become so
tired of us that the appearance of our agent would produce a
nervous spasm. If our faith had been strong enough we might
also have regarded it as a sure index of the greater things
which Providence was about to do for us, that on the very day
of my inauguration as President the Trustees voted to accept
of $20,000 from Hon. Samuel Williston as an endowment of
the Professorship of Rhetoric and Oratory. The cloud, how-
ever, was permitted to hang heavy upon us for some years
more. To show how the plans of Providence were gradually
developed, I quote from my Valedictory Address in 1854.
6*
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130 BEMINISCENOES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
** Our experiment had stopped the doirnirard course of the College,
and turned, to some extent, the prejudices of the public into sympa-
thy for us. Still wo could make no improvements : our debt pressed
heavily upon us ; we found it difficult to eke out our deficient salar
ries ; and though our numbers slowly increased, the College seemed
to my dejected spirits to be sinking deeper and deeper into the mire,
and I became at length entirely satisfied that Proyidence did not at
least intend to make use of my instrumental!^ to bring it reliefl
Oh, how little did I suspect how near that relief was, and how simply
and easily God would alter the whole aspect of things I Indeed,
when the change came, it seemed to me as obviously his work as
if I had seen the sun and moon stand still, or the dead start out
of their graves; and it appeared as absurd for me. to boast of my
agency in the work, as for the ^res of the telegraph to feel proud
because electricity was conveying great thoughts through them.
Oh, no ; let the glory of this change be now and ever ascribed to a
special dirine Providence.
" In the discouraging circumstances in which I was then placed, as
already described, I came to the conclusion that I must resign my
place. Yet I felt apprehensive that in the condition of our funds,
no one worthy the place would feel justified in assuming it, with no
certain means of support I therefore determined to make an effort
to get a professorship endowed. And where was it more natural for
me to look, than to one who only a short time before had cheered us
by the endowment of a professorship ; and who, I trust, will pardon
me for detailing a few items of private history, not so much because
they illustrate his liberality, as because they show still more the
Divine Interposition and Beneficence.
**It had become so common a remark among the officers of
Amherst College, that if any respectable friend should give us fifty
thousand dollars, we should attach his name to it, that I felt sure it
would be done ; and I recollected, too, the last words of Professor
Fiske, when he left us : * Amherst College will be relieved : Mr.
Williston I think will give it fifty thousand dollars, and you will put
his name upon it.' I felt justified, therefore, in saying to him, that
if his circumstances would allow him to come to our aid in this
exigency, by founding another professorship, I did not doubt that
such a result would follow. He gave me to understand that in his
will a professorship was already endowed, and that he would make
it available at once, if greatly needed. Nay, he offered to endow
the half of another professorship, provided some one else would add
the other half. But as to attaching his name to the College, he
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RESORT TO PRAYER. 181
felt nnvilUng that I should attempt to falfil that promise, certainly
during his life. Be it so ; hut how can I avoid hearing my solemn
testimony to the obligations that wiU rest upon those who come
after me, to fulfil my promise at a proper time, if they would escape
the curse that follows ingratitude and forfeited faith.
''The half professorship thus offered was soon made a whole one
by Samuel A. Hitchcock, Esq., of Brimfield. And oh, what a load
did these bene£ftCtions take from my mind I For seyeral years each
returning Commencement had seemed to me more like a funeral
than a joyful anniversaiy: for I saw not how the, downward
progress of the College was to he arrested. But now with the addi-
tion of thirty thousand dollars to our funds, I began to hope that we
might be saved. But the kindness of Providence had other develop-
ments in store for us.
'' These events occurred in the winter of 1846, while the Legisla-
ture of Massachusetts was in session. We had often appealed to
them unsuccessfully for help ; and I feared that when the generous
benefactions of individuals should be made public, we should seek
in vain from that quarter for the aid which in justice should be given
us. I therefore requested permission of the Trustees, by letter, to
make one more application to the Government. They allowed me
to do it, and the result was a donation from the State of twenty-five
thousand dollars. The passage of the Resolve met with less oppo-
sition than on former occasions. Perhaps the following incident,
communicated to me by a member of the Legislature, may appear
to the Christian to be connected with tliis fact.
'' The Bill for aiding Amherst College came up on Saturday, and
met with strong and able opposition, so that its friends trembled for
its fate. On Saturday evening a few members of that body were in
the habit of meeting for prayer. That evening the Bill for aiding
the College formed the burthen of conversation and of supplication,
and each one agreed to make it the subject of private prayer on the
Sabbath. Monday came ; the Bill was read ; but to the amazement
of these praying men, opposition had almost disappeared, and with a
few remarks it was passed. How could they, how can we, avoid
the conviction that prayer was the grand agency that smoothed the
troubled waters and gave the College the victory after so many
years of bitter opposition and defeat I
'' In 1846, also. Professor Shcpard offered to deposit in the Col-
lege his splendid collection of minerals, meteorites, fossils, and
animals, provided a fire-proof building were erected for its reception.
Conscious that such an offer ought not to be neglected, I made the
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182 BEMINISCEKCB9 OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
effort to obtain the requisite funds. But I should probably hare
failed, had not the Hon. Josiah B. Woods come to my aid. By hia
judicious plans and perseyering personal efforts, nine thousand dol-
lars were ere long secured ; enough to erect not merely a minera-
logical, but a geological cabinet, and an astronomical obserratory.
There seemed, indeed, but a faint prospect that the latter, when
it was erected, would be supplied with but a few of the requisite
instruments. Yet at the time of the dedication of the building, in
1848, 1 remarked that * we should be very faithless and ungrateful
to doubt that the same Providence, which has done so much for us
the past year, will send us a fitting telescope, if it be best for us to
have one ; and send it too just at the right time.' This prediction,
through the liberality of the Hon. Rufus Bullock, has been fiilfilled ;
and a noble telescope has just been placed in yonder dome, which,
through the great skill and indefatigable industry of Alvan Clark,
Esq., who has constructed it, is one of the finest instruments of its
size that ever graced an observatory ; and its mounting has some
important improvements never i>efore introduced. In the hands
of Mr. Clark, it has already introduced to the astronomic world two
new double stars, never before recognized ; one of which is prob-
ably binary. This discovery has already been confirmed and
acknowledged by one of the most accomplished observers in Great
Britain. May we not hope that this glass will perform another
service for science, by stirring up some generous heart to endow a
professorship of astronomy in our College at no distant day. This
certainly is at present one of the most pressing wants of the institu*
tion. It is not creditable that the noblest of the sciences should be
bandied about like an intruder, and be scarcely recognized in our
catalogue."
We have bad to wait till 1861 to see this last prediction or
rather aspiration realized. For the Walker Professorship,
lately endowed, embraces Astronomy as weU as Mathematics.
These things occurred in 1846. In that year, also, Pro-
fessor Adams presented to the College his great Zoological
collection and Professor Shepard offered to deposit his splen-
did cabinet here if we could furnish a fire-proof building. In
1847, Hon. David Sears made an addition of $12,000 to the
Sears Foundation of Literature and Benevolence,
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THE RESULTS. 138
See now how altered was the condition of the College!
More than $100,000 had flowed in upon it in endowments
and buildings in a little more than two years, as follows : —
Williston Professorship of Rhetoric and Oratory, . . $20,000
Graves Professorship of the Greek Language and Literature, 20,000
Hitchcock Professorship of Natural Theology and Geology, 22,000
Donation from the Stete, 25,000
Sears Foundation, 12,000
The Woods Cabinet and Obserratory, . . .* . . 9,000
$108,000
Along with the pecuniary aid there came also a rich profu-
sion of specimens, either presented or on deposit, whose value
is poorly expressed in money. If only half their present
value, we must add from $35,000 to $40,000 to the above sum.
Was it enthusiasm in me to speak of the change as follows ? : —
" Our debts were cancelled, and available funds enough left to
enable us to go on with economy from year to year, and wi^
increased means of instruction. The incubus that had so long
rested upon us, was removed ; the cord that had well nigh throttled
us, was cut asunder, and the depletion of our life-blood was
arrested. Those only who have passed through such a season of
discouragement and weakness, can realize with what gratitude to
God and our benefactors we went on with our work. It seemed to
us, and does still, a special act of Divine Mercy, and not the result
of our wisdom or effort. We could not otherwise account for it,
that the hearts of so many generous friends should have been simul-
taneously opened to help us, when again and again we had sought
the same aid in vain.
" Under such circumstances, as we might expect, our numbers
have gone on increasing, until I am now able to say, that it is double
what it was when I assumed the Presidency."
The great additions to our funds, made in the latter part
of 1846 and the first part of 1847, had not been made public
till afler a special meeting of the Trustees, which took place
July 6th, 1847. This was the most delightful Trustee meet-
ing I had ever attended. Those venerable men, Drs. Fiske,
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184 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
Packard, Vaill, Ely, Ide, and John Tappan, Wlliam B.
Calhoun, Greorge Grennell, Alfred Foster, Samuel Williston,
Linus Child, David Mack, Ebenezer Alden and Henry
Edwards, whom Dr. Humphrey and myself had so often met
with a discouraging story of debt and an empty treasury,
were now for the first time to be told of .God's wonderful
goodness in turning our captivity and answering their long-
continued and earnest prayers. They were to have a little
respite before they died from the incessant demands upon
their beneficence and labors, with which they had ever been
met. It was a matter of high gratification to see how happy
they were in their subsequent visits to Amherst, to see how
everything was altered for the better, as the fruit of their
long toil and sacrifice and prayers.
At the meeting above described the most important votes
passed were the following : —
Voted, That four thousand dollars from the Amds of the College,
and enough more from the $25,000 lately given by the State, to
amount to $12,465, be appropriated to the immediate payment of
the College debt ; which those sums would entirely cancel.
Voted, That of the remainder of the $25,000 bestowed by the State,
an adequate sum be devoted to the endowment of the Professorship
of Chemistry and Natural History ; which will hereafter take the
name of the Massachusetts PtofessorslUp of Chemistry and NdiiMral
History.
Voted, That in consequence of the State bene&ction, and the
donations of individuals, the annual charge to the students upon
Term Bills, be reduced from forty-eight to fortf-two dollars.
Voted, To direct the Prudential Committee hereafter, to remit the
full amount of the reg^ar term bills, to those students who desire
it, and are indigent, and are preparing for the Christian ministry.
Voted, To name the new Observatory now being erected, the
Lawrence Observatory, in honor of Hon. Abbot IiAW&bncb, the
largest donor for its erection.
Voted, To name the new Cabinet, the Woods Cabinet, to com-
memorate the generous efforts of Hon. Josiah B. Woods, of En-
field, to obtain funds for its erection.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
CURIOUS SCENE. 185
Voted, In consequence of a temporary endowment, to create a
Professorship of the Latin and. French languages, under the name
of the Moore Professorship, in grateful remembrance of Rev, Dr.
MooBB, the first President of the College, and a liberal benefactor.
Voted, To api>oint Rev. A. D. Gridley, Moore Professor of the
Latin and French Languages, with the usual salary of $800, and
liberty to be absent a year, should he accept, and find it necessary.
The Hon. Samubl Williston, of Easthampton, having offered
ten thousand dollars, and Samuel Austin Hitchcock, Esq., of
Brimfield, an equal sum, to endow the Professorship of Natural
Theology and Geology, Voted, That it hereafter be called the
Hitchcock Professorship,
The Hon. Samuel Williston, having offered a further sum of
twenty thousand dollars, for the support of the Professorship of
Greek and Hebrew — Voted, That hereafter it take the name of the
Ora/ves ^Professorship,
The above sums, given to the College by Mr. Williston, with a
professorship previously endowed by him, amount to Fifty Thou-
sand D0LLAE8 1
The meeting closed in the afternoon, and as the students
were yet ignorant of the whole matter, in which I knew they
ffelt a deep interest, I took the opportunity at evening prayers
to read the above votes, and I shall never forget the scene
that followed. At first they did not seem to comprehend the
matter, and they gave no demonstration of their feelings,
especially as two of the Trustees were present. But as the
successive announcements came out they could not restrain
their feelings and began to clap, and by the time the last vote
was read the clapping was tremendous, and when they were
dismissed and had reached the outer door of the chapel, they
stopped, and th^ cheering was long and loud.
At the annual meeting of the Trustees, in August, they
appointed ^^a committee to consider in what manner we
should testify our gratitude to Gk>d and our benefactors, in
view of recent favors to the College," who reported that " at
such time as the President and Professors shall regard as
suitable, a public meeting be held in Amlierst, with an invita-
tion to the friends and benefactors of the College to be present,
Digitized by VjOOQ IC
136 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
and that Hon. William B. Calhoun be requested to deliver an
address on the occasion."
This meeting was deferred till June 28th, 1848, in order to
connect with it the dedication of the new cabinet and observa-
tory, which would not be finished and filled with specimens
at an earlier date. The occasion was one of deep interest.
The principal address was given by Hon. William B.
Calhoun, and was a beautiful and appropriate production. In
my address of welcome, I said : " Gratitude — deep, sincere
gratitude becomes us, and we know that we feel it ; gratitude
first of all and above all to God. For we honestly believe
that it was He who put it into your hearts to come to our
help. If ever I had doubted God*s special agency in influ-
encing the hearts of men to deeds of benevolence, the experi-
ence of the last two years would have removed all my scepticism.
Permit us, then, from a full heart, to praise Grod for our
increased means of honoring Him by promoting the cause
of benevolence.
" Think not, gentlemen, that you are invited hither to-day
through mere form, for the sake only of a pageant. If any of
you know w^hat it is to labor year after year in a cause which
you feel to be a good and important one, but which is in a
depressed condition, and therefore meets not with popular
favor, if you know the heart-sinking, the mortification, the
struggle between duty and inclination, and the alternation of
hope and despondency of such a state, then you can realize
our feelings for many a long year. And if you have seen
that depressed cause suddenly assume a different aspect, and
have felt your lungs breathe more freely, and your heart beat
more lightly, through the liberal aid of some large-souled
benefactor, then you can appreciate our feelings to-day."
A few sentences from Mr. Calhoun's address (p. 22,) will
show how these same topics affected him. He says : " The
waning fortunes of this institution have for years brought to
our hearts gloom, despondency, almost despair. Heaven
again beams upon us with blessings. To Heaven let us not
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PUBLIC ACKNOWLEDGMENT. 137
cease to offer the incense of thanks^ving." " We render our
thankfiilnebs and gratitude to all our benefactors. We leave
behind us the night of gloom through which we have passed.
We receive the College into the fellowship of new and ani-
mated hopes. The massive structures upon which are inscribed
the names of the generous donors, rising up in the midst of
this landscape, — ^these hills and valleys— of unsurpassing gran-
deur and beautj — are now dedicated to the cause of science
and truth. Long, ever may they stand thus dedicated. Here
may science remain tributary to virtue, freedom, religion.
Here may there be inscribed on all these walls and in every
heart, Ghristo et ecclestae.'*
At the dinner on this occasion several distinguished gentle-
men (Professors Silliman, Senior and Junior, Rev. Dr.
Worcester, William C. Bedfield, President Wheeler, Professor
Shepard, and many others,) made appropriate and interesting
remarks, and several letters of the like stamp were read. I
feel tempted to make many quotations ; but must limit myself
to a single one from the letter of Hon. David Sears, where is
shown his appreciation of the financial experiment undertaken
by the officers of the College, as akeady detailed. "But while
the benefactors of the College are thus honored," says he, "the
Faculty of the College should come in for their share of grati-
tude. I have been a silent but not inattentive observer of
them. I have been informed of their devotion to their literary
labors, — of their self-denials,— of their voluntary surrender of
a part of their moderate salaries, — ^reserving only enough for
a bare subsistence, — ^to relieve the College in its necessity.
Such disinterested zeal stands out brightly, and merits an
honorable record."
Thus by a rapid succession of Providential interventions,
almost as striking as if they had been miraculous, was the
noble sliip in which many of us had ventured our all, turned
away from a lee shore^ a rocky coast and hidden shoals, into a
smooth and open sea, refitted for her voyage, and urged for-
ward by prospering gales. Hitherto slie had been compelled
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138 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
to skulk along a dangerous coast, and many a friend feared,
and many a foe hoped, to see her go to pieces upon -the rocks
or founder in the storm, especially when they saw more than
half of her crew abandon her as unscaworthy, and those who
remained seemed to have no power to stop her leaks or mend
her sails. How gratifying to see her now bearing away under
easy sail over an open sea, with every prospect of a prosperous
voyage if her crew exercise only common discretion and skill-
To drop the figure, the College had now come into possession
of funds sufficient to cancel all its debts, improve its external
Appearance, and furnish the means of defraying its ordinar}
expenses even in those exigencies when from any cause its
numbers are diminished. Up to 1846 every such exigency
produced an apprehension for the very life of the institution ;
for it had not strength enough nor a basis broad enough to
bear a heavy blow. But now the great increase of its public
buildings, its apparatus, books and specimens, gave it ballast
enough to keep it steady in a severe storm. Its permanence as
one of the leading literary and scientific institutions of the
land became now an admitted fact, unless through gross mis-
management it should again get loaded with debt and become
extravagant in expenses. These are temptations against
which, taught by sad experience, it should now set up a double
guard.
Having had this long and bitter experience, I feel constrained
to record my opinion as to certain measures adopted here and
in many other places in analagous circumstances, that is, in
starting literary and benevolent institutions, although that
opinion conflicts with the views of many excellent men. It is
not my object to cast censure upon such men ; but only to
express the convictions which have been forced upon me by
that stem schoolmaster, experience.
1. In the first place I doubt the justice or expediency of run-
ning in debt to found and carry forward literary and benevolent
institutions.
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BUILDING ON CREDIT, 139
It is not just to successors. It is contracting debts for them
to pay, although never consulted, and who is willing to commit
that power to any man? The institution comes into their
hands thus encumbered, and the alternative is to let it go
down or to make a desperate effort to pay the debt The
latter course is usually taken ; but how desperate the struggle
often is, let the history of Amherst College attest. Surely it
must be an urgent necessity that can justify one set of
Christian men in forcing another set into such a conflict. I
will not say that it is possible in every case to avoid going
forward on credit ; and if ever justifiable it was probably so
in the effort to build the first college building at Amherst
But there, as it seems to me, it should have stopped, at least
till the first one was paid for and money was on hand for
building another.
Again, building on credit is much the most expensive. You
have got to pay interest on the sums borrowed, and the salaries
of agents, for their liquidation. In some cases those agents get
little more than sufficient for these two objects, like the sap
gatherer who, to save transportation, fitted up a series of
spouts to convey the sap to the kettle ; but it turned out that
it was all absorbed before reaching the kettle. Is it wonderful
that benevolent men who know how much it takes to wet the
spouts, should manifest some reluctance when solicited to pay
old debts even to sustain very important institutions ?
This question suggests another objection to this building on
credit It is much easier to get money to found a new insti-
tution than to cancel old debts. Hence those who incur
debts inflict a double injury upon their successors, expecting
them to make brick without straw. Nothing is more odious
than to appeal to a man to help pay the debts of an insti-
tution contracted many years before; and nothing is more
adapted to make any enterprise unpopular with the benevo-
lent. Alas, we found this all painfully true in respect to
Amherst College. With the religious public, saving local
prejudices, it was wonderfully popular in its earlier days.
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140 BEMINISCBNCB3 OF AMHERST COLLBGE.
But when our ubiquitous system of begging had been continued
for years, we were growled at and found fault with in all
quarters, and almost every one felt fully competent to decide
what we ought and ought not to do. We were fast
losing the confidence of the public Even the Alumni
sat in judgment upon us, and because we could not pay our
debts nor make improvements in the College, without money,
we were judged incompetent. Had we been out of debt,
we might have maintained our independence and the public
confidence. But it seemed next to impossible to recover our
lost balance, because the public ear had become deaf and the
public heart insensible to our solicitations.
The temptation which this living on credit presents to Trus-
tees to adopt measures that will give early but ephemeral
popularity to a college, which will most likely be followed
by such a trying reaction as just described, is another
strong argument against it When some improvement seems
very desirable, — some new building, or books, or apparatus, —
how readily will they vote to obtain it, if they can do it by
simply directing their treasurer to borrow the money and
make themselves believe that Providence will raise up some
one who will cancel the debt If such improvement would
give the college a wider reputation and make it more attract
tive, and especially enable it to compete successfully with
some rival institution that had already secured the boon, how
easily could they make themselves believe that there was a
call of Providence for them to go forward. How strong the
temptation, also, to lead them to do some things which though
desirable with ample funds, might without much inconve-
nience be dispensed with! I mean how much more ready
would Trustees be to do these things than if they acted on
the principle of never voting any improvement till the money
for it was in their hands.
If I were to instance improvements at Amherst, not indis-
pensable, which certainly would have been delayed if the
Trustees had waited for funds, I should point first to the
Digitized by VjOOQIC
bebtob's prison. 141
wide cat through the hill in front of the College^ between
them and the Woods Cabine't If a landscape gardener had
been consulted, he probably would not have advised the
grading; yet it cost $2,000, to be added to the College debt
The other act was the erection of a new President's house
on a spot less desirable, in my opinion, than the site of the
house already in possession of the College ; yet it cost $9,000,
and added over $6,000 to the debt. Ought it not to have
been a matter of stem necessity that should thus add $8,000
to a debt which already had well nigh throttled the institu-
tion ? In another place I have given my views of the new
President's house compared with the old one. If I were
again to take the Presidency, I should prefer, all things
considered, to live in the old one. Yet the Trustees acted in
both these cases, I doubt not, with conscientious sincerity.
For these reasons, chief y, I am persuaded that the true
principle in starting and sustaining colleges and other insti-
tutions dependent on public benefactions, is not to go forward
to build and make other improvements unless the requisite
funds are actually obtained, except perhaps in very extreme
cases. As an individual, I should not feel justified in
running into debt to build a house, in the expectation that
my children would somehow or other pay for it ; why, as a
Trustee of a public institution, should I do an analogous
thing? It might, indeed, retard its progress, to wait till
funds could be obtained; but though the growth might be
slower, it would be much surer, and there would be no disas-
trous reaction, so that in the end there would be no loss of time.
If this principle had been adopted at Amherst College, I think
it would have reached its present elevated position several years
earlier than it has done, and all the anxiety and vexation and
desperate effort which it has cost to raise it out of the debtor's
prison^ would have been saved.
It may be said that by this principle many an important
enterprise would utterly fail, because funds could not be
obtained beforehand. In such a case, if after the most perse-
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142 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
vering and prayerful efforts, they could not be secured, I
think we might reasonably conclude that Providence did not
intend it should succeed.
The extraordinary success that has attended some of the
orphan asylums of Europe, where this principle was adopted,
is a striking evidence of its truth. Francke acted on this
principle at Halle, and his asylum, now more than one hun-
dred years old and still flourishing, shows its potency. Yet
more strikiugly have the labors of Muller at Bristol shown us
how Grod helps those who help themselves. I do not say
that I should adopt all the views of MuUer. But when he
contends that we have no right to run in debt one pound
beyond our means, I feel that he has both Scripture and
reason on his side. There have been no reactions and pull-
backs in his gigantic establishment, just because he waited till
he could pay for every thing as he went along. I mean as to
the erection of buildings.
The Female Seminary at South Hadley is another example
nearer home of the correctness of this principle. For not till
the requisite funds were in the hands of the Trustees were the
brick and mortar put into requisition, nor have any debts been
incurred there for any purpose that could not be paid when
demanded. And now for twenty-five years has that institution
enjoyed uninterrupted prosperity. It was hard work to get
the funds at first ; but by adopting John Elliott's principle
that 'Sprayers and pains through Jesus Christ will do any
thing," success crowned the eflbrt.
In the erection of the Library Building the Trustees of
Amherst College acted on the principle for which I contend.
They would not proceed in the woric till the requisite funds
were in their hands, and as the result the enterprise was carried
through without the slightest difficulty. The bills were all
promptly met, and no imperative demands for interest upon
an impoverished treasury made a vexatious finale as was the
case with most of the other buildings.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
DORMITORIES. 143
May I be allowed to say that I have myself found the value
of this principle in my efforts to enlarge the cabinets at
Amherst College. I have obtained not less than $30,000 fof
buildings and specimens. But I have rigidly adhered to the
principle never to advance money for any purpose until it was
in my hands, though in some cases strongly tempted to do so
by some favorable offer which might soon be withdrawn. The
result is that I have never bad the slightest diflSculty in any
pecuniary matter connected with the erection of the Appleton
and Woods Cabinet, the Geological Lecture Room, the Nine-
veh Gallery, or in purchases for the cabinets. I acted just as
I would in my own private dealings ; that is, never, if possible
to avoid it, to run in debt. Professor Adams was tempted to
anticipate the income of the Natural History Fund by some
$350, because some good opportunities offered for purchase.
But he died, and this money could legally be refuscfS payment
to the estate. The Trustees, however, out of regard to the
afflicted family, paid it over. How much better, thought I, to
keep one's ledger free from such balances.
2. In the second place, I doubt the expediency of the very
common practice of laying out large sums for dormitory build-
ings in founding a new college. For almost any of our country
villages, even one as small as Amherst, could easily furnish
comfortable rooms enough for students to study and sleep in.
Certainly there are enterprising men enough in every village
who would soon provide such rooms if there were a reasonable
prospect of renting them. A building for recitations and
prayers is indeed needed early, and then will follow after a
time other rooms for library, cabinets, laboratory, and other
public rooms. But not till all these are provided need dormi-
tory rooms be built if built at all.
Now most Boards of Trust lay themselves out vigorously at
the very first to provide private rooms for the students, and
generally by the time these are finished all their available
means are exhausted, and even large debts incurred, and then
'public rooms can be built only by plunging deeper in indebt-
Digitized by VjOOQIC
144 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
edness. So that sometimes by the time a college is ready
fairly t6 start they are so exhausted of means as to be com-
pelled to suspend operations entirely ; or, as at Amherst, a
struggle commences which requires great strategic skill,
unusual financial ability, much self-denial, and unflinching
courage for a quarter of a century, before the victory is gained.
What a relief to that institution it would have been had its
founders been convinced that the $45,000 which have been
laid out in dormitory buildings might have been saved or
diverted to other purposes !
I know that the impression prevails widely that it is far
safer to the morals of students to have them congregated in
large dormitory buildings than to be scattered through the
community. I must say that my own observation for many
years does not sustain such an opinion, but rather the reverse.
Some peculiar temptations may meet them thus scattered; but
not so many, I think, as to be isolated from public inspection
entirely among their own kith and kin, with whom it is a
point of honor notto reveal the delinquencies and immoralities
of their fellows.
I shall spend but little time in detailing the financial history
of the College since its passage through the Bed Sea of diffi-
culties in the pathway made through the waters parted by the
wand of Providence. Though we found ourselves with funds
enough to pay our debts and meet ordinary expenses, yet the
wants of the institution had become numerous, and to make it
such as it ought to be we still needed the fostering care of
individual beneficence as well as the exercise of rigid economy.
Still we have found it easier to persuade wealthy and benevo-
lent gentlemen to aid us than during our most needy condition,
because they were then fearful that we might sink in the
struggle, and then all their donations would be lost ; but now
they see that permanence is inscribed upon our walls and that
their benefactions are sure to bless a long succession of gener-
ations. I doubt not that such impressions had some influence
in procuring the $10,000 for the Appleton Cabinet; perhaps
Digitized by VjOOQIC
FUNDS OP THE COLLEGE. 145
also the $1,165 for the Nineveh Gallery; the $1,000 for the
Geological Lecture Room, and the thousands of dollars for the
purchase of footmarks and other specimens. Also, at more
recent dates, the benefactions of S. A. Hitchcock, Dr. Walker,
David Sears, Jonathan Phillips, and others, for scholarships
and books. But perhaps the best waj to give an idea of the
present state of the finances -will be to copy several items from
the Treasurer's Report
Funds op thb College.
Williflton Professorship of Rhetoric and Oratory, —
Principal, . ' $14,100 50
Income, 827 50
Graves Professorship of Greek and Hebrew, —
Principal, 20,000 00
Income, 1,200 00
Hitchcock Professorship of Natural Theology and Geology, —
Principal, $22,000 00
Income, 1,773 39
Massachusetts Professorship of Chemistry and Natural History, —
Principal, $15,000 00
Income, 1,126 00
Charity Fund, (1863,) Principal, 61,287 00
Annual Income, July, 1863, 3,205 00
Stimpson Fund, 16,000 00
Income, 960 58
Moore Scholarships for Indigent Students looking to
the Ministry, 7,850 00
Income, (one-third to be added to Principal,) . . 476 47
Adams Benevolent Fund, ($125 of income to be paid
the Congpreg^tional Society in Milford, $120 to indi-
gent^ meritorious students in College, never over $50
apiece, and the balance to the College Library,) —
Principal, 6,000 00
Income, ' 285 00
Porter Scholarship, (student to be selected by him-
self for thirty years,) Principal, .... 1,000 00
Income, 60 00
Hitchcock Scholarships, (given by S. A. Hitchcock for
indigent, meritorious students, $100 each,) Principal, 10,000 00
Income, 600 00
7
Digitized by VjOOQIC
146 REMINISCENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
Sears Foundation of Literature and Benevolence, (one-
half the income to be added to the principal, $120
to the Library', and the rest to College purposes,) —
Principal, ......... $14,700 00
Income, ' . . . . 708 80
T4iirty shares in Randolph Bank, .... 3,000 00
Income, * 300 00
Ten shares in Connecticut River Railroad, original
value, 1,000 00
Income, 30 00
President's House and Lands adjoining, . . . 9,000 00
Dwelling House in Amherst, cost, .... 8,250 00
Income, 200 00
Legacy of Hon. Jonathan Phillips, for the Library, . 5,000 00
Income, .... * 300 00
Samuel Appleton's Donation for Instruction in Agri-
culture, 850 00
Grant from the Massachusetts Legislature, upon the sale
of the Back Bay Lands, a part already paid, and Uie
whole to be paid in August, 1863, .... 25,000 00
Legacy from Richard Bond, Esq., the income to be used
for the general purposes of College, . . . 4,000 00
Legacy of Hon. William Reed, available upon the
decease of two nieces, 6,000 00
Donation from C. Baldwin, not available fbr some
years 4,000 00
Donation from M. H. Baldwin, 3,500 00
Donation of Dr. J. W. Walker, to endow a Professor-
ship of Mathematics and Astronomy, . . . 25,000 00
From the same, for half the cost of a new Philosoph-
ical Cabinet, 20,000 00
From the same, for Mathematical Prizes, . . . 2,000 00
Donation for Mathematical purposes, .... 10,000 00
$5,000 each from Samuel Williston, Samuel A. Hitch-
cock, Esq., and James Smith, Esq., of Philadelphia,
with smaller sums from other individuals, to make
up the other half, for the Philosophical Cabinet, . 20,000 00
Grant from the Legislature of 1863, for aid to the Nat-
ural History Department, 2,500 00
The last of the above items came to us aa a special gift of
Providence, The Trustees threw in a petition to the legisla-
Digitized by VjOOQIC
VARIOUS FUNDS. 147
ture pointing out Amherst as a proper place for the Agricul-
tural College endowed by Congress. This failed; but was
followed up by another petition for aid in the Natural History
Department on the ground that the like aid had been bestowed
upon the Zoological Museum at Cambridge, and some other
institutions. This petition we followed up perseveringly. I
went down to Boston three times in the course of the winter,
in so feeble a state that I was obliged to be accompanied by my
wife. Success crowned our efforts ; not indeed to the extent
of our deserts, but enough to afford us important help. I trust
that the greater part of it will be devoted to Palaeontology.
Indeed, the Prudential Committee have directed the Curator
to visit important localities, and the result already has been a
valuable collection of the annelid and other tracks of Central
New York, as well as other important fossils.
Three of the above Funds, by the terms on which they were
presented, must go on increasing in amount, viz. : the Charity
Fund, the Sears Foundation, and the Moore Scholarships.
So far as I can see this increase can never be stopped without
forfeiting the principals, and heirs enough in such a case will
always be found to take possession. We might speculate upon
the effect of this endless expansion, and perhaps show that it
must operate disastrously. But as posterity only are con-
cerned, we leave it to them to settle difficult questions, confi-
dent that they will complain less of an excess of funds than if
their progenitors had sent down heavy debts for them to pay.
Of the Funds given to assist indigent students three of the
above* are devoted to sucli, and to such only, as have made up
their minds to enter the gospel ministry. These are the
Charity Fund of $61,287, the Stimpson Fund of $16,000, and
the Moore Scholarships of $7,850; amounting in all to
$85,137. Moreover, one-sixth of the income of the Charity
Fund is added to the principal, and one-third that of the
Moore Scholarships, so that some time or other they must
furnish money enough to educate all the evangelical young
men in the country studying for the ministry. Fortunately
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148 BEMINISCENCES OP AMHERST COLLEGE.
the Charity Fund does not limit its benefactions to one denom-
ination, but embraces all that arc evangelical, viz. : Congrega-
tionalists, Presbyterians, Baptists, Methodists, Episcopalians,
&c. Moreover, the benefactions need not be confined to
paying the tuition merely ; but might be extended to board,
clothing, or any other needful expenses, nay, to the erection
of buildings, purchase of books, or cabinets, or any thing else
necessary to give scholars a complete education. This Charity
Fund was the comer-stone on which the College was originally
founded; it has been our sheet anchor during winds and
storms, and it seems destined in the future to give the rising
tree an indefinite expansion, and fruit beyond our ability to
calculate.
There are three Funds in the above Hst abo that do not
require the recipients of the income to have decided upon their
profession, or even to be hopefully pious ; but only that they
be needy, of good morals and of good talents and scholarship.
These are the Hitchcock Scholarships of $10,000, the Adams
Benevolent Fund of $6,000, and the Porter Scholarship of
$1,000, amounting in all to $17,000. Only about fourteen
students can be aided at the same time by these funds, and
that only in sums from $50 to $100. This is indeed a noble
beginning. But from what I have learnt by long acquaintance
with this class of students, I cannot but think that future donors
to the College would most advance not only the cause of learn-
ing but of religion by enlarging this fund rather than that
which assists the candidates for the ministry. Not unfre-
quently the finest scholars among the indigent, although appa-
rently not far from the kingdom of heaven, have not yet
become decidedly religious, or are not ready to make up their
minds as to a profession. But if they could be aided to go
forward we might strongly hope that before their collegiate
course is finished both these points would be satisfactorily
settled ; or at any rate such a character and habits, both moral
and intellectual, as such benefactions requii^, would train up
for other professions a most desirable set of men. I look to
Digitized by VjOOQIC
EXPANDING FUNDS. 149
the daj as not far distant, when the Funds of the College in
aid of the indigent will be as extensive and have as indefinite
an increase for those who have not, as for those who have, made
up their minds as to a profession.
In one of the Funds above given I think I discern the germ
of an indefinite enlargement of our Library. I refer to the
Sears Foundation of Literature and Benevolence. Unless I
quite mistake the somewhat technical terms in which the gifl
IS conveyed, Mr. Sears has an eye to this object. He speaks
of one of the estates presented by him as " forever to be a
source and afford a supply, as a river affords a supply of water
to the ocean, by which the capital of eaid fund is to be annually
increased." He gives direction how the fund shall be used
when it has reached a hundred thousand dollars, then for two
hundred thousand, and so on 'Hhiough all time." From
another estate he requires that $120 shall be devoted to books
for sixtyHsix years, and all the income that goes to the College
may be used for the Library, or when large enough, for a
Library Building. It seems to me that if a large part of the
future income of this Literary and Benevolent Fund be not
devoted to an indefinite increase of books, it will not be used
as the donor intended.
The Natural History Fund of $5,000, producing $300
annually, will also do something to increase the cabinets,
although insufficient to make very rapid or large additions.
Here, too, we perceive the principle of indefinite increase, so
that we may regard it as the law which Providence has
impressed upon all the great interests of the College. It
seems to me to be Providential that all these interests are
thus provided for. I cannot impute it to chance that so many
different benefactors, without knowing one another's plans,
should thus have provided for an indefinite increase of men,
of means, of books, and of specimens. It impresses us with
high hopes as to the future destiny of the College if those who
conduct its affairs are wise and faithful.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
150 REMINISCENCES OP AMHERST COLLEGE.
For a few years past the Treasurer has reported a consider-
able -debt, which has been accumulating ; and I confess I have
been a little anxious about it, lest the College should again
get into the slough, out of which it took twenty years to extri-
cate it. But the very gratifying Report of the Treasurer for
18G3 has relieved my apprehensions ; for it shows that the
Trustees have now the means of wiping out all their debtsy
and affording relief at any points where there was a pecuniary
pressure. And I am sure that they will take the earliest
opportunity to apply the sums to be received in August from
the Back Bay Lands to accomplish these most desirable
objects, and enable the College to follow the apostolic direction
to owe no man any thing. This is the true point to be aimed
at by the College ; and if its guardians can succeed in keeping
it on this high ground they may be sure of prosperity. But
if under any pretence they allow debts to accumulate, as in
former yeai's, they may be sure of embarrassment and trouble.
August Ist, 1863. Commencement has now passed, and it
is gratifying to leam that the Trustees acted fully according
to these principles at their late meeting. With the $18,800
just received from the State from the Back Bay lands, they
voted to cancel all their debts, and then appropriated several
thousand dollars to repairs upon the President's house and
the reconstruction of the much worn and defaced Johnson
Chapel. They also voted \o proceed at once to the erection
of the Walker Hall, upon which, by the terms of Dr. Walker's
gift, forty thousand dollars are to be expended.
The expenses of the College for 1862-3, were between
$18,000 and $19,000.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
ANTIVENENEAN SOCIETT. 161
SECTION V.
fflSTORY OF TEMPERANCE IN THE COLLEGE.
The College was started before the beginning of the modem
temperance movement in our country. But the character of
its members would lead us to expect that they would be fore-
most in such an enterprise. They did indeed go much ahead
of the community as teetotalers. This was as early as 1829,
and though the cause of temperance was then making some
headway, it was only total abstinence from ardent spirits.
Indeed, an officer in the American Temperance Society
strongly rebuked me in the journals because I urged the
students to pledge themselves against fermented liquors also.
I do not, however, claim the credit of first starting them on
this track. That was done by John Tappan, Esq., of Boston,
one of the earliest, most thorough and consistent friends of
temperance ii^ our country. He saw early that for young
men in college to be pledged against ardent spirits only, while \/
free to use wine and other fermented liquors, is rather a farce.
Moreover, Mr. Tappan had a strong antipathy to the use of
narcotics, especially tobacco and opium, knowing how often the
habit is connected with or leads the way to intemperance in
drink. Hence in 1829 or 1830 he proposed to the students
of the College that if they would form an association pledged
against the use, as articles of luxury or diet, of ardent spirits,
wine, opium and tobacco, he would present them with $500, to
be disposed of as they saw fit. They concluded to form the
association, but rejected the money lest it should be said they
were bribed. But Mr. Tappan sent on the money to the
College to be used in the purchase of books. We used it as a
Digitized by VjOOQIC
152 RPIINISOENCBS OP AMHERST COLLEGE.
nucleus around which to accumulate $3,000 or $4,000, which
Professor Hovey took to Europe and employed it for making
the most important early addition ever made to the library.
Thus did this effort of Mr. Tappan secure two very important
objects for the College, and we have seen how another $500
from him was the means of accomplishing a third object of
great scientific value, viz. : the filling up of the Ichnological
Cabinet. His other contributions to the College have been
numerous, and I have no hesitation in placing him among the
most valuable of our benefactors.
We called the new association the Antivenenean Society, or
the society against poisons, {anti, against, and venenum, poison.)
The ori^nal pledge which we signed was as follows : —
** Whereas, the undersigned, Officers and Students in Amherst
College, are convinced that it is best for us to dispense with Ardent
Spirit, Wine, Opium and Tobacco as articles of luxury or diet : —
Therefore, Resolved, That, relying on Divine Aid, we hereby pledge
to one another onr mutual pronise, that while connected with this
Institution we will abstain entirely from these articles except as
Medicines, and the use of Wine at the Lord's Supper.'*
This document is dated ^^ Amherst College, August, 1830,"
and seems to have been adopted and signed ju^ before Com-
mencement, It was signed by all the officers and by 26 out
of 33 Seniors, 36 Juniors out of 75 ; 23 Sophomores out of
47, and 33 Freshmen out of 53 ; in all 118 out of 208. In
October of the same year a new class entered, 33 out of 37 of
whom signed the pledge. From that time to the present I
have offered it to each of the classes as they have entered, and
will give a list of the numbers that have added their names to
the roll, which has now got to be twenty-three feet long, and
contains on a part four columns and on a part three columns
of names. To unroll this before a class generally produces a
strong impression, as it ought to do, and such an array of the
names of their predecessors in College calls loudly upon them
to follow the example.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
EARLY EFFORTS. 153
Perhaps I ought to give the names of the officers of the
College, which stand at the head of the list, embracing every
Professor and Tutor for 1830, 1831 and 1832. They are as
follows : —
Heman Humphrey, Edward Hitchcock, N. W. Fiske,
Solomon Peck, Samuel M. Worcester, E. S. Snell, William
P. Paine, Sylvester Hovey, Story Hebard, Ezekiel Russell,
Justin Perkins, William S. Tyler, Ebenezer Bui^ess, Calvin
E. Park, Amos Bullard, Jr., Jonathan B. Condit, W. H.
Tyler, S. B. Ingram, Charles E. Washburn, Thomas S.
Miller, Lyman Colman.
I ought also to state, before giving the list, that the pledge
above given continued unchanged till 1849, when there was a
modification, as the following preamble and votes will show : —
"At a meeting of the Antirenenean Society, holdex^ Kor. 15th, 1849,
the following Preamble and Votes were unanimonsly adopted :
" WherecUi among the articles prohibited by the Fledge of the Anti-
venenean Socie^, intoxicating drinks are decidedly the most injuri-
ous to the community ; And whereat, some individuals are willing
to pledge themselves to abstain from intoxicating drinks, who still
use some of the other substances named in the Fledge : And whereas,
it 18 desirable that those who agree in important principles should
miite in their defence, even though they may differ on other points :
"Therefore, Voted, That the following Pledge (inserted below) be
substituted for the one that has hitherto been adopted by the Society.
" Voted, That if any one in signing the new Pledge shall prefix a
star to his name, it will be understood that he adopts both Pledges ;
but if he prefix no star, the new Fledge only will be binding upon
him."
"New Plbdob.
" We, the undersigned, officers and students of Amherst College,
relying on Divine Aid, pledge to one another our mutual promise
that while connected with the Institution we will not use Intoxicating
Drinks as a beverage."
Quickened in memory by these statements, I find that I
have not gone far enough back to trace the earliest starting
point of the Antivenenean Society and the preparation there
7*
Digitized by VjOOQIC
154 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
was among the students for Mr. Tappan's proposition. The
truth was that early in 1830, or I think still earlier, he had
offered a premium of $50 for the best essay on alcoholic and
narcotic substances. That prize was awarded to me, and my
essay published under the direction of the American Temper-
ance Society, I believe, as early as 1829. In the spiing of
1830, 1 volunteered to give nine lectures on diet, regimen and
employment, to the students of the College, the fourth of
which was the prize essay. I had made such arrangements
that the lectures were going through the press while I was
delivering them, though the fact was unknown to the public
till the Iflst lecture, when I held up the completed volume
before my audience. It will show the interest excited in the
subject^ to state that though the work would immediately be
offered for sale, the students felt constndned to offer me a vote
of thanks and to endorse my plan for the publication of the
lectures. I feel much gratification as I now read the vote of
the committee conveying these sentiments, because I find
names that have since become eminent through the world,
viz. : those of H* B. Hacket^ Peter Parker, Lyman Gibbons
and H. D. Humphrey. I cannot but feel that the early stand
they took on the subject of temperance, in eating as well as
drinking, may have had much to do with their subsequent
success and usefulness.
My lectures closed May 6th, 1830, and the Antivenenean
Society was not formed as we have seen till August, There
was therefore not a little preparation, which may show how so
large a proportion of the members of College came at once
into the measure, although so far ahead of the state of public
opinion. But the following list of the number who have joined
the society from 1830 to 1862, will show how strong a temper-
ance phalanx has existed in the College : —
Digitized by VjOOQIC
STATISTICS OP THE ANTIVENENEAN SOCIETY.
166
^.
«i?
^
^
^S
.
YJSAB.
|J
1
TEAR.
1^
If
11
o
1830, August, .
*207
118
1847-48, .
50
37
1830, October, .
37
33
«
1848-49,
52
28
-
1831-32, .
60
51
-
1849-50,
53
.t36
8
1832-33,
72
67
-
1850-51,
40
30
8
1833-34,
85
76
.
1861-52,
63
47
11
183-^35,
70
62
_
1852-53,
57
52
7
1835-36,
76
68
-
1853-54,
56
50
6
1836-37,
76
55
-
1854-55,
66
54
2
1837-38,
50
36
-
1855-56,
54
41
3
1838-89,
87
14
.
1856-57,
64
57
9
1839-40,
38
34
_
1857-58,
66
37
3
1840-41,
62
32
-
1858-59,
74
52
18
1841-42,
44
40
_
1859-60,
67
41
6
1842-43,
32
26
-
1860-61,
62
80
1
1843-44,
32
22
-
1861-4J2,
78
61
15
1844-45,
34
31
_
1862-63,
60
37
12
1845-46,
1846-47,
84
35
24
16
-
2,033
1,485
im
â– if All Classes.
t New Pledge.
t One in 14.
From these figures we see that in the last thirty-seven classes,
embracing 2,033, 1,485, or just about three-quarters, have
connected themselves with this society ; and of the 615 who
have joined it since the adoption of the new pledge, one
hundred and three, one in six, have not pledged themselves
against opium and tobacco. To one who, like myself, knows
how little effort has been made to obtain these results, they
are gratifpng. The rule which we adopted at the first, was,
that the President of the College should be also the President
of the Society, and the Secretary hold his office during good
behavior. Dr. Humphrey accordingly presided during the
first fifteen years, and I was Secretary. Since that time I
have been President, and Professor Tyler Secretary, Dr.
Steams having requested me to continue President after his
election. As a matter of fact, I believe I have offered the
pledge to every class, though Professor Tyler has been gen-
erally present. We have done nothing except to spend say
half an hour in making the class understand the character
Digitized by VjOOQIC
156 BEMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
of the Society, and stating to them that we wanted onlj true
men to subscribe. Very rarely have there been any extra
meetings during the year, or any other means taken to awaken
an interest in the subject, though I believe Mr. Grough has
once or twice lectured at Commencement, at the request of the
Society. I ought also to say that in some years pressing
duties prevented me from offering the pledge till some months
afler the class had joined College; and in such cases, I
always found that the numbers who joined were less than
when it was offered early. The fact is, within a month or
two students who join college generally get their companions
chosen, and find their way into the channels of college life in
which they will continue through the whole course, unless
God's Spirit meet them in their path. If they find out that
a temperance pledge will be in their way, or unpleasant to
the companions they have chosen, they will of course think
it best to keep clear of it. I have often looked with sadness
upon a fine, susceptible and talented young man refusing the
pledge, because I feared he was deciding his fate, by refusing
to take the only safeguard that could prevent his ruin ; and
the result has often confirmed my fears. But when such a
young man came forward promptly and put down his name,
I have marked him as destined for distinction, and accordingly
I find that out of thirty valedictorians, as many certainly as
twenty-two, and I believe more, have been pledged Anti-
veneneans. •
At first our Diplomas contained a lithographic view of the
Colleges from a north-west stand-point, and beneath it a
certificate of membership, signed by the President and Secre-
tary, giving the pledge in fulL Subsequently, another plate
was prepared, differing little from the first, except that a foun-
tain, (ideal, of course, as none exists there,) was placed in
front of the Colleges, near where the Woods Cabinet now
stands. Still more recently, aided by the continued benefac-
tions of Mr. Tappan, we got Mr. Billings, of Boston, distin-
guished for his skilful designs, to prepare a vignette, which,
Digitized by VjOOQIC
THE PLEDGE. 157
with a blank certificate beneath, we had engraved on steel,
so that now the Society has the means, at a veiy slight
expense, of furnishing very elegant diplomas.
This plate represents Minerva, the goddess of Wisdom,
offering the pledge of temperance to a student, at the same
time pointing him to Temperance, with a garland of victory
in her hands. Behind Minerva are several philosophers,
and one of them is putting upon a tablet the names of the
neophytes. Above, in the clouds, are Apollo and the Muses-
On the right is a fountain of water, from which a servant is
filling a pitcher, and hard by is an altar on which 'Eyx^drstu
(Temperance) is inscribed, and on the left hand another altar,
with £o<pla (Wisdom) vrritten upon it. Beneath is placed
the title of one of Anacreon's Odes — " ^A^ivrap fjiiv i^wg " —
« Water is indeed best."
This Society has not accomplished what it might have done
if more carefully nourished and given a higher prestige. My
conviction has been that occasional meetings where the officers
of the College would meet the students and without much
formality talk upon temperance, would have been of great
service, judging from the few meetings of this kind which have
been called. Moreover, we should be more decided than we
have been, to erase the names of those who have violated the
pledge, which I do not recollect to have been done but in a
single instance. Complaints have often been made that mem-
bers have often showed but little regard to the pledge. It
may have been so in some instances. But what shall we think
of the moral character of that young man who has pledged his
honor and called on God for help, and yet recklessly disregai-ds
his sacred obligations ! I am sure that the great raajonty of
our students are not so low in moral character and so seared
in conscience. So that the Society has done immense good.
It may be used in future to do much more and to save many
from ruin. For it is not to be concealed that the tendency of
Digitized by VjOOQIC
158 REMINISCENCES OP AMHERST COLLEGE.
opinion and of practice at this day is to look disparagingly
upon temperance pledges, and to return to the drinking usages
of the last generation. But certain I am that more than half
of the cases of discipline in College have resulted from the use
of intoxicating drinks. With such facts before them, it would
be passing strange if the officers of Amherst College should
not avail themselves of every opportunity to guard their pupils
against such indulgences, and they cannot but see that though
pledged abstinence be not an infallible security, it does help a
man amazingly in time of temptation. This Society has
already become almost venerable for years, and it has the
prestige of showing upon its roll the names of three-quarters
of the students for the last thirty years. Where can so good
a basis be found for future efforts in the temperance cause ?
I have not done what I could have wished with such a
society ; but I have succeeded, by the help of my colleagues,
in keeping the temperance flag flying for more than thirty
years. Let those who come aHer me see to it that it be not
torn down and trampled in the dust
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BEUGIOUS HISTORY. 169
SECTION VI.
RELIGIOUS HISTORY.
The religious history of Amherst College is more important i
and interesting than every thing else pertaining to it. It is, \
moreover, the bright side of the institution. Man has often 1
been hostile to us, but God has always been our friend. Dark
as our external prospects have often been, our religious condi-
tion has always been more or less encouraging. I do not
mean that we have not often experienced sad religious declen-
sions, but that in the lowest condition, religion has had a
powerful hold in the community, and formed indeed, the grand
controlling influence. So far as a high state of the religious
affections is concerned, we have often had occasion to cry out
our leanness, our leanness, and to deplore our want of fidelity
to Christ and the souls of men. But it was not apostacy, it
was not the abandonment of the great principles of the
Grospel. Never has there been a time when there was not
an overwhelming majority rooted and grounded in these prin-
ciples, and resting upon them for their own salvation and the
salvation of the world. It was not a mere general acknowl-
edgment of the truth of Christianity, but a distinct avowal
of its characteristic doctrines, called generally, the doctrines
of the Reformation, or evangelical doctrines. Hence there
has ever been an unshaken trust in God in the darkest hour.
And God has honored such trust by standing by us in every
exigency, ^nd though not always delivering us from external
difHculties, He has ever been ready to bless us spiritually,
and to make even our sorest trials the means of rich religious
blessings. Nay, the deeper the darkness that hung over our
outward prosperity, the more sure were we to realize God's
Digitized by VjOOQIC
160 REMINISCENCES OP AMHERST COLLEGE.
presence in our souls. Nor has returning prosperity, thus
far, caused our heavenly Father to withdraw from us, though
it is a state far more dangerous to our spiritual condition than
the deepest adversity, and calling for special vigilance. But,
upon the whole, the religious condition of the College has not
been subject to those fluctuations which have attended our
financial condition and estimation by the public. It has been
i*ather a continued state of religious prosperity, though not a
state of continued revival. Let us go into some details.
1. Origin and Object op the College.
The more unreservedly men consecrate themselves or their
labors and property to God's service, the xnore certain may
they be of the Divine blessing. Never was this consecration
more entire than in founding Amherst College. The first
comer-stone that was laid is all covered over with inscriptions,
distinctly avowing the grand object for which it was laid, and
solemnly consecrating it to God. I refer to ^' A Constitution
and System of By-Laws for i-aising and managing a Permanent
Charitable Fund, as the basis of an Listitution in Amherst, in
the County of Hampshire, for the classical education of indi-
gent young men of piety and talents for the Christian Ministry."
To show the object and spirit of the founders it is only neces-
sary to quote the Preamble and first Article of this Constitution,
and perhaps one or two other sentences.
'* Taking into consideration the deplorable condition of a large por-
tion of our race who are enveloped in the most profound ignorance,
cruel superstition, and gross idolatry ; and many of them in a savage
state without a written language : together with vast multitudes in
Christian countries of which our own affords a lamentable specimen,
who are dispersed over extensive territories, as sheep witliout a
shepherd : —
"Impressed with the most fervent commiseration for our destitute
brethren, and urged by the command of our divine Saviour to preach
the gospel to every creature ; we have resolved to consecrate to the
Author of all good, for the honor of his name, and the benefit of
our race, a portion of the treasure or inheritance which He has been
Digitized by VjOOQIC
OBJECT OP THE COLLEGE. 161
pleased to intrust to our stewardship, in the firm belief that < it is
more blessed to give than to receive.
" Under the conviction that the education of pious young men of
the first talents in community, is the most sure method of relieving
our brethren, by civilizing and evangelizing the world ; and that a
Classical Institution judiciously located, and richly endowed with a
large and increasing charitable fund, in co-operation with theological
seminaries and education societies, will be the most eligible way of
effecting it :
" Therefore, "We, the undersigned, have solemnly, deliberately, and
prayerfully made, constituted and ratified, and by these presents,
and for the foregoing weighty considerations, do make, constitute,
and ratify, the following Constitution and System of By-Laws,
together with the preceding preamble, as the basis of such a fund,
and for the raising and managing the same.
' < Aht. 1 . In contemplating the felicitous state of society, which is
predicted in the scriptures of truth, and the rapid approach of such
a state, which the auspices of the present day clearly indicate ; and
desiring to add our feeble efforts to the various exertions of the
Christian community, for effecting so glorious an event ; we have
associated together for the express purpose of founding an Institu-
tion upon the genuine principles of charity and benevolence, for the
instruction of youth in all the branches of literature and science
usually taught in colleges ; to be located in the town of Amherst,
in the County of Hampshire, and incorporated with the Academy
in that place, and with Williamff College also, should it continue to
be thought expedient to remove that seminary to said County of
Hampshire, and to locate it in the town of Amherst, and to be
called ."
*' The principal of the fund shall be sacred and intangible, not sub-
ject to be diminished by any exigency, the act of God excepted, but
shall be perpetually augmenting, by donations, subscriptions, grants,
legacies and bequests, and by the addition of one-sixth part of the
interest and other avails, as aforesaid.*'
" Art. 18. It being the design of the founders of this establish-
ment, that its benefits should be handed down inviolate to all suc-
ceeding generations, and considering the inadequacy of human
forethought to provide for every exigence that may occur in the
course of long experience, we the undersigned agree, that this Con-
stitution and System of By-I^aws, may be altered or amended, by the
board of Trustees of said institution, and the board of Overseers
of said fhnd, so however, as not to deviate from the original object
Digitized by VjOOQIC
162 REMINISCENCES OP AMHERST COLLEGE.
of civilizing and evangelizing the world, by the classical education
of indigent young men of piety and tiilents ; but, it shall not be
altered or amended, except from the most weighty considerations."
Now we who remember the men who founded Amherat
College, know veiy well that in using such language as this
they were perfectly honest and hearty. We should expect,
therefore, that the Grod who honors them that honor Him
would smile upon their enterprise. After the lapse of more
than forty years, we are in a position to judge of the results.
Let us look at soiAe of the most important.
2. Revivals.
Up to the present time, (July, 1863,) the College has
enjoyed marked seasons of special religious interest in the
following years, viz.: 1823, 1827, 1828, 1831, 1835, 1839,
1842, 1846, 1850, 1853, 1855, 1857, 1858, and 1862.
Besides these fourteen prominent revivals, many other seasons
of special interest have existed in the institution, which,
though not dignified by the name of revivals, have yet been
of unspeakable importance in raising the standard of practi-
cal piety, and in fitting the successive classes to go forth into
the world with a more glowing and fresher love to God and
man than otherwise they would have felt ; and, moreover, in
all such cases, a few are hopefully converted. I have placed
the interest in 1860 in this class, though it has been generally
reckoned as one of the marked revivals. In the seasons of
revival the average number of converts has been from twenty
to thirty. In Professor Tyler's Premium Essay on Prayer
for Colleges, he estimates that during the first thirty years of
the existence of the College, from two hundred and fifty to three
hundred were converted, and the twelve succeeding years
have doubtless added sixty or seventy more. We think it
not extravagant to say that probably as many as three hun-
dred and fifty have begun their religious life hei'e. Not a
few of these have been men very prominent and influential.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
REVIVALS. 163
Of the two hundred and fifty named by Professor Tyler, lie
says that more than one hundred have been ministers of the
jGospel, fifteen missionaries, and twenty-eight officers of col-
leges and theological seminaries. Of individuals may be
named such men as Professor Bela B. Edwards, Professor
"William A. Peabody, Henry Lyman, Story Hebard, Timothy
Dwight, Amos Bullard, W. Bradford Homer, Alexander W.
McClure, Ebenezer Burgess, Charles Hartwell, Daniel W.
Poor, Richard S. Storrs, Henry Ward Beecher, Edward D.
Neill, Henry M. Storrs, Daniel Bliss, Zephaniah Himiphrey,
Professor Joseph Haven, Professor Francis Andrew March,
Professors Edward P. and John Humphrey, Jonathan C.
Perkins, Nathan Belcher, Henry Lobdell, Henry Adams.
Up to the present time, (1863,) we are able to say that no
class has passed through College without also passing through
a marked revival. Indeed, fourteen revivals in forty years,
make one every three years.
Professor ^jler has reasoned ably to show not only that
revivals are in harmony with the movements of nature and
Providence in other things, but also that our standard of
effort and limitation of faith in being satisfied with one revival
for each class, is low and narrow. I quote a few paragraphs.
*^ Bevivals of religion are not yet so frequent, or so pure or power-
fhl, even in college, as it is greatly to be desired they should be.
Why should not a revival occur every year, that every class, as it
enters, may also enter the school of Christ ; and as it advances from
year to year in the college course, may receive a fresh anointing of
the Holy Spirit, and so all their studies be pursued in his illuminat-
ing presence, and holiness to the Lord be written on every hall, on
the door of every room, and at the entrance to every heart ? Then
would they indeed know cUl things which it chiefly concerns them to
know, having received an unction from the Holy One.
" Every thing else in college is periodical. This is one of the most
striking characteristics of college life. Why, then, should not special
attention to the subject of personal religion be periodical ? Classes
enter and leave every year. Why should they not be converted
every year ? Why should this not be distinctly contemplated, ex-
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164 BBMINISCENCES OP AMHERST COLLEGE.
pressly aimed at, and specially provided for, like all the other regular
exercises and arrangements of the institution ? Tliis would not be
inconsistent with the design of such institutions, or conflict with the
studies or literary attainments of the student. On the contrary, it
would harmonize with that design; nay, more, it is due to that
design : for colleges in their original plan and intention were meant
to be religious institutions. And it would greatly further the ad-
vancement of students in learning ; for the principles and spirit of
true religion are the surest guide, the strongest stimulus to the right
use of time, to the best improvement of talents and opportunities,
and to the most successful prosecution of all useful knowledge;
insomuch, that not only theologians and reformers, but philosophers
and scholars have indorsed the maxim: *Bene orasse est bene
Btuduisse ;' — ^to have prayed well, is to have studied well."
Of the above named revivals, the first, in 1823, was during
the Presidency of Dr. Moore ; the next six during the twenty-
two years' Presidency of Dr. Humphrey; the next three
during the ten years when I held that office, and the remaining
four since Dr. Steams assumed the office, in 1854.
In all these revivals except the first, it has been my privilege â–
to be present, and to participate in the labors connected with
their progress. Even at the close of the first one I preached
a sermon by request of Dr. Moore, which was published under
the title of '* Retrospection." In all the others I took my turn
in preaching ; and of four I had the responsible oversight,
three during my Pi-esidency, and one when I was Dr. Humph-
rey's locum tenens during his absence in Europe. Gladly
would I detail many of the interesting scenes which I witnessed
during these seasons when a stmggle was going on between
grace and nature in tlie hearts of many who have since become
eminent as ministers and missionaries. How animating it was
when grace triumphed ! How sad when nature prevailed, and
the sinner reverted to his former state of indifference ! If I
should refer in another place to individual histories, I may
give some facts of tliis sort, but I pass them over now.
I have alluded to the responsibility of having charge of a
revival, and it is indeed a solemn and weighty trust, espedallj
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ANTECEDENTS, 165
in a college revival. For such a work usually moves forward
much more rapidly than in other communities. In general
the whole matter is decided in the course of a few weeks, and
if one does not seize the favorable moment, or tries to hold
back the current of feeling, he will find his subsequent efforts
unavailing. I think that oilen college officers fail here through
fear of extravagance and fanaticism. But young men are
ardent and impulsive, yet I have found the danger of excess
among those who have been religiously educated to be small,
and I must say that revivals are more apt to be prevented or
diminished in power by the want of preparation in officers than^
students. Not unfrequently by the time the former have
become fully awake, the latter have exhausted their sensibili-
ties and that overpowering zeal which carries every thing
before it, and they cannot again be brought into sympathy
with the work. On the other hand, I think I have seen more
cases where there has been such a multiplication of means and
expenditure of feeling before the revival was fairly estab-
lished, that the interest soon fagged and the work was
ephemeraL Inexperienced young Christians are very apt in
such cases to run before the Spirit, and fail by attempting to
do the work without his aid and the requisite preparations.
If there be not sufficient feeling in a church to sustain an
increase of meetings, they do more hurt than good. It is
exceedingly important^ therefore, for the pastor to have
enough of experience in revivals and of interest in saving
souls, to be able to hold the helm with a steady hand and to
keep enough, but not too much canvas fiying.
I am led by these remarks to say a few words about the
means that have been used to bring about and carry forward
these revivals. For though impossible without the sovereign
giuce of God, like every thing else in this world not miraculous,
they are always connected with means as their antecedents,
and if no means are used, we have no reason to expect reviv-
als. The grand, all-essential means is the presentation of
evangelical truth. But its success in turning men's special
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v/
166 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
attention to personal religion depends on a variety of circum-
stances. The most important of these is the state of heart in him
who presents the truth. And in all cases which I have traced
out, I have found a silent preparation in the hearts of Cliristians
to have preceded the revival. They have been deeply hum-
bled by a sense of their selfishness, worldliness and want of
interest in the cause of religion, and often the struggle in their
bosoms has been long and painful, before they were brought
into a state in which they could labor effectively to bring
about a revival. If only a very few in a church are thor-
oughly permeated by such feelings and feel so straitened in
their souls that they cannot but make manifest their emotions,
and must strive to rouse their brethren to duty and impenitent
men to repentance, we may hope for e^ revival, even though a
large majority take no interest in the work.
If, now, the pastor of a cliurch is in such a state as he ought
to be, he will be watching for favorable times, or endeavor to
make them, for producing such a state of feelmg as we have
described. One of .the means of doing this is by faithful
preaching on the Sabbath and at other times. But if he stop
here, he will probably fail, especially in college, where Christ
is often crucified, not only between the two thieves. Classics
and Mathematics, but a third one is always ready to drive
the nails, viz.. Rhetorical Criticism.
Private conversation with Christians is another admirable
means to quicken the religious sensibilities. Sometimes the
pastor or professor will find that the Spirit has gone before
him, and that some among the students are ahead of their
teachers, in which case he will, if a wise Christian man,
become the learner and quicken his pace in the divine life.
All my experience goes to convince me that such private
conversation is one of the most powerful of all the means of
grace in a college, and yet I fear that many officers so
hedge themselves about with false notions of dignity, that
they sadly neglect this duty. But certainly the pastor of a
coUege church should be free from all such red tape-ism.
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PRAYER MEETINGS. 167
To multiply religious meetings, publicly announced and
understood to be designed to bring on a revival before any
special interest appears,* even on the part of Christians, is
a dangerous expenment. But private and more informal
prayer-meetings, of which no public announcements are made,
usually have a good effect ; for they indicate more than usual
religious feeling. I have known these oflen apparently the
means of a revivaL
From the beginning, Thursday evening has been devoted
to a religious lecture, either written or extemporaneous, by
one of the clerical members of the Faculty, the attendance
of the students and families of the officers being voluntary.
This meeting has been a means of great good, and the amount
of attendance upon it has been a tolerably good index of the
state of religious feeling in the College. I had always felt it
to be desirable, however, that a meeting where somewhat
more familiar relations could be established between the pastor
and his flock would be quite desirable, and accordingly, when
I assumed the Presidency, I privately informed one or two
members of the senior class that every Monday evening, at a
certaui hour, my study would be open to any members of
College who might like to spend a half hour (to which time
I should rigidly limit the meeting,) in prayer and religious
conference. Not a word was ever said in public about this
meeting, yet it never lacked attendants. I told them I should
generally call on them for prayers, and that I would then
make familiar remarks upon some practical question, proposed
at the preceding meeting, and would be glad, also, to hear
their remarks. I sat at my study table, and tlie room was
usually so closely packed that we could not even kneel in
prayer. It seemed like a great family at morning or evening
prayers, conversing upon experimental religion, and I do not
doubt that the home feeling this produced had much to do
with the interest which the meeting seemed to excite. At the
season of the year when the annual fast for colleges occurs, I
directed my questions to subjects adapted to prepare Chris-
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168 REMINISCENCES OP AMHERST COLLEGE.
tians for a special work of grace ; such, for instance, as the
following :
What is the proper mode of conducting the work of self-
examination ?
By what marks may we know whether we have the true
spirit of prayer ?
How shall we know whether we stand in the way of spir-
itual blessings descending upon the community in which we
live ?
How shall we best acquire and preserve a quick sensibility
of conscience ?
What special means are to be employed, and how far, by
the Christian, in awakening a deeper interest in religion
among those around him?
What are the elements of a true revival spirit in the hearts
of Christians?
By a judicious selection and arrangement of such questions,
it is obvious that Cliristians might soon be pressed into an
uncomfortable comer, if they were in an alienated state, and
that they would not rest till they had got into a better state,
and thus these meetings sometimes seemed the means of
revivals. In such a case the numbers increased so much as
to drive us out of my study, and my family used every week
to fill one of the large parlors of the President's house with
seats. But when the meetings were so manifestly blessed of
God, I did not dare to transfer the meeting to one of the
public rooms in college, lest its peculiar attractions should be
destroyed. I rejoice that I did not : for in subsequent years,
by letters from graduates, I found that probably no other
religious effort which I ever made was so blessed of Grod as
this. Sometimes thrilling incidents occurred in the meetings,
of which I may perhaps give one or two examples farther on.
And sometimes the prayers made by ray young brethren had
an unction, an eloquence and a power, which I have never
heard elsewhere, and whose impression remains upon my
memory to this day.
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ANNUAL CONCERT OP PRATES. 169
The Annual Concert of Prajer for Colleges, on the last
Thursday in February, has ever been a powerful instrumen-*
tality in the work of revivals among us. It was begun in
1823, though a Sabbath morning concert of prayer had been
observed earlier. The annual concert has been observed at
Amherst ever since its origination. I have been present at
all of them since 1825, except two, I think — detained once
by sickness, and once by absence from the town — and I
can testify that it has ever been one of the most powerful
means of grace that I have ever witnessed. The regular
preaching in the afternoon is not generally any more effective
than a good sermon on the Sabbath : but the more private
prayer-meetings, especially that in the forenoon in the Side
Chapel, where attendance is voluntary and not required, as in
the afternoon, has always shown deep religious feeling, and
words that melt and bum have often issued from hearts
oppressed with responsibility, and agonizing to see the work
of the Lord revived. The consequence has always been a
quickened state of religious feeling among Christians, and
sometimes a revival could be distinctly traced to the exercises
of that day. Its influence and importance are well set forth
by Prof. Tyler, in his Prayer for Colleges.
The influence of this Concert upon revivals shows us that
in God's plans the proper proparation of the hearts of Chris-
tians in college may not be all the requisites for securing the
blessing. He may also require a proper state of feeling and
action in the community that contains and sustains the college.
How often have I seen the College churoh apparently in a
humble waiting and anxious state, yet pleading and waiting in
vain for a revival. Something out of sight may have been
wrong in all these cases. But may there not have been some-
thing wrong also in the churches of the land whose duty it is
to pray and labor for the colleges? Especially may not some-
thing be wrong often in the hearts of Christian parents and
friends who have unconverted sons in college? In the revival
of 1846, so suspicious was I that some foreign influence was
8
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170 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
exerted even more powerful than that in College, that I tried
to ascertain how much of it proceeded from the prayers and
efforts of parents. I reproduce the results here as contained
in my account of that revival as published in several new3«
papers, according to a general practice.
« Towards the close of this work, my attention was accidentally
directed to the connection between the prayers and efforts of Christian
parents, or other pious friends, and the conversion of their sons and
relatives ; and I was led to direct the following inquiries to several of
the parents and friends of those hopefully converted.
*< * Have you, or your wife, had any special anxiety of late, and
before you heard of the revival in College, as to the conversion of
your son } and if so, were you led to any unusual earnestness in prayer
in his behalf } or, have you been thus stirred up since you heard of
the revival, but before you knew that he was awakened ? '
«< These questions do indeed relate to points of great delicacy ; and
they were answered with much reluctance. But the answers seem to
me so fraught with interest and encouragement to parents to prayer
and faithful exhortation, that I cannot believe their authors will blame
me if, suppressing names, I present extracts in this communication,
although they had no idea that any such use would be made of their
letters.
" • When entered College,' says a father, « we endeavored to
commend him anew to God. On hearing of the revival in College,
our anxiety for him was awakened*anew. The thought that he should
he passed by was overwhelming. We conversed with, and tried to
pray with, and for him ; but dare not cherish the belief that our poor
services have been the means of his conversion ; rather would we he
deeply humbled for our want of fidelity and unbelief. We attribute
it solely to the free, rich and sovereign grace of God.' "«
«*A clergyman, answering my inquiries in behalf of a widowed
mother, says, among other things ; ' She has authorized me to say, that
she was unusually anxious as tp the conversion of her son, and was
led to more than ordinary earnestness in prayer in his behalf, before
she heard of the revival in College. This, she says, was particularly
the case on the day of the concert of prayer for colleges. W9
observed it here ; and what was said made a deep impression on Mrs,
's mind ; and she fervently prayed that there might be a revival
in College, and her son become a subject of renewing grace. At that
ineeting we all thought of him particularly, and earnestly prayed for
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AGENCY OP PABENTS. 171
his conyersion. This mother informs me, that, when the fiimily lived
in , she and several mothers in the church were accustomed, on
the day of the College Concert, to hold a meeting by themselves to
pray particularly for the conversion of their sons. If, then, it would
perhaps be too much to say, that his conversion * has taken place as a
special answer to the special prayers of a mother,' it may be safely
inferred, that the prayers of his mother and of Christian friends here
have been answered.'
** The father of another hopeful convert writes : * In answer to your
inquiries, I would say, that as for myself I had not felt any thing
more than my usual desire for his conversion until I heard by Mr.
â– that there was more than usual attention to religion at College.
I then prayed with more faith. My wife thinks that she had felt rather
more than usual solicitude for a longer time. However that may be,
on hearing of the seriousness, she was stirred up, and conversed with
some of her female friends, members of the maternal association,
requesting them to intercede at the throne of Ghrace in his behalf; and
I trust that some of the many prayers which have been offered for him
have found acceptance with God.'
« Another fiither, a minister of the Gospel, thus replies: *I have
had strong hopes that our son would become a Christian, and we have
felt this for years ; but since the Fast (for Colleges) this feeling has
increased. And I find by conversing with others, who are my par-
ishioners, that they have had similar feelings. We did not hear of
the revival in College till the letter arrived which contained an account
of the change in his feelings. O that God would prepare our son to
be a minister of the Gospel! Most cheerfully would I say, Go,
wherever God shall direct.'
• *< Says the mother of another individual : * After I heard of the
revival in College, I felt particularly anxious and prayerful that he
might be one of those inquiring the way to be saved. I wrote to him
requesting to know if he was, and if so, beseeching him not to cease
wrestling with God day and night, until he had obtained the pardon
of his sins. If God has heard and answered my feeble prayers with
respect to him, I pray that I may be more earnest and faithful in
future for the conversion of those of my dear fiamily who are out of
the ark of safety.'
*<It is an interesting fact, that the letter referred to above was
received by the son of this mother just at the time when, after a con-
siderable period of anxiety, he had about concluded to give up the
subject in despair. The effect was to deepen his anxiety, and soon
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172 BEMINISCENCE9 OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
after he found relief. Will any Christian regard all this as mere
accident, and that the proyidence of God had nothing to do with it }
« The father of another hopeful convert says : * When we came to
. , last Maji there was some special attention to religion in the
Tillage, and some things encouraged us to hope that our son might
become a subject of it. But as he did not, we, perhaps, felt more than
usual anxiety for him. Late in the autumn we perceived that he read
his Bible more than usual, and was more attentive to religious means.
As might be expected under such circumstances, we, I trust, felt an
increased anxiety for him. I think that Mrs. â– has for a long
time been deeply and prayerfully anxious for him. But in stating
this &ct, we feel that we have cause to be humbled in the dust, and so
far as instrumentality is concerned, we have to look away from our-
selves.'
** A brother-in-law of another individual makes the following state-
ment : < My wife, and a pious sister of hers, have for some months
past observed one day each week to pray for their brother and the
other impenitent members of the fiimily. Our sister saw
about the time he returned to College, and conversed with him about
his soul. She has felt much for him of late. My wife cannot say that
she had been more deeply anxious for him than usual, imtil she heard
of the unusual religious interest in College. As to myself, as the
season of special prayer for the colleges returned, I thought and felt
more on the subject, and my thoughts were specially turned towards
Amherst. On the Fast day for colleges, I wrote to ' and his
room-mate, and have had greater desires for their conversion since.
This was before I heard of their being interested, or of any special
interest in College. I will send on your letter to our parents. I can
assure you that has not been forgotten there. He has from his
birth been a child of many prayers, and w^as no less given to the Lord
than was Samuel of old.'
** Another father writes as follows : < As parents who have entered
into solemn covenant with our heavenly Father, I trust we have at no
time since we dedicated our son to God in baptism, been wholly indif-
ferent to his spiritual and eternal welfare. But it is still true that our
solicitude and prayers respecting him have not always been character-
ized by that degree of feeling and interest which pious parents are ever
bound to cherish towards their offspring. Yet it is due to Divine
Grace to state, that some time previous to our knowledge of any
seriousness in the College, or on the mind of our son, our anxiety had
been greatly increased respecting him.
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AGENCY OP PARENTS. 178
<« * When mj companion has endeayored to plead fbr him at the
Throne of Grace, before she vas aware that his mind had been turned
to the subject of reli^on, she has been forbidden utterance in her
prayers, and could only weep for him/
« A widowed mother makes the following statement : * A week or
two before the College Fast, my son dropped a word which led ifte to
fear that he was somewhat inclined to fiivor the doctrine that man is
not totally depraved. This was a trouble to me^ and led me, I think,
to some degree of fervor in prayer, that the Holy Spirit would con-
vince him that he was altQgether alienated from God. Perhaps I may
say that from that time my anxiety for him increased, until at length
his salvation was almost Uie only subject of my thoughts and prayers,
by day and by night. I seemed to feel as if his conversion depended
on my fiiith and fervor in prayer. I have had a deep sense of my own
unfiiithfulness; and often have said, « Lord I am not worthy that thou
should come under my roof : but yet I cannot let thee go except thou
bless me." Finally, it seemed to me that I had never consecrated
my son entirely to God, and had never been willing He should dispose
of him as He saw fit to promote His glory, and therefore I must not
expect he would be brought into the fold. This conclusion increased
my anguish, until at length I think I was enabled to say,— here. Lord,
take my son— my only son — ^take aU my children, and seAd them to
the remotest comer of the earth ; only glorify thy name in their salva-
tion and receive them to thyself at last/
•* Any one who saw, as I did, the overpowering emotions awakened
in that mother's heart by the intelligence that light and peace had
begun to dawn upon the mind of her son, would not doubt that the
above language was a true index of her heart
•* The following letter firom a widowed mother brings before us an
interesting chapter in the dying exercises of an eminently devoted
Christian &ther, well known and deeply lamented by the churches.
" • For some weeks before Mr. 's death, his desires for »— 's
conversion were imusually strong, and his prayers were exceedingly
importunate in his behalf. It seemed as if he could not be denied. I
recollect that when I told my cook, who is a godly woman, that we
hoped had experienced religion, she replied, with tears, " I ex-
pected he would be converted ; for I never heard such prayers as his
father offered for him just before he died/' Indeed, I think he had
faith to believe that he would become a Christian ; for, when speaking
of our library, he remarked, <*you had better keep the theological and
religious books for . I hope he will be a minister and will
want them/' After the death of my husband, I thinlMD.r ^-^ '-^y^^
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174 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
for were deep and fervent, particularly at the funeral, when I
leaned upon his arm, and with a bursting heart cried unto God, *< O
that this child might live before thee ! " and during the winter I had
many deep exercises on his account. During his vacation, I said to
him, *• what do you expect to do when you come out of College ? " and
he f^lied, ** I prefer above all things to be a minister ; but you know I
cannot be unless I am a Christian." From that time I felt that I must
cry mightily unto Qod in his behalf, and engaged several Christian
friends to unite with me in prayer for him. And I tlunk I was
enabled to make a more entire consecration of him to God than I ever
did before; and when the day of prayer (for the colleges) came,
although I attended no meeting, yet I appropriated the day as much
to prayer as possible. Of course Amherst and my fiitherless boy were
much on my mind. So that when for several weeks I heard nothing
from him, which was very unusual, I remarked to my sister that I was
persuaded there was something on his mind. She replied that she had
the same feeling, although neither of us had heard that there was any
unusual feeling on the subject of religion in College. I think much
prayer was offered for him from the time of his fisither's death, for he
had many friends.'
** This statement suggests many inquiries of deep interest ; but there
is one which I cannot pass tmnoticed. What suggested to that mother
and her sister the idea, or rather the confident belief, that a revival of
religion existed in the College, before they had received any intimation
of it through the ordinary channels of information ? It was accidental,
says one. It grew out of the &ct, says another, that their minds were
upon this subject. But how came their minds to be upon it ? Did
not the same Infinite Spirit, who operated upon the minds of the sons,
excite the desires and expectations of Christian parents for their con-
version } Mysterious and even absurd though such a doctrine may
seem to many, yet does it not accord with the fisimiliar experience of
devoted Christians ? It is a law of God's moral kingdom that he must
be inquired of before he grants any great blessing ; and hence he stirs
up those who need it to pray for it beforehand.
" The following extract is a part of the reply of the same widowed
mother to the letter of her son, communicating the glad news of a
change in his religious feelings.
•• *^Your letter reached me yesterday ; and I need not attempt to tell
you the feelings it awakened in my desolate heart, so long a stranger
to joy.
•« • To learn from your own pen that you are happy in a forgiving
Redeemer, an^an trying to do good to others, is enough to rejoice the
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PARENTAL FIDELITY. 175
heart and wake up the gratitude of any Christian mother. But when
that mother is made to sit solitary, and her older sons are &r removed
from her, and she looks to one as the support of her declining years,
as her protector and guide, ** When the strong men shall bow them-
selyes, and they that look out of the windows shall be darkened," what
must her joy be when that one has passed from death imto life, and a
new song is put into his mouth ? When that one, endeared by all the
ties and sympathies of natural love, has become doubly dear by the
ties of Christian affection and sympathy, and the hopes of eternal life ! '
*< I cannot but think it will be interesting, since I have the opportu-
nity, to present one or two examples of the importunate earnestness
and fidelity with which the parents and friends of the converts in this
revival urged the subject of religion upon them, before they knew of
the existence of such a work. The first extract is addressed to a
brother-in-law and his room-mate.
** * This is the day set apart to pray for colleges, and we cannot but
remember you. We hope that, while others are praying for you, you
will not forget to pray for yourselves. I am anxious that you and
your room-mate should, this term, come out on the Lord's side. You
have already lived long enough for yourselves. God has a claim upon
your hearts ; and you ought not to disregard that claim for a single
day. Both of you have had many prayers offered for you. But this
will avail you nothing unless you pray for yourselves. It will only
make your case worse. It will be an awful thing, after having been
dedicated to God by pious parents, after having had so many warnings,
and so much religious instruction, and been the subject of so many
prayers, to be finally lost.'
« The following is frt>m a devoted mother : * You, my dear son,
are never forgotten when we bow before our heavenly Father in
prayer ; and can it be that you alone are careless about that precious
soul, for which so many are praying daily, and I might almost say .
hoiurly, with strong crying and tears ? — O, my son,- my son ! I entreat
you, think of the loye and care you are slighting. You have often
read that the great Jehovah has said, ** My spirit shall not always strive
with man," and you know that now is the time, and that your life is at
best a vapor that passeth away. O, then, awake thou that sleepest,
and think, O think on these things while you are in health, and have
your reason, and can reflect with calmness on the state of your soul.
What folly, my child, to defer in this thing ? You had better let every
thing else go — your studies, your school, and every thing besides,
rather than be found trifling Mrith the Holy Spirit, and saying, when
I have a convenient season I will call for thee. " But I am young yet.
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176 BEMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
and am looking forward to a long life," you may be tempted to aay.
O, you feel thia to be folly and presumption, I know. You cannot
forget that four of our number have been taken much younger than
you, and laid in their grayes, one after another ; and how often we
see those in the bloom of youth cut down, and called to their last
account, and that too all unprepared, as you are now. I fear you are
thinking that God is gracious, and you have many friends praying for
you, and you shall not be called away tinprepared ; but, my son, these
prayers will never save you, unless you £edl in with, and cherish the'
influences of the Spirit, who would teach you and lead you into all
truth. But, O, the fearful condemnation of one who was taught in
his earliest childhood the truths of the Bible, and in a measure the
worth of the soul. And that is not all ; the Spirit has often distiirbed
your peace, and you have often resolved that you would attend to
these things ; and now, if you are getting more and more careless,
what reason have you to tremble and resolve in earnest that you will
begin immediately to seek salvation. Begin now, then, my child ; I
charge you to begin now ; do not lay down this sheet until you raise
your heart to God, and beg him to forgive your sins, and help you to
go forward immediately in this great business.'
•< Mark, now, the change in that mother's language, when she had
heard of the change in her son's feelings.
<« < My dear, dear son, I never before found the task so difficult as
to begin to express my feelings to you. I find no words in our lan-
guage to express a poor, unworthy mother's feelings on such an occa-
sion as this. It seems to me that I may well shout Grace ! Grace !
Free Grace and Redeeming Love I O , is it so ? Do you love
the Lord Jesus, that precious Saviour, who suffered and died to save
a lost world > That Saviour who has been to you as a joot out of
dry ground. If you have, indeed, at length seen him to be the chiefest
among ten thousand, and one altogether lovely, well may your mother
join in the transports of those who surround the Throne of God and
the Lamb, and ascribe glory to God in the highest. Sure I am that I
do desire to call on my soul and all that is within me to bless His holy
name. But I cannot praise him as I ought. O, I want to lie in the
dust and be ashamed of my wicked fears and unbelief in years past.
I have feared that, for my unfaithfulness, my unconverted children
might all be lost forever ; but I feel now that God has not laid judg-
ment to the line and righteousness to the plummet ; but has graciously
heard and answered the prayers of poor, sinful, hell-deserving crea-
tures, and has loved to glorify his Son by answering the many prayers
Digitized by VjOOQIC
PREACHINQ, 177
that have been offered in His name, although they came from the lips
of those who have so wickedly offended Him.'
<* What eloquence there is in a Christian mother's heart ! and could
more of her earnestness and fidelity be infused into the discourses of
those of us who profess to preach the Gospel, what tmction and
power, would be imparted to them."
To the examples given above of a connection between the
prayers and exhortations of parents and their sons, I am con-
strained to add another that was forced upon my attention.
During one of our revivals the son of a missionary residing at
a distance of 10,000 miles was awakened, and lingering for
weeks in a state of indecision, I began greatly to fear was
losing his impressions. At that critical moment he received
a very faithful letter from his father, who, knowing the young
man's character and temperament, could aim his arrows at
vulnerable points. And though it was death to rebellious
nature, it was life from the dead to the new creature. All
this, some will say, was accidental. But that is a term I do
not admit into my vocabulary when I am contemplating the
plans of an Infinite God. Rev. Dr. (for this youth
is now a Doctor of Divinity) may not be aware that, next to
Grod, he is indebted for his conversion to his venerable
father ; but when he shall meet him on Mount Zion I think
he will see in the transparencies of heaven the chain of influ-
ence that reached half round the globe and was hooked into
his nose just at the right moment
The grand instrumentality on which we have always
depended to originate and carry forward revivals, has been the
earnest and faithful presentation of the peculiar doctrines of
the Gospel in the pulpit, in the prayer-meeting, and to the
individual conscience. We have always found this mighty
through God to the pulling down of strongholds. Believing
fully ourselves in the entire natural alienation of man from
God, and in the necessity of a renovation of his nature by the
special agency of the Holy Spirit, we have urged these truths
as earnestly as we could \fpon all. Some would call this
8*
Digitized by VjOOQIC
178 BEMINISCENCES OP AMHERST COLLEGE.
sectarianism; but we have gloried in such sectarianism;
for to maintain it Amherst College was founded, and if
ever the time comes when these doctrines shall cease to
be rung out boldly from the College pulpit, " Ichabod " may
well be inscribed upon it. Oh! with what power have I heard
these truths proclaimed there by such men as Humphrey, and
Fiske, and Tyler, and how distinctly could the ticking of the
clock be heard all over the chapel while they reasoned of
temperance and righteousness and judgment to come. It is
probably possible to get up some kind of excitement and call
it a revival where these truths are ignored, but those who
founded and those who sustain Amherst College do not believe
that any but spurious conversions can be the result.
It has been sometimes a difficult question to decide in time
of revival, first, how many meetings should be held, and
secondly, how many of them should be regular preaching
meetings and how many devoted to prayers and brief, off hand
exhortations. If the meetings are so numerous that the feel-
ing cannot sustain them, and Christians attend more from a
sense of duty than from strong desire, they deaden rather than
advance the revival. It is always better that there should be
an appetite for more meetings rather than a secret desire
among Christians that there should be less. Ardent young
men also often prefer meetings where glowing exhortations
and impassioned prayers greatly stir up the feelings. But I
think I have several times seen the religious sensibilities in
that way early exhausted beyond resuscitation, and also hopes
acquired in such circumstances that did not wear well. Plain,
systematic preaching, although less popular, I am inclined
generally to prefer, in order to counteract these evils. The
solid truths of the Bible brought in this way to bear upon the
conscience, operate as a regulator to keep the machinery steady
and to prolong the revival.
Inquiry meetings we have ever found eminently useful.
And they were more useful, I think, when held in a private
room rather than a large lecture room of the College. Hence
Digitized by VjOOQIC
PREACHING. • 179
I used, as long as tbe numbers did not forbid, to hold them in
a student's room or my own study. I think such meetings are
far better in their influence than to call upon the anxious in
their own rooms or to invite them to the pastor's study, one by
one. For one of the chief dangers of conversing with inquirers
is that we shall say too much. The great object of conversing
with them is to lead them at once to submit to God, and until
this takes place it is dangerous to lighten the burden that is
upon their spirits, as we shall be apt to do if we converse long
with them, and especially if our remarks produce weeping.
Soon ailer I began to preach I had an instructive lesson on
this subject I spent a Sabbath at the house of Rev. Dr.
Porter at Farmington, in Connecticut, when one of the most
powerful revivals ever known in this country had nearly reached
its culmination. There I met with Dr. Asahel Nettleton, the
man who of all I have ever known had the most wisdom and
skill in conducting revivals. He had preached Sabbath even-
ing and made an extraordinary impression, and while sitting
with him the next morning in Dr. Porter's parlor, a gentleman
in middle life, one of the Doctor^s parishioners, came in, bear-
ing in his countenance the marks of extreme anxiety. Doctor
Porter invited him into his study, where he had not been more
than ten minutes when I perceived that Dr. Nettleton was
uneasy^ and on Mrs. Porter's coming into the room he said,
" Cannot you contrive to get your husband out of his study ; I
fear he is injuring that man." He then proceeded to make
such remarks on the subject as proved of great service to me
in subsequent life.
Where the pulpit is supplied by the officers in succession,
college revivals are apt to suffer from a want of unity and
adaptedness in the preaching. Those familiar with revivals
know that they have certain stages of progress, and that if the
preaching is not adapted to the particular phase the work has
assumed, it will do little good, and may do much hurt It
oflen happens that college officers have not had much if any
experience in revivals, and imagine that the presentation of
Digitized by VjOOQIC
180 REBmnSCENGES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
any great and solemn truth during such a season will be
appropriate. Some of them, too, are afraid to trust them-
selves in extemporaneous preaching, and must hence choose a
written sermon from the small stock perhaps on hand ; and it
may be finely prepared and delivered, and well fitted for any
other time, but quite unadapted to a revival. A check is thus
put to the work which often requires great effort on the part
of the experienced pastor to counteract.
Dr. Nettleton had peculiar sensitiveness on this point, and
believed that the best of preachers would make sad blunders
in this matter unless he had for some time participated in the
work, so as to know what nails needed to be driven and
clenched at a particular time. I have heard «n anecdote, from
such authority that I can hardly question its truth, concerning
him and Dr. Lyman Beecher, who was his particular friend
and one of the ablest revival preachers in the land. A revival
had been going on in New Haven for a fortnight, in which Mr.
Nettleton had been laboring. But one evening* when the
middle church was filled with hearers. Dr. Beecher arrived
late in town and was persuaded to preach before he had learnt
the exact state of the revival. At the close of the service Mr.
Nettleton met him at the bottom of the pulpit stairs and put
the question, "Do you know what you have been doing
this evening ? " "I have been trying to preach the Grospel,"
was the Doctor's reply. " You have put back this revival a
fortnight," was the rejoinder.
Not unfrequently, as every experienced pastor knows, a
good deal of religious interest may exist in a church for a long
time, and yet it seems doubtful whether a revival will be the
result. It seems to need some startling event to give a religious
influence the predominence and awaken the unconverted — just
as a salt dissolved in a menstruum even to saturation will not
begin to crystalize till a nucleus is thrown in. This deci^ve
event may be some startling Providence or some unusual
development of wickedness. I have given a curious example
Digitized by VjOOQIC
THE POWDER PLOT. 181
of the latter in my Valedictory Address on leaving the Presi-
^dency, which I here quote.
•• There was one scene of a very peculiar characteT, which I always
supposed was decidedly instrumental in bringing on one of these
revivals, that I ought, perhaps, to rescue from oblivion. Every one
conversant with seasons of special religious interest, knows that often
it seems long uncertain what will be the result of an awakened state
of feeling in respect to spiritual things, until, at length, some slight
circumstance turns the scale one way or the other. In 1835, when I
acted as the locum tenens of Dr. Humphrey, who was absent in
Europe, we were in this state of awakened interest and anxious
expectation. The non-professors of religion in College, actuated I
know not by what motives, had invited Mr. Burgess, then tutor and
now missionary in India, to conduct a weekly religious meeting for
them alone. He occasionally invited other members of the Faculty
to assist him at these meetings. I was making some remarks at one
of them, when suddenly a train of gunpowder, laid all around the
room, and which must have contained some pounds, exploded, filling
the upper part of the room with smoke too dense to breathe in. Per-
haps it was providential that one was conducting the meeting who
had for nearly ten years been femiliar with all sorts of detonations in
a chemical laboratory, and who was not, therefore, greatly disturbed
by this new example. Kecollccting that the opposite room, now the
Zoological Cabinet, where I was daily lecturing, was filled up with
seats, I invited my auditors to repair thither, and we finished the
meeting, which, as may well be imagined, became at its close intensely
solemn. It was the decisive blow that ushered in the revival, although
intended to put it down, by Satan, its instigator. I well recollect
that at the time of the occurrence, I felt almost sure that a revival
would follow such unwise over-acting on his part. It was so ; and I
may add, that the unfortunate young man, who set fire to the train,
till then of unblemished character, was in less than an hour brought
before the Faculty, who had no alternative but to inflict the highest
college censure upon him."
In my published account of the revival of 1850 I have given
an example where the case was decided by the concentration
about the Annual Concert of Prayer for Colleges of several
startling events. For this reason and some others, I introduce
the whole of that account as given in several papers.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
182 REMINISCENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
** Rbyiyal IK AxHBBBT CoLLEOK. — Gratitude to Divine Grace, as
well as a sense of obligation to the friends of Amherst College,
seem to demand a brief statement respecting the spiritaal blessings
it has recently experienced, in connection with severe temporal
judgments.
*' During the two years past, (1849 and 1850,) a good deal of special
religious interest was exhibited in the Institution, for a portion of
the year. The influence of these seasons was very happy upon
Christians, and a few interesting cases of conversion occurred. And
did the church realize the immense importance of such seasons in
our literary institutions, they would feel as if they were a rich
answer to their prayers, even though such seasons be not technically
called revivals.
*'^ut the displays of Divine Grace during the term just closing,
have been far greater ; and may justly be regarded as the ninth
marked and powerful revival of religion since 1828, when the first
occurred under the Presidency of Dr. Moore.
*' At the beginning of the term, there were a few who felt an unusual
spirit of prayer, and very strong desires to see a work of the Lord.
And they labored and prayed for weeks without much encourage-
ment, though some were awakened, and one or two hopefully con-
verted. But next came the heavy judgments of God. The Past
Day for literary institutions, in February, is always a solemn day;
but this year it was more solemn than ever before. A beloved
instructor (Professor Peabody) who had just joined us, and given
rich promise of great useftilness, was suddenly cut down and lay
dead in our midst, on that day. An unusual number of the members
of College, also, about that time, received accounts of the death, or
the conversion of firiends at home. In two instances, those who
died were recently members of CoUege, and were among the few
who were hopeftiUy converted during the special attention of the
two last years. The death of a venerable Trustee and benefactor
of the institution, (Gov. Armstrong,) was among the announcements
that came upon us with a startling effect. Indeed we do not recol-
lect, ever before, forming a part of a community on which there
were concentrated and reiterated, such powerful appeals to repent-
ance. But on looking round, it seemed for a time as if they were
all likely to fall of a converting effect, and as if no revival would
follow. Then it was, however, when we had been taught the pow-
erlessness even of such means, to convert the soul, that we were
made to see how easily, by a mere breath of Divine efficiency, it
might be done. The work, silently, though not very npidlyy
Digitized by VjOOQIC
REVIVAL. 188
adyanced, till there were very few who did not acknowledge its
inflnence, though many resisted it.
** Of the present mcmhers of Collegei amounting to 179, 106 are
professors of religion ; of the others, as many as 80 indulge hopes
of having been converted during this revival, besides a few con-
nected with the families who worship in the College Chapel. Abso-
lutely, this number is not very large, but relatively, it is, we believe,
fully equal to any revival we have ever enjoyed. How many of
them will endure to the end, God only knows, and on his help hang
our hopes of the perseverance of any.
<< We subjoin a few remarks that may give a more definite idea of
this work of grace.
'*I. It was the object of long continued, earnest prayer and per-
severing effort. We have never in College witnessed a more ago-
nizing spirit of prayer, nor more consistent, persevering efforts on
the part of some, than for six or seven weeks before the iiill answer
came. This was our strongest ground of hope, for it seemed con-
trary to the analogy of God's Providence that he should not answer
such prayer.
" II. We have never known the character, oflSces, and work of the
Holy Spirit, so much dwelt upon in any revival, in the preaching,
as in this. As the officers supplied the pulpit in rotation, this was
not the result of a preconcerted plan, but the spontaneous impulse
of the heart. Yet we must believe that it had some connection with
the result, for them thai honor me, says God, IwiU honor.
" III. The work had its peculiar type or character. We never
witnessed a revival that had not, and we are satisfied that one most
important point for the pastor of a church in the beginning of a
revival, is, to learn how God means to ca/rry on the work. For the
want of attention to this point, we think not a few revivals have
been blighted in the bud, either by attempting to go before the Spirit,
or lingering too far behind. In this work we noticed the following
facts:—
** 1. It moved forward steadily and slowly, and the interest con-
tinued longer than usual. Indeed, up to this day, the meetings have
continued to be crowded and solemn, and may it not be hoped that
another term shall witness a continuance of the work ?
** 2. There was no opposition to it. Nearly all seemed to be con-
vinced of their need of religion, and that the present was the most
favorable time for securing it, and the grand point seemed to be, to
persuade them not to delay acting according to their convictions.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
184 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
** S. Fear of punishment seemed to have but little influence in
producing conviction. The predominant feeling among those
awakened was, that they had no adequate sense of their own ingrat-
itude and depravity, though in some instances the sense of sin was
overpowering.
" 4. There was veiy little of animal excitement. The studies of
College were pursued as usual, and although the meetings were full
and solemn, there were few outward signs of emotion.
**5. Hope and comfort came in gradually for the most part, and
did not become strong and clear till the individual had passed
through several alternations of darkness and light.
** 6. We may add, as another peculiarity, that the work has extended
more or less into the town of Amherst; although several revivals
have occurred in the place since 1823, we believe one has never
before seemed to be connected with a work in the College, nor vice
versa,
'*The guardians and instructors of the College have reason to
rejoice in this new opportunity to testify to the Divine faithfulness
and special mercy. The blessing has been greater than their antic-
ipations or their faith. They have also occasion to be thankful to
the churches for their fervent and effectual prayers. Let them be
encouraged by what God has done, to continue their supplications,
and let none doubt any more, God's readiness to gratify their largest
desires for the advancement of his kingdom."
The subject referred to in the above account of a difference
of types in different revivals is one of no small importance.
Sometimes Christians are startled out of their dreamy state by
finding impenitent men awake and pressing into the kingdom.
Such revivals may be expected to be short, and it behooves
preachers and private Christians to do with their might what
their hands find to do. In another case the church agonizes in
prayer and labors long before any are awakened, and then the
cases are isolated and each conversion seems to demand impor-
tunate and continued prayer. The labor is Sisyphean from
beginning to end, yet the revival is usually a protracted one,
and the converts are quite apt to hold out. Sometimes even
from the first there is strong opposition, and ridicule and social
influence are vigorously employed to counteract the power of
truth. In such a case it is like sailing against wind and tide,
Digitized by VjOOQIC .
TYPES OP REVIVALS. 185
-with the white crested waves dashing over the ship. But in
other cases no whisper of opposition is heard, and jou find
yourself delightfully lifted up on a great wave of influence, nor
can you tell when it begins to subside till you look out on the
surrounding waves and perceive that their crests are getting
above you. In the first case, when the opposition is conquered,
as it almost always is, we may expect a larger harvest of souls
than in the latter case, When the wave of revival influence
subsides so soon and gently that many who meant to be saved
find themselves stranded on the shoab of self-righteousness or
driven about in the whirlpools of error, till they are borne into
the great maelstrom of infidelity, firom which they never
escape.
How important now that preachers, and private Christians
also, should be able to discern early this variety of types in
revivals, that they may modify their efforts. And especially in
college, where, from the nature of yoimg men and the arrange-
ment of terms, revivals may be expected to be unusually short
The influences that modify character are usually very rapid in
college. In the four years of the course I reckon that charac-
ter is changed as much as in most oommmiities in thirty or
forty years. Almost as much more rapid is the progress of
revivals in colleges, so that what we do should be done quickly,
lest the golden opportunity should slip out of our hands.
Alas I very rarely have I been able at the close of a revival
to look back upon it without sadness and self-reproach, because
I had not been as diligent as I ought to have been, nor improved
as I might the precious opportunity. I had calculated confi-
dently upon the rescue of this or that young man, and perhaps
had I followed them up more faithftdly they would not have
resisted ^e truth, and after coming so near to heaven's gate
have sunk back again into the mire of the world. But they
are out of my reach now, and I shall probably never have
another opportunity to warn them with any hope of success.
As I have already intimated, our revivals have differed
much, not only in type but in power. Sometimes the power
Digitized by VjOOQIC
186 REMINISCENCES OP AMHERST COLLEGE. •
of sin seemed to be but little crippled, and maintained a bold
fix)nt through the whole revival period, though many individu-
als bowed before the truth. The season when the fewest con-
verts were brought in was in 1860, when not more than two
or three conversions occurred, though these were of great
interest, and the church was thoroughly roused. Still it may
be doubtful whether this work should be reckoned among the
marked revivals in the College. If it is, I am sure that there
have been a large number of similar seasons in the history of
the College, when we reckoned more converts than in 1860.
Indeed it is doubtftil whether any year has passed without
several conversions, and the occurrence of some awakened
interest among Christians. It is always difficult to get
through with the scenes and influences of the Annual Fast
without some such results.
But the revival of 1858 was of a different character, and
most probably exceeded in its subduing power any other in
our whole history. This was the year of " the Great Awak-
ening ** throughout the land, and will form one of the brightest
pages in the history of the American Church. I copy here,
from Prof. Tyler's Prayer for Colleges, the account of this
revival iii Amherst College, by President Steams, as well as
a paragraph added by myself at his request^ aU of which
appeared in the newspapers: —
<* The religious community will be interested to know that in the
* Great Awakening' of the times, Amherst College has not been
passed by unblessed. A wonderful revival of religion has just been
experienced here. It commenced with the tenn which has recently
closed. From small beginnings, it made gradual progress, till our
entire collegiate community was brought under its influence. Week
after week * the little cloud ' might be seen rising, spreading, thicken-
ing, with here and there a few drops, and many interyeni]% alterna-
tions of hope and fear on the part of observers, till, towards the end
of the term, the shower began to fall, and for the last ten days * the
great rain was not stayed.'
" Nearly three-quarters of our number were previously professors
of religion, about twenty of them having taken their stand publicly
Digitized by VjOOQIC
"THE GREAT AWAKENING." 187
on the side of Christ some months before. Of the remainder, between
forty and fifty have here been hopefully converted during the term,
leaving less than twenty in the whole College undecided. Besides
these, ten or twelve who had once been professors, some of them
giving little or no evidence of piety, were awakened and converted
anew, while nearly the whole body of Christian students seemed to
receive a fresh baptism of the Spirit.
*• Of the Senior class, but three or four remain who have not
commenced the Christian life ; of the Junior class, but one, and he a
serious inquirer, if not a Christian ; of the Sophomore class, four or
five ; of the Freshman, nine or ten.
** The work has been characterized by quietness and decorum. No
extraordinary measures were adopted to promote it. No additional
meetings were held, except short meetings for prayer in groups of
students by themselves, and a general prayer-meeting, often limited to
three-quarters of an hour, in the early part of the evening, and, for
the last ten days of the term, held nearly every evening in the week.
Though these meetings were conducted on the voluntary principle
throughout, in many prayers and exhortations offered by students and
others, nothing was done or said, even in a single instance, so far as I
remember, to which the most fastidious Christian taste could take
exception. And when the religious feeling was strongest and all-
pervading, not a single regular class recitation was omitted in conse-
quence of it. While there was no appearance of extravagance,
irregular zeal, or enthusiasm, there was manifested a deep sense of
sin, an entire giving up of all hopes of self-salvation, unconditional
submission to a sovereign God, complete dependence on the Holy
Spirit, and the affectionate and often joyful confidence of £uth in
Christ.
<* The reformation of character and manners was no less remarkable
than the renewal of hearts. College discipline, in the way of restraint
and censure, seemed to lose its office; order prevailed, study was
attended to as a religious duty ; sacred psalms took the place of ques-
tionable songs, and social revelries gave way to heavenly friendships.
Many young men have been hopefully snatched from ruin, and
inspired with new feelings of self-respect and new and noble determi-
nations for the future. How they will hold out, time must show.
Generally, in such cases, some fall back. But many circumstances
inspire us with unusual confidence that this unhappy number will be
small. The changes seem to us like those radical and permanent
ones, of which, under the power of religion, we have seen so many.
We ask the prayers of all Christians. Brethren, pkat for us."
Digitized by VjOOQIC
188 BEMIN1SCENCB3 OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
" To this statement by the pastor Dr. Hitchcock added the following
testimony, as the resnlt of his own long obseryation and experience :
* I have been witness to all the reyivals here since the College was
established, except the first during Dr. Moore's Presidency ; and I
must say, that I do not remember in any of them such an almost
universal and thoroughly subduing power manifested as during the
last two weeks of the term just closed. One or two facts will show
this to those who are acquainted with college life. All such know the
intense and almost irresistible desire of students to start for home at
the earliest possible moment of release at the end of a term. But
this year nearly all remained oyer night at the inritation of the Presi-
dent, that they might attend a parting religious meeting, which proved
one of intense interest. Another &ct is new in the religious history
of the College. Those students who remain in town during vacation,
with the officers and their families, meet twice a week for prayer ;
and there is no abatement of religious interest. The small number
of those left unconverted, much less than in any former revival,
also shows the thoroughness of the work.' "
Could the founderB of this College reappear among us,-^-
some of them stiU Burvive, — ^how gratified would thej be
with duch a history of God's interposition in its behalf! Let
us now see how successful the Institution has been in accom-
plishing the great object for which it was founded, viz.: in
raising up Ministers and Missionaries.
8. Ministers.
The Triennial of 1863 contains the names of 1,520 gradu-
ates, of whom 610 are put down as ministers, including all
clerical missionaries. • But none are called ministers on this
list who have not been licensed to preach, and have actually
entered upon the profession as an exclusive employment. Of
course those not unfrequent cases where graduates both teach
and preach, and those who from providential hindrances have
been prevented from entering the ministerial profession, are
not in the list, nor is that still larger number among recent
graduates who are now in a course of preparation, at a theo-
logical seminary or elsewhere, for the ministry. Nay, all
these are included among these who have chosen other profes-
Digitized by VjOOQIC
MINISTERS.
189
sicHiB or no profession : whereas nearly all of them sought a
pablic educadon for the sole purpose of preaching the GospeL
Surely these should all be reckoned among mmisters, and
among those who are accomplishing the grand object of the
Institution; for some of them are probably more useful as
teachers and preachers, than they would be simply as preach-
ers. I haye done my best to ascertain the number of these
clerical teachers, and those in preparation for the ministry, and
correcting the Triennial by this addition, the following list
will show the number of ministers in the several classes to
1860, although doubtless considerably below the truth, espe-
cially in the more recent classes. For in some instances
graduates are obliged to teach one or two years after leaving
College, and do not enter for some time upon the study of a
Tbaxof
1
1
H
TXABOF
1
1
Gbaduatioii.
III
GHAX>UAnOV.
g||
o
s
<
o
S
-5**
1822, . .
8
1
^
1841, . .
32
13
1823,
5
4
59
1842, .
28
13
1824,
20
14
1843, .
21
14
47
1825,
25
12
1844,
29
13
1826,
30
18
"
1845, ,
30
13
182T,
23
18
1846, .
26
11
1828,
40
23
65
1847, .
18
10
1829,
89
24
1848, .
30
16
47
1830,
32
24
1849,
80
15
1831,
60
82
1850, ,
96
10
1882,
38
10
1861, ,
41
16
1833,
38
20
51
1852, .
4a
11
1834, ,
39
20
1853,
4a
90
36
1835,
39
27
1864^ ,
•7
If
1836,
38
20
'
vSS, ,
63
18
183T,
61
35
186?
46
20
1838,
42
19
M
1857,
43
25
1839,
67 .
S2
1858
61
26
44
1840,
44
20
1869
44
16
1860
47
17
It appears from the preceding table that the number of
ministers, and thofitf preparing for the ministry, among the
Digitized by VjOOQIC
190 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
graduates up to 1860, amounts to 700, which is thirteen more
than half of all the graduates : and hence we are able to say
that thus far more than half our graduates have sought the
ministerial profession. This is certainly a gratifying conclusion.
Yet I have added a column showing the average per cent, of
ministers for the first four years, and then hr each successive
five years, and it awakens some solicitude, for it shows that
the proportion of such which was in 1830 as high as 65 per
cent, has been gradually diminishing, till in 1855 it was only
35, and in 1860, 44. I think there was a special reason
for the decrease that followed 1832. For in that year a
change was made in our winter vacations which made it very
difficult for our indigent students to keep school without losing
their literary standing, and as a consequence such went to
other colleges, where they could be better accommodated.
True this leak was discovered, and the vacations were put
back into the old notch in 1840, but causes of this sort are
slow in their operation, and the tide having begun to set the
wrong way, it took a long time to turn it back ; and when I
took the Presidency in 1845, it was one of tbe hardest changes
I labored upon to bring back that class of young men : but
even for ten years I did little more than to keep the waters
from sinking lower. We have never gone back to the high
per cent, of early days : nay, I fear we must confess that a
downward progress is the settled order of things. Yet this
is a melancholy conclusion, in view of the grand object for
which the College was founded.
I have made some eflTort to ascertain how the above 700
ministers have been distributed among the different religious
denominations. But as it was usually accidental if I discov-
ered their preferences of this sort, while connected with the
College, and I have been able to follow them but imperfectly
since they left us, the following estimate must be regarded as
not a very dose approximation to the truth : —
Digitized by VjOOQIC
RELATIVE NUMBER.
191
Orthodox Congregationalisto, Fresbjterians and
Dutch Befonned, 673
Baptists, 21
Episcopalians, 5
Unitarians, . . . . . . .6
Universalists, 2
The relative number of ministers furnished by the Northern
Colleges compared with the whole number of their graduates
is shown below. At Amherst the estimate embraces all the
graduates to the present time ; but in the other Colleges I
have not access to the means of bringing it down later than
1852.
At Amherst one in 1.96
At Middlebury one in • . . • 2.31
At Vermont University one in . . . 3.10
At Williams College one in . . . 3.13
At Hamilton College one in • • . 3.7
At Yale and Brown one in . • . 3.8
At Dartmouth one in .... 3.9
At Harvard one in 4.2
At Princeton one in 5.4
At Bowdoin one in . • . .^ • 5.6
The yearly supply of ministers from the same colleges up
to the same periods has been as follows : —
Amherst, 17.5
Yale, . . . . . . . 10.3
Middlebury, 7.8
Williiims, 7.2 j
Dartmouth, 7.0
Harvard, 6.9
Princeton, 5.3
Brown, 5.1
Vermont University, . . . . 1.6
Almost all the above institutions were founded by religious
men and with essentially the same object in view as at Amherst.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
192 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
It is certainly gratifying, there&re, to its founders to see it thus
stand at the bead of the list But let him that thinketh he
standeth take heed lest he faJL
4: Missionaries.
The circumstances of our country of late years, stretching
across the continent and embracing almost every variety of
climate, soil and tribes of the human family, have almost oblit-
erated the distinction between foreign and domestic missions.
As I have said in my sermon on the United States as a com-
missioned Missionary Nation, published by the College Society
of Inquiry : —
<* We used to look upon these fields as exceedingly diverse, and to
regard the foreign one as calling for much more self-denial and sacri-
fice than the domestic. But with the single exception of greater
personal security from governmental protection at home» in what
respect does the foreign differ from the home field ? Is it in distance ?
But how few pagan fields are more distant than the Pacific shores "i
Is it in the degradation and misery of the inhabitants ? But where in
heathen lands, will you find men more s\mk in ignorance, poverty
and superstition, than many of the wandering tribes along the Rocky
Mountains, or the inhabitants of New Mexico, or our slave popula-
tion, or even many of those disembogued from the prisons and poor-
houses of Europe upon our Atlantic cities ? Is it in the unhealthiness
of the climate \ But even Africa itself is scarcely more full of deadly
miasms than many of the low fever-producing regions of this country.
Is it in a separation from civilized life \ But what isolation can be
more complete, to one accustomed to refined society, than vast regions
in our country, where the pioneer woodsman and hunter have yet
found only a precarious foothold. Is it in a great diversity of lan-
guage and habits ? Truly we have a Babel among us, and habits and
manners as diverse as the antipodes can furnish.
** The matter of fact is, that God has so located us, and environed
us, and mingled foreigners among us, that to do our duty as mission-
aries in many parts of what we call our country, demands the same
hiunble and devoted piety, the same physical and moral training, and
the same willingness to submit to privation and hardships, as on any
foreign shore. And the lesson is an important one, because it identi-
fies the work everywhere as one. It awakens sympathy among the
Digitized by VjOOQIC
MISSIONARIES. 198
laborers, and makes them feel that all are exposed nearly alike to the
heat and burden of the day, and entitled to the same reward if fiiith-
ful. It shows us all that the missionary cause is a work for the
world, and not for particular localities. It shows us that a mission-
ary spirit is the appropriate characteristic of every Christian, without
which he ought not to bear the name."
The founders of Amherst College, as appears from the
Preamble to their original Coostitutbo, had both these classes
of missionaries in view in their enterprise. But those who
chose the foreign field, both from location and the mode of
their appointment, became more definitely known than the
others. Indeed, since eyery grade of destitution exists in our
country, it is not easy to say in many cases whether a minister
should be called a home missionary or an ordinary pastor.
Moreover, not a few ordinary pastors after a while enter upon
the missionary work in some destitute field, and perhaps we
never hear of it Hence I have been unable to obtain a defi-
nite list of tlie domestic missionaries educated here, as I have
of those who have left the country. Professor Tyler states
that in 1850 as many as fifty graduates of Amherst were
laboring as domestic missionaries ; which was about as many
as had gone to the foreign field during the whole history of the
College. In 1863 tlie latter amounted to sixty-three. The
following list will show when and where they have gone, and
as I was acquainted with them all I should be glad to give
additional &cts concerning them.
1. David 0, AUeriy frx)m Princeton; bom in 1800 ; gradu-
ated in 1823, two years before the Charter; studied at Andover
and went to India in 1827. His wife died in 1831^ remarried;
has resided several years in this country and written valuable
works on India. Received the degree of D. D. from Amherst
in 1853.
2. John Taylor Jones, from Ashby; graduated in 1825;
sent, in 1825, to Siam, by the Baptist Board of Missions.
Died in 1851. Received the degree of D. D. from Columbia
College.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
194 REMINISCENCES OF AHHEBST COLLEGE.
8. Elijah Colman Bridpnanj from Belchertown ; graduated
in 1826; from Andover, 1829; same year sent to China;
received the degree of D. D. from New York University ; died
in 1861, after thirty-two yeajrs of missionary labor.
4. Alonzo Ohapin, from West Springfield; graduated in
1826; a physician; studied at Philadelphia; went to the
Sandwich Islands in 1831, and was honorably released in
1837. Has since resided in the eastern part of Massachusetts.
5. Edward JoneSy from New York city ; graduated in 1826;
sent as a missionary to Liberia by the Episcopal Church;
afterwards transferred to the presidency of a college in Sierra
Leone, where he still remains. He is a colored man, the only
one who ever graduated at Amherst College.
6. George W. BoggSy from Pendleton District, South Caro-
lina; graduated in 1827; sent to the Mahrattas, in India, in
1832 ; returned in 1838. I have no knowledge of his subse-
quent history.
7. Stephen Johntony from Griswold, Connecticut ; graduated
in 1827 ; sent, by the American Board, as missionary to Ban-
kok, in Siam, in 1833 ; returned in 1838, and his wife died in
1839 ; but he married again and went back to Siam.
8. Reuben Tinker j from Chester, Massachusetts ; graduated
in 1827 ; finished study at Auburn in 1830 and went to the
Sandwich Islands; visited the Washington Islands in 1832;
returned in 1841 on account of a difliculty with the American
Board ; was settled as pastor of the church in Westfield, New
York, in 1845, and died in 1854. His biography, by Dr. M.
L. P. Thompson, was published in 1856.
9. Isacu^ Mtssy fit)ra Warren, Massachusetts ; graduated in
1828; from Auburn in 1831 ; went to the Sandwich Islands
in 1836 ; returned in 1842, and died in 1851.
Five missionaries by the nan^e of Bliss have gone out from
Amherst College.
10. Story Hebardj from Lebanon, New Hampshire, gradu-
ated in 1828 : my assistant in the Laboratory and in a geolog-
ical survey of Massachusetts : also Tutor two y^ar^ ( di9tin«
Digitized by VjOOQIC
MISSIONARIES. 195
gnished afterwards as a teacher in Springfield: left; Andover
in '1834 and went missionary to Syria in 1835, where he was
principal of a High School on Mount Lebanon. In 1841
he started on his return and died on the passage.
11. Axhut BUss, from West Fairlee, Vermont, graduated
in 1829 : from Andover in 1832, and the same year went as
missionary- to the Indians of New York, then regarded as a
foreign mission. So far as I know, he is still alive.
12. Henry Lyman. Bom in Northampton, but resided in
Amherst during his collegiate course, where he graduated in
1829, and at Andover in 1832 : went as a missionary to the
Indian Archipelago in 1833: murdered in Sumatra by the
Battas in 1834. His biography has been published.
13. Benjamin W. Perkins, from Reading, Massachusetts,
graduated in 1829, and from Andover in 1832: went to
Sandwich Islands the same year and visited the Washington
Islands in 1833. He still lives to labor in the Sandwich
Islands.
14 Justin Perkins, from West Springfield, graduated in
1829: was two years Tutor at Amherst: studied at
Andover : went to the Nestorians of Persia in 1833. Eight
years afterwards he visited this country and published a work
of 500 pages, entitled " Residence in Persia, &c." He went
back and remained till 1859, when he returned again on
account of the health of his wife. In 1862 he went back
again to Persia, although he had labored there more than a
quarter of a century. In 1842 the title of D. D. was con-
ferred on him by his Alma Mater.
15. Mias Biggs, from Mendham, New Jersey, graduated
in 1829, and from Andover in 1832: in 1833 he went as a
missionary to Greece : in 1838 he was transferred to Turkey
and he still lives to labor in Constantinople. He has visited
this country once at least, and in 1853 Dartmouth CJollege
conferred on him the degree of D. D.
In the class of 1829 were five missionaries, all of whom,
except Henry Lyman, still live.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
196 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
16. WiJUarn Amu, from Moatrose, Pennsylvania, graduated
in 1830, and from Andover in 1833 : he was sent with Mr.
Goan as a missionarj to Patagonia in 1833, from which he
returned and was then appointed to go among the DjakB of
Borneo in 1835. He returned in 1837, and on account of bad
health was released : studied medicine and received a medi-
cal degree at Hanover, N. H., in 1839, and went west as a
practitioner, where he may be still living. He also acted for
a time as domestic missionary.
17. Henry A, Hames^ fix>m Boston; graduated in 1830,
also from New Haven in 1833. In 1834 he went as mission-
ary to Turkey, having spent a year in Paris on his way. In
1839 he visited Syria and Mesopotamia, where he narrowly
escaped deatli from the Mohammedans. Afterwards he left the
service of the Board of Missions, and was connected with the
American Embassy; subsequently he returned to this coun-
try, and has been assistant librarian of the State Library in
Albany. He was not professedly pious till after he left
College.
18. Oliver P. Powers^ from Phillipston, Massachusetts;
graduated in 1830, and from Andover in 1834 ; missionary the
same year to Broosa, Asia Minor; afterwards he went to
Central Turkey, where he labored for many years, but is
now in this country on account of the health of his wife.
19. Jamee L. Merrick, from Monson, Massachusetts ; grad-
uated in 1830, and studied theology at Columbia, South Caro-
lina, on account of his health ; went out as a missionary to
Persia in 1834 ; came near losing his life there from a mob
of Mussulmen, for attempting with some Grerman missionaries
to distribute the Bible. Ordered in 1842 to join the Nesto-
rian mission at Ooroomiah. Recalled and dismissed in 1845,
on account of some difference of opinion between him and the
Missionary Board. Subsequently settled in South Amherst,
where he is still pastor.
20. Benjamin Sckneider, from New Hanover, in Pennsyl-
vania ; graduated in 1830, and from Andover in 1833 ; went
Digitized by VjOOQIC
MISSIONARIES. 197
the same year bjb missionary to Broosa, in Asia Minor ; after-
wards transferred to Aintab, on the Euphrates, where he has
had extraordinary success. He has visited this country once.
Received the degree of D. D. from Franklin Marshal CJollege,
in Pennsylvania. •
21. Ebenezer Burgess^ fipom Grafton, Vermont ; graduated
in 1831, and was a Tutor in CJoUege two years ; from Andover
in 1837 ; went the same year to India, to the Mahrattas, sub-
sequently to Ahmednuggur, and finally to Satara ; lost his wife
and child, and came home, but returned ; but health failing
again, and being dissatisfied with some of the measures of the
Mission Board as to education, he resigned, and has been since
a preacher in several places. Since his return he has pub-
lished a learned work on Astronomy, a translation of the
Surya Siddhanta.
22. Alden Grouty from Pelham, Massachusetts; graduated
in 1831, and from Andover in 1834 ; went as inisaonary to
the Zulus of South Africa in 1835 ; lost his wife, and relumed
in 1837; re-married, and relumed and labored till two or
three years ago, when he again visited the United States ; but
he has returned, and is still laboring among the Zulus very
successfrilly.
23. Israel W. Searl^ from Southampton, Massachusetts;
graduated in 1832 ; did not study a profession, but was sent as a
missionary teacher to Liberia by the Colonization Society, and
soon died there, probably from neglect of proper precaution.
He found himself feeling in Africa as he did in New England,
and hence concluded that the usual care used was unnecessary,
and his death was the result.
24. Ohadiah M. Johnson^ from Newark, New Jersey ; grad-
uated in 1832 ; became a minister, and went as Seaman's
Chaplain to Rio Janeiro, in South America. He afterwards
returned and was settled as a minister, but I know not where.
25. Leander TTiampsony from Woburn, Massachusetts ; grad-
uated in 1835, and from Andover in 1838. Went as mission-
ary to Sjrria in 1840, but returned in 1845, partly, I believe.
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
198 BEMIKISGENGSS OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
from difference of opinion between him and the Missionaiy
Board ; afterwards settled for several years at South Hadley
Falls, and since then over another church.
26. James G. Bryant^ from New Boston, New Hampshire ;
graduated in 1836, from Andover in 1840 ; did not go out as
a missionary to the Zulus in South Africa till 1846 ; having
been settled for five years as a pastor in Littleton ; he labored
in Africa till 1850, when he died.
27. Samuel C. Damon, from Holden, Massachusetts;
graduated in 1836, and from Andover in 1841. Not long
after he went out to the Sandwich Islands as Seaman's
Chaplain, and he has since resided at Honolulu, except he has
once or twice visited this country. For many years he has
edited a very useful newspaper called "The Friend." In
1861 Mr. Damon visited Micronesia, and gave an interesting
description of those Islalids, both in the " Friend " and in a
pamphlet of 78 pages, called the " Morning Star Papers."
28. JSdwin JB. EUss, from West Springfield; graduated in
1837, and from Andover in 1842 ; in 1843 went as a mission*
ary to Trebizond ; in 1848, returned to this country on account
of the health of his wife, but went back, and now resides in
Constantinople.
29. George B, BotoeSy from Cornish, New Hampshire;
graduated in 1837, and at Andover in 1841. Li 1843 he was
sent to the Sandwich Islands, and I am not aware that he has
ever returned. He still lives and labors there.
30. Samuel Austin TayloTy from Worcester ; graduated in
1837, and in 1842 at Andover. To what part of the world he
went I have not ascertained ; but he died in 1847, only 29
years old.
31. Henry J, Van Lennep, from Smyrna, Asia Minor, son
of the Dutch Consul ; graduated in 1837 with the highest
honors, also from Andover in 1840, and the same year went
as missionary to Smyrna. He has lost two wives, and been
back to this country three times. He is now here in 1862.
For a time he was connected with a High School at Constan-
Digitized by VjOOQIC
MIS8I0NABIES. 199
tinople. Afterwards he went to Tocat, the burial place of
Henry Mar^, where a few years ago he had his house and
all his library burned. He received the degree of D. D.
at Amherst in 1862.
32. WiUiam Walker j from Greensboro', Vermont; gradu-
ated in 1838 ; and in 1841 at Andover. In 1842 he went as
a missionary to the mouth of the Gaboon River, in West Africa.
He has lost two wives, and I believe is now living with the
third. He has visited this country twice, and perhaps three
times, and perhaps it is owing to such occasional changes that
he has been able to preserve good health for nineteen years in
the deadly climate of Western Africa.
33. Jod S. Everett, from Halifax, Vermont ; graduated in
1840, and in 1845 went as a missionary to Smyrna, in Asia
Minor, and was transferred to Ckmstantinople, where he died
in 1856, much missed and lamented.
34. Wmam W. Howland, from West Brookfield; graduated
in 1841, and studied theology in the New York Theological
Seminary. Went to Ceylon in 1845, where he labored till
within three or four years, when poor health compelled him to
return. But he has recovered vigor enough to allow him to
go back.
35. James O. Bridgmanj from Amherst; graduated in 1842.
In 1846 he joined his unde. Dr. Elijah C. Bridgman, in China,
as a teacher. He translated and published Nottia lAngwe
'Sinicae frx)m Chinese into English ; but studied too hard ; his
mind lost its balance, and he took his own life.
36. Joseph G. Chchran, from SpringviUe, New York;
graduated in 1842, and went as a missionary to Ooroomiah in
1847, where he still labors.
37. Isaac G. Bliss, from West Springfield, Massachusetts,
and brother of Edwin E. Bhss, already mentioned, graduated
in 1844, and in 1847 went as missionary to Erzeroom, in
Armenia ; health failing, he returned in a few years, but at
length went- back to Constantinople to act as agent of the
Bible Society.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
200 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
88. Eliphal Maynardj from Potsdam, New York ; gradu-
ated in 1844, and at East Windsor a few years after. Went
in 1849 as a missionary to the Jews in Asia Minor ; but had
hardly entered npon his work before he was smitten down by
a disease of the brain.
39. Joseph T, Nof/es, fi[X)m Newburyport; graduated in
1845, and from Andover in course^ In 1848 he went as a
missionary* to Ceylon, where he has continued till this time.
40. Josiah TyUr^ from East Windsor; son of President
Tyler; graduated in 1845, and at East Windsor in 1848;
appointed to South-Eastem Africa in 1848, where he has
labored ever since.
41. Serena E. Bishop^ from Oahu on the Sandwich Islands ;
graduated in 1846; went subsequently to the Sandwich
Islands as missionary of the Seaman's Friend Society, where
he now labors.
42. Charles HarlweU^ from Lincoln, Massachusetts ; gradu-
ated in 1849, and at Andover in course ; appointed soon after
to a mission in China, where he has continued to labor till
this time. Converted in College.
43. Hubert P, Herrick^ from McDonnongh, New York;
graduated in 1849 ; went as missionary to West Africa ; soon
after returned on a visit to this country ; went back and died
soon after in 1857.
44. Henry LobdeUy from Danbury, Connecticut ; graduated
in 1849 ; received a medical education at New Haven, and
a theological one at Auburn, and went as missionary to
Mosul in 1851, having previously been engaged with his wife
in a select school in Danbury, Connecticut, during which time
he published a translation of a large French work. He died
at Mosul in 1855, and a memoir of him, of great interest, has
been published by Professor Tyler.
45. Albert G. Beehe^ from Guilford, New York ; graduated
in 1850 ; went to Armenia, where his wife died ; he returned
home and I believe has dissolved his connection with the
American Missionary Board and been settled as a pastor.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
MISSIONABIES. 201
46. Henry M, AdamSy from Enosburg, Vermont ; graduated
in 1851, and from Eaat Windsor in 1854; went soon after to
the Gaboon Mission in Western Africa, where he died in
1856. His death was a remarkable exhibition of Divine
grace.
47. Marcus M. Carlton, from Marshfield, Massachusetts;
graduated in 1851, in wretched health; went abroad as a
missionary, but where, I cannot say.
48. Francis -4. Douglass, from Plattsburg, New York; grad-
uated in 1851; sent as a missionary by the Baptist Board of
Missions to Siam, where he is now laboring.
49. WtUiam 0. Baldwin, from Mount Vernon, New Hamp-
shire ; graduated in 1851 ; went to the Sandwich Islands,
where he labored many years.
50. Heman N', Bamum, from Leicester, New York ; grad-
uated in 1852 ; visited Armenia a few years ago, where his
classmate, O. P. Allen, is a missionary, and concluded to
remain, and they are now associated in labor at Eharpoot
51. Orson P. Allen, from Mount Morris, New York ; grad-
uated in 1852 ; went to Eastern Turkey soon after, and is
now laboring at Kharpoot.
52. Daniel Miss, from Geneva, Ohio ; graduated in 1852,
and from Andover in course. He went soon after as a mis*
sionary to Syria, and is now in this country, raising frmds for
a University on Mount Lebanon, of which he is to be presi-
ident Converted in college.
53. Samuel G, Dean, from Oakham, Massachusetts ; grad-
uated in 1853, and went soon after to Satara, in Lidia, whero
he is now laboring.
54. Cfliarles F, Morse, from Salem, Vermont ; graduated in
1853, and from Andover in 1856; went subsequently to
European Turkey, and is now laboring in Adrianople.
55. James F, Clarke, from Simderland, Massachusetts;
graduated in 1854. and from Andover in 1858 ; went subse-
quently to European Turkey, and is now laboring in
Bulgaria.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
202 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COIXEOE.
56. Milan M. Hitchcock^ from Bergen, New York ; gradu-
ated in 1854, and from Bangor in course. Sent as a missionary
to Gejlon in 1857 or '58 ; but was obliged to return in a jear
or two on account of his wife's health, and he is no longer
connected with the Board.
57. George F^Aftum, from Middleborough, Massachusetts ;
graduated in 1855. He did not complete the studj of theol-
ogy in this country, but went to Constantinople as a traveller,
and remained there as mission treasurer. He has since
returned to this country to prepare himself for ordination.
58. James A. Bates, from Granby, Massachusetts ; gradi>-
ated in 1856, and from Andover in 1859 ; and was sent as a
missionary to Ceylon soon after, where he now resides.
59. John JBl Dodge, from Wenham, Massachusetts ; gradu-
ated in 1856, and from Andover in 1859. He was sent by the
American Missionary Association soon after to Western
Africa ; but returned in a year or two on account of the health
of his wife. He preached two years in Wendell, Massachu-
setts, and was then called by his Master out of the world in
1863.
60. Amherst L, Thompson, from Amherst; graduated in
1856, and from Andover in 1859 ; we^^t out as a missionary to
Ooroomiah, but died soon after reaching his field.
61. Henry M. Bridgman, ftom Westhampton, Massachu-
setts ; graduated in 1857, and from Andover in 1860 ; went
soon after to the Zulus in South-eastern Africa, where he
now resides.
62. Alvan B, Goodale, from Potsdam, New York ; gradu-
ated in 1858; received a medical education, and went to
Central Turkey, where he now labors as a physician.
63. George Oonstantine, a native of Greece ; graduated in
1859, and at Andover in 1862 ; he has gone to his native
land, under the patronage of the American and Foreign
Christian Union.
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MISSIONABIES.
208
The preceding list of missionaiies presents us with the
following results ; —
Whole number to 1860, .... 63
Number of ministers, .... 57
Number of physicians, .... 3
Number of laymen, 3
Number who have been married, . . 60
Went out at first unmarried, • • . 7
Married the second time, .... 8
Married the third time, .... 3
Proportion of deaths among the men, one in 4.1
Proportion of deaths among females, up to
1849, one in . . . . . 4.1
Proportion of deaths among all the gradu-
ates, one in 6.3
No graduates from the classes of 1859 and 1860, except
Constantine, have yet gone out as missionaries, though I know
of several who have offered their services ; but their profes-
sional studies are not completed, and the war has cut short the
funds. Hence we ought not to reckon these two years in
ascertaining what proportion of the graduates have been foreign
missionaries. Up to 1858 the proportion has been one in 20.7.
I have not been able to ascertain what is the proportion in but
a few other New England Colleges, but in 1852 it stood as
follows : —
In Middlebury one in
In Williams one in .
In Dartmouth one in
36.3
40.0
106.0
It ought, however, to be recollected that the above Colleges
graduated many classes before the subject of missions had
excited much interest in our country, and in estimatmg the
proportion of missionaries as compared with those of Amherst
Digitized by VjOOQIC
204
BSMINISCENCE8 OF AMHiSST COLLEGE.
such classes should be left out But I have not the means of
making such an estimate.
J£ we put down the number of missionaries from Amherst in
the first four years and the sucoessire five years to 1860, it
may be instructive.
TEABS.
I
From 1822 to 1825,
From 1825 to 1830,
From 1830 to 1835,
From 1835 to 1840,
From 1840 to 1845,
From 1845 to 1850,
From 1850 to 1855,
From 1855 to 1860,
18
6
8
7
5
12
5
53
164
214
232
140
129
214
231
3.8
11.
2.3
3.4
5.
4.
6.6
2.1
Though this table would indicate waves of missionary influ-
ence, particularly finom 1825 to 1830, we do not see in it evi-
dence that it has been on the decline. I fear, however, that
we who preach have hardly done our duty to this cause. But
there has always existed in the College a missionary band who
meet from time to time, especially when some returned mis-
sionary happens to be in town, and I doubt not this association
is one of the most important means of keeping alive the
missionary spirit
5. Assistance to Indigent Students.
The founders of the CoUege did not merely propose to raise
up ministers and missionaries, but to encourage the indigent
classes to become such ; well knowing that this was the most
reliable source of supply. We have seen their success in
obtaining the men ; let us look at the aid tiiey have rendered
them in the process of education.
In his Valedictory Address in 1845, Dr. Humphrey stated
that from 1825 to 1844 inclusive, there had been paid &^m the
Digitized by VjOOQIC
BENSFICIABIES. 205
Charity Fund, to beneficiaries, $89,896.51. The smallest
annual amount was in 1825, viz., $564.72, and in 1844 it was
$2,229.76. He does not state thje number of beneficiaries, but
&om 1844 to the present time, by the assistance of the Treas-
urer, the Hon. £dwaid Dickinson, I am able to give the num-
ber of those who have received aid each year, and also during
my Presidency the number that were assisted by the American
Education Society.
Koii. ' Amoant Nos.
helped. paid. helped.
In 1845, Charity Fund, 45, $2,096 00. Education Sociely, 27
" «* 28
" " 26
" * " 46
a « 42
« « 57
" «* 56
« " 46
« K 40
" " 58
1846,
((
(f
89,
2,128 00.
1847,
(1
tt
48,
2,032 00.
1848,
«
u
66,
2,576 00.
1849,
ti
u
70,
2,744 00.
1850,
a
u
79,
3,206 00.
1851,
li
((
76,
2,996 00.
1852,
tt
<(
62,
2,708 00.
1853,
a
<(
63,
2,493 00.
1864,
u
it
-62,
2,696 00.
1855,
«
u
80.
2,696 00.
1856,
If
«
88,
3,625 00.
1857,
(i
M
86,
8,172 00.
1858,
((
ti
81,
2,820 00.
1869,
((
ti
72,
2,496 00.
1860,
((
ti
70,
2,448 00.
1861,
t<
u
69,
2,610 00.
Amonnt since 1845,
,
,
$45,240 00.
" before 1846,
> •
•
39,897 00.
Amoant from Charity Fnnd, $85,187 00.
<' from Stimpson Fund, 4,766 00.
<< from the Moore Fund, 634 00.
'< to indigent pious stu-
dents $90,587 00.
It thus appears that up to this time the College has paid
over ninety thousand dollars to aid those in straitened drcum-
Btances who are seeking the ministry9.&om all its funds devoted
Digitized by VjOOQIC
206 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
to that object They do not, indeed, receive the money ; but
it is equivalent to money by paying their term-bills. The
income some years, especially before the Stimpson Fund
became available, was not always sufficient to cancel their
entire bills, and hence some of the Trustees imagined that if
the whole bills were paid in such years it would be equivalent
to paying from the treasury the amount of the deficiency.
But Professor Fiske suggested that nothing was in fact paid
from the treasury, but the College simply allowed such
students to go on at a somewhat cheaper rate than others, and
he recommended that the offer should be made on the cata-
logue that the entire regular term-bills of indigent students
should be paid, and then they would know beforehand what
to depend upon, and more would be attracted to the Col-
lege, and thus the College would really gain instead of
losing by such an announcement. Accordingly, in 1846,
when Providence provided such an increase to our funds,
the Trustees voted to '^ remit the full amount of the regular
term-bills to those students who desire it and are indigent and
are preparing for the Christian ministry." I cannot doubt
that it was mainly this vote that almost doubled the number
of beneficiaries in three or four years, although the whole
number of students in those years was much smaller than
previously or afterwards. It brought hack a very desirable
class of young men who had been driven away some years
previously by a change of the winter vacation unfavorable to
school keeping, and thus carried out more completely one of
the great objects of the CoUege, viz., to help the indigent. I
think the opposite effect of a partial return to the old policy
of paying the term-bills only in part, may be seen in the
reduced number of beneficiaries in proportion to the number
of students in later years. But the income of the three funds
that have been described will soon be and I believe now is
sufficient to pay the entire bills of all who apply and have the
requisite qualifications. So that we shall need no further
discussions on this subject.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
SPIRITUAL DAN6EBS. 207
Gratifying as this review of the religious history of the Col-
lege is and of the wonderful success which God has given to the
enterprise thus far, it is impossible to avoid some solicitude
for the future. For almost every analogous literary institu-
tion, after becoming large and prosperous, has deteriorated —
oh, how sadly, sometimes — in religious character. I cannot
but add a few things, therefore, at least, to show from what
quarters the danger will come.
1. The general source of the danger lies in prosperity and
success. The furnace of adversity merely bums off the dross
of Christian character ; but the sun of prosperity nourishes a
host of weeds and excrescencesi The first leads men to trust
in Grod ; the last, in themselves. It is the same with asso-
ciated bodies of men, such as churches and literary institutions.
Hence I tremble for Amherst College ; for although its out-
ward prosperity is not absolutely great, it is so in comparison
with what it once ,was, and often it takes but a littie success
to ruin an individual, a church, or a college.
2. Such a deteriorating process will not come on suddenly, or
even visibly, but insidiously, and by infinitesimal changes. It
always has been so in like cases. A simple omission to preach
certain doctrines, or to do certun things, will often more
effectually starve out and deaden vital piety than could be
done by the most vigorous open assaults.
3. A tolerance of vital errors and neglect boldly to preach
the doctrines of the Reformation form some of the earliest
evidences of downward progress in a religious college like
Amherst. When it becomes unpopular to maintain such
doctrines as the essentials of religion, and popular to admit
the doctrine that the essence of true religion lies in right
feelings which do not require a correct creed — ^then the
process of deterioration will have gone very far. For it
ought never to be forgotten that the defection of Harvard
University from the evangelical faith was the grand argument
for building up another coUege, because its founders believed
that the negative faith there adopted would never produce
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
208 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
true conversions or raise up men of the right stamp for the
world's conversion. If, then, the strong distinction between
evangelical and unevangelical views should be abandoned,
true revivals will soon cease — ^a missionary spirit will die out,
and a formal and genteel religion will take the place of
earnest pietj. It is certain that the tendency of opinions at
this day in the community is to such a coalescence between
error and orthodoxy, and it would be strange if the College,
waxen fat by prosperity, should not S3rmpathize in the delu-
sion. Oh that its guardians and officers might keep their
eyes wide open to this danger.
4. Another danger is that tile desire and effort to make the
students eminent in scholarship shall be stronger than to lead
them to excel in piety. At the best not a few sacrifice their
religion to their reputation ; but as the constant effort with
tea<!her8 is to raise the literary standard, the danger is that
the temptation will become too strong for any to resist.
0. Whatever increases the expenses of a college course
tends to lower the standard of piety and to defeat the great
objects of its founders. For it drives away those indigent
pious young men who are striving, almost without means, to
obtain an . education, that they may become ministers and
missionaries. And whatever any may think as to the other
sources of danger that have been named, here is one that has
already shown its disastrous influence extensively. While I
was in the Presidency I labored with all my might to keep
down the necessary expenses, and not without success, after
God had added largely to our means, as the following state-
ment of expenses given in the Annual Catalogues before 1846
and after 1854 will show.
For several years previous to 1847 the estimated expenses
were as follows : —
Tuition, room-rent and incidentals, . . $48.00 to $51.00
Board, fuel, lights and washing, fix)m . 65.00 to 99.00
Digitized by VjOOQIC
INCREASE OF EXPENSES. 209
Prom 1847 to 1854—
Tuition, &c., $42.00 to $45.00
Board, &c., 48.00 to 89.00
From 1855 to the present time, (1862,)
Tuition, &c., ' . . . . $51.00 to $54.00
Board, &c, 75.00 to 125.00
It is true that during the last few years the expenses of
living have been greater than in previous years. But it is
also true that luxuiy and extravagance have increased in a
still greater ratio in the community generally, and of course
College has not escaped the influence. It has extended to
students, and a costlier way of doing almost every thing was
the result For instance, it is now thought indispensable at
every Commencement, and often at the Exhibitions, that one of
the costly city bands of music should be engaged at an expense
of several hundred dollars. So each class, ere it graduates,
must get up a tasteful book, containing the photographs or
engravings of the whole class and the Faculty. And the same
system of doing things in good style is extended into all the
operations of the numerous societies, and there is competition
among the different associations to see which shall have the
most splendid room or furniture or the largest library. For a
time some of the poorer members of the classes who are at
their wits end to know how they can get along with necessary
expenses, remonstrate against these needless .luxuries. But
the cry is, you are niggardly and mean and dishonorable thus
to thwart the wishes of the whole class or association, and the
remonstrating members are forced into the traces to keep up
with public opinion, if they can by hook or by crook find the
means, or they drop out and leave College if they cannot.
Now these things may not be immoral, and most of them
may be even desirable, if they did not conflict with higher
interests. But they do powerfully conflict with a leading
object for which the College was founded, viz., to help young
men who have no money to obtain an education. They
Digitized by VjOOQIC
210 REMINISCENCES OP AMHERST COLLEGE.
compel multitudes of such either to avoid the College, or to quit
I it in mid course. They introduce in their place another class of
students who, though they may be men of excellent character,
and even professing Christians, yet are not looking to the min-
istry nor the missionary service, and therefore are not the men
for whom the College was expressly founded. The gradually
decreasing percentage of graduates who are looking to the
ministerial office, which we have shown on another page, shows
conclusively how this deteriorating process is going on as the
fruit of prosperity. I am a£raid that it has already advanced
much &rther than either Trustees or officers imagine. For I
have told but a small part of the story. But I have watched
these changes with painful solicitude, and with some sense of
responsibility ; for it is in part the fruit of my own effi}rts to
obtain funds for placing the institution on the high ground it
now occupies.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
SGENEBY. 211
SECTION VII.
SOENERT AND GEOLOGY.
I. — SCENERY.
The Connecticat Yallej is justly celebrated for the beauty
of its scenery over an extent of more than two hundred
miles long and of Tarying width. I include the hills and
mountain ridges that border the intervals or cross them, so
that in some places, as in the latitude of Springfield, the
Valley is thirty or forty miles wide. In what latitude it is
most attractive, it might be invidious to say, but none will
doubt that Amherst and its vicinity are eminently beautifuL
Nor wiU any doubt that scenery exerts an important influence
upon the education of youtii. It cultivates the taste, and
when grand and romantic, inspires noble sentiments and puiv
poses. No graduate of Amherst ever forgets the inspiration
of the romantic view that opened upon him in almost endless
variety from College Hill, at different seasons of the year.
So, too, there are numerous points of deep scenographic inter-
eat around within half a day's walk or ride. I have found
these so numerous and so little known that it has been one
of my pleasant employments to look them up, and if possible,
to make them accessible, and to impose appropriate and taste-
ful names upon them, so as to make them better known to
students. For many have spent four years in College without
visiting spots in the immediate neighborhood, which in after
life they would think worth long journeys to see. And
though I have now resided in Amherst nearly forty years, I
still continue to find, within an hour's ride, spots which ahnost
any where else would be regarded as of high scenographic
interest
Digitized by VjOOQIC
212 BEMINI6CENGES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
In the work of imposing new names upon hills, mounlsdnSy
gorges, rivers and bowlders, I have oflen called in the aid
of the class to which I was lecturing in geology, and our
geological excursions have often had the double object of
studying the rocks, and by appropriate speeches and ceremo-
nies, of naming some of these objects. This would seem to
be a very easy and pleasant undertaking ; but I have often
found it so laborious, and encountered such malignant opposi-
tion, that I have again and again resolved at the close of our
excursion that I would never attempt another. There is first,
the disturbance which the absence of a class from College,
especially if it extend beyond a day, produces, especially as I
have always found classes disposed to make a great deal of
noise and display at starting, by taking their vehicles to the
College, and perhaps driving off with cheers, so that the
other classes would feel discontented to remain to be driUed
in the recitation-room. This, of course, prejudices the Faculty
against such excursions. Secondly, it gives an opportunity
for the unruly members of a class, and presents a strong temp-
tation to others, to indulge in antics, and perhaps immoralities,
such as give both the class and the College a bad name in the
community. Thirdly, we have sometimes found strong preju-
dices in the region of the mountain or other object to be
named, against our enterprise, as if we were intruders, and
had no right to interfere with names that have become vener
able by age, however absurd ; not so much, even, as to pro-
pose a change, which in fact is all we ever have done or
could do. Fourthly, the newspapers have sometimes joined
the popular clamor, and denounced us as unmannerly inno-
vators. Finally, the labor of preparing for such an enterprise,
especially where new paths must be cleared out I have
sometimes spent nearly a week in these preparations, and the
only reward which I would get, (except in the class,) was
reproach and bad feeling.
In spite of these obstacles, however, we have persisted in
this effort up to the present time, and with marked success.
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
COLLEGE HILL. 213
We have named not less than nine mountains and some other
objects, by formal excursions and set exercises, and I am con-
fident that most of the names thus imposed will be adopted by
the public and made permanent I propose briefly to refer to
all these mountains and other objects, as well as to other points
of scenographic interest around Amherst. In a few instances
I shall propose names for spots not yet formally christened.
The principles that have guided us in the invention of names
will appear in some of the details that follow. It may be well,
however, to quote in this place the following sentences from
our Report on the Geology of Vermont, Vol. L, page 394,
where an account is given of the naming of Eolus. ^ In order
to be good, a name should be derived from one of three sources :
1. Indian ; 2. Classical, that is, Greek or Latin, or Hebraic ;
3. HistoricaL The two first are the best sources. Such a
name should awaken no low or vulgar associations. It should
be one that would be graceful and ennobling in poetry, and yet
it should be easily pronounced and appreciated by alL^ Such
names as Norwottuck, Nonotuck, Mcttawompe, Pocomtuc,
Eock Rimmon, Nutonk, Hygeia, and Kilbum Peak, answer
these conditions, and have been proposed by different classes
for different mountains. Eolus is eminently appropriate, being
classical, poetical, euphonical, and suggestive.
1. College Hill.
Strangers are much struck with the great beauty of a view
from this eminence, especially if they visit it in balmy summer,
when the atmosphere is o^n loaded with the fragrance of
flowers, and the eye delighted with the fresh green of the
mountain sides. But the variety of aspects presented by the
landscape at different seasons of the year, and at different times
in the day, is oflen very striking, and affords great enjoyment to
those on the look out. The various fantastic shapes exhibited
by the fog are of deep interest. Often the trees and lulls
emerge from it, and give one a good idea of the general deluge.
I have in one or two instances seen my own figure projected
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
214 BEMINISCENGBS OF AMHEHST COLLEGE,
as a huge ^ant upon the bank of fog, which I believe is a rare
phenomenon.
Of course no view from any one point at the base of the
buildings can embrace the whole horizon. A walk along the
south-west side of the buildings which point in that direction,
presents the finest view, and the point along that line which is
most attractive to my eye is on the terrace in front of the
Appleton Cabinet There the Holyoke range is shown in all
its glory.
If one wishes to get a panoramic view of the whole of the
edifices and of the surrounding country, he must ascend either
the tower of the Library or of the Johnson Chapel. The
latter is the best, because the highest, and open at the top ;
but the other forms a pleasing variety and is better for getting
a view of the College buildings. Some think much of a view
from the octagonal window on the second story of the vestibule
of the Woods Cabinet, though not intended for a look out.
The views from the East College Hill, where the last doi^
mitory building stands, are different from those that have been
described, and quite agreeable.
2. Mount Doha. (Sotfia, a dome.)
This name I apply to a dome-shaped hill, half a mile south-
west of the Colleges, on the farm of Mr. Alfred Baker. It
affords the best view that can be found of the edifices, all of
which, except the Gymnasium, are in sight, and it is a view
of their fronts. There is, however, a spot about the same dis-
tance north-east of the Colleges, at the south-west angle of
Mr. Hiirs grounds, where in the winter nearly all the build-
ings may be seen, and in addition, the new High School,
which, with its four towers, is quite imposing in appearance.
With the exception of Williston Hall, it is indeed a back side
view. But this is of less consequence than might be supposed,
and this view will probably be preferred by some to that from
Mount Doma. This last spot has been chosen by Mr. Lincoln
of late for a private residence, but room remains for other
Digitized by VjOOQIC
MOUNT PLEASANT. 215
dwellings. For on all aides it affords magnificent prospects,
and needs only money and good taste to convert into one of
the most attractive spots in the country.
3. Mount Pleasant.
Though this hill is but little elevated, its south end affords
one of the most beautiful residences in the country, and is now
and long has been the seat of a private school. The southern
view, with the village in front, and the Mount Holyoke range,
or rather perhaps I ought to say the Norwottuck range, peer-
ing above it with its serrated crest, is extremely picturesque.
Norwottuck, Holyoke and Tom are all in sight, being only
prominent points of the same trap range, and on a clear day
the prospect down the Connecticut Valley, where Mount Tom
seems to unite with the eastern slope of the Hooeac range of
mountains, is superb. The Colleges are seen from Mount
Pleasant only on their f ank, yet they form very agreeable
objects.
As a matter of taste, I have always felt disposed to find
fault with the name of this hill, just because it seems to me
too fiaJt and devoid of originality. But as it cannot now be
changed for a better, I propose to apply the same name in the
comparative degree, to a neighboring hill which as a matter
of fact is perhaps more elevated.
4. Mount Pleasanter.
Immediately east of Mount Pleasant is a valley not very
deep, and east of this rises another hill having the same gen-
eral shape, and like Mount Pleasant still* covered with forest.
This last hill is three hundred and two feet above Connecticut
River, and Mount Pleasanter, three hundred and twenty-nine
feet. On its south slope, where an unfrequented road crosses
it, is decidedly the best spot that I know of for getting a view
of Amherst, of the Holyoke range and the grand cvl de sac
that extends south of Northampton. The spot is superior to
Mount Pleasant for this view, and hence I call it Mount
Digitized by VjOOQIC
216 BEMINISCENCES OF AMHEB8T COLLEGE.
Pleaaanter, It is perhaps the best place left near the centi^'
of Amherst for a private residence or a public institution,
unless the more panoramic view from Mount Doma should
form a stronger attraction. I trust that the present proprietor
of Mount Pleasanter (Mr. Dickinson) will never suffer the
grove that now covers it to be cut down, and thus take away
not only half its pecuniary value but much of its scenographic
interest.
This is the spot of all others to which the citizens of
Amherst should take strangers if they would give them a £ur
view of the scenery of the town.
5. The Occident.
Immediately west of College Fill is a north and south
valley extending through the town, and probably in ancient
times a bed of Connecticut River. On the west side of this
valley, opposite the Colleges, is a gradual ri^ which spreads
out into a sort of plateau, and still farther west the land rises
into Mount Warner. Along the plateau runs the old road to
Hadley, and looking easterly we have a very fine view of
Amherst West Parish with the Colleges. As it is only two
miles west of the village it nmkes a pleasant drive for the
visitor who would look at our fine scenery from different points.
I have called this swell of land the Occident simply because it
lies west of the Colleges.
6. Mount Warner.
Continuing gradually to ascend, west and north-west from
the Occident, we reach the rocky elevation called Mount
Warner, in Iladley, and not far from the east bank of Con-
necticut River, and perhaps somewhat over three hundred
feet above the river. Rising thus in one of the richest and
most romantic parts of the valley, it presents a panorama of
unsurpassed loveliness. The north end of the hill is, indeed,
yet covered with woods, and therefore the view in that direc-
tion — ^the least important quarter — ^is obstructed. But on the
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
THE GOLDEN GATE. 21T
east and south-east jou have Amherst and Belchertown, and
the Pelham Hills; on the south, the Holjoke and Tom
Range; on the south-west, Northampton and Easthampton,
and Hadley, with their rich surrounding meadows ; on the
west, close beneath you, lies quiet Hatfield, and a little farther
north, the village of Whately ; and behind them both rise the
hills that make ttitg^^astem border of the Hoosac Eange.
Directly beneath yon flows the beautifhl Connecticut, visible
northerly, in a straight line, almost up to Sugar-Loaf, in Deer-
field, rising as nature's buttress to cut off the view in that
direction, while to the south, the river forms many wide and
graceful curves, and finally disappears between Holyoke and
Tom. In fine, the view from this summit is in some respects
more complete than from Holyoke or Nonotuck, and were it
only more difiicult of access, it would be a place of great resort.
But now it is rarely visited. It is strange to me that the
people of Amherst, especially, take so little interest in this
spot, when a good road, only three miles long, brings them near
the summit ; and it would require but a slight amount of labor
to open a carriage road to the top. Indeed, one already
exists, but is fenced up.
7. The Golden Gate.
The proper way to visit this spot is to go to that village in
North Amherst called the Gty, and from thence to follow
down a small stream westerly. For a mile or two it has
formed a romantic gorge, along which the road has been cut.
At length the stream seems to terminate in a beautiful pond,
covering a few acres, and surrounded by high and steep hills
on every side but the west, where an opening appears between
two gigantic buttresses of granite ; and if we reach the spot
just before sunset, in a clear and quiet day, the pond, the
opening and the region to the west far off seems full of golden
glory. Hence the name I propose. The fact is, the stream
passes through this gate, across which an artificial dam has
been built for supplying a factory village below with water-
10
Digitized by VjOOQIC
218 REMINISCENCES OP AMHERST COLLEGE.
power. The view of the Ml below, looking easterlj, is not
without interest. But standing back of the fall and looking
through the gate westerly, under the circumstances just
specified, it is far more striking.
8. The Crescent.
If we ascend the hill curving around the north end of the
pond above described, we shall find it an extraordinary struc-
ture. Though sixty or seventy feet high, and apparently
composed essentially of sand and gravel, its sides are almost
too steep for ascending. If we wind our way along its inside
we see nothing but the pond on our right, but on reaching the
crest we find ourselves upon a ridge only four or dve rods
wide, curving around the pond and disclosing a splendid pano-
rama of the Connecticut Valley, especially of North Amherst,
Mount Warner, the Holyoke range, and in close proximity.
Mount Taurus and Mettawompe on the north. Such an
unexpected development, with such a beautiful sheet of water
embosomed within, and so singular a geological formation
beneath our feet, makes this a most attractive spot ; and yet,
so little celebrated has it been in Amherst, that I had lived
thirty-six years in the town before I heard of it.
This ridge goes frequently by the name of Pulpit HiU.
But such a name could never be introduced into poetry, and
besides, if this were a pulpit, there is no place for the preacher
to stand but in the water, which might indeed not unaptly
represent the condition of many ministers, if the lake were
thermal. But we propose a name which avoids such impleas-
ant associations.
9. Mount Castor.
We pass now a milp south of the Colleges on the road
to the South Parish, and hqlf a n^ile before reaching the
South Church we find on our left a smajl, rounded eminence,
which is cleared and opens from its top one of the most lovely
panoramas which nature has formed. All around you ip ^
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
CASTOB AND POLLUX. 219
cleared valley and beyond this rises a wall of beautiful moun-
tains ; on the east the Pelham Hills, on the south Norwottuck
and Holyoke, on the west the Hoosac ridges, and on the north
Mettawompe, Mount Taurus, Sugar-Loaf, and far off in the
north-west some of the peaks of the Green Mountains. The
immediate vicinity is full of villages and cultivated fields, and
on the north the Colleges loom up finely. To look off from
such an eminence would be an ample reward for a day's jour-
ney ; and yet, I lived thiity-four years within two miles of the
spot and did not hear of it, and though passing it frequently,
I did not think it worth visiting. Such indifference to spots
so beautiful is not to be imputed to a want of intelligence and
taste in the community, but simply because they are so numer-
ous, or rather there are so many other spots in the region
which have so much higher reputation as to cause these to be
overlooked.
This eminence is composed entirely of gravel, the rounded
fragments being sometimes nearly a foot in diameter. How
they were piled up in this dome-like form to the height of
200 or 300 feet is one of the most difficult problems to solve
in all geology. I know of no solution that approximates to
probability save that wliich supposes the whole region to have
been once filled with the same materials to the same height,
and that they were subsequently removed by aqueous agency
from the present depressions.
10. Mount Pollux.
Nearly a mile south of Castor is another rounded gravelly
hill of the same shape, and though a little higher, perhaps,
and the materials a little coarser, the two hills are so nearly
twins that the names, Castor and Pollux — the mythological
twins — ^was suggested as soon as I had visited them. I think
the panorama rather the finest around Castor, because you
seem there nearer the centre of the circle and are nearer to
the College and the villages. Yet the proximity of Pollux to
Norwottuck produces an agreeable effect on the beholder.
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
220 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
Thus far, with the exception of Mount Warner, all the hills
we have described are composed of modified drift, that is,
gi-avel and sand, and of course are not of much height, nor
very far distant from the College. We now extend our views
to a wider circle, embracing the rockj ranges that surround
Amherst
11. Mount Holtoke.
So extensively known is this eminence, and so often has it
been described, that any new attempt of this sort is unneces-
sary. So far as I recollect, however, the building of a road
along the western face of the ledges was the first of those
mountain excursions that have since been so common from
the College, and therefore some description of the occasion
may be desirable.
The history of this effort is as follows : — Formerly the only
foot-path up the side of the mountain passed almost at right
angles to the side and was very steep and rough. In the
autumn of 1844 I happened to be in the woods near where
this foot-path terminated, studying a large trap bowlder lying
there as late as November. Supposing the period of visiting
the mountain to be past, I was greatly surprised to find a
fleshy gentleman working his way from the top down the
foot-path, and as he reached the bottom he complained bitterly
of the Tough road, and his torn garments bore testimony to
the severity of his scramble. I found him to be a foreigner,
from the West Indies I thought. Looking up to the almost
perpendicular side of the mountain a new thought struck me
and I said, " I believe I could make a path obliquely along
that mountain which should be easy of ascent" "Well,"
said the gentleman, " you Yankees can do almost any thing,
but I do not believe you can make a road there." The next
season, however, I made a reconnoissance and satisfied myself
that the work was feasible, though difficult. On stating my
plan to Miss Lyon, Principal of Holyoke Female Seminary,
she offered to meet us at twelve o'clock, at the foot of the
mountain, with a dinner provided by her pupils, after we had
Digitized by VjOOQIC
ROAD UP HOLYOKE. 221
completed the road. Under such circumstances it was not
difficult to awaken the enthusiasm of my geological — then, I
believe, the Senior Class. But fearful that the work would
prove too much for them, we extended an invitation to the
junior class to join us, and it was accepted. We also, through
the newspapers, invited the citizens who live around the
mountain to meet us with axe and spade in hand. But just
before the appointed day, which was the 4th of July, 1845,
we learnt that though they were quite friendly to the enter-
prise, they did not care to take hold of it, because instead of
one-half day, it would, in their opinion, require a fortnight of
labor, and they did not like to fail and be laughed at Neither
did we. When the morning came I told the classes that we
must either make that path before noon or expect to be ridi-
culed. Out of my scanty stock of Greek I also quoted a few
lines from Hesiod, as a motto for the day : —
Os K*tpyov fttlcrtav tOetv ooXok *€Xavvoi
lAtiKcrt irarrraivitv /f<0' o/aiXueot, aXX* Art tfya
(Who mindful of his work, draws a strait farrow: nor looks
around among his companions, but keeps his mind upon his work.)
We were promptly on the ground, and never did I see a
body of men go into any enterprise with such a will and with
better success. Before eleven o'clock the road was so far
opened that a gentleman rode horseback over it, and by twelve
o'clock the young men had the work finished and had made
their toilet as well as they could with nothing but rocks for a
mirror, and were ready to descend and meet the Uolyoke
ladies with their dinner ready by the welcome spring. This
disposed of, the whole party ascended the mountain where
several gentlemen made addresses and toasts were offered.
Some of these I will copy as a sample of the style of these
mountain addresses.
« Prof. Shcpard congratulated the Senior Class of Amherst College,
on the successful achievement of cutting a horse-path to the summit
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222 BEMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
of Mt. Holyoke ; and entertained no doubt but that the exploit woifttf
keep the memory of the class fresh in the public mind, until thej
should be able to work out for themselves, at no distant day, more
distinguished roads in the wide theatre of the world, upon which they
are just about to enter. In this severer struggle which awaited them,
he hoped they would, as now, be aided by the assistance of Junior
companions, and cheered by the approval of the fair.
** He would not be understood, however, as undervaluing the pres-
ent exploit. On the contrary, he did not hesitate to compare it to
Napoleon's great road across the Alps. For although the Simplon
way was longer, in roods, and consequently in the time of its con-
struction, yet when we look at the objects aimed at in the two works,
the speaker was of opinion that there was more to be proud of in the
Mt. Holyoke road than in that of the Alps.
'*The French chieftain, (he said,) by his work sought only a speedy
transit for the myrmidons of war, and their fell machines of death,
wherewith he might go thundering down upon the peaceful vales of
Italy, while you aspire to a more beneficent result — you aim to
smooth some of those asperities with which this proud eminence has
heretofore surrounded herself, whereby she has repulsed the approach
of aU who were not i>ossessed of leisure and strength, and to throw
open the pleasures of the scene to troops of grateful persons, who
else would forever be debarred the rich feast of which we now par-
take. Henceforth, with showers of blessings on your heads, will
ascend to this most commanding eyrie of the Connecticut Valley, the
hurried traveller, the wan invalid, prattling childhood, and even hoary
age ; while maiden beauty, no more toiling over uncertain foot-paths,
and up steep acclivities, will with flowing robe, and plumed hat, be
attended hither by gallant knight on prancing steed.
** Prof. Shepard then adverted to some of the changes which have
transpired in the surrounding scenery, and industry of the people,
during the past twenty years. But what struck him with the most
astonishment, was to discover that even the old Connecticut herself,
which for ages had held on the even tenor of her way, had seemingly
caught the spirit of improvement, and of her own accord ceased to
flow round the Ox-bow, as when he last looked down upon her, and
now hastens her waters forward to the sea, in one hour less of time
each day, than she was wont to do before — i^^linquishing her ancient
bed for the benefit of a railroad company ! Who shall say, (he
asked,) what is destined to transpire during the coming year, when
the naiads of that stream, as it courses the luxuriant meadows of
Hadley and Northampton, shall hear for the first time the harsh
Digitized by VjOOQIC
PROFESSOB SHEPABD'S SPEECH. 223
clattering of the locoxnotiye, or its more piercing whistle, warning all
travellers to stop ?
«« What would be the astonishment, {he inquired,) of some of our
good ancestors of the last century, could they revisit for a moment
the scene before us ! Why, in 1738, in place of the roads which at
present are everywhere so abundant in the Connecticut Valley, that
their very number bewilders the traveller, they had scarce any other
highway, than the now almost neglected bosom of the Connecticut
herself ! What would that reverend patriarch, Peter Powers, the first
pastor of the church of Haverhill, N. H., think, who made his paro-
chial visits and journeys in his canoe ; and who for want of roads,
had to go over to Hollis to get a coimcil to ordain him, and then to
row himself back, and preach his own ordination sermon ! Whatever
might have been the grievances between pastor and people in those
heroic days, there was a better chance than at present for keeping up
their connections with each other, since no roads existed for dismiss-
ing councils to come in upon ; and if a clergyman could preach his
own ordination sermon, he also had an opportunity of using his own
discretion in the matter of dismissing himself.
**How strange too was the dilemma in which betrothed lovers were
placed in those days, who, living near the river-bank, were forced to
watch the passing canoe, in order to get therefrom a clerg}'man to tie
the marriage knot ! It is related of the same patriarch, that as he was
passing by the town of Hanover, (twenty-seven miles below his own
place,) he was hailed from the river-bank by a messenger put there
for the special purpose, to know when he would be ascending the
river, and whether he would stop and marry Mr. Walbridge to
Hannah Smith, a proposition to which he readily agreed ; and when
the appointed day and hour arrived, true as a railroad train in these
days, the parson had paddled himself back to Hanover, and was
ready to perform the welcome ceremony.
** He spoke of the great increase, within twenty years, of the broom-
corn culture, eulogized the new staple, and in particular the broom
itself. He related the following anecdote respecting the enterprise of
the inhabitants of Hadley. Some years ago, soon after Hev. Mr.
Adam, who was a Scottish clergyman, had been settled at Amherst,
he took a ride over to Hadley, and there meeting a man just setting
off with a load of brooms, he had the curiosity to ask him what those
commodities were in his cart, for Mr. Adam was quite ignorant of
the broom, having passed much of his life as a missionary at Benares,
in Hindostan. The honest farmer, as may easily be supposed, gave
him a stare of the profoundest curiosity at his question, following it
Digitized by VjOOQIC
224 UESflNISGENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
immediately by the inquiry, ^ Where are you from, that you never
saw a Hadley broom ? ' The Scotchman, with characteristic brevity,
replied, ' I have been living at Benares.' * Benares,' exclaimed the
interested farmer, « where is Benares ? tell me sir, if you please ; for
it must be an excellent place to take my brooms.'
*< He also thought that the Amherst students had succeeded by their
labors of this day, in recommending themselves to these practical
personages across the ridge. If the young ladies take a pride iu
-wielding the broom, it is certainly fitting that the collegians should
not forget the use of the crowbar, the axe and the spade. And while
he desired for both parties every attainable refinement of feeling, and
of manners, he still hoped that both would continue to cherish a
proper regard for these homely, though useful instruments of life.
And although in the onward career of taste, it may yet occtir that the
lofty roof of the Mt. Holyoke Seminary, (already the most splendid
edifice of the kind in America,) should be studded over wi^ trophies
of art — though the statues of the graces and the sacred nine should
uprise from that high over-looking platform, — although the huntress
I)ian, * the silver-shafted queen,' with her dread bow, or Minerva,
* With snaky-headed Gorgon shield,
Wherewith she fioze her foes to stone,
Whose noble grace dashed bmte violence
With sudden admiration and blank awe * —
should these, and more, from the Sculptor's hand adorn the site, he
still hoped that some native Powers or Greenough would give us in
polished marble, for the most commanding pedestal, tJie maid of the
Connecticut^ who, while she might outvie Juno's self by her accent,
lofty and elated mien, would still grasp in one hand the tidy, industrial
emblem of the broom — not to proclaim, indeed, as did the proud duke
of Danville, when with a broom at his mast-head, one hundred years
ago, he crossed the ocean with a powerful fleet against these colonies,
that the land should be swept with the besom of destruction, but
simply to denote that industry, neatness and order, are the law of the
institution.
** Prof. Fiske, who was perfectly acquainted with the history of the
Connecticut Valley, entertained the company with lively sketches of
scenes which had taken place in it at various periods. He spoke of
the Valley as it was in the time of the landing from the Mayflower,
with its two patches of cleared ground — of the scene at Bloody
Brook, at Hadley, &c. His address was full of interest and instruc-
tion, transporting his hearers back to other times, and reminding them
Digitized by VjOOQIC
PROPESSOB HITCHCOCK'S SPEECH. 22$
of another race v bich then inhabited thifl beautiful Yalley, and other
scenes quite unlike those which are now occurring."
«Dr. Hitchcock spoke nearly as follows : —
*< <Some scenes in one's experience have so much of romance in
them, that we never could be made to believe beforehand they would
ever occur. To be called to address an audience on the top of Hol-
yoke, and among them one hundred and fifty ladies, seems in my
history more like a dream than a reality. Yet, if it be a dream, it is
a very pleasant one. With such a scene to stimulate me, ladies and
gentlemen, you may expect a labored and finished address from me,
annotinced as it was \mfortunately and without my knowledge in the
papers ; but I assure you that I shall only make a few plain sugges-
tions, respecting the formation of the broad Yalley that lies spread out
beneath us, in almost unearthly beauty. I mean its geological forma-
tion. I have been for many years looking at the geological structure
of my native Valley, and have come to certain conclusions respecting
the manner in which it was originally formed and has been subse-
quently modified.'
** He then went on to describe the five great steps in the formation
of the Valley — telling how in the far-off time, when no valley existed,
the primary strata were broken down by lateral pressure ; how the
ocean rushed in across Connecticut and Massachusetts ; and how, at
the close of this period, the Creator enlivened the barren shores with
animal and vegetable life.
« He told how, in the second place, the action of rivers upon its
sides filled up the estuary as high as the level of Sugar-Loaf and Mt.
Toby, with a deposit of sandstone, in the lower beds of which there
are no evidences of life, but in the upper are found fishes, and numer-
ous tracks of birds and quadrupeds, with land plants.
<* The third important change, he said, was produced by volcanic
action ; by this Mts. Holyoke and Tom, and the other trap ranges
were produced ; the strata of sandstone were also tilted up, as the
tracks show, and a breach was made for the Connecticut between Mt.
Holyoke and Tom. The action of footer produced the fourth great
modification of the Valley. This removed a large part of the sand-
stone, leaving the green-stone, because too hard to be acted upon by
the water. The ocean first wearing back to Sugar-Loaf and Mt. Toby,
then the diluvial agency sweeping on the de^ritua southerly, in scoop-
ing out the valleys upon Holyoke and Tom. Then the Valley being
mostly above the ocean, a series of lakes would be formed ; and he
explained how the Connecticut was formed, filling up and draining off,
until it assumed its present level, * And finally,' continued the Pres-
10*
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
226 BEMINISCBNCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
ident, * the latest geological agency that has operated on the Valley of
the Connecticut, is the united physical forces of the Senior and Junior
classes of Amherst College, This is undoubtedly a new force in
geological dynamics, and all visitors to Holyoke will hereafter see
that it is a yery powerful force. Geologists will undoubtedly intro-
duce it into their future works, as a most important agency in produc-
ing erosions, (in Tulgar language called horse-paihs,) on the sides of
mountains. It wUl probably constitute a new branch of geology, for
which I propose the name of Holyoponies^ which I translate to be the
** Science of building a road ^p MU Holjfoke for ponies,** *
*' After the entertainment which was prepared by the ladies of
South Hadley Female Seminary, many sentiments were proposed*
which we have not room to give/'
If we follow tbe crest of Holyoke soatherlj from the pros*
peci house, we shall find it extremely rough and irregular,
with no footpath to guide us. But occasionally unique and
fine views will open southerly and westerly, and especially one
attracted our attention when we look out southerly from
between two ledges half a mile or more south of the house.
Here, if we can work our way down the almost perpendicular
west face of the mountain, we shall find some peculiar phe-
nomena well worthy the attention of visitors, yet but little
visited.
12. Titan's Piazza.
I refer to an arrangement of the trap into columns standing
nearly perpendicular with the lower part of some of the outer
rows worn away and strewed in a steep talus below, while
the upper parts of the columns at the lower end are worn into
the shape of a paraboloid, or even have become lenticular, so
that you seem to stand beneath a projecting mass of hexagonal
iron kettles forming the roof of a piazza. The appearance
extends for several rods along the cliff, and so far as I know,
is unique among the phenomena of trap-rocks. It is best
reached by ascending from the west side ot *^'^ ^ooae
fragments.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
NOBWOTTUOK NAMED. - 227
13. Titan's PiifiB.
Following the west face of the ridge southerly, about half a
mile, we come to where it passes under Connecticut River.
Here are precipices from twenty to ^^j feet high, of naked
rock, showing an imperfect columnar structure. This I call
Titan's Pier. AVhere the tops of the columns are broken
off they are more perfect than I have elsewhere seen in the
Connecticut Valley, and smaller too, bearing a nearer resem-
blance to those at the Giant's Causeway.
14. The Geologist's Dell.
A few rods west of the public road, where it passes through
a deep cut in the ixtck that Ibrms the most southern spur of
Titan's Pier, is a beautiful amphitheatre, surrounded on all
sides by walls of trap, except towards the south-west, where it
opens upon the Connecticut, and is only a few feet above it,
forming one of the most delightful dells that I ever saw.
Thousands of people might here be arranged within sound of
a speaker's voice, so that no place could be more eligible for
Sabbath school gatherings, picnics, political meetings, &c.
With a few canoes in front, delightful sails could be had upon
the smooth Connecticut. On the east side issues a good
spring, and I have usually made this spot a stopping place for
a lunch on geological excursions with classes. Hence the
name which I propose for it.
15. NORWOTTUCK.
Tlie next year (1846,) after we had made the road up
Holyoke, another fourth of July excursion was got up to
impose a name upon the highest point in the Holyoke Bange,
several miles to the east, and about a mile east of the road
from Amherst to Granby and South Hadley, through the
Notch. A very good report of the ceremonies and the
speeches on that occasion, appeared in the '^ Hampshire and
Franklin Express," a part of which I copy : —
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228 BEMINISOENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
'* About eleyen o'clock, some five hundred persons had collected,
and after being seated upon the rocks, or wherever a convenient
place could be found, Mr. Leonard Humphrey, of the Senior Class,
president of the day, addressed them nearly as follows : —
** Ladies and Gentlemen, — ^A custom venerable by its age has
secured to the discoverer and the conqueror the right of giving
name to the territory he has preoccupied or silbdued. By virtue
of this usage, the Senior Class of Amherst College claim such a
right over this majestic mountain. We may not be allowed to base
our claim upon discovery ^ but, surely, we may upon c<mq%test. Is
proof wanted? We point to the track of the army with all its
marks of conquering and resistless progress ; to the hovflder tribes,
even routed from their strongholdst and skulking in terror by the
wayside; to these gashed and mangled limbs: these headless and
prostrate trunks ; all these are witnesses for us that our foot and
the axe of the conqueror have been here. But apart from the ques-
tion of our lawful right by established usage, we know of no cause
in justice why this should not be crowned with title and glory like
earth's other giants. Is it too humble in stature, towering as it does,
1,120 feet above old stormy Neptune, 1,026 feet above the tranquil
Connecticut, and not less than 100 feet above its proud sister Hoi-
yoke, whose fame has encircled half the globe } With such com-
manding height, with an ascent on either side so comparatively easy,
to a summit girt with such varied magnificence, no reason can be
given why this noble mountain has been * unknown to fame,' save
that which must account for the strange caprice with which the
world has always treated greatness, and for its present stubborn
neglect of half the great men and things it contains.
" We have been peculiarly fortunate, we think, in discovering an
appropriate name, through the generous assistance of Dr. Hitehcock
and one or two gentlemen of Deerfield. There is good authority to
believe, from records of the General Court in 1653, and other authen-
tic sources, that the name we have chosen is the old Indian name of
Hadley, which then embraced what is now called Hadley, Amherst,
Granby, South Hadley, Sunderland, Hatfield and Whately, and of
course included this entire range of mountains.
'* In view of these facts, it must appear especially fit to all who
find pleasure in Indian memories, that the red man's name for this
whole chain be now re-assumed by this noblest mountain, the Prince
of the range. And therefore, on this fourth day of JuJyj when our
fathers asserted claims bolder and more momentous than this moun-
tain's to its rightful appellation, in the name and by the authority
Digitized by VjOOQIC
PROFESSOR Hitchcock's speech. ^ 229
of the Senior Class of 1846, in Amherst College, I now denominate
this commanding summit Mount Norwottuck.
" Three hearty cheers were given for Norwottuck, a flag bearing
that name was run up above the platform, after which the company
retired to a grove just east of the summit, where they were favored
with an address from President Hitchcock.
" He commenced by observing that when a year ago he addressed
some of those present from Holyoke, he remarked that the scene
seemed to him more like a dream than the reality. Had any one then
said to him, 'you will next year speak to us from the top of Mount
Norwottuck,' which is nearly 200 feet higher than Holyoke, he should
have been still more incredulous, since none of us then knew this
spot as an object of interest. Yet even such a prophecy has become
a pleasant reality — unless indeed we are in a mesmeric state. And
in fact, he was not quite sure but that some hallucination of this sort
was now upon him ; for as he had visited this spot from time to time,
during the last few weeks, he had been led to compare it with. other
conspicuous eminences, long known in other parts of the world — so
that as he took hold of specimens of rocks from those other places,
in the. College Cabinet, he seemed to be transported to them, and to
be looking over the scenery around them, and contemplating the
condition of those who dwell there. He had brought along some
of these specimens, and as he grasped them he trusted he should be
thrown into a mesmeric state, and would state to the company what
he saw.
"1. He would follow the fashion of the day, and take his first trip
to Oregon. The specimen he held in his hand, brought him at once
to the top of a volcanic mountain on the banks of the Columbia.
He looks around him, and after describing some of the basaltic walls,
and fearftil cataracts, and mountain scenery, inquires whether all is
peace among these mountains ?
* Do love and mercy haant that sunny glade.
And sweetly rest upon that lonely shore.
When light retires and nature smiles no more?
No; there at midnight the hoarse panther growls;
There the gaunt wolf sits on his rock and howls.
And there, in painted pomp, the yelling Indian prowls.*
" 2. This second specimen takes him to China, where he sat upon
a fine hill of granite that overlooks the city of Canton, and what
a dense mass of living beings on the land and on the water was
beneath his eye, and the country is labelled the Celestial Empire.
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2S0 BEICINISGENGES OP AMHEBST GOUJSQE.
•
Bat its polliition, its idolatry and degradation prove it rather aa
infernal empire, and he hastened onward.
**B, The next specimen conducted him to Ceylou; and when he
saw thousands gathering peals from the ocean, and others genu
from the rocks, while his senses were greeted hy aromatic odors
from cinnamon groyes, he fancied himself in a paradise. But
* What though the spicj hieeees
Blow 8oft o'sr Ceylon's isle,
Though eveiy prospect pleases,
And only man is vile !
In vain with lavish kindness
The gifts of God are strown,
The heathen in his blindness
Bows down to wood and stone.'
<< Ah I how different from the Valley of the Connecticat I
** 4. The next specimen of granite conducted him to a strange region,
almost out of the world. He stands upon an elevated mountain —
the sun has disappeared, and yet it is not darkness. For at a dis-
tance stands a mountain of 12,000 feet high, pouring forth flames
which light up the vast sea of ice that covers the entire surfiace, save
here and there some naked rock shooting up into the heavens. He
was in a region of perpetual winter^he stood upon the Antarctic
continent.
*^ 5. But the next specimen conducts him to a more sunny spot.
He is looking off from Table Rock at the Cape of Good Hope, and
as he looks southward into the bay, the prospect is most imposing,
and he seems to feel that he must remain there long to ei^oy it,
But he turns n6rthward, and oh! what a region of desolation,
natural, social and moral, opens before him into the deserts of South
Africa I He sees man there sunk to his lowest level — he hears the
hyena's growl and the lion's roar, and he gladly plumes his wings
for the sunny islands of the Paciflc.
" 6. This specimen brings him to the margin of the great volcano
of Kilauea, the most remarkable on the globe. He looks down into
a gulf fifteen hundred feet deep, and seven or eight miles in circum-
ference, which is a boiling cauldron of melted matter — an ocean of
fire dashing its angry waves from side to side, and sending forth
unearthly bellowings. The scene is indeed sublime and awful
beyond description. But the tired eye would gladly be able to turn
from it, and repose upon the green fields and smiling villages of
Norwottuck.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
PROFESSOR HITCHCOCK'S SPEECH. 281
*^7. This specimen of lava oarries him back to the top of Ararat ill
Armenia, which tradition says was the stepping-stone of the patri-
arch from the antediluyian into the postdiluvian world, and is
eighteen thousand feet high. But think of the literary, social and
moral condition of the inhabitants occupying the region around, and
how will the heart flee back to the Valley of the Connecticut
"8. This specimen brings him to the top of the great pyramid of
Egypt, five hundred feet high. Though he sees the fertile Valley of
the Nile, and other great natural advantages, yet Egypt is the
* basest of kingdoms.'
<'9. The next specimen leads him to a holier place— the Mount of
Olives. To the west lies Jerusalem^the Valley of Jehosaphat and
Eidron, and the Pool of Siloam, encircle the city ; on the east is the
Dead Sea ; to the north is Gibeah and Bamah and Bethel ; to the
south Bethlehem and Bethany. In short the whole country is cov-
ered over with sacred mementoes. But alas I what moral and sociai
degradation. How different from this Valley 1
'* 10. This specimen conducts him to a loftier and scarcely less
holy place, Mount Lebanon, ten thousand feet high. Much of the
natural scenery around is beautiful and grand. But what a horrible
state of society — ^Druse and Maronite fighting, and the Turkish
scimitar and bow-string coming in to decide the strife.
'' 11. This specimen conducts him to Mount Olympus in Asia
Minor, nine thousand feet high. North is the sea of Marmora, and
beyond the sea of Dardanelles, with Constantinople on the western
shore. It is the centre of the ancient worlds but oh I how degraded I
** 12. This specimen reminded him that he must stop a moment at
the crater of volcanic Vesuvius. And here we have a striking con-
trast. Before us is the deep opening into the mountain from which
smoke and flames and lava are issuing. But on the north are the
bay and city of Naples, and on the right stretches away towards the
north-west the noble Appenincs. But in the same direction lies
Borne — a name that reveals to a Protestant soul every thing that is
repulsive in a religion that has sacrificed already by the sword of
persecution not less than fifty million Protestants. In contemplating
such horrors he forgets the splendid scenery around him, and hastens
to another spot.
'* 18. He now stands on still more classic soil. This specimen
brings him to Mars Hill in Athens. And here how can the scholar
avoid musing for a time. Greece is still beautiful in her natural
scenery as when her Immortal poets sung, nAd her orators declaimed,
and her philosophers lectured in the Academy. But alas I deep
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232 BEMINISCENCBS OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
ignorance broods oyer the land, and a bigoted religion is at this
moment persecuting one of the most humble and devoted men, I>r.
King. Aptly has Byron described the condition of Greece : —
* So coldly sweet, so deadly fair,
We start, for soal is wanting there!
Here is the loveliness in death,
That parts not quite with parting breath ;
Expression's last receding ray,
A gilded halo hovering roond decay;
The farewell beam of feeling past away—
Spark of that flame, perchance of heavenly birth,
Which gleams, but warms no more its cherished earth.'
"14. This specimen carries him to the top of St. Gothard, one
of the lower summits of the Alps. Above is Mt. Blanc, with its
eternal glaziers ; below are the beautiful Valleys of Switzerland, and
when he looks down on the Valley of the Rhine he sees scenery that
will compare in beauty with that of Norwottuck. But when he looked
over to France on the west, to Italy on the south, to Austria on the
east, and Germany on the north, and compared their degraded polite
ical and religious condition with that of New England, be was glad
to hasten back to his native Valley.
" 15. Yet number fifteen takes him to a spot which seems more
like New England than any he had yet lighted upon. He was
looking down from one of the peaks of England upon scenery of
great richness, and upon a people whose general character and con-
dition in most respects compare favorably with those of our country.
And yet his republican eye is not pleased with so many palaces, and
liveried servants, and other marks of aristocracy among the higher
classes, and of ignorance and deep degradation among the lower
classes ; and he gladly turns his thoughts to the freedom and eqaality,
the intelligence, morality and religion of this Puritan land.
<* 16. But the next specimen reminds him that he must linger &
moment or two on the shores of Ireland, and look at the Giant* a
Causeway, whence it came. And although the scenery there much
resembles that on Norwottuck, especially at Titan's Piazza and
Titan's Pier, yet he will confess it more striking on the Irish shore.
But when he looks over her surface and sees so many marks of the
Beast, and of deep poverty, ignorance and degradation, he enviea
not her basaltic scenery.
" 17. He would now return to the United States. But this speci*
men induces him to stop a moment on the bleak shores of Iceland.
The scenery has in it all the wildness that volcanic desolation can
Digitized by VjOOQIC
NORWOTTUCK. 238
give it, and the people are honest, intelligent and religious. But the
soil is too sterile, and the climate too glacial, to bear such fruits as
grow in the happy Valley of the Connecticut River.
" 18. This specimen, taken from the top of Mount Washington,
tells him that he must not pass the White Hills without stopping ;
and the panorama that opens from this highest point in the northern
part of America, is indeed magnificent beyond description. It is
also in free and happy New England. But he did not see around
him the smiling, cultivated fields, and happy villages that encircle
Korwottuck. In short, though we find elsewhere wilder prospects,
and scenery more magnificent, yet taken, in connection with the
civil, social, literary, moral, and religious condition of the surround-
ing region, we receive nowhere such unmixed gratification as upon
this highest point of the Holyoke range. He would, therefore, wake
from his mesmeric trance, and return joyftdly from his lon|^ tour, to
esijoy with those present the prospect around, and to bless God that
the lines have fallen to us in such pleasant places, and that we have
so goodly a heritage. Take it all in all, it is not vanity to place it
very high among the interesting eminences firom which he had exhib-
ited specimens. All of them must do homage to this mountain, and
he held a fragment fsom each of them in his hand, which he now
scattered on this height, as the tribute which they pay to Norwot-
tuck."
^' The President concluded with this sentiment :
** Mownt Norwottuek. — ^Hitherto it has been a wall of separation
between two literary Institutions. To-day it is a point of union.
Let it ever be an object of deep interest by them both ! "
To make the road to this spot cost myself, the Class, and
many of the citizens of South Amherst, several dajs' work,
and we finally made it so that carriages could reach the
summit. It is not much visited now, chiefly because there
are so many points along the range and on other sides of
Amherst that are very attractive, and most of them of rather
easier access.
In constructing the road we routed two or three rattle-
snakes. Said a man to me who resides at the foot of the
mountain, " Oh, how fortunate you were ; I have now lived
here forty years, and all that time have been anxious to meet
a rattlesnake, but have never found one." Probably he
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234 BEMINISGENGES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
wished to obtain some rattlesnake oil, which is reputed to have
wonderful virtues, or he wanted to bite through the snake
once or twice, which is said to be a specific against toothache.
We did not try the experiment.
L once met with a rattlesnake on the crest of Holyoke, a
quarter of a mile south of the Prospect House. I had
mounted a bowlder and called the class around me to eicamine
it, when some one cried out, " there is a rattlesnake ; " and
indeed a coiled specimen lay within the circle of students.
He made no attempt to injure us, but I am afraid we did not
act as generously towards him.
16. Mettawompe.
According to my recollection, our next effort in the way
of christening mountains was an attempt to fix a new name to
a mountain in Sunderland, whose principal summit had borne
the name of Toby. As this was one of our most laborioas
efforts and drew upon us a good deal of odium, I shall give
the details as they appeared in the newspapers, also certain
papers, some of which were never published, bringing out the
principles which have guided us in these efforts.
It may be desirable to say that this mountain, most of which
lies in Sunderland, consists of two parts, the highest and most
massive part being Toby, and the southern part, separated
from Toby by a vtdley, and called Bull Hill. It was Toby
proper to which the class directed their attention, although
Bull Hill, as we shall see, was taken in hand at a later date.
The following brief history of the christening of Mettawompe
was printed in the " Express " of June 22d, 1849 :—
<« The ceremony was commenced by the Chairman of the Committee
of the Class, Edward Hitchcock, Jr., who announced briefly the
reasons for proposing a change of name, and then proclaimed the new
one. A copy of this paper we have obtained and insert.
** Ladies and Gentlemen : Distinguished individuals, and emi-
nent associations of men, when they are about to perform an act that
will operate powerfully upon the fortunes of the world, are in the
habit of briefly setting forth their reasons.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
METTAWOMPB. 236
« In accordance with this usage, the Senior Class of Amherst Col-
lege, now that they are about to attempt imposing a new name upon
this mountain, — an act which will haTe so important an influence
upon this Valley, — would propose to this assembly their reasons for
this transaction.
**We propose a new name, in the first place, for the sake of good
taste. A splendid mountain like this deserves a splendid name; a
classical and euphonical name, not a common or -vulgar one ; a name
that will look well and sound well in poetry, books of travel and
history. For this reason alone, we hope that the citizens of this
Valley will consent to let the name of Toby go into oblivion, if we
propose a better one ; for we believe those citizens to possess an imu-
sual share of correct taste.
*< Secondly, we name it by right of conquest. The prostrated
bushes and trees, the torn up bowlders, and the open pathway, show
how that conquest was achieved; and we claim that never before
could the beauties of this landscape be seen but wiUi difficulty, espe-
cially by the feirer portion of creation. To give a new name, we
think a quite moderate exercise of the rights which such battles and
such victories confer Upon the conqueror.
« Thirdly, we do it for the sake of the literary institutions around
this mountain; we confidently expect, that ere many years have
passed, some splendid poems will issue firom these institutions. But
no poet would dare to write a poem, if he must introduce into it the
name of Toby. It would kill the finest epic in the world.
** Finally, we wish to change the name in order to do justice to the
original owners of this mountain. Here is the first deed of this
mountain, or rather of most of Sunderland, Leverett, Montague and'
Shutesbury, by several Indian Chiefs and one Squaw, and especially
by one Sachem, who speaks in the name of the rest. He sold the
whole for eighty fathoms of wampum ; and probably there is not one
man in a thousand in this Valley who ever heard of him. Some young
gentlemen in Sunderland, a few years ago, did' indeed attempt to
rescue his name firom oblivion, in a periodical which they published
for a short time, which is now before you. But his name ought long
ago to have been attached to this mountain, where we doubt not he
hunted a thousand times. And this act of justice, though tardy, is
what we propose to do to-day. His name, although of the purest
Indian, is easily spelt and pronounced, and euphonious in either
prose or poetry. It is Mbttawompe, and by the Senior Class of 1849,
in Amherst College, the name Mettawompe is hereby affixed to this
mountain.
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236 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
**The concluding exercise was a dialogue between William R.
Palmer and George R. Ferguson, which took the audience yery much
by surprise, and excited a good deal of interest. A stem looking
old man, dressed in Puritan style, and with a rusty musket in his
hand, suddenly pressed through the crowd, and mounting the plat-
form demanded of the young men what they were doing. They
shrunk back, seemingly affrighted, and began to apologize, when he
declared himself to be Mr. Toby, from whom the mountain had been
named, and that the uproar of that day, and the injustice that had
just been done him, would not allow him to sleep in his grave, and he
had come forward to vindicate his rights. At this moment a tall
Indian Chief, appropriately decorated, issued from the bushes, and
was immediately recognized by Mr. Toby as old Mettawompe. The
occasion had roused him too from his grave, to thank the young men
for their generous effort to do justice to his memory. A rather sharp
discussion ensued between Toby and Mettawompe, in vindication of
their respective claims to the mountain. Toby said that his name was
put upon it, because he had been so successful in killing Indians.
Mettawompe said that although he had deeded to the whites the right
of soil, he never thought of having his name struck off from the
mountain, which was his throne and that of his ancestors. He then
turned to the company present, and appealed to them, especially to
the squaws, to say whether he or Toby had the best daim to the
mountain. A response was immediately given by the audience ; and
although we heard two or three voices in &vor of Toby, the great
mass cried out, < Mettawompe, — Mettawompe forever ! ' "
The Class had no idea what a solemn reproof awaited them
for this act of theirs, which they thought was at least harm-
less, and they supposed that it met with the approbation of the
leading men of Sunderland. But afler a delay of nearly five
months, the cloud of disapprobation became fully charged, and
poured out its contents through the " Express " of November
9th, 1849, in the following communication : —
" Mettawompb tJ». TOBT.
" Mb. EnrroB : — In a warrant calling a town meeting on the day
of election of State officers, an article was inserted to this effect :
"To see if the town will vote to comply with the change made
by the Senior Class of Amherst College, in calling the mountain here-
tofore called Toby by the name of Mettawompe.
** The following resolution was presented to the meeting, and passed
Digitized by VjOOQIC
PROTEST. 237
by h majority of six to one, and a yote taken that it be sent to the
publisher of the * Amherst Express' for publication :
*< WhereaSf in the month of June last, the Senior Class of Amherst
College saw fit to change the name of the mountain heretofore called
Toby, to that of Mettawompe, therefore
^^Besolved, That as the citizens of the town of Sunderland, we con-
sider the associations connected with the history of the past too sacred,
and the reasons assigned fqr the change too trivial, to justify us in
assenting to the change.
« It may not be out of place, perhaps, in explanation of the resolu-
tion, to state that it is related, as a matter of history connected with
this subject, that more than two centuries since, when this now beau-
tiful Valley was an unbroken wilderness, except where a few hardy
pioneers had cleared a small spot and erected their cabins, that a
small company, with one Capt. Toby at their head, came into this
Tidnity from a neighboring settlement, I think it was one of the
Brookfields, for the purpose of ascertaining the wants, and of afford-
ing such protection as they might be able to giye the few feeble settlers
who had planted themselyes here. And that they might better -view
the position of the country, they ascended this mountain, the first
white men who ever placed their feet on Mt. Toby ; and from that day
to the present, his posterity have ever been proud to call the moun-
tain after the worthy leader of that noble band ; and should we not,
in making a change, be wanting in that filial regard which we should
eyer cherish for the memory of our ancestors, who haye accomplished
so great a work in subduing the forest and a savage foe, and establish-
ing principles and exhibiting virtues which we should ever do well to
endeavor to imitate. I believe that we ought ever to cherish with
the deepest and the purest regard, the names of those enduring
monuments sacred to the memory of those of other times, that, so
often as we or our posterity may behold the mountains of Holyoke
or Toby, we shall be reminded of the noble and heroic men who lived
* in times which tried men's souls.' And though they may have been
so unfortunate as to have names not now considered euphonious by
some, we had many times rather suffer the inconvenience in it, than
sink into oblivion the memory of their names and their virtues."
SUNDBBLAMD, NoV. 13, 1849.
By this time the class were scattered to the four winds, but
the few who saw this article thought the whole subject a
matter for amusement rather than serious reply, and therefore
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238 REMINISCENCES OF ASKHEBST COLLEGE.
some one inserted in the next week's '^ Express " the following
jeu d^etprit, and that was the last I ever heard of the matter.
I am sure it never produced anj unpleasant state of mind
in any of us towards the people of Sunderland, nor did I
ever see any evidence that they thought us very grievous
offenders. It did, however, seem rather strange to me that if
six-sevenths of the people felt very deeply opposed to the
revival of Mettawompe's name, they should have borne to see
it for several years on the sign of the village hotel : —
"Mesmshic Mbbtino of thb Sbniob Class of 1849 in Amhbrst
CoLLBOE. — As soon as the last number of the * Express' appearedf con-
taining the formal condemnation by six-sevenths of the town of
Sunderland of the doings of the Senior Class of 1849, in relation to
Mount Toby, the Genius of that class (for each class as it departs from
College leaves a Genius to look after its reputation) summoned a mes-
meric meeting of its members at noon on Friday last upon the top of
the College Tower. All except three or four who could not be thrown
into a somnambtdic state, were present in spirit ; not bodily, for since
a mere geological excursion had assumed so serious a shape as to be
inserted by selectmen in * a warrant for a town meeting,' and then by
a formal preamble and resolve condemned by a solemn vote, it was
not known but other more serious < warrants' were ia the hands of the
proper oncers. For the same reasons it is thought unwise to say
who presided at the meeting, or who addressed it, or what was said.
Suffice it to say that being delivered from bodily fear, they felt free to
discuss the subject in an independent manner. We give only the
Besolutions, which passed in all cases by more than * six to one.'
"1. Resolved^ That we receive with all humility the rebuke of the
town of Sunderland as Seniors should receive a rebuke from their
Seniors in age and wisdom ; and in token of our submission we will
stand up with folded arms and lowered crests while it is read to us by
the Secretary from the 'Amherst Express,' with the affecting history of
Captain Toby.
*( 2. Resolved, That we duly appreciate the high degree of reverence
felt by * six to one ' of the inhabitants of Sunderland for Captain Toby
which has shown itself to us by two facts: 1. When deliberating
whether to propose a new name for the mountain, we searched the
town records and inquired of several of the most respectable inhabit-
ants, but from no source could we learn who Toby was. 2. The
mountain (the highest parQ has for more than a century been carefully
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MESMERIC MEETING. 239
guarded hj gates and fences, and not even a foot-path has been made
to its summit, and the temptations to visit it have been carefully
avoided also by leaving the trees so to cover its top that the prospect
was good for nothing. How sacredly has it been guarded ! And how
strong (since the town meeting) must be the reverence of the people
for Captain Toby !
** 3. lUtohed, That as to their Names, their Geology, their Scenery,
and their Poetry, Mountains are public property, belonging to no one
town or individual more than to others, and therefore every man and
every body of men have an equal right to call them by what names
they please, and to take all lawful means to induce others to use the
same names.
** 4. Resolved, That as students, the mountains by which we have
been surrounded during the four yelurs of our college lives — which we
have often traversed, whose natural history we have explored, and
whose awful forms we have often gazed upon with poetic and even
a religious interest, should be regarded by us with special interest,
and if they have no names, or bad ones, and older men fail to do it,
we cannot feel that it is arrogance in us, but rather a duty, to propose
new ones.
** 6. Reeohed, That to discover a thing is not merely to know of its
existence, but to bring out its qualities for public use ; and hence if
by hard labor we make a mountain accessible which has been before
shut out and its prospects unknown, we feel that we have some claim
to the right of proposing for it such a name as is agreeable to good
taste, and will do honor to whom honor is due.
" 6. Resolved, That when it is proved by fair documents, not by
hearsay rumor, so as to become * a matter of history,' that Captain
Toby and his party » ascended this mountain ' — * the first white men '
who ever did it, we shall be ready to acknowledge the fact as of
interest. But it will still be true that Mettawompe gave a deed of this
mountain to the whites for eighty fathom of wampum, and therefore
as its rightful possessor, has the best claim to have his name attached
to it ; especially as one of the last of an abused race to whom such a
tribute is due.
«*7. Resolved, That when the claims to the name of Mount Toby
shall be made out as strong as those of Bull Hill, which the class con-
scientiously refrained from disturbing,* we will yield up those of
Mettawompe.
* Mount Toby, or Mettawompe, consists of qtiite a number of distinct emi-
nences, the highest of which only has usually gone by the name of Toby.
The conspicuous spur that extends southerly is called Ball Hill, from an
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240 REMINISCENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
" 8. R&aohsdf That the thanks of the class be presented as follows :
<* 1. To the young men of the town of Sunderland who a few years
since published a * Literary Journal,' entitled * The Mysterious Budget,'
(H. W. Taft, Jr., and M. II. Smith, Editors,) containing a story of
Mettawompe, (probably quite as authentic as that of Captain Toby,)
which greatly stimulated us to attach his name to the mountain, and
which we recommend for republication to the editor of the 'Amherst
Express' as very ingenious, and likely to interest his readers.
** 2. To the seventh part of the men of Sunderland who either did
not yote upon or TOted against the famous resolution restoring Toby
to his rights. We class them with the < immortal fourteen ' who yoted
against supplies for the Mexican War.
"3. To Moses Hubbard, Esq., the owner of Mettawompe, for allow-
ing the class to make a road up its side, and open a prospect from its
summit, without waiting for a town meeting.
«« 4. To Horace W. Taft, Esq., for his kindness in allowing the
town records in his possession to be freely examined.
<* 6. To the town of Sunderland, for bringing this subject before the
public again, and thus leading them — especially literary and scientific
men — ^to examine and decide the subject according to justice and good
taste, which is all the class desire ; and as to the implied rebuke that
&lls upon us, we trust that we are about as thankful for it as we
suppose the people of Sunderland will be for these Resolutions.
** 9. Resolved, That the success of members of Amherst College in
fixing names upon Turner's Falls, Norwottuck, and we trust also the
Ghor, should encourage our successors to proceed in this work until
the beautiful natural scenery of this region shall have such names
attached to it that we shall not be ashamed to inform literary and
scientific gentlemen from abroad what those names are. They will
doubtless meet with strong prejudice, misrepresentation and opposi-
tion. But if they did not, it would be about the first valuable enter-
prise that was not thus rewarded."
It is probable that the opposition to a change of name had
an earlier origin than the actual christening of the mountain.
Some of the newspapers manifested displeasure upon the
affecting incident A farmer having loaded a Bled at the top, to which two
bulls were attached, they ran down the hill, and Were driven furiously against
a tree, that broke the neck of one of the noble animals. Hence the name of
the hill. * It is a matter of histoxy ' that this was tlie first bull ever killed
upon this eminence.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
WHY NAME MOTOTAINS. 241
announcement that it would take place. Seeing one of these
articles in the " Springfield Republican," I drew up an expos^
of the reasons for our course, but for some reason I never
offered it to the paper* Yet as it maj still be of some use —
since a great deal of this work jet remains to be done-— I
insert it here ^—
"Messrs. Editous: — Having noticed that recently, and I believe
also some time ago, you have spoken with disapprobation of the
attempt of the Senior Class in Amherst College to affix the name of
Mettawompe upon a mountain in Sunderland, I have thought that
perhaps if all the facts in the case had been before you, you might
have been of a different opinion. At least, so high is my sense of
the liberality of your views, and of your desire to promote every
good object, that I venture to offer you a brief statement on the
subject.
« For more than twenty years the instructors in Geology, Mineral-
ogy, Botany and Zoology, in the College, have been in the habit of
spending at least one day with their classes abroad in the fields and
the mountains. And in such cases they have usually visited some
mountain, or gorge, or cataract, where the scenery was wild and
romantic, in order to inspire a taste for the beauties and sublimities
of nature. They soon found, however, that many of the interesting
spots with which the Connecticut Valley abounds were unvisited,
because no paths had been made to them, and that some had no
names, and others bad ones. Tlie thought occurred whether these
excursions could not be turned to a good account as to this matter.
The first effort, and it was a bold and an arduous one, was to make
a new road to the summit of Holyoke, which was so successful that
the old road was at once abandoned. The next class opened a
road with great labor to the top of HiUiard's Knob, the highest
point of the Holyoke range, and this name they proposed to change
to Norwottuck, the Indian name of Hadley. The next class directed
their attention to Mount Toby, which had no path to its summit,
and no clearing at the top to lay open the valley below. Not
liking the name of Toby, nor being able to ascertain by inquiries
in Sunderland who or what Toby was, whether a white man, a
negro, a horse or a dog, but ascertaining from the town records
that Mettawompe was the head Indian Chief who gave a deed of the
mountain, I think to John Pyncheon of Springfield, they felt as if it
would not be improper, nay, that a sense of justice to a persecuted
11
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
242 BEMINISGENCES OF AMHEBST COUJEGE.
and extinct race required them to propose to substitute his name
for that of Toby ; and it was done subsequently in the presence of
a large number of the citizens of Sunderland and Leverett. In like
manner, the present Senior Class more recently hare explored the
deep gorge made by Deerfleld River between Conway and Shel-
bume, which few if any white men have ever done in its whole
extent, and proposed for it the name of < Ohor/ an Arabic word sig-
nifying * a long valley between two mountains.' At an earlier date
other members of the College had succeeded, I believe, in giving
names to Turner's Falls, Holyoke's Falls, Titan's Piazza and Titan's
Pier ; and all this not only without opposition, (save perhaps here
and there an individual,) but with the concurrence of the citizens.
In substituting Norwottuck for Hilliard's Knob, especially, the people
of South Amherst turned out almost en matse and labored for several
days.
«(The following, it seems to us, have been among the prominent
good effects of such excursions : —
**They afford an occasional and desirable relaxation for those
engaged in study, and that without any loss of time, since the
increased vigor of body and mind produced enables them to make
more rapid advances afterwards.
**They enable students to look at rocks, minerals, plants and
animals in their natural condition, and give them an interest in the
works of nature.
** They cultivate a taste for natural scenery, and tend to divert the
attention from low and unworthy scenes and pleasures.
** They afford a good exercise in linguistics and elocution : 1st, in
looking out a good name for the mountain, &c. ; 2d, in preparing
addresses for the occasion ; 3d, in delivering them in the open air.
**They tend to attach a class to one another and to the scenery
which they explore, and form scenes of pleasant recollection in future
years.
*« They open to the public new and attractive places of resort for
relaxation, health and enjoyment, unattended with many of the dan-
gers to morals which flow from artificial sources of amusement, and
thus improve the taste and the character of the community.
•* Now what objections are there to such excursions that will over-
balance these advantages? Is it not desirable that the interesting
spots in our scenery should be searched out, m^de accessible, and
crowned with appropriate names ? And if literary men may not do
this work who will ? Nay, if the young do not take hold of it, will
those in middle life, full of cares and labors ? Wlien have they doii^
Digitized by VjOOQIC
THE GHOR. 248
it? I apprehend that there is a feeling as if young men yet in college
-were taking too much upon them to attempt to give and alter the
names of mountains, cataracts and gorges. But whose rights do they
invade ? and if they propose good names why not receive them } Be-
sides, let the blame not fSall upon the young men, but rather upon
those instructors who encourage them to this work. They are willing
to take the responsibility ; and they wish they had no more serious
&ults to answer for.
** But, Messrs. Editors, if the authors of these enterprises are to be
followed with formal town meeting votes of condemnation, as if they
had been guilty of some heinous crime, and if our literary men, and
especially the conductors of our public journals, join in the denuncia-
tion, the public may rest assured that they will not be troubled any
farther from this quarter. It is enough to endure the severe fatigues
and anxieties of body and mind which such enterprises demand, and
to overcome the obstacles which selfishness and vulgar prejudice throw
in the way. Future Senior Classes will not be advised, nor will they
consent, to meet in addition the frowns of those literary gentlemen
who conduct the public press. The scenery of Massachusetts, espe-
cially of Western Massachusetts, is yet only partially known and
made accessible. Many of its most interesting hUls and gorges are
yet unvisited and unnamed, and many more have names which make
us a laughing stock to travellers and literary men, and repel all men
of taste. If our public journals would favor the enterprise, easily
might we open many new sources of attraction to the admirers of
nature. But without such countenance, Horse Mountain, Bull Hill,
Beartown Mountain, Mount Tom, Tom Ball, Saddle Mountain, Rattle-
snake Hill, Rattlesnake Gutter, &c., &c., must be left alone in their
glory."
17. The Ghor.
I notice in this connection the excursion which' resulted in
trying to impose this Arabic name upon one of the wildest
and longest gorges of New England, because it happened in
the autumn of the same year in which Mettawompe was taken
in hand. A brief account of the trip from the ** Express**
will tell the whole story.
"The Ghor.— And what is a Ghor? It is an Arabic word that
means a long, deep valley between high liills. In Palestine, when
the Ghor is spoken of, that deep valley is usually meant which lies
between the Dead Sea and the Lake of Genessareth, and through
Digitized by VjOOQIC
244 BEMINISCENCES OP AMHERST COLLEGE.
-which the Jordan winds lilce a serpent, between high and rocky-
banks.
*' But, Mr. Editor, we have now a Ghor in this Ticinity, althongh
as yet you will not find it in books upon geography. Allow me to
mention a few facts, that will, I trust, conyince yoa of the correct-
ness of ray statement.
** On Monday, October 15, the Senior Class of Amherst College
went out upon a geological excursion, and we were among a few
learners on the subject who accompanied them. They directed
their course to the south part of Beerfleld Meadows, where the
Deerfield Riyer emerges from the mountains, between Conway and
Shelbume. Leading their carriages at this place they commenced
the exploration of that deep rarine, which extends from this place
to Shelbume Falls, a distance along the rirer not less than nine
miles. Through the whole of that distance has the Deerfield Rirer
cut its deep channel through the rocks, across their highly inclined
strata. Almost the whole distance they crowd to the rery water's
edge, and leave not room enough for a house or a road, and only
one road crosses the river. The whole region has all the wildness
of the wilderness, and the scenery is highly romantic. Occasionally
most beautiful cascades leap down from a great height, and some-
times it is necessary to fell a tree in order to get over a tributary
stream. In doing this, some individuals were subjected to a rather
more energetic and sudden hydropathic experiment than they desired.
But upon the whole, all felt amply repaid for a day of very severe
toil, by the fine geological sections exhibited, and by the wildness
and sublimity of the scenery. There is not, probably, another
place in Massachusetts where a river bank can be traced continu-
ously nine miles, without finding one road along cither bank, or a
single habitation. The banks do not, indeed, rise above to equal
height, but ^lope gradually back to an elevation of nearly a thou-
sand feet Yet this immense chasm has doubtless been worn down
in the hardest rock, (mica slate, hornblende slate and gneiss,) by
the river itself. The work, indeed, is far gpreater than the famous
deep cut between Niagara Falls and Lake Ontario. West of Shel-
bume Falls there are decisive marks of the former action of the
river on the rocks at the top of a mountain five hundred and forty-
five feet above its present bed.
"In the evening, the Class assembled at the hotel at Shelbume
Falls, and recounted the exciting events of the day. One of the
number at length proposed that the long and deep gorge through
which 'they had passed should receive the name of The Ohor. The
Digitized by VjOOQIC
BOOK UIMMON. 245
inotion parsed by acclamation, and after remarks hj sereral presenty
the transaction was confirmed musieaUy, by the Shelbnme Falls
band, who happened to be near, and who struck up a lively air, in
their best style.
*< It ought to be mentioned that the lower part of the Ghor in
Deerfield, furnishes quite an attractire place of Tesort for those who
seek in summer a few hours' relazatlfm and recreation. At the
entrance they will find two ot three small boats ready to convey
them half or three-quarters of a mile between precipitous, wooded,
and rocky hills, to the foot of the first rapids, beyond which, they
can creep along the shores as much farther up the wild ravine as
inclination and strength permit.
*<If any are disposed to demur to the name thus proposed for
this romantic gulf, we would suggest that before they urge their
objections, they follow the steps of the Senior Class on the 15th
October. After they have clambered over nine miles of slanting,
slippery rocks, and have taken two or three cold water baths, they
will have as good claims to be heard as the Class oan urge.-'
18. Rock Rimmon.
This spot in the south-west part of Belchertown, was named
in 1854. It is a large granite boss, not large enough to be
called a mountain, rising not more than fifty feet above the
adjoining road ivcsa Belchertown to Ludlow. A few extracts
from a report of the excursion in the ^ Express,'' will give an
idea of the rock and the occasion. The representative of the
class, who announced the name, with appropriate remarks,
was William W. Fowler. He concluded as follows : —
''An appellation derived from a locality and event in Scriptural
history has been kindly proposed by Dr. Hitchcock, in his generous
co-operation ; this appellation has been adopted by the Class of '54,
as euphonious in itself, and as peculiarly appropriate from the
similarity between this beautiful elevation and its namesake in
Palestine. In that sacred land, witliin sight of many hallowed
scenes, within sight of the Holy City, within sight of the Kiver
Jordan, the Dead Sea and Mount Carmel, in a barren waste, there
stands a lofty eminence, cultivated and inhabited by man. Ages
ago, in a civil war which broke out among the Israelites, the chil-
dren of Benjamin, sorely pressed in battle, fled for refUge to that
rock, where for four long months they kept their stand, until their
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
246 REMINISCENCES OF AMHEB8T COLLEGE.
brethren sent heralds of peace, and renewed the bonds which had
been roughly cut asunder by the sword of discord.
** So may we, when sorely pressed in the battle of life, retreat to
this mountain crag to eiyoy a brief truce, and on this altar sacri-
ficing every estrangement and every feeling of reserve, knit afresh
the ties of friendship and love.
** Therefore it is with confidence that, commissioned by the Class
of '54, 1 now proceed to announce the eegnomen which we trust
this summit will hereafter bear. Thus we dignify it with a scriptu-
ral name and scriptural associations. And when thus dignified
may the stored blessings of Heaven fkU upon it like the dew upon
Hermon. To quote the language of our Webster, < Let the light of
morning gild, and parting day linger and play around this summit,'
which I, in virtue of authority delegated to me, now denominate
Bock Rimxon."
At the dinner in the orchard at the foot of the rock, several
speeches were made, which were published in the " Express "
for June 9, 1854.
19. NONOTUCK.
This was not the next mountain named by the Senior
Class, but I introduce it here because I wish to describe first
all those places of scenographic interest that* are so near
Amherst that thej can be visited in a half day.
Nonotuck embraces the northern part of the trap range in
Northampton and Easthampton, which culminates at the
south end in Mount Tom. The north part shows from the
valley below three distinct peaks. The two most southerly
peaks and the highest^ are yet covered too much with trees
for good prospects, and are less favorably situated than the
most northerly peak, and it was on this that the ceremonies
took place. The day was one of the most delightful ever
experienced in our climate, when every breath inhaled seemed
to awaken the physical and intellectual powers to vigor.
Since this mountain was named, quite a comfortable house
of refreshment and even board has been built there, with
conveniences for horses a few rods below the summit, so that
a delightful place of rest for the invalid and the care-worn
Digitized by VjOOQIC
NONOTUCK. 247
may here be found. The following brief description of the
ceremonies of the occasion is taken from the " Springfield
Republican."
" The Christbkiko op Konotuck. — Thursday was a * great day'
for the students of Amherst College, Easthampton and Holyoke
seminaries. The naming of the three lesser peaks of the Mount
Tom range, on the hrow of the most easterly one, was the occasion
that brought them together. Fair women and brave men toiled
patiently up the steep ascent in a broiling sun, to enjoy the promised
intellectual treat, breathe the pure mountain air, and drink in
the extensive view. Upwards of five hundred persons were gath-
ered for this purpose. Among the notables were C. C. Chafiec,
M. C, Erastus Hopkins, Lieut. Gov. Trask, Presidents Stearns
and Hitchcock, of Amherst College, Bev. Drs. Allen and Eddy, of
Northampton, Professors Haven and Clark, of Amherst, and Rev.
Aaron M. Colton and Prof. Hubbard, of Easthampton.
« The excursion and the celebration were under the auspices of
the Senior Class of Amherst College, and at 8, P. M., the audience
was called to order, and J. E. Tower, of that class, introduced as
the christening orator. He commenced by congratulating his class-
mates that they had left the classic groves and cloistered halls of
study, and come thither to learn a purer lesson in the great book
of nature, and gather strength for other conflicts. He called that
mountain-top their altar, and the vaulted sky their sanctuary. He
said there were mountains in the intellectual world as well as in the
physical ; that great ideas and thoughts give to the mind its highest
elevation; that it was God-like to forget themselves in thought.
He said that the mountain we are to name to-day is the child of
nature, or rather God's nobleman furrowed with age. Mr. Tower
bore himself manfully, and spoke about fifteen minutes.
'' The name chosen for these three eastern peaks of the Mount
Tom range, and formally conferred in this opening speech of the
day, is Noxotuck. This supplants no other name, for the other and
highest peak is now and forever named Mount Tom. Other names
than the one announced were formerly discussed, and we under-
stand if Prof. Longfellow had accepted the committee's invitation,
Hiawatha would have been chosen. It is undoubtedly all for the
best that Nonotuck Was decided on, for this is a local Indian name
of Northampton, and signifies * mountain of the blest.' "
'*A song followed, in excellent style, and then Messrs. Tuck,
Ellsworth and Bishop, members of the Senior Class, each gave short
Digitized by VjOOQIC
248 REMINISCENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
oratloBS aboonding in local allasions, and C. J. Brewster, also of
the class, a poem, entitled * New England ; ' all appropriate to the
occasion and creditable to their authors. Repeated eulogies were
made of ex-president Hitchcock, and when at the close of another
stirring song the president of the daj called on him to respond, he
did it in such a modest, playful manner, that it brought down the
house, or rather mountain. He said, ' I neyer felt before the loss
of that little brief authority I used to exercise in college. You used
to obey me. I meant to have told you not to expose me thus,' &c
He then opened a paper that contained a dozen different stones, and
said that that morning be visited the mineralogical cabinet of the
College, and obtained permission of the specimens there collected,
to break off little pieces in order to bring them thither and introduce
them to the rocks of Nonotuck. He exhibited specimens of mountain
rock from the Arctic regions, the Rhine, China, the Jura Mountains,
the Alps, Mount Tom, the White Mountains, Egypt, Mount Holyoke,
Africa, the Green Mountains, Mounts Lebanon and Olympus. He
then tossed them up into the air, and said this mountain is now re-
ceived into fellowship with all the other mountains. Dr. Hitchcock
was very easy and familiar in his remarks, and the students all love
him like a fSei^ther. He never had a stronger hold on the affections
of his pupils than now. We could not but think, as we saw him
drink in the view, expand his lungs on that mountain height, and
tread those craggy rocks, of an old eagle, reconnoltering for his
northern flight. He declared that the northern view of that eminence
was the finest his eye ever rested on.
'< He introduced Dr. Allen to the audience, the oldest man present,
as a native of Northampton. Dr. Allen responded by saying that
Dr. Hitchcock had made a biographical mistake, though never a
geological one. Httsfield was his birthplace. Dr. Allen said hia
father was the first minister of Pittsfield, and that he fought as well
as he preached. He exhibited a large wallet, belonging to Ms
ancestors, and among other things read from the diaiy in it, a pas-
sage about the capture of Comwallis. He thanked the young men
for honoring Northampton in their mountain name, and said he
could sympathize with them for sixty years ago he was in Harvard
College.
''President Stearns was next called up, and said that he was
reposing as quietly as those rocks would admit when called on. He
said the mountain to-day has undergone a sort of baptism, a
sprinkling of stones ; that though not as old as Methusalah, or some
^t were there, he could not help looking backward to the time
Digitized by VjOOQIC
EYRIE HOUSE. 249
when their grandfathers named another mountaini Banker Hill, that
day eighty-three years ago. Your grandfathers, said he, welcomed
their brothers to a baptism of blood, and the psalm they sung was
Yankee Doodle. He said that thirty-three years ago when a Sopho-
more in Harvard College (God save the Sophomores) he stood near
Daniel Webster, when in his manhood's prime, lie laid the comer-
stone of that monument, whose top converses with the clouds, and
basks in the earliest and latest sunbeam. Still later he had heard
Kossuth from that same rostrum of liberty. Dr. Stearns otherwise
recognized the anniversary day which had been chosen for this Tural
celebration.
<< Erastus Hopkins next spoke, and in his usual effective manner.
During all this time the attention of the audience was fixed upon the
speakers, but the waning day reminded of adjournment, and after
the close of Mr. Hopkins' speech the party broke for the valleys."
In 1861, the proprietors of Nonotuck requested me to sug-
gest a name for their mountain house. Out of several which
I furnished they selected that of Effrie Howe, an Eyrie being
the place where the eagle and other birds of prey build their
nests, as Milton says —
*^ The eagle and the stork on cliffs and cedar tops their eyries build."
The house was dedicated with addresses on the fourth of
July, 1861.
The yiew from this summit towards Northampton, is per-
fectly unique and exceedingly fine. The old bed of Connecti-
cut River, still filled with water, here surrounds an elliptical
island two or three miles long, which lies directly beneath the
eye, and a little beyond rises the beautiful village of North-
ampton. This view far exceeds in interest any one in the
immediate vicinity from Mount Holyoke, although the view
down the river is better from that summit. Both should be
visited by the lover of natural scenery.
20. Mount Tom.
I have already spoken of this mountain as the culminating
point of the trap range on the west bank of Connecticut River.
II*
Digitized by VjOOQIC
250 BEMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
It is excelled in height only hy Norwottuck, in any part of the
Holyoke range, and the view from its summit is very com-
manding, though less attractive than that from Holyoke and
Nonotuck, because the objects seen from it are less so. Yet
he who would enjoy all the variety and beauty of this part of
the Connecticut Valley, must not fail of ascending Mount Tom.
On each prominent peak of the whole Holyoke range will be
found so much that is peculiar in the prospect as amply to
repay one for a visit. I once traversed the whole length of
the range from Belchertown Ponds to Mount Tom, and had
several days of rich enjoyment.
I quote the following paragraph from my Final Report on
the Geology of Massachusetts, describing a rich scene some-
times to be seen from the summit of Tom.
** I obtained from this mounUun one sammer morning a striking
view, while yet the whole Yalley of the Connecticut was enyeloped
in fog, and Tom and a few other peaks connected with the Greenstone
range, alone rose above the vapor. The sun shining brightly, and the
wind gently blowing, gave to this fog a strong resemblance to an
agitated ocean. To the north and south it seemed illimitable ; but
on the east and west the high mountain ranges that form the bounda-
ries of the Yalley of the Connecticut, constitated its shores. I could
not but feel transported back to that remote period, when this great
Valley was in like manner enveloped by water, and Holyoke and
Tom formed only low and picturesque islands upon its surface." —
p. 247.
Every principle of correct taste reluctates against the name
of this mountain. But the prejudices we encountered in respect
to Toby, have made us unwilling to disturb another nest.
21. Mikekva's Seat, (Lookout.)
I venture to propose this name for a fine elevation lying a few
rods east of Mount Holyoke Seminary, in South Hadley. It is one
of those dome-shaped hills of sand and gravel, such as Castor and
Pollux, in Amherst, already described. Though not very high, it
commands an extensive view, especially of the gorge between Hol-
yoke and Nonotuck, through which a fine view of Northampton is
obtained, with the range of the Hoosac Mountains in tho back-
Digitized by VjOOQIC
SUGTAR-LOAP AND TAURUB. 251
ground. I propose a name to this hill chiefly- in the hope of attract-
ing visitors to it. I ought to saj, however, that a view nearly as
good may be obtained from the fine Observatory on the top of the
Holyoke Seminary.
22. SUOAB-LOAF.
This remarkable outline of red sandstone rises up almost perpen-
dicularly five hundred feet above Connecticut River, in the south-
east part of Deerfield, and arrests the attention of all the Valley
north of Nonotuck. It is seen to the best advantage two or three
miles south, on the river road to Hatfield, or quite as strikingly
farther west, in Whately. From its top, of course, the view is very
rich and commanding. Upon the Connecticut and the pleasant
village of Sunderland, you look down as almost beneath your feet,
and it seems as if you might even leap into either of them. The
spot also overlooks the sites of two memorable battles with the
Indians, one to the south, where the Indians were defeated in 1675,
by Captains Lathrop and Beers, and the other to the north-west,
where the same year. Captain Lathrop, with a company of eighty
men, " the very flower of Essex County," was drawn into an ambus-
cade and nearly all destroyed.
If it were possible to get a more classic and poetical name upon
Sugar- Loaf, as well as Tom, it would be very desirable. But it
wants faith and courage to attempt it.
23. MouiTT Taubub.
In describing Mettawompe, I have mentioned that the southern
part of that pile of mountains was called Bull Hill. In the autumn
of 1861, the Senior Class that is to graduate in 1862, visited this
mountain, on the south side, and found there, at a moderate eleva-
tion, a delightful view of the Connecticut Valley, south and west of
the mountain. By going as far as Long Plain, in Leverett, they
found an unfrequented path leading up the hUl, through a valley,
which they could follow for nearly a mile, and then by climbing a
steep hill on the right, less than one hundred feet high, they reached
a terrace, which brought into view a good part of the Valley.
Ascending a second terrace, not more than fifty feet high, a still
better view was obtained, and best of all upon a third terrace, fifty
feet higher. Here the view is quite as good as that from the top
of Mettawompe, and probably it would be still better from the top
of Bull HUl, which is now covered with a forest. Amherst, in its
whole length, Hadley, Northampton, Easthampton, Hatfield and
Whately, are in full view, bounded on the south by the picturesque
Digitized by VjOOQIC
252 BEMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
Holyoke range, and 70a haye the Connecticat, with its meanderings
directly before you. It should be visited in the morning of a clear
day, and a better view of the extent, populousness and richness of
the Connecticut Valley will be obtained than from any other point
around it. The spot is only about six miles from the Colleges, and
if the Leverett people on Long Plain — such men, for instance, as
Moses Field, who first took me to the spot, and who has so accurate
a knowledge of the geology and topography of the mountain — ^will
only clear out the carriage path a little, and make a little better
foot-path up the terraces, I believe this will be one of the most
frequented look-outs around Amherst, especially as the drive to it is
very romantic.
In giving a name to this mountain the class acted on the principle
of Cowper in his well known lines : —
Leaconomos — ^beneath well soanding Greek
I hide a name I dare not speak.
Bull Hill is flat and vulgar ; but Mount Taurus is in good taste
and poetical.
24. Moum? BoKBAS.
No one in Amherst will recognize this name, and not one in a
thousand has ever heard of the fine prospect from its summit. I
meant that the Class of 1862 should have christened it ; but as they
did not find time, I propose the above name to a moderate elevation
in the south-west corner of Shutesbury, on the east side of Amherst,
rising from the level of what is called Flat Hill. A pleasant ride
brings you to a spot called Adam's Mill, where you leave the car-
riage. Directly north of the mill and less than half a mile distant,
rises a dome-shaped hill, perhaps three hundred feet high, entirely
cleared and easy of ascent. Here you seem wonderfully lifted up
above the world, and though the view is rather cramped on the east
and west, yet north and south it is peculiarly grand and extensive.
On the south the Holyoke range is just about distant enough to be
imposing, and through some of its notches, as for instance* towards
Belchertown, you catch glimpses of scenery beyond. On the north
Mettawompe occupies most of the opening, and is peculiarly impos-
ing, with the Leverett church spire at its base. More to the right a
valley opens, and discloses mountains far away, perhaps even as far
as the Green Mountains of Vermont. The truth is, this Valley,
which extends southerly through East Amherst, and so on to Belcher-
town, was one of the old beds of Connecticut River, when the coontiy
Digitized by VjOOQIC
MOUNT HYGEIA. 258
was undergoing gradual drainage, and the waters at different levels
sought different passes through the liiJls.
The name prefixed above has been suggested from the fine oppor-
tunity old Boreas has to sweep through this north and south valley,
when he would not fail to g^ve very rough kisses to this eminence, a
privilege of which he does not fail to avail himself very often. He
does not always exercise his rights there, as I can testify ; for a few
days ago (March 29th, 1862,) I ascended this hill in a clear, quiet
time, borne up by a strong crust on snow two feet deep, and all was
mild, and I may add all was magnificent ; for all the mountains and
valleys far and near were clothed in their winter dress, and I was
reminded of the glacial phenomena of the Alps.
A delightful ride in summer from Amherst is to visit Mount Boreas
and then to proceed northward through a romantic valley which
winds around to the City in Amherst. From thence proceed down
the stream described in another connection through a romantic gulf
till yon come to the Golden Gate and the Crescent already described,
whose beauties will fitly close the excursion.
25. MouKT Aquilo.
Aquilo means a north-east wind, and I propose to apply the name
to the highest point on the Pclham range, which is north-east from
Amherst and south-cast from Boreas. Of course a view from its
summit, which is mostly cleared of trees, is very fine.
26. Mount Hyoeia.
Following the same lofty Pelham range, from Mount Aquilo
southerly until nearly opposite the Colleges in Amherst, we find it
cut through by a small river, leaving a prominent peak, which is the
southern terminus of the range, and although not as high as Aquilo,
the prospect from it is finer. In the valley beneath some chalybeate
springs were discovered a few years ago, which became somewhat
celebrated, and as Hygcia was the goddess of health, I thought this
an appropriate name for the mountain that overlooked the fountains
of health, and so I placed that name upon that peak in a geological
map of the region published several years ago in my *' Illustrations
of Surface Geology." Last year a large hotel was erected on a com-
manding eminence a little south of the springs, for which I was
requested to propose a name at its dedication on the fourth of July.
I suggested that of Orient House, from its position in respect to
Amherst, and it was adopted. The springs also were christened the
Hygeian Springs, They are situated in one of the most romantic
valleys that I ever saw, and if the insane disposition that has been
Digitized by VjOOQIC
254 BEMINISGBKCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
manifested to cut down the dense groves along a most romantic
stream can be arrested, and foot*paths be made along its wild banks,
it seems as if the spot must present peculiar attractions to the invalid
and careworn in balmy summer.
Although the western prospect from Hygeia is magnificent,
embracing the country towards Amherst and Northampton, it is
unfortunate that the proprietor neglects to cut down the trees from
its summit, which so obstruct the view that it is not much visited.
27. Tbb Orient Crsbt.
In the address which I made at Rock Rimmon, already given, I
have incidentally described the Orient Crest. It forms the western
ridge of the Pelham range, to the south of the Orient House, and
especially that part of it when you first come in view of Belcher-
town, as you travel along the Crest in the road leading southerly
from the Methodist Church, in Pelham, to Belchertown. You get
a splendid view of the Holyoke range, of the valley, on its north
side, ¥rith Connecticut River, and of many objects on the south side,
and nearly south of the Chain Pond, in Belchertown, and the prin-
cipal village in that place. The views are quite peculiar, and well
worthy a trip over this road.
There are other places of some scenographic interest not Ikr from
Amherst, which will be described farther on. But the above twenty*
seven, all accessible by a half day's excursion, must be seen to give
one a full idea of the beauty and variety of our scenery. Probably
very few of those who have resided in Amherst have ever heard
of half these places, or visited more than a tithe of them. It has
taken me thirty-five years to find them all out, and I may not yet
have found them all. But when I think of their number and vari-
ety, I cannot but predict that this region will prove a place of great
resort for summer residents, on account of the great number of
interesting spots around, which they can visit for amusement, exhil-
aration, and instruction. Very few places in the land can show so
many.
I now proceed to notice some other mountains more remote,
which dhferent Classes have named, some of them even beyond the
limits of the State.
28. POCUMTUCK.
This mountain, lying in the east part of Heath, was named
bj the Class of 1856. It lies about midway between Amherst
I
Digitized by VjOOQIC
ANCIENT GLACIERS. 255
and Williams Colleges, and the Senior Class from the latter
were present, hy invitation, and it gave deep interest to the
occasion. I copy some part of the account of the excursion
from the "Amherst Express."
The name was given to the mountain by T. P. Herrick, who
closed as follows: ''In behalf of the Class of '56 in Amherst
College, I give a name to this summit, whose claim to rank and
title among the family of mountains, your presence here to-day has
sanctioned. And while returning seasons continue to adorn it with
nature's beauties, and passing years add honors to its hoary brow,
let this noble peak be called Pocumtuck."
Then followed a Geological Oration, by C. H. Hitchcock, from
which I present an extract.
" The traveller in Europe finds in its different countries much to
please the eye and astonish the mind. In England he becomes wea-
ried with beholding the numerous citstles of Saxon knights, and the
munilicent museums of modem science. In Paris, gaiety becomes
irksome ; and tiresome the miles of paintings through which he may
pass. Kenowned battle-fields are interesting — cathedrals magnificent.
But Switzerland is especially remembered. There are the mountains
and valleys, the snow-capped peaks and the glaciers — there the
needle-rocks, narrow passes, and the wildest scenery imaginable.
Mature has showered upon that country the truly grand and sub-
lime in profusion. The traveller must examine the European works
of art before visiting Switzerland if he would satisfactorily estimate
them, JBo puny and insignificant hre the works of man beside this
Alpine scenery. But the glaciers vrill be remembered when other
objects are forgotten, they are so singular, impressive and powerful
in their effects. Imagine^stant snow-capped peaks — before you a
valley, on either side of which are precipitous rocks. Imagine a^so a
mass of clear, blue, flexuous ice, gradually sliding down, turning
with and filling the valley, scratching, rounding, and tearing off
rocks, and pushing before it the moraines or hills of the dissevered
fragments — while a rushing torrent leaps from beneath the mass.
This might give a faint idea of a glacier, though all descriptions must
£ei11 far below the reality. At present these glaciers are not so
extensive as formerly.
" It would be natural to suppose that the rounding and scratching
of our New England rocks, like these under our feet, ought to be
attributed to this glacial agency ; especially as the marks of glaciers
Digitized by VjOOQIC
J
256 REMINISCENCES OP AMHERST COLLEGE.
have been called miniature drift. But our drift striae, unlike gla-
cier Hcratches, are found upon the summits of high ntuuntains, and
running north and south. Inasmuch as marks of ancient glaciers
have been found in Wales and other countries, geologists have searched
the valleys of this country for similar evidences. Quite recently they
have been discovered in Massachusetts, where the marks of their
passage over the rocks may be clearly seen. One of these glaciers
-was at the foot of this mountain, in the valley of the Deerfield River ;
another was upon the north side, in the valley of the North Branch.
At the junction of the two rivers the glaciers united and proceeded
down the Deerfield llivcr, through the Qhor. These glaciers have
no names. Those in Switzerland have separate appellations, and
why should not tlicse be similarly designated } Perhaps in this day
of naming, while infected with the * cacoethes appelandit* I should be
justified in bestowing names upon them. Accordingly I will denom-
inate the glacier coming down the Deerfield Valley the * Occidental
Glacier,* the one in the North Branch the 'Boreal Glacier,' and the
glacier formed by their union, the * Pocumtuck Glacier,*
<« We might easily imagine these ancient glaciers beneath us. The
Hoosac range and this mountain forming the snow-capped peaks — the
starting points — the two valleys partly filled with moving ice, which
is grinding and scouring the rocks, leaving at the turns of the valley
moraines of angular blocks, the two uniting and together pushing
on below the Falls.
•'These great changes are suggestive of important moral lessons.
I cannot refrain from mentioning the excellent illustration this
ancient glacier affords to us, my brother Seniors, of the proper .
motives we should cherish in seeking to exert influence in graduate
life.
•* The glacier at first is clean and pure — at length it becomes soiled
by contact with the rock, and when it has ascended up to the
heavens leaves all its impurities behind, besides giving to future
aged the indications of its existence.
"So we, like this glacier, at first unsullied, may become soiled by
contact with the world. Yet let the good influence we exert be
great, so that when we may have ascended up to heaven, though
our names be forgotten, our deeds shall be too deeply engraven
upon the institutions of society to be worn away by time or fate.*'
Other speeches were made. The dinner was eaten at Shelbume
Falls, and among other toasts responded to was the following :
** President Steams — His face more truthfully than his name, be-
speaks the kindness of his heart. During his short connection with
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
KILBUBN PEAK. 257
OUT College, he has made himself the object of our wannest loTe and
admiration.
*• Dr. Steams replied in a Tery happy manner. He said that he
&vored this excursion, because he thought it tended to benefit those
-who engaged in it, morally, intellectually and physically. He was
present for another reason in addition to the aboye — he was there
because his colleague. Dr. Hitchcock, had promised him if he would
come, that he would tell him some things which he never knew
before ; and so he had — he had told him more things than he ever
thought the learned professor knew himself. From what Dr. Hitch-
cock told him to-day, he had concluded that he (Dr. H.) must have
lived years and years ago, and he really imagined that he was con*
suited in die making of Connecticut River.
**In conclusion, he gave a sentiment which called out Professor
Hitchcock,, who after making some very interesting remarks, con-
cluded by informing the Williams' Seniors that there were several
mountain peaks in their region of the State which as yet bore no
name, and that if at any time they should invite him, he would be
most happy to come and assist them — at a christening."
This was one of the successful efforts to impose a name
upon a mountain, and that too one of the highest and grandest
in the State. It is still called Pocumtuok in the yidnitj.
29. KiLBUBN Peak.
This mountain, lying on the east bank of. Connecticut
Riyer, directly opposite Bellows Falls, was named bj the
Senior Class of 1857, on the 23d day of September, and
although the equinoctial storm somewhat marred the interest
of the occasion, it was, nevertheless, marked by the usual
good feeling and enthusiasm. I introduce an extract from
the speech of ]^£r. J. H. Boalt, the orator of the day : —
•• It seems appropriate, that a mountain like this should perpetuate
the name of one whose unblazoned deeds would put to shame the
easily acquired glory of many whose names stand first upon the scroll
of fame. Long time ago, not far from the base of this moimtain, the
first settler in thcBc parts, assisted by only three others, maintained an
obstinate and successful resistance against one hundred times their
number of Canadian Indians, thereby preventing, in all human proba-
bility, the massacre of hundreds of their fellow-countrymen, in a
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258 REMINISCENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
similar state of undefence. It is time that this valiant act, -whose
equal we make bold to say does not exist within the recollection of
man, not even excepting the case of Leonidns and the Persians, — it is
time that this noble deed of self-relying courage, which has too long
slept, unnoticed and unsung, should receive from us a fitting testimo-
nial. Let us, then, honor this neglected hero with a monimient which
the proudest might envy. Yes, the very trees bow their acquiescence
in this new title to their ancient home, which by the authority and in
the name of the Class of 1857» I do hereby denominate Mt. Kilbubn.
And although the torrents of rain which have recently fallen, are not
usually considered as of good omen, I can see in them but another
manifestation of the ever kind hand of nature, who is unwilling that
her mountain should receive its new name without a clean &ce."
Eilbum was aided in tiis extraordinary defence of his home
by a hired man whose name was Peak. It did not occur to
the Class till afler their return, that his name might be
united with that of Kilbum, as I have done at the head
of this article. Peak was wounded in the contest and having
no surgical aid he died in a few days, — ^an additional reason
for associating his name with that of Eilbum in the desig-
nation of the mountain.
30. NuTONK, OR Hiawatha.
The Class of 1860 took this rocky ridge in hand and
named it in October, 1859, when the forests -were glowing
with autumnal hues.
The usual variety of dramatis personas was introduced,
with songs and a poem. The clown was there, also a Pro-
fessor from the University of Oxford, who talked in Cockney
style ; also an able geological address by 3ir, C. E. Dickinson,
an eloquent oration by N. Mighill, who made good use of the
historical reminiscences awakened on a spot overlooking Deer-
field and Turner's Falls. The poem of the occasion was
delivered by G. L. Goodale, and was entitled " The Legend
of St. Regis' Bell," said bell having been carried by the
Indians who destroyed Deerfield, to St. Regis, in Canada.
There was also a ^ Scientific Report" of a Special Committee
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
GEOLOGY. 259
on the Geological formation of Nutonk. In short, the literary
exercises of the occasion were unusually full and interesting.
I have room to make but a few extracts : —
SCIENTIFIC REPORT ON THE GEOLOGICAL FORMATION OF
MOUNT NUTONK.
Pre$etUed to the Close of ISSO, by the '* Special Committee."
OUB OWN RBPORTKR.
AiK—*' A little more Cider too."
The Geologists among us,
Having made a full sorvej,
With dne consideration,
Offer this report to-day;
^ This formation's rather ancient,
Bat how ancient we can't tell,
Since, alas, we have forgotten,
' The calculus of Snell.*
^But jndi^ng fVom the looks.
And what we have been told,
We have come to the conclusion
Mount Nutonk is pretty old.
And as to its formation.
It is made of soil and stone,
But what that rock and soil may bo^
Your Committee haven*t known.
''We think Oolitic poultiy,
And sand-stone barnyard fowl
Once roosted in that old tree.
Where mountain whirlwinds howl.
We also think that tlie mountain top,
Which they call the poet's seat,
Was the place where Ichthiosauiians
In council used to meet
^ And here upon their hand-sleds
These ancient creatures sat,
And coasted down the hill-side,
And many a bnmp they * gat'
On the river's side below us.
These ancient creatures landed.
And there their foot-steps now are seen
In the metamorphic sand-bed.
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260 BEMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
** Asd the striae that folks talk aboat,
Were made by their old sleds.
Bat other notions than the true,
Fill Geologic heada.
We give these fkcts advisedly,
Althoagh our chairman states,
These lines were probably the marks
Of BroBtozoic skates I
'* You'll notice that the rock up here,
Is as hard as the Koh-i-nohr;
We account for this phenomenon,
All unexplained before.
Onoe on a New Year's evening,
(It may seem somewhat queer,)
The Oraothichnitee had a ball
And danced till daylight here.
"When morning came, the ground WW hard
As a marble dancing floor,
And the bowlders, metamorphoead bow,
Were the jewels that they wore!
These &ct8 can be relied upon,
For iT%tl£k ccoK nwer fail.
And if you doubt it, we would point
To the ' Mtga&tnim'$ iafe.*
"This tale was printed long ago,
By Mastodon & Son,
'Twas read in Pre-Adamic Schools,
And had an awfiil run.
Should you ask us how we know of thlnga
From others so aloof—
*By the kindness of the publishen,'
We examined all the proof.
" Submit we now this fhll Report,
Of your profound Committee,
If we've developed no new facts,
We think it is a pity.
Let no one doubt these honest truths
We fiiithftilly have given.
Of the days when mammoth pachyderms
Breathed here the air of Heaven."
For some veason, I never knew what, the name of Nutonk
^d not strike the people of Greenfield favorably, and it is not
Digitized by VjOOQIC
EOLUS. 261
probable that it will ever be extensively adopted, although I
cannot see whj it has not all the characteristics of a good
name — short, euphonical, Indian, poetical. But it is useless
to reason against sentiment. Had I known that << Poet's
Seat " had been used sometimes as the name of this rocky
ridge, I should have advised the Class to christen it Hiawatkay
which I think would have been more acceptable, and which I
therefore prefix to this account, as a synonym to Nutonk.
31. E01.US.
This lofty mountain, 2,468 feet above the village of East
Dorset, in Vermont, and 3,148 above the ocean, was named
in the autumn of 1860, by the Class of 1861. Most of its
lower part, to the height of 1,970 feet^ is composed of nearly
horizontal layers of white and gray limestone, capped by
about 500 feet of talcoid schist. At the height of 1,750 feet
is an extensive cavern in the limestone, probably once the bed
of a stream. It was not the main object of an excursion
so far from Amherst to name this mountain, but rather to
aid me in measuring a section across the Green Mountains
and to visit the gold region of Plymouth. But the tempta-
tions to christen such a magnificent mountain was too strong
to be resisted, although it involved a night-ride in the cars.
It proved to be perhaps the most successful effort of this kind
ever attempted by the Classes at Amherst. A description of
the trip, by one of the party, follows : —
•< Leaving Kutland about one o'clock, Saturday morning, we made our
way as speedily as possible, on the Western Vermont Railroad, towards
the little village of East Dorset. Time and language would foil to de-
scribe the feelings and postures of our company as we proceeded. Some,
desirous to sleep, were coiled up like a chicken in an eg% shell;
others, fearful of being carried too far, were using the few energies
of life remaining to keep themselves and others awake. Turkeys
never went to roost more gladly than the Seniors sought their beds
in the hotel. Some, however, had to abide in the manger, for there
was no room for them in the inn. Morning came very early in East
Dorset ; and after a short but wholesome breakfast, we screwed up
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262 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
our courage for the ascent of the mountain, which rose nearly three
thousand feet above us. This mountain has hitherto gone by the name
of Dorset Mountain, which is no name at all, as there are more moun-
tains than one in Dorset ; and it seemed good to us to append a name
which might be called its own. And for that reason we ascended its
steep marble sides. After climbing nearly half its height, we came
to the marble quarries of Messrs. Holley, Field & Kent, where is
obtained stone which rivals the Carrara, and goes by the name of
the * Vermont Italian/ It has, more clearly than any other Ameri-
• can marble, the metallic ring so peculiar to the best Italian marbles.
It is yery hard, contaming a large per cent, of silica, and is conse-
quently very durable. The strata lie in a horizontal position, which
is different from that of the strata in the neighboring mountains, and
implies a different formation. It is quite evident that the mountain
was forced up into its present position by lateral pressure. Leaving
the quarries, we ascended to within about seven or eight hundred feet
of the summit, where we found a sort of table ground and an enor-
mous cave in the solid marble. It was here proposed to take a stand
and shoulder the responsibility of godfather to this mountain. When
all had arrived, and order was restored, Mr. C. H. Hitchcock com-
menced the services of christening, with a few brief remarks relative
to the birth, growth and maturity of the mountain, mentioning also
the brotherhood of mountains for which Amherst boys had become
the sponsors. Then with his geological hammer, he broke the bottle
he held in his hand, (thereby reminding us of Gideon and his troop,)
and the mountain was christened with the sprinkling of water, which
flowed from its own marble heart. Mount Eolus.
** After this ceremony, Mr. Field, who accompanied the Class up
the mountain, made a brief address, stating his pleasure in the occa-
sion, and his conviction that the name would be a permanent one.
** A striking little episode next followed, in which four personifica-
tions of the winds came blowing and whirling among the crowd,
enough to make us all shiver. It is needless to state that the most
gaseous personages in the Class were selected for this purpose.
•* A poem was then read by one of the number, giving some sketch
of the life of the winds, and their keeper, Eolus. We have not been
able to obtain a line of this for publication.
♦'After the poem, an ode written by W. M. Pomeroy was sung, to
the good old air of * Mt. Pisgah.' The cold mountain air rung well
as the song came out.
«The ceremonies of christening over, we proceeded to enter the
cave, with candles in hand, and cautious feet beneath. Down, down
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EOLus. 268
ve went into the marble bowels of the mountain, and nobody knows
how far we might have gone, had time or courage permitted. We
made the cayern ring with our songs, and sundry jokes made our
voices ring with laughter, till we were obliged to make our way out
and down the mountain.
** Perhaps it would be well to state our reasons for giving the name
of Eolus to the mountain. It is a &ct that in some kinds of weather
air is perceived to blow from the cave, and it is very easy to under-
stand how we found here a resemblance to the cave in which the
ancient Eolus kept the winds restrained, or sent them out at his
pleasure. Homer makes the winds to have had their residence in
Thrace, if we havn't forgotten our Greek, and Prof. Tyler says
Thrace is any rough, hilly country ; hence it is easy for us to establish
our theory, for no certain knowledge ever prevailed but that this was
the mountain, and this the cave, in our New England Thrace, where
Eolus kept the winds, or sent them out by the stroke of his inverted
spear.
« Equinox is a mountain in full view from Eolus, and is said to
have been so named from its being covered with clouds at the time
of the Equinoxes. In order that Eolus might receive a recognition
from its nearest neighbor, it was voted to give him a letter of introduc-
tion to Equinox.
<* Nearly east of Eolus is Mt Stratton, one of the Green Mountain
range, on which, in 1840, was held the greatest political gathering
ever held in Vermont ; "Webster was present, and so great was the
enthusiasm that the i>eople camped out over night.
<* On arriving at the foot of the mountain, we learned that our
expenses in East Dorset were nothing to us, for which we heartily
thanked the people, and cheered them, though not half so well as
their kindness cheered us. By the kindness of Mr. Field, we were
allowed to bring away fine specimens of the Eolian marble.
••Through the same gentleman, we received a very kind invitation
from Mr. Orvis, of the Equinox House, in Manchester, to spend the
Sabbath with him as his guests. We returned sincere thanks for his
kindness, and regretted that duty should call us another way. The
temptation to stay away another day from our Alma Mater was great,
but we resbted. Mr. Field kindly offered to have the following
engraved in the marble over the mouth of the cave :
Mount Eolus.
Class of 1861, Amherst College.
October 13th, 1860, A. D.
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264 BEMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
« At length, after a farewell shout for £o]us and Dorset, we entered
the cars and started for home. We returned to Amherst very weary,
but satisfied that we never had a more glorious time."
Large Bowlders near Amherst.
These are not as large as in some parts of the country, but
ihej afford interesting examples of drid agency, and are quite
large enough to be admitted into the Bowlder Family, which
of late years is attracting the attention not only of scientific
men, but of all persons of taste* Every one of them of much
size should receive a good name, as a means of drawing the
attention of tourists and others to them. The three first of
the following were named bj the Glass of 1862, in the autamn
of 1861 ; to the three others I venture to propose names,
without consulting others : —
82. The Kobthehneb.
This is an irregular mass of the coarse conglomerate of Metta-
wompe, weighing nearly one hundred tons, torn off by the drift
agency and carried over Mount Aquilo and lodged on the gneiss
rock of Felham Hill in the bed of a large brook close by a small
cascade, where it was pointed out to me by Mr. Newall, in a very
retired and romantic spot, but which few men would have found.
The great difTerence between the bowlder and subjacent rock marks
it distinctly as a foreigner, and one is sure who knows any thing
of the geology of the surrounding region from whence it came. It
is a fine place for picnics and other gatherings, situated as it is in a
dense pine grove.
83. Rock Obbb.
Near the top of Mount Warner, a little east of the summit, and in
the cleared pasture, lies a large bowlder of imperfectly piismadc
trap or greenstone. Its weight we estimated at seventy-eight tons.
The rock of the mountain is granite and mica schist, and no trap in
place is found to the north till we reach the north part of Sunderland
and the south part of Deerfield, say some ten miles distant. From
that range this bowlder undoubtedly came, though we cannot say
how far southerly the sheet of trap once extended, since the amount
of erosion in this Valley must have been very great The Class,
with a few ceremonies, imposed on it the scriptural name of Obeb.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
BOWLDEBS. 265
84. Rock Etax.
Korth-west of Bock Orob, say a quarter of a mile in the woods,
and far down the north-west slope of the mountain, is another and
larger bowlder of the same variety of trap, which on the same day
the Class found and called it Rock Etam, which in Palestine was once
the resort of Samson. We estimated the weight of the Hadley
Etam to be three hundred and eighty-five tons. Its origin is doubt-
less the same as that of Oreb.
85. Thb Magnet.
At the western foot of the steep part of Holyoke, and a little north
of the place where the railroad goes up the hill, lies a large bowlder
of trap precisely like those just described on Mount Warner. It is
fifteen feet high, and by a loose estimate I think it must weigh
three hundred tons. It is remarkable for exhibiting on its north face
a vast number of magnetic poles sufficiently strong completely to
invert a common magnetic needle — ^forming in fSact several continuous
lines of poles. I spent some days, several years ago, in tracing them
out. These fkcts fUrnish a reason for the name which I venture to
propose for this bowlder, viz. : the Maonbt. I formerly supposed
that it had been broken off from the trap ledges immediately above
it. But its exact correspondence with Oreb and Etam in characters,
and want of resemblance to the trap of Holyoke, make it more prob-
able that it was brought into its present position by drift agency, and
originated in the same region as those on Warner.
86. Thb Sbbtinbl.
As we ascend Mount Boreas looking northerly up the Valley on
its east side, once the bed of Connecticut River, we see a prominent
bowlder lying near the base. We find it to be composed of gneiss,
and lying upon gneiss, although the stratification in both is very
indistinct. It weighs something less, perhaps, than two hundred
ton^ although not accurately measured. As it seems to stand as a
sentinel to guard tlie narrow pass east of Boreas, I have ventured to
designate it by that name.
87. The Rockinq Stone.
Some years ago a bowlder of several tons weight, capable of being
rocked a little by one man, lay on a farm then owned by Mr. Grout,
about a mile north of Pelham Centre, on the road to Shutesbury. I
presume it is still there, and though not a remarkable example of
this phenomenon, it may be worth visiting.
12
Digitized by VjOOQIC
266 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
Water Scenert in the Vicinity op Amherst.
The greatest defect in the sceneiy immediately around
Amherst is the want of any large bodies of water. Connect-
icut Kiver is indeed visible in some places, but it is rather
too far from the Colleges to be a striking feature in the
landscape. There are, indeed, some fine cataracts on Con-
necticut and Deerfield Rivers, though at such a distance
that to visit them will occupy nearly a day. But I will
first describe a few water scenes nearer to the College.
38. The Io.
I have already alluded to a small stream that comes down
from Pelham, past the Hygeian Springs and Mount Hygeia,
and along which are some beautiful cascades and gorges.
Another branch, coming from Mount Boreas, unites with
that from Pelham and the stream passes obliquely across
Amherst and Hadley and empties into the Connecticut at
the foot o£ Mount Holyoke. In Hadley it has been called
Fort River. But as it passes along the southern base of
College Hill for two miles, and is not more than half a
mile distant fh>m the buildings, and is moreover quite a
place of resort in summer for bathing, it has seemed to me
that a classical name should be attached to it It is nearly
as large as the Isis and the Cam, so intimately associated
with the English Universities at Oxford and Cambridge,
and I presume to propose for our river the name of lo. This,
according to heathen mythology, was the name of a daughter
of the king of Argos, who was transformed into a cow,»and
Tfandering over the e^tb came to Egypt and was changed
back again into a woman, and became the wife of Osiris, and
afterwards the Egyptian goddess Isis, The Oxford Univer-
sity has chosen the latter name for thpir classic stream. For
one, I prefer the name which the virgin daiighter bore before
she was transformed into a cow or a goddess.
I propose to designate that branch of the Io which comes
down from Mount Boreas, the Boreal Branch, and that which
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
AMETHTST BROOK. 267
comes in from Pelham, past the Hygeian Springs, Amethyst
Brook : for along its rocky bed Mr. Newall has found hundreds
of beautiful amethysts, some of them more than an inch in
diameter and of delicate color. It is the finest locality that
I know of in New England. And besides, should a path be
made along its banks before the forest is cut down by vandal
hands, it would open very romantic scenery, deserving a name
as rich as that of Amethyst Brook.
39. The Chain Ponds.
Between the east end of the Holyoke range and the gneiss
hills of Belchertown is a narrow valley, in which is situated
three ponds connected by a brook and thus forming a chain
of ponds. Hence the name which I propose for them. They
are not large, yet a sail upon them is pleasant, especially to
the botanist in summer, who will find here many rare plants^
In the most southerly pond a boat is usually kept.
There are two outlets to these ponds : the most southerly
empties into the small stream that runs along the south bordep
of the Holyoke range and flows into the Connecticut in
South Hadley ; the most northerly was connected a few years
since, by an outlet, with the lo in Amherst Hence the
entire Holyoke range is an island, although few probably are
aware of it.
These ponds show very well from the Orient Crest, as I
have already mentioned.
40. The Terrace Lake.
This body of water lies in the north-east part of Leverett
and the north-west part of Shutesbury, extending also into
Wendell, and goes by the name of Lock's Pond, and being
the largest sheet of water in the region, and having around
it some terraces, I propose for it the name of Terrace Lake.
The western shore is very pleasant, and I believe there is a
hotel on that side. It may be half a mile across, and a boat
excursion over^it is very attractive. Quite a stream issues
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268 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
from its west side, whicli passes through the centre of Mon-
tague and thence into the Connecticut, where it is called Saw
Mill River.
41. Tubnbr's Falls.
These are on Connecticnt River, near the point where the
towns of Montague, Gill and Greenfield meet They are
the most interesting water fall in the State, and as &r as
mj knowledge extends, in New England. The river here
is over 1,000 feet hroad, and an artificial dam is erected at
the Falls more than thirty feet high, resting near the centre
npon two small, picturesque islands, so that the whole fiadl, seen
from the north shore, towards Greenfield, where is the best
view, presents us with a Niagara in miniature; nor is it a
small miniature. The surrounding country, too, is more
romantic than round Niagara, and the stream, for a mile
or two, goes tumbling down rapids too steep for a canoe,
bounded on the west by the almost perpendicular wall of
Hiawatha (Nutonk.) Above the Falls, the water for nearly
^hree miles is as quiet as a lake, and admirable for a boat
excursion through an almost unsettled region. A magnifi-
cent geological section also is opened all along the river,
especially near the Fails.
But I cannot ^ve the details of this spot I will only add that
on the north-east bank, just above the cataract, rises a small
sandy hill, which was the seat of a terrible defeat of a party of
King Philip's Indians, as much as one hundred and ninety years
ago, by Captain Turner, from Boston. But subsequently, the
same Indians drew him into an ambush and killed him and thirty-
seven of his party. On this account, nearly forty years ago, in
an account of the geology of the Connecticut, I proposed to
attach Captain Turner's name to this cataract This was my
first attempt to attach a name to the scenery of this Valley, and
it was successful ; for the name of Turner is now attached to
these Falls without any exceptions. In my Reports on tlie
Geology of Massachusetts, in 1830, 1835, and 1840, 1 gave a
sketch of these Falls, made by Mrs. Hitchcock. As early as
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VIBRATING PALLS. 269
1818, also, she sketched the spot, which was published in Phi-
ladelphia, with a description in a periodical called the *' Port
Folio." This was before any name was attached to the Falls.
This spot is less than twenty miles from Amherst, over a
romantic road, and the trip can be taken in a day. The rail-
road through Greenfield, however, has rendered the canal for
which this dam was built nearly useless ; and when the dam
shall decay, there is no prospect that it will ever be rebuilt
until a real city shall be built to the south of it where now are
a few houses called a city, as I doubt not will be done hereafter.
If not) this spot will lose most of its scenographic interest.
42. Shelburne Falls.
These are within a day's ride of Amherst, through Conway,
and therefore I name them. They are in the south-west part
of Shelburne, at the head of what has been called the Ghor.
A large and flourishing town has risen aromid them, for the
water-power is prodigious. But they can never cease to be an
object of deep scenographic interest, as indeed is the whole
country aroimd. When the railroad is completed through the
Ghor, it will Aimish a romantic ride.
43. The Vibrating Falls at South Habley.
A few years since the falls in Connecticut River, between
South Hadley Canal and Holyoke, were little more than rapids.
But in order to build up Holyoke, it was necessary to erect a
strong and elevated dam, and now the cataract is grand. But
it has one peculiar feature that gives it special interest It
has long been known that some dams show a decided vibration
in the descending sheet of water. Here it is on a broader
scale, and more striking than I have ever seen. Standing at
the end and partly behind the sheet, and a strong unsteady
current of air rushes out, and you see the movement of the
water outward and inward in pulsations. But I once looked
at this fall about ten o'clock in the morning of a clear day, from
the road to Williamanset on the bank, nearly a* mile east of
the &I1, and at a time when the vibrations were in foil play.
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
270 BEMHaSCENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
for thej are bo only at certain stages of the water. The view
was intensely interesting ; for as the successive waves of vibrar
tion rushed across the river, the flashes of reflected light seemed
like the sudden lighting up and extinguishing of hundreds of
gas-lights along a street in the city. It was one of those
unique and brilliant spectades which I never expect to meet
more than once or twice in a long life, and I have not met
with any one else i?^o ever saw it. Prof. Snell, however, has
studied the phenomena of the vibration very attentively, and,
as I think, has hit upon their true explication. But ih^re is
not time to explain his views, which, however, may be found
in the ^' American Journal of Science."
44. AdULLAM — ^THE SUNDEBLAXD CaTE.
Three miles north of Sunderland Village, on the west side
of Mettawompe, is a cavern produced by erosion and fracture.
It is fifty-six feet deep and one hundred and forty-eight feet
long, and well worth visiting, and not unworthy, perhaps, the
name of Adullam.
II. GEOLOGY.
G)nnected as I have been for nearly forty years with the
geolo^cal department of the College, it would be strange if the
geology of the surrounding region should not be among my
most vivid reminiscences. Yet as a matter of &ct, I never till
two years since undertook so to study the rocks in our imme-
diate vicinity as to be able to map them accurately. And I
found it a more difficult matter than I had supposed, and more
interesting. The difficulty is, that most of the sur&oe in
Amherst ib overlaid by loose materials, worn off from the solid
ledges, and such as are generally regarded as no rocks at all
but only soils. The underlying ledges exhibit only the rem-
nants of formations once quite extensive. Geologists have
been in the habit of extending these underlying patches which
only occasionally protrude through the sand and gravel till they
meet upon their maps, and leaving off the unconsolidated
Digitized by VjOOQIC
BOCKS. 271
strata. The consequence is, that their maps have only a slight
resemblance to the actual state of things on the surface. Last
year I tried to remedy this defect by making a map of the
geology just as it is. And this makes the largest part to
belong to what I call Surface Geology — that is, the geology of
the unconsolidated strata, embracing many distmct varieties of
formation. This map I have reduced, and annex hereto. Its
chief object is to show what facilities there are in the vicinity
of the College for the study of geology, and thus furnish those
who wander over the surface with an additional reason for
their perambulations in the knowledge they will acquire of this
science. My description of the different formations will be
brief. I follow the order designated by the tablets on the map.
1. Gneiss.
This well known rock occupies the range of hills on the east
of Amherst, known as the Felham and Belchertown and
Shutesbury Hills. Indeed, the same range can be traced from
Long Island Sound to Canada with essentially the same rock.
Against Amherst its dip is generally to the west, though as we
go east we cross anticlinals and synclinals; for this rock
extends east as far as Worcester, and recurs again beyond,
occupying in fact a large part of New England. It furnishes
£ne building materials, the quarries of Felham yielding the
best in the county.
2. Hornblende Schist.
This is a modification of gneiss by taking hornblende into
the composition. Only a narrow strip of it occurs in the west
part of Belchertown, and is not well characterized.
3. Limestone.
A bed of impure white limestone just shows itself a little
south-east of the middle of Belchertown, in the gneiss. It is
so limited as hardly to be deserving of notice.
4. Serpentine.
A small bed of imperfect serpentine, apparently intermediate
between steatite and serpentine, or rather perhaps a mixture
Digitized by VjOOQIC
272 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
of the two, occurs in the south-west part of Pelham, along the
Orient Crest. It is a bed in gneiss, and seems to be in a
curious stage of metamorphism. Some might call it soapstone.
5. Mica Schist, and Granite.
I unite these distinct rocks on the map because they are
blended so intricately in nature that they cannot be separately
represented with any approach to the truth. In some spots
the one will prevail over a considerable space, and then the
other ; again, the two will be so mixed together, that long labor
alone could delineate them over only a few square rods. The
granite is coarse and well characterized, but almost useless for
architectural purposes. The schist is imperfectly foliated and
stratified, and abounds in quartz. The dip and strikes are not
very distinct ; but predominantly I think the former rather
large towards the east, and the latter northerly and southerly.
In some places the granite seems to have been thrust into the
slate as enormous veins, and I can hardly doubt that it is an
intrusive granite, though it seems in some places to have been
metamorphosed from the schist
These rocks are well exhibited on Mount Warner, where
the granite predominates. The ridge running through nearly^
the whole of Amherst I think is underlaid by them, though
they appear through the gravel only occasionally near the
middle of the' town, but at the extremities very abundantly.
They occupy also a considerable part of Leverett
I used to suppose that these rocks constituted the metamor-
phic border of the Pelham gneiss. But I think them, after
examination, entirely distinct, and I suspect the granite and
schist to be the oldest and to underlie the gneiss. But I have
as yet found only a few places of junction. At Adam's Saw
Mill, in Shutesbury, is, I think, the best place of this kind
which I have found, and here the rocks at the place of con-
tact seem to be so metamorphosed, and to have so lost their
stratification, that it is difficult to settle their relative position ;
and BO all along through the valley of East Street, where.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
TRAP AND STENITB. 278
according to the dip of the gneiss and schist, the two rocks
ought to come U^ther, the junction is hidden hj modified
drift. It maj be looked for, perhaps successfully, south of the
Holjoke range, in Ludlow, &c, or north in Leverett These
researches may, I think, bring out interesting results concern-
ing the rocks of New England. I think this peculiar forma-
tion extends south-westerly across the Connecticut Valley, and
shows itself in the similar granite and schist that embrace the
lead and copper veins of North, East, and Southampton, also
on the north the lead and copper of Leverett. It may turn
out to be a highly metalliferous formation.
6. Syenite.
This is only a variety of granite that takes hornblende into
its composition. I think, however, that it differs &om many
granites in being never intrusive, like them, but metamorphic,
and therefore never has been melted, properly speaking, but
softened by hot water. It occurs in the south part of Belcher-
town and extends southerly into Ludlow, beyond the mapu
It occurs also in the north-west part of Northampton exten-
sively developed.
7. Greenstone.
Two distinct varieties of trap rock around Amherst have
received the name, and, until &rther investigations, must be
called Greenstone. One variety forms dikes of all sizes in
gneiss in the west part of Pelham. Some of these dikes are
as thin as paper, as may be seen in specimens in front of the
Woods Cabinet ; others in Pelham are some rods in thickness.
The thicker ones lead to the conclusion that they were filled
by matter in a melted state, but the thin ones could not surely
have been injected into crevices so thin, and therefore probably
hot water was the medium of their introduction, and if of
these, probably also, to some extent, of the wide ones. This
variety of trap is usually crystalline, or at least compact, but
never vesicular. I have marked on the map only two strips.
12*
Digitized by VjOOQIC
274 BEMINISCENCES OF AMHGBST COLLEGE.
Along the west part of Pelhaniy though, I suspect other dkrtanct
deposits.
The other varietj of Greenstone is that associated with the
red and gray sandstone of the valley. Holjoke and Tom
constitute its lai^est masses, and these show sandstone dipping
south-easterly under them, at a consideiahle angle, and similar
rock lying ahove them on the south-east side. In some places,
also, the sandstone passes across the trap, but its mode of
interstratification has never been satisfactorily ascertained.
Another belt of similar trap commences a little west of
Long Plain, in Leverett^ and passing over the south part of
Mount Taurus, apparently lying conformably between the
strata of sandstone, extends into the north part of Sunder-
land, where, about a mile north oi the village, it crosses
Connecticut River and extends on its west side throogh
Greenfield, constituting Mount Hiawatha, to Turner's Falls,
and so on into GilL This bed increases in width, appar
rently, as we go north. Like Holyoke and Tom, this trap
is sometimes a little crystalline, often compact, in several
places columnar, often vesicular, so as greatly to resemble
modem lava, disintegrated often, so as to form a kind of
trass or puzzolana. From its southern part, at least, this
Sunderland range of trap has suffered great erosions, and
the trap bowlders on Mount Warner, already described, are,
doubtless, fragments of it
8. Trap Tuff, or Volcanic Grit.
This rock is made up of rounded fragments of trap, sand-
stone, &c, with a cement of the same comminuted. It seems
to have been formed by the overflow of lava upon the sandy
and gravelly bottom of the ocean. Occasionally we meet with
masses of vesicular, or even compact trap, probably where
the overflow was the thickest This deposit occurs along the
southern foot of Holyoke, and extends southerly along the
east flank of Tom, at least as far as West Springfield.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
SANDSTONE. 276
9 AND 10. Sandstone.*
This rock occupies the floor of the Connecticut Vallej, and
rises into mountains in Sugar-Loaf and Mettawampe. It varies
exceedingly in color and the size of its constituents. Much of
it is red, some gray, and some white. It passes from the finest
shale to conglomerates so coarse, that I have seen fragments
in it seven feet in diameter, as in a ledge at the south end of
the village in Montague. This coarse conglomerate, or rather
breccia, forms most of the upper part of Mettawompe. Inter-
stratified with it, however, we find sometimes quite fine shale,,
showing a strange alternation of quiet and turbulent waters.
I separate the sandstones that dip under the trap ranges
from those that lie above them. Probablj thej are different
formations. Their differences I have pointed out in my Ich-
nology. The famous fossil footmaj^ are confined almost
exclusively to the overlaying sandstones. Excepting on the
south side of Holyoke in South Hadley, and beneath Mount
Holyoke, these fossils have not been found in the region of
the map.
So distinctly marked are the external characters of the
sandstone below the trap, that to a practiced eye these are
sufilicient to determine its place where the trap is absent.
Thus the red disintegrating sandstone that shows itself occa-
sionally in Amherst unquestionably belongs to the lower group,
although there is no greenstone near. It has a moderate
easterly dip all along the east slope, between the west and
east villages, the same, though not as large, as the mica schist
on which it lies. These facts have led me to the conclusion
that an Artesian boring along that slope may possibly be
successful in bringing water to the surface ; though I cannot
say how near the crest of the hill we might hope for such a
result; perhaps not so &r as the west village, though if it
should be ascertained that the ridge is underlaid by granite
* Above the trap, 9 ; below the trap, 10.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
^B0tST
COtLBOS.
S76 **^ , ^^^^ well might not be unpos-
.1 suspect, '^^^^^^
ryi'Bed dii^ occurs over most of the more
jijthong^ """^ J have marked it only in two places
hiUy petr^ ^ ^ iJjandant, viz., in the northern part of Pel-
whero it ^ ^£ Mount Hjgeia, and in Granby, towards
ham, in the ^^^^^ drift covers most of the lower regions,
Its cHst ^ '^^ under the following varieties. For a full
T^ ' d n of them I refer to my Illustrations of Surface
Geology.
12. Old Sea Beaches.
I have marked only one Old Sea Beach on the map, along
the western slope of Felham hills, near the top, sending off a
branch to curve around the south slope of Hygeia. I think
that the marks of oceanic action may be seen along that ridge
as a shore, in ridges of gravel and sand, though other places,
at various altitudes, also look like old beaches, especially
among the old sea bottoms.
13. Old Sea Bottoms.
It will be seen that a large part of Amherst, as well as
South Hadley, Granby and Hadley, is represented as covered
by this deposit, consisting of undulating deposits of sand and
gravel, which were certainly left by water, and which look
like sea bottoms. The waters may have been fresh, but most
likely were those of an estuary.
14. MOBAINE TeRBAGES.
These curious deposits of gravel and sand, to which I have
never been able to give an appropriate name, show themselves
in a good deal of perfection at a moderate elevation along
the western side of the Felham hills. Some small ones
* Mr. Hills bored through the sandstone at his new house, and the
water rose so as to form a good well, though it did not rise to the
surfkce.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
TERRACES. 277
exist a little nortfe-cast of Mount Boreas, in the valley;
but they are larger in the vicinity of the Orient House, and
best of all a mile or two farther south, where is at least one
quite elevated gravel ridge analogous to the Horsebacks of
Maine, and exceedingly difficult to account for. The rounded
elevations I have supposed the result of stranded icebergs
among which currents had introduced the gravel, which upon
the melting of the bergs took the peculiar form of the Moraine
Terraces.
15. Delta Terraces.
These are accumulations of sand and gravel, which some
former stream had urged forward to its moutli and deposited
along the shore of the lake, estuary, or the ocean — ^in this case
I think it was an estuary ; and I think we have one marked
example in that broad strip of gravel on Long Plain, in Leverett,
which becomes finer as we go south, and terminates in a steep
escarpment of coarse sand in the Plum Trees in Sunderland.
How clear that this was brought down by the stream that
once ran southerly on the east side of Mettawompe. Even
the lateral terraces of that stream remain where it issued from
the rocky gorge.
16. Gorge Terraces.
Terraces are usually fuller about gorges than in the more
open country. Such a terrace appears to me to exist in that
high bank of gravel a little south of Titan's Pier, in South
Hadley.
17. Lateral Terraces.
These are the most common of all the varieties. They
occur on a broad scale along the Connecticut and other exist-
ing streams, as well as on the sides of old abandoned river
beds. Along Amethyst Brook, in Pelham and Amherst, I
have described and sketched in my Illustrations of Surface
Greology over twenty terraces, extending to the height of
several hundred feet, though they are a good deal obscured
at present by forests and dwellings. But I have traced them
out with a levelling instrument
Digitized by VjOOQIC
278 REHINISGENCES OP AHHEBST COLLEGE.
18. Dunes or Downs.
These are sand hills movable by the winds. We have one
or two not bad examples in Hadley, occurring in the principal
lateral terrace of the Connecticat east of the villages of
Hadley and North Hadlej. That which maj be seen near the
road from Hadlej to Amherst is the best. As you ascend the
first sand hill or terrace, if you turn to the right into the
fields you will find the sand torn np by the prevalent north-
west wind and driven south-easterly till within eighty rods of
the road it reaches the lo, and forms a steep escarpment and
seems to be gradually crowding the river out of its bed and
piling up sand around the trees.
19. Old River Beds.
In the slow drainage of this Valley the retaring waters,
which seem always to have had a southerly current, would
find difierent beds at successive levels. These old beds can
generally be traced out without much difficulty by the gorges
and terraces, and sometimes potholes, which they have left.
I have already mentioned one as manifest along the east side
of Leverett, thence past Mount Boreas through East Amherst
and the Belchertown Chain Ponds, thence south-westerly
through South Hadley. Another can be traced very distinctly
along the east side of Mettawompe as far as the Plum Trees
in Sunderland, where it coalesces with the deepest part of the
Valley. A third at a lower level starts from the present
Connecticut a little north of Sunderland village, passes east
of it and proceeds to Amherst, so as to go through the Valley
between College Hill and Mount Warner, and thence striking
south-westerly joins the present bed at the foot of Holyoke,
where the lo debouches. So that it is proper to say that the
Connecticut River once ran east of the site of the Colleges,
and still later between them and Hadley. The difierent
streams also frequently inosculated, as may be seen on the
map, and the hills formed islands. Thus at least two old
water courses can be traced across the south part of Amhersty
Digitized by VjOOQIC
MINERALS AND FOSSILS* 279
and one along the south base of Holjoke in South Hadley,
where a small stream now runs.
At Shelbume Falls is an old river bed where potholes of
considerable depth are visible. I have never seen any in the
vicinity of Amherst.
The tracing out of old river beds is a subject that has not
much engaged the attention of geologists. But it seems to me
to be a very rich field of research.
.20. AxLunuM.
I include under this term only those deposits that are now
being formed by water and other agencies on the surface.
The rich intervals along the Connecticut are the only examples
large enough to be represented on the map, although on a
small scale they are presented on every brook.
21. BOVTLDEBS*
Under this head I have merely pointed out the localities ci
the six bowlders large enough to receive distinct names that
have been already described.
22. Veins op Copper and Lead.
Two or three of these occur in the north part of Leverett,
in that peculiar formation of granite and mica schist already
described. The gangue is oflen sulphate of baryta, which is
itself perhaps more valuable than the metals. These veins
may prove of great richness, when fully explored.
I have already mentioned a fine locality of amethysts in
Pelham. I obtained a still larger fragment of a crystal in Lev-
erett, and probably it may prove a frequent mineral I have
also one or two good specimens of "beryl from Pelham, and
also of sulphuret of molybdenum. Li the south part of the
town is good crystallized quartz. As to fossils the fishes of
Sunderland, and the footmarks of Turner's Falls, Northampton,
and South Hadley, also the clathropteris of Easthampton,
are of deep interest. The western hills yield several fine
Digitized by V^OOQIC _
280 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
minerals, such as the crystallized spodumene of Norwich,
the only known locality, the rose mica and beryl of Goshen,
the tourmalines of Chesterfield, the manganese spar of Cum-
mington, <Scc.
My object in giving this brief synopsis of the geology
around Amherst is two-fold. I wish to show what £Eu;ilities
are here afforded to such as wish to pursue that branch.
Secondly, to put down the matured results of my examina-
tions, which I have given in no work that I have published,
and which may afford some help to those who come after
me. I doubt not that the students of college would say in
view of the summary which I have presented, that I have
Opened a field wide enough for them to study, but have not
provided them with the time to explore it. But the time
may come when some will regard this subject important
enough to lead them to devote to it some of their vacations,
or a few months after they have finished their daasical
course.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
PEBSONAL HISTOBY. 281
SECTION VIII.
PERSONAL HISTORY.
I do not propose to go into a ^ill autobiography in this
section ; but only quoad hoc ; hoc meaning my connection with
the College. Whatever in my private history may account
for my success or want of success, my fitness or unfitness for
the positions I have occupied here, should not be withheld.
One of these circumstances was the comparative poverty of
my early condition. It was not absolute poverty, for my
father moved among the most respectable of the people of
Deerfield, where I was bom, and was honored among them
especially by being chosen deacon of the Orthodox church, of
which he was long one of the strongest pillars. But he had
to struggle hard with a trade not very lucrative, to feed, clothe
and educate a large family. He had commenced his family
career during the Revolutionary War, in which he had been
twice engaged as a soldier, as was his father, who fell a sacri-
fice to the diseases of the camp. The debts which he contracted
when Continental Notes were almost the only money, hung
like an incubus upon him nearly all his life, and he was
relieved only when his sons were old enough to aid him. But
he was highly intellectual in his habits, and studied theology
especially with much success. Towards the close of life, as
but few sympathized with him in his evangelical views of
truth, the church having passed into Unitarian hands, and
under a Unitarian minister, he committed many of his thoughts
to writing, and some of the essays and sermons which he left
would do no discredit to educated clergymen.
It cannot be doubted that such a father would do all he
could for the education of his children. We were first carried
Digitized by VjOOQIC
282 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
thoroughly through the primary school, and then had the
advantages of a good academy, as much as we could find time
and means to improve. But he could go no farther with any
of us — ^he had three sons. And nothing was before me but a
life of manual labor. But as I had a great aversion to being
apprenticed to a tradesman, he did not attempt even to teach
me his own trade, that of a hatter. Farming was the only
resort, and I worked on the farm — ^not on my father's, for he
had none — ^but on land hired by my brother — ^I know not how
many years. I liked the employment, but as I shall state
more particularly in a few moments, I had acquired a strong
relish for scientific pursuits, and I seized upon every moment
I coukl secure — especially rainy days and evenings — for those
studies. I was treated very leniently by my father and
brother, who probably did not know what to do with me, but
saw plainly that I should not become distinguished as a fanner.
My literary taste was also greatly encouraged by a few com-
panions in Deerfield with whom I uiuted in a society, whose
weekly meetings we kept up for years, which had a depart^
ment for debate, and another for philosophical discussion. I
always regarded this as one of the most important means of
mental disdpline that I ever enjoyed.
But periiaps the most important lesson taught me by my
straitened circumstances was habits of rigid economy. I
learnt that these were more important than a large income.
I learnt the value of money, and that the use of it is one of
those talents for which we must give an account It has
made me ever since opposed to any useless expenditure of
money in clothing, food, furniture, servants, equipage, journey-
ings, &c. I have been opposed to large salaries, and am
confident that if the truth were known, our public institutions,
literary, political and religious, have the greatest real pros-
perity when their officers* salaries have been low ; for the
temptation to extravagance with an increase of means is well
nigh irresistible. I have always felt it to be an imperious
duty for the officers of a literary institution, which contains
Digitized by VjOOQIC
RELIGIOUS VIEWS. 288*
indigent joung men, to set an example of plainness in dress,
equipage and living, that thej might be encouraged. In
respect to books, apparatus and specimens, and even objects
to improve the taste, such as paintings, statuaiy and rertu, I
would counsel as large an expenditure as possible, for that is
true economy ; and to get large sums for these and benevolent
objects is the grand purpose of economy in personal expenses.
But I have ever found men more ready to call your economy
parsimonious, than to inquire into the liberality of your bene-
factions for wordiy objects.
I am bound to state that in my religious views in early life
I did not sympathize with those of my father, but rather with
the Unitarian notions prevalent in Deerfield. Hence, when at
length I took up the systematic study of the aacient classics,
I aimed to fit myself to pass through Harvard University.
Nor was it through any voluntaiy agency of my own that this
purpose was defeated and my religious views changed, but
rather in spite of my own efforts, and in apparent opposition
to my worldly interests. Providence first struck down my
ability to study in a manner I shall shortly detail, and thus
by catting off my worldly prospects led me to inquire on what
foundation I was building for eternity,* and a prayerful study
of the inspired volume forced me to give up inch by inch the
ground on which I had tried to stand, and brought me into
the belief which became cordial as soon as I understood it, of
the plain old-&Bhioned doctrines of the Puritans. I was thus
oompeUed to separate myself ecclesiastically from many a
valued friend, and ever since I have felt constrained to take
that stand in respect to many whose worldly friendship I
highly esteem. It has been a heavy cross; but I could not
shrink from it with a good conscience. Hence I could enter
with a hearty good will into any enterprise that promised to
aid a system of truth on which my eternal hopes rest, and
those of the whole human family.
For thefi>nnation of a taste for science I was doubtless
indebted to my unde, Major-General Epi^hras Hoyt^ of
Digitized by VjOOQIC
*284 BEBONISCEKCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
Deerfield, a near neighbor. He gave the most attention to
military science, on which he published some valuable works,
and to which I devoted myself with considerable interest,
especially to fortification, when from fifteen to eighteen years
of age. But he was also deeply interested in astronomy and
natural philosophy, and these branches became my favorites.
The great comet of 1811, and access to some good instruments
for observing it, belonging to Deerfield Academy, gave me a
decided bias for astronomy. From the 7th of September,
1811, to the 17 th of December, corresponding to the appear-
ance and disappearance of the comet, I was engaged in making
observations, not only on the comet's distances from stars, bat
on the latitude and longitude by lunar distances and eclipses
of the sun and moon, and on the variation of the magnetic
needle. I gave myself to this labor so assiduously that my
health failed, and I well remember that when my physician
was consulted he said, ^^I see what your difficulty is; you
have got the comet's tail in your stomach." To reduce my
numerous observations cost me several more months of study,
so imperfect were the means of calculation in my hands. Yet
I have sometimes thought, when looking over my record of
these observations and Ihe results, that they might almost be
worth publication, although much inferior to similar works in
the observatories of the present day. Indeed, General Hoyt,
under whose direction I labored, and who often aided me in
observations, communicated some of them to the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences, and they were published by
that society. But I experienced great benefit from the work,
in the mental discipline it required, and I acquired a strong
love for theoretical and practical astronomy. I became, in
fact, such an enthusiast in this respect, that I could cheer-
fully forgo every ordinary source of pleasure sought after by
young men, in order to gratify tliis scientific passion.
But I was destined to a sad disappointment in this, my first
scientific love. I had for a considerable time been engaged in
the study of Latin and Greek, in the hope of entering the
Digitized by VjOOQIC
WEAK ETES. 285
Uniyersity at Cambridge in advanced standing, and using my
eyes upon Greek during an attack of the mumps, a sudden
weakness of the eyes came on which compelled me to suspend
nearly all study and to change the whole course of my life,
abandoning a college course as impracticable, and for a time,
nearly all hope of pursuing science or literature as a profes-
sion. I have now struggled with this affliction fifty years, and
though for some time past, through the kindness of Provi-
dence, it has been much mitigated, it has seemed to be a very
serious obstacle to my literary pursuits, and it certainly has
produced much suffering. I am not sure, however, but it has
been a merciful check upon my disposition to over-work, and
thereby has tended to lengthen out my life and ability to labor.
If so, how thankful I ought to be for it.
But practical astronomy had to be given up. Yet it cost
me a pang, as the following lines from a poem, whidi I wrote
at the time, evince : —
How sweet, diTinQl3r sweet, is his employ,
Who la the midnight hoar, mueen by m*ii,
Looks with an astronomic eye on heayen !
Where others see a spark, he sees a son;
Where wild confusion, he sweet harmony.
And where all seems by chance, he sees a God—
A God how great, how mighty, and how good I
He lifts his tube, a loop-hole to the skies —
And lo, what scenes appear I New worids, new sons,
These too innamerable, and to which
A microscopic atom is the earth.
And yet if earth is nonght, how low is man,
Bat still how high, to grasp sach mighty scenes I
Sweet too it is, or by the maral arch,
Or zenith sector, or the qaadrant*s limb,
To flz the places of annamber*d stars,
To find the planets' places and their paths.
And trace the mazes of the comet's conzse.
Ah lovely scenes ! ih)m me forever gone !
Fled like the transient rainbow from the clonds.
Thou bright Areturns, Sirius and the Lyre,
And thou Orion, Japiter, and Moon,
Ye can bear witness to the many hours
That I have spent with you;— with what delight
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286 BEMINISCENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
I saw 70a through the witching sextant*! tubes,
And read your altitude upon the silver arch.
V/[hen to our sphere the glowing comet came
A welcome visitor. But now no more
With eager gaze I see you on the mirror's fkoe;
Ko more I watch thee, Moon, when first thy limb
Touches the Sun ! O moment of delight
Which I may never know again. For now
These eyes that once could gaxe on heaven nntir'd,
Scarce can endore a feeble tnmsient glanoe.
But Providence had better things in store for me in a variety
of respects to which this trying £ulure of my eyes and blasting
of my plans and hopes would introduce me. To say nothing
of spiritual blessings, new fields of science were thus to be
opened to me where wonders yet more attractive awaited me.
My eyes failed in the spring of 1814, and for two years dark-
ness that might be felt rested upon my prospects. Still I could
not give up study, and tried all manner of ways to make some
progress. In 1816, the Trustees of Deerfield Academy ven-
tured to commit that Institution to my care, where for three
years I labored intensely to maintain myself in spite of a
defective education, weak eyes, and poor health. It was at
this time that I commenced study for the Christian ministry,
having been led by my trials to feel the infinite importance
of eternal things, and the duty of consecrating myself to the
promotion of God's glory and man's highest good. There too,
at first, chiefly as a means of promoting health, my attention
was turned to Natural History. About tliat time Professor
Amos Eaton had been lecturing at Amherst, and we became
acquainted with him, and I always regarded him as the chief
agent of introducing a taste for these subjects into the Connect
ticut Valley. Dr. Stephen W-, Williams, Dr. Dennis Cooley,
and myself, all of Deerfield, took hold of mineralogy and botany
with great zeal. Dr. Cooley and myself collected nearly all
the plants, phenogamous and cryptogamous in the Valley.
Dr. Cooley became an excellent botanist, and even to a recent
date, when he died in Michigan, has pursued the subject with
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THE BATTLESNAKB. 287
zest. Dr. Williams afterwards became Professor of Medical
Jmisprudence in the Berkshire Medical School.
I well remember an incident that occurred on my first
mineralogical excursion among the trap debris of Deerfield
Momitain, in company with Dr. Williams. As I stopped a
moment upon the loose fragments, Dr. W. cried out, " You
stand upon a rattlesnake ! " Looking down, I found a spotted
«nake stretched out between two firagments on which my heel
and toe so rested that he was not crowded, and so was not
particularly troubled. I did not kill the snake, and was after-
wards led to doubt whether it was a rattlesnake. It certainly
looked like a small one, and had upon me the same effect as if
no doubt had subsequently arisen. But I think instead of
leading me to abandon mineralogy, it rather quickened my love
of excursions among the rocks.
A leading object I had in view in commencing the study of
natural history was its influence upon health. That same
motive, as well as a strong love for the pursuit which I had
acquired, led me to continue its cultivation after I was settled
in the ministry, which took place June 21 st, 1821. The
excursions in the fields and the mountains, demanded by these
pursuits, have ever since been with me a most important
means of resisting the progress of disease, which early and
incessantly has been at woi4l in my constitution. My parish
in Conway was a large one, and four years' labor there, with
one or two extensive revivals, brought me into such a state
of health that I felt as if I must get released. About the
same time the Trustees of Amherst College, knowing my
penchant for science, appointed me Professor of Natural His-
tory and Chemistry. It seemed to me probable that the
change, and the great amount of physical exercise requisite
in such a professorship, might enable me to hold out a few
years. This was all I then expected. In my request to the •
church in Conway for a dismission, I said that ^'the sole
reason why I make this request is the feeble state of my
heiQth," and that ^* I do not believe it to be right, in ordinary
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288 REMINISCENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
cases, for a person to leave the ministiy for the place of a
professor." The Council that dismissed me saj also in their
result, that ^ the Council cannot feel themselves justified to
dismiss him for the sake of a professorship at Amherst College
or any other literary institution," but solely because " they are
constrained to believe that his health is so seriously impaired
as «fntirely to preclude all reasonable prospect of his being
able to serve them (the people) permanently and profitiU)ly in
the duties of the ministry."
I was dismissed October 25th, 1825, and went to New
Haven with Mrs. H., where I stayed till the early part of
January, 1826, in the laboratory of Prof. Silliman, by whoee
kindness and instruction my sojourn there was made most
profitable. I there learnt how to perform chemical experi-
ments so that they should rarely &il, and this is the grand
secret of success in that department The two principal rales
for securing success were these, and I had them fixed to the
wall of the laboratory :
1. Never attempt an experiment in public which you have
not within a few hours performed in private.
2. No apology to be ever given or received by any one in
the laboratory for a fiulure, but it is to be set down as detract-
ing so much from the skill of the operator.
From 1826 to 1845 I delivered twenty full courses on
Chemistry ; that is one to each class.
When I joined the College in the winter of 1826, there was
no laboratory, no philosophical cabinet, no natural history
cabinet, and no chapeL Two dormitory buildings had been
erected, and in the fourth story of the most* northerly of these
(the present North College South Entry) two rooms were
thrown together, a platform built on which was placed a small
tub-like pulpit, which, could be moved off to allow the Pro-
fessor of Natural Philosophy to lecture one part of the day
and the Professor of Chemistry the other part, taking care to
finish before evening prayers. There I spent most of the day
in preparation of the next morning's lecture, and I recollect
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COLLEGE CHARTER. 289
how my risibles were tried 'one evening after I had been
manipulating with chlonne during the daj to hear Dr.
Humphrey in his iati^oductory petition, apparently unconscious
of the odor that was in the room, which the students were
snuffing at, pray that the Lord might smell a sweet savor
from our offering.
I became connected with Amherst College the same year in
which it obtained a charter from the State legislature, so that
my connection with it has been as long as its legal existence.
Yet its Trustees had graduated four Classes before that time,
viz. : in 1821, 1822, 1823 and 1824, and I never heard any com-
plaint that their diplomas were not as good a passport to public
confidence as any issued since. Nor did the College experi-
ence any pecuniary benefit from this recognition by the State,
for more than twenty yeai's. The truth is, a charter was
obtained because the injustice of withholding it had become so
palpable that the legislature dare not longer refuse ; and I am
afraid that this motive has always entered largely into the
feelings of the government towards the College. The grand
difficulty has ever been that the College was a decidedly
religious enterprise — not in the loose sense often attached to
that phrase, but in the very definite sense of promoting evan-
gelical religion ; and the opposition to this conjoined with that
springing from local interests that were affected, was generally
sufficient to prevent a majority even of a Massachusetts legis-
lature from ^vingthat aid and encouragement to the institution
which the State liberality to other institutions demanded.
Character and Amount of mt College Duties as
Professor.
On the catalogues for 1825 and 1826 my title appears as
Professor of Natural History and Chemistry. The order of
these subjects was changed on the subsequent catalogues, and
continued thus till 1845. For nearly twenty years I had
entu-e charge of these two wide fields, except that in 1843
Mr. Shepard was appointed Lecturer on Agricultural Chemis-
13
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290 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
try and Mineralogy. But it should be recollected that these
branches, especially natural history, thirty years ago were
but little thought of in this country, and were in fact in com-
parative infiincy. And besides, we had then next to no collec-
tions, and a leading object before me was to provide Uiem.
Indeed, I may state it as a general fact, that in all the subjects
in which I have given instruction in Amherst College I have
been obliged to provide the apparatus, models and specimens,
sometimes with, but more often without, funds, except my
private resources. Nevertheless, my first courses of lectures
and recitations were nearly as extensive as they have been
since. They averaged nearly four exercises per week, or
about one hundred and fifty in the year. In particular
branches, as new instructors have been appointed, more time
has been given. For instance, when Professor Adams took
the department of zoology he was allowed fiom thirty to forty
recitations and lectures, as was also Professof Clark, though
for what reason I know not they have since been reduced to
ten lectures, which is equivalent to five recitations ; for it is
common now to put lectures in difierent departments side by
aide, so that two shall be equal to one recitation — ^that is a
half day. Even in its in&nt days I never gave less than
twenty or thirty lectures on zoology — say ten to fifteen on
mammalogy, ornithology, herpetology, and ichthyology, and
ten to fifteen on conchology and the other branches of inverte-
brate zoology ; also ten to fifteen on botany. At this day all
those important discussions respecting the distribution of
species, their metamorphosis, and the unity of the human
species must require several more lectures, or it is impossible
to teach graduates how to defend religion against the assaults
of sceptics.
In 1845, Professor Shepard took the same title which I
had retained to that time, viz., Professor of Chemistry and
Natural History, which was changed to Massachusetts Pro-
fessor of the same, in 1847, when C. B. Adams was elected
Professor of Astronomy and Curator of the Cabinet, which
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SCIENCE AND RELIGION. 291
made him Tirtuallj, as be was made nominallj, the next
year, Professor of Zoology, which post he occupied till 1852,
when he died. Professor Shepard, I believe, has not lectured
on any branch of natural history, except mineralogy and
astrolithology. I have always retained geology, but gave
up chemistry when I took the Presidency, and my title ever
since has been Professor of Natural Theology and Geology.
In 1852, W. S. Clark was appointed Professor of Analyti-
cal and Applied Chemistry. To this Zoology was added in
1853, and m 1854 to 1858 his title was Professor of Chem-
istry, Zoology and Botany. In 1858, he dropped all but
chemistry, and that is his present title. In 1854, Professor
Mallet took the title of Professor of Anal3rtical and Applied
Chemistry. In 1858^ E. Tuckerman was appointed Professor
of Botany and C. H. Hitchcock Lecturer on Zoology and
Curator of the Cabinet.
The title of Professor of Chemistry and Natural History,
which I had for twenty years, conveys but an imperfect
idea of what I attempted to teach, or rather of the grand
object I had in view. That object was to illustrate, by the
scientific &cts which I taught, the principles of natural
theology. This I stated at the commencement of my course
and on other proper occasions. At length when I became
President, I took natural theology as the leading title of my
professorship. And really the instruction given in the
natural sciences in college is scarcely more— often less — ^than
is necessary to understand their religious bearing. But this
is theu* most important use, as it is of all knowledge, and this
thought I made the basis of my Inaugural Address, when
inducted into the Presidency. I had endeavored, to act on
this principle in all my teaching ; but now I put it into the
form of a professorship, and a richer or nobler field I do not
know in the whole circle of science. I called it a Professor-
ship of Natural Theology and Geology, adding this latter
science because I have been in the habit of going more into
Digitized by V^OOQIC .
292 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
detail concerning it, and because no science equals this in its
religious applications.
It was a deep conviction of the importance of such a profes-
sorship that led me to seek its endowment. The manner in
which it was secured has already been referred to. Mr.
Williston had just agreed to endow a professorship, which
was finally called the Graves Professorship, in honor of
Mrs. Williston's maiden name, and he offered to give half
enough to endow another, if some gentleman could be found
to take the other half and proffer his name to the whole. I
immediately communicated with Samuel A. Hitchcock, of
Brimfield, and I merely stated the case and told him that as
he was childless, I wanted he should make the Professorship
of Natural Theology and Geology his heir, and that so long*
as I was connected with the 0>llege, I would fill the chair,
and thus make it a Hitchcock affair all round. The conceit
struck him fiEkvorably, and by return mail the proposal was
accepted. Subsequently, through fear that some of his seen-
ties might fkll below par, he added two thousand dollars more,
making the whole endowment twenty-two thousand dollars,
which is the largest among the profeissorships, and the income
is almost sufficient to sustain two professors.
The object I had in view in seeking this endowment, and that
of the donors was the same, was to secure permanent instruction
in geology and natural theology, in their connected form : for
it was not so much the metaphysical natural theology of past
times which I had in view, as those principles and questions
which have sprung from modem physical and natural science,
and w^hich can be treated ably only by one familiar with the
sciences. - Hence, although other subjects, such as physiology
or zoology, might be added to this professorship, neither
geology nor natural theology could be taken from it, without
destroying it, and forfeiting the endowment. I cannot believe
that the Trustees will ever allow any such perversion of the
Hitchcock Professorship, and thus incur the odium of present
and future generations.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
ANATOMY. 293
There are two branches of science, the history of whose
introduction into my department deserves some notice, because
they appear nowhere on our catalogues in connection with
my name, although I have devoted to them no little time and
money. I have already briefly referred to them in giving an
account of the Zoological Cabinet, and promised the details
in this place. I have reference to anatomy and physiology.
In the earlier periods of the College, I believe Dr. Humphrey
had either given some lectures, or heard some recitations on
the subject, and in 1835, Dr. Post, of New York, delivered a
course of lectures ; and I think at an earlier date. Dr. J. Y. C.
Smith, of Boston, had once, and perhaps twice, done the same.
But the College had not a single anatomical model or prepara-
tion, not even a alKeleton, nor any of the large works on anat-
omy ; and o^ourse the instruction given must be very meagre.
I had long been giving my attentibn to the subject, and intro-
ducing jt more and more in illnstration of natural religion.
Moreover it seemed a shame to profess to give young men a
liberal education, and yet leave them ignorant of their own
bodies, so curiously and wonderfully made. Yet I had never
studied anatomy professionally, and therefore it would hardly
do for me to be announced as the teacher of it. Yet as a
matter of fact I became more and more so. But I knew the
College to be too poor — for that was the period of its deepest
poverty — ^to procure the requisite iUustrations. I therefore
obtained, in 1843, with my own funds, a seven hundred dollar
manikin, with a skeleton, and many other models, and then
wrote out a systematic course of lectures, say twenty-five,
which I continued yearly to give till 1861, when I gave over
the subject into the hands of my oldest son, as Professor of
Hygiene and Physical Education. For the use of the appa-
ratus I received a fee for several years from the classes,
amounting to sums from fifty to one hundred dollars annually.
But I did not like the idea of imposing such a tax, and in
1854 1 told the Trustees if they would abolish the tax I would
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294 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
give the use of the models and drawings, and since that time
they have been used gratuitously.
I have referred to anatomical drawings. These were not
very extensive, but enough so with the models for a course
of twenty-five lectures. They were executed by Mrs. Hitch-
cock, and I ought here to record my deep indebtedness to her
for that immense amount of illustrations which her pencil has
furnished me in all the departments of instruction in which I
have engaged. They cover many thousand square feet of
surface, and illustrate the principles of botany, geology,
zoology and anatomy. The College has never had any funds
which it could devote to procure these indispensable aids to
the lecturer, and therefore I never asked any ; nor have I had
the requisite private funds for the purpose. But Mrs. Hitch-
cock has been steadily at work for thirty-six years, whenever
called upon to supply my numerous demands. And that too
without the slightest pecuniary compensation, or the hope of
artistic reputation ; for so large and coarse have been mjDSt
of the drawings that she never felt flattered to have others
told that she was the author of them. And yet the outlines
even of the largest are drawn with remarkable truthfulness ;
witness, for instance, the Iguanodon, which as first drawn was
seventy feet long. I am sure that $1,000, or even $2,000,
would not have procured the drawings which she has furnished
me, and that may be looked on as her donation to the College,
while to myself money would poorly represent my indebted-
ness, since without this aid I never could have intelligibly
explained or given any interest to the subjects of my lectures.
A review of this chapter in my history awakens sad remin-
iscences. For it reveals the great fisdlure of my life. As
I became more and more deeply interested in natural theol-
ogy, the desire sprang up within me to make it the great object
of my life to prepare a full work on that subject, in which all
its great principles should be stated and fully illustrated by
modem science. Hitherto all the works that have appeared
have given only brief generalities or discussions of particular
Digitized by VjOOQIC
DISAPPOINTMENT. 296
points. Moreover that rich part of the field where natural and
revealed religion afford mutual illustration, has yet been but
most imperfectly explored. I knew that such a work as I
contemplated must be undertaken late in life, not till twenty or
thirty years had been spent in exploring the field. At the
time I accepted the Presidency, I was almost ready to begin.
Nay, I had long been throwing out insulated fragments in my
" Religion of Geology," and articles in the **Bibliotheca Sacra**
and " Biblical Repository," &c^ which I hoped at length to
convert into one complete and compacted system. Bat as I
said in my Valedictory Address, " I perceived, that if I accepted
the Presidency, that object must be abandoned, as in fact it
has been ; for the sands of my life are too nearly- run, I fear,
to resume it now, and so I must leave only disconnected frag-
ments of what I had hoped to bring out in a perfected system.
But when I saw how much more important was the wel&re of
the Institution than any of my literary plans, or health, or even
life, I yielded to what seemed duty, nor does my decision
appear erroneous as I look at it in retrospect." I dare not refuse
to lay this darling object upon the altar at Grod's command,
satisfied that God never intended I should have the honor of
executing such a work, however important, probably because I
was not fit for it If I might feel that he was saying to me as
he once did to David — *^ Whereas it was in thy heart to hiild a
house to my name^ thou didst well that it was in thy hearty' I
should be content ; and oh, if I could appropriate to me and
mine the next sentence addressed to David, (1 Kings, viii. 19,)
how calmly and even rejoicingly could I acquiesce in his Provi-
dence. Nevertheless, let these disclosures show to any who
may have mistaken the secret springs of my labors, that
scientific reputation was not the culmination of my ambition, but
the higher object of making science ilhistrate the Divine Glory-
Whatever I have done in that direction affords me a far higher
gratification than the most decided scientific success.
During my twenty years' experience in teaching before
assuming the Presidency, some exigencies occurred in which I
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296 REMINISCENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
was called to give instraction in branches quite foreign to the
title of my professorship, which duty I attempted becaut»e,
according to my notions, every ofScer is bound to take part in
those miscellaneous duties not properly falling into any depart-
ment, and therefore devolving upon the President, if no one
comes to his aid. For years I conducted a weekly Thursday
exercise on the Bible in the junior or senior class. Not having
a text-book, I made the exercise partly by lecture and partly
by question upon a subject previously given out, and in that
way went over the most important doctrines of the Bible,
taking care to bring out the leading objections of scepticism.
Though such an exercise did not require so much preparation
on the part of the student as was desirable, except when we
used such works as '' Knapp's Theology," or ^ Storr and Flatt's
Biblical Theology," yet it did seem to me to have done mudi
good, and by devoting Thursday afternoon to the study of the
Bible, as was done till quite recently, a public testimony was
given to the authority and value of the Bible ; and though
there may have been good reasons for giving up this practice,
it is not likely that one, who like myself had followed it ao
many years, can ever become quite reconciled to the change.
One summer I was called to hear the recitations of the
Junior Class in Astronomy, which I did with great pleasure,
it being my favorite science. Probably, however, the exercise
profited me quite as much as it did the Class.
Another subject which I was quite unexpectedly called upon
to teach in 1828 was Fortification. That was the year when
a new Parallel Course of Study was introduced substituting
for the ancient classics after the first year modem languages
and science. A number had taken the New Course and it
became necessary to supply them with instruction. My
knowledge of Fortification was called into requisition, and I
explained its principles chiefly by familiar lectures. When I
enlisted in the army of the Prince of Peace, and even became
a st€Uidard-bearer in it, I concluded that my knowledge of the
principles of carnal warfare would never bo of farther use.
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TEMPERANCE LABORS. 297
But when thus called to employ it, I made up my mind that
â– whatever knowledge a man acquires in early life he need not
fear but some time or other in the course of his life it will
come into play. -^
During the summer of 1835 Dr. Hiunphrey was absent in
Europe and I consented to act as his tocum tenem, and of
course had a taste of the duties of President during term time
and at Commencement; and though nothing unpleasant
occurred, it was not such an experience as prejudiced me in
favor of a permanent acceptance of the office when, some years
afterwards, it was offered to me, for I saw at once that such a
position must compel a man to hold in abeyance nearly all his
literary and scientific plans.
Efforts on the Subject of Tehferaxce.
The efforts which I made to promote temperance in College
so &r as intoxicating and narcotic substances were concerned,
have already in a good measure been described. But they
took^ wider range and embraced the whole subjects of diet,
regimen and employment I had never been intemperate in
any of these respects, unless it were by excessive labor. But
as to food and drink I had lived in the plain manner common
among fiurmers, made more rigidly plain by poverty. But in
early life I had been troubled with what seemed to be a
scrofulous diathesis to which was added a dyspeptic habit,
before the age of twenty. This had become at length the
great torment of my life, and bid fair to lay me upon the shelf.
I began to inquire whether my dietetic habits could not be
improved. I studied the leading works on Hygiene from
Chenye to James Johnson, and by adopting their lead-
ing principles I found great relief, though my troubles
were so deeply constitutional, and perhaps hereditary on
my mother^s side, that entire restoration to health was out
of the question. But I learnt, I thought, how '* Dyspepsia
might be Forestalled and Resisted." And my zeal led me
to attempt to teach the art to the young men in College,
13 ♦
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
298 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
who in those days were far more troubled with these hundred-
headed complaints than in these gymnastic times, and so wera
the community generally. My system was rather rigid, and
drawn out with the enthusiasm of one who found himself
thereby greatly relieved, and his ability to study and to labor
• very much increased. But it needed modification to suit all
cases. Hence the most contradictory statements of its effects
on individuals came to my knowledge. In by fiir the greater
number, decided benefit had resulted, and I was regarded as
a great bene&ctor. But in some cases individuals found
themselves growing weaker, but I never heard of any one
who received permanent injury. On two points, at least,
my views were quite extensively misunderstood, probably
from my defective mode of description. One was that I
recommended eating by the scales, that is, weighing the food
eaten. Another was that I went against the use of meat I
never recommended the first except as a means of showing a
man how much he was in the habit of eating. And as to the
latter, I only went^ against the excessive use of meat, unless
in partictdar cases, where its entire disuse might be found
beneficial by trial. My fundamental principle was to make
use of such kinds of food, and in such quantity, as will give
the greatest continued vigor and activity, both to mind and
body, whether it need only the twelve ounces of Comaro
daily, or the twelve pounds of the Esquimaux. Nor did I
object to variety in diet, only that it should not be great
at any one meal. Since my lectures were published, the
discoveries of chemists as to the composition of food have
made me more liberal, perhaps, in the matter of variety in
food than formerly, when it was understood that nitrogen did
not exist in vegetable products. Indeed, since it is known
that all the elements and proximate principles essential to
nourishment are found both in vegetable and animal products
used for food, I regard it as comparatively unimportant, on
what sorts of food we live, except that some are more nourish-
ing and easier of digestion than others. Hence I am ready
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PRESENT VIEWS. 299
to partake of what is set before me, and can be satisfied with
a very meagre cuisine. Or if tempted by an ^undant larder,
I have only to put a knife to my throat and I feel safe. At
any rate I had rather suffer from a moderate dyspeptic attack
than to manifest fastidiousness about particular kinds of food
and thus attract notice for singularity.
In no way, perhaps, have I made myself more widely, and
perhaps I may say unfavorably known, than by my lectures in
the College, and three sermons in the National Preacher on
Diet and Begimen. I did indeed give some severe, and per-
haps uncharitable blows, against some of the dietetic habits
of the community, and it seemed to be taken for granted that
the abstemious system which I advocated was first started by
myself, and a mere idiosyncratic assault upon the peace and
comfort of society. The thousands of authors — a large part
of them physicians — ^from whom most of my rules were
derived, were ignored, and I was made the scapegoat of them
all. The truth is, the most unpardonable of all sins is to
attack a man's habits of eating and drinking, and the more
objectionable these habits are the more irritable will he be
under your probe.
In later times I have been sometimes asked whether I still
maintain, either theoretically or practically, those views in
regard to food, drink and regimen, which I publicly defended
more than thirty years ago. In reply I have said that I
never professed or expected in my practice to come up to
those rules ; but that if the rules were strict I should come
nearer to a true standard than if they were low and lax. As
to the great principles of my system of 1830, 1 cannot see
why they are not correct, though I should now state them
with some modifications resulting from chemical discoveries
and larger experience. I should be less rigid now, as already
intimated, in respect to variety in diet, though equally opposed
to crowding too many sorts into the same meal. The grand
points which I regard as most important in theory, and which
I have aimed at in my practice, are as much simplicity in my
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
300 BEBONISCENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
diet as pofisible, and never to overload nature l^ indulging a
perverted appetite. I think more, perhaps, of the adaptation
of diet to employment, the seasons, and the state of health,
and of the salutary influence of an occasional change of
living, even if it bring a more liberal allowance, as on jour^
neys and in seasons of relaxation from regular and severe
employment and study $ for then the brain has little to do but
to attend to the demands of the stomach. But at home, when
the nervous influence of the brain is needed for engrossing
labors and studies, a more rigid conformity to rules and a
simpler diet are important. As to drink, I still maintain that
whatever may be necessary in poor health and in old age, for
the young and the middle aged, pure water is all that is
necessary, and best adapted to health and strength.
To a partial and imperfect adoption of this system, I am
indebted more than language can express. Other systems of
hygiene, such as the vegetarian, have indeed long since supers
seded mine, and they might have done still better for me than
mine. But I have been so engrossed by professional cares
and scientific pursuits that I have given them little attention.
Moreover, for some years past my complaints have assumed a
form so much more serious, and have had their seat so much
in organs not intimately connected with the digestive, that the
question has often been, not whether this or that article of
food and drink was theoretically the best, but rather what
kinds my system would bear at all, and these I have been
compelled by medical advisers to use, even though at variance
with former hygienic rules. But skin for skin, yea, aU that a
man hath mH he give for his life.
It may be of some service if I record my experience on a
particular feature of this subject, on which I think some
erroneous views prevail. It is a common opinion that if a
professional man has much public speaking to go through, or
protracted duties to perform, he should strengthen himself by
hearty and stimulating food and drink. I have found just the
reverse to be true in my case. If called to preach or lecture
Digitized by VjOOQIC
FANCIED DANGER, 801
I found that I could go through the service far easier, find with
less fatigue and wear and tear, if I reduced the quantity of food
and drink. My favorite diet in such cases has long been a
bowl of hominy and milk, which with me has a wonderfiil
power to give clearness and elasticity to the mind. My rule
has. been to leave the eating, except just enough to prevent
faintness, till the speaking is through.
During my Presidency I found Commencement week to
demand almost constant confinement in the meetings of Trus-
tees, Prudential Committee and Faculty, and on the closing
day a session of five or six hours in the church. I used to get
very nervous, and my head seemed as if bound by a hoop, till
I learned to practice great abstemiousness. By taking a little
horseback ezerdse in the morning, and a bowl of arrowroot,
the lightest of all kinds of food, for breakfast, I could go through
these protracted sessions without the slightest inconvenience or
subsequent injury. It might not be so with others, yet I would
advise those of feeble constitutions to try ; for I think the prin-
ciples of physiology promise them success, as well as my
experience.
I would refer to one other subject connected with filedged
abstinence from intoxicating drinks. I am satisfied that one
- of the main difficulties that stands in the way of aspiring young
men in a course of ediication, to prevent their pledging them-
selves against intoxicating drinks, is the fear that it will greatly
embaiTass and mortify them when they shall be introduced into
refined and influential society, where such drinks are freely
used, and not to use them in the social circle will be thouglit
vulgar and boorish. They do not wish to subject themselves
to such mortification, and the dajiger of blasting their fain«t
prospects in life. Now my experience goes to show that this
is an idle fear, and that a consistent, honest example of tem-
perance raises a man in the judgment of all whose opinion is
worth having. I would refer to a few examples.
Li the numerous meetings of the American Association for
the Advancement of Science, and other scientific and literary
Digitized by VjOOQIC
802 BEMINISGENGES OF AHHEBST COLLEGE.
bodieSjVhere soirees have abounded with intoxicating drinks,
I am sure that my refusal to partake has not produced the
slightest neglect or disrespect, either towards myself or those
of my confrhrei who like me were abstinents.
When dining with Governor Marcy of New York, with a
small party, he, knowing something of my habits, with trae
gentlemanly politeness said to me, as the wine was offered,
" I think you do not use wine,** and thus relieved me at once
from all embarrassment, and introduced a pleasant conversa-
tion about total abstinence, which I could see had on its side
the consciences of all present.
These little discussions about temperance almost always
followed a refusal to partake of the wine cup. I was invited
to the dinner given in Richmond, Yirginia, in 1847, (happen-
ing to be sojourning there,) to Daniel Webster, and was placed
near IVIr. Webster and Rev. Mr. Hoge, the latter of whom,
like myself, used water only. This was noticed, and drew
from Mr. Webster an excellent lecture on temperance. He
said that when he first went into the practice of his professioa
his health was poor, and the physician reconunended the
daily «se of wine. Using it at a particular hour of the day,
he found after a time that if from any cause he could not
obtain the customary glass, he became uneasy and fretful, and
it alarmed him. ^ And let me tell you," said Mr. Webster,
*Uhat if any man finds himself uncomfortable because his
customary glass fails him at a particular hour, he is in danger
of intemperance.**
The most honorable and gentlemanly treatment I ever
received, in like circumstances, was from Chevalier Bunsen,
the distinguished scholar and author. I was dining with Mr.
Pusey, member of Parliament for Berkshire, at his residence
in London, in 1850. The Chevalier, who was Prussian Min-
ister at the Court of St James, sat opposite to me at the
table, and I expected what soon came, an invitation to drink
a glass of wine with him, which I believe means to drink mj
health. But I declined. " Oh," said he, <* you don't use wine.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
INCIDENTS IN ENGLAND. 808
do you ? ** " No, sir,** I replied. " Will you then take a glass
of water with me ? " was his rejoinder. " With the greatest
pleasure," said I. " How is my friend Dr. Baird ? '' he added,
thus showing where his temperance knowledge came from.
This was genuine politeness; and yet why should not the
teetotaler be allowed in such a case to choose his beverage,
to keep a good conscience, when the wine-drinker can change
his without any qualms of conscience ? why should not such a
concession be made, without regarding it as any great stretch
of liberality? Bui as the feelings of the higher classes of
society in Europe are, it was certainly very generous in the
Chevalier, and showed the true nobility of his nature.
I met with treatment a little different in another assembly
in London, where I hardly expected it. It was at a dinner or
collation given at the last Commencement of Homerton Col-
lege, which had been presided over by my venerable friend
Dr. John Pye Smith, for fifty years. The leading clergymen
and laymen of the Independent Church in London and vicin-
ity were present, and Dr. Smith had placed me on his right
hand and given me a very fiattering introduction. He was
himself a well known teetotaler, and I felt quite strong under
his shadow. When the Queen's health was proposed I drank
it in my glass of water ; I stated that I had done it with a
cordial respect for her Majesty, not only from my knowledge
of her general character, but from what I had myself wit-
nessed only a Sabbath or two previously. Happening in the
Isle of Wight, I sat during the church service within a few
feet of the Queen and royal family, and I noticed that when-
ever she was prayed for perso^ly, as she was several times,
she bowed her head, and I could see her bonnet tremble, as is
natural when a person joins cordially in what is said, and it
seemed to me to indicate that she felt the need of those
prayers, and united fervently in the petition. As I mentioned
these facts, I could see tears in the eyes of some of the ven-
erable men before me, so strong was their love for the Queen.
But my story was not sufficient to save me from the playful
Digitized by VjOOQIC
804 REMINISCENCES OF AMUERST COLLEGE.
Bailies of one of the London minUters for my cold water toast.
As he had been in the United States not long before, I con-
cluded that his conscience disturbed him somewhat, and I
made no reply, contented that I had been the means of making
him so uneasy as to his drinking habits that he found it
necessary to do something to keep his moral sense quiet.
In passing through all the soirees and dinners encountered
in a week's meeting of the British Scientific Association, I
did not meet with any thing at all unpleasant in the practice
of entire abstinence, although wine and even stronger drinks
met me everywhere, and was furnished, and used too, even at
breakfast, as I witnessed at the one of which I partodc at the
residence of the Lord Provost of Edinburgh.
On the whole, I am confident, that I have been a decided
gainer wherever I have fearlessly and openly practiced total
abstinence when in wealthy and refined society. It has
secured to me respect and confidence instead of insult and
mortification, and so I think every one will find it who tries
the experiment.
Invitation to the Presidenct.
I have already given a detail of the financial embarrassments
of the 0>llege, which were the main cause of its rapidly
running down from 1836 to 1845. It was clear that some
decisive measures must be taken or it would soon be too far
gone for resuscitation. Dr. Humphrey concluded to resign,
and efibrts followed to supply his place. But tiie position had
no temptations. One natural question would be, where is the
money to come from for the support of a President? Another
would be, what measures can be adopted to stop the downward
progress of the institution, and to give it an upward tendency?
If a man as wise as Dr. Humphrey could not do it, who would
wish to venture upon the experiment ? Especially, who would
feel it his duty to quit a sphere of great usefulness and quiet
for an enterprise so doubtful and perplexing? Tet it seemed
to require a man who could bring a distinguished reputad<Hi
Digitized by VjOOQIC
THE PBESIDENCT. 805
and was popular with the community, in order to stem and
turn back the current Hence the Trustees applied to such
men as Professor. Park, of Andover, and Professor Shepherd,
of Bangor. But they had not much hope of success, and it
ere long began to be suggested that some one already connected
with the College must take the office ; for it would only make
matters worse if the Presidency should go begging long. It
was intimated to me that probably my name would head the
list of home candidates, I never knew why, except that I was
the oldest officer on the ground. For of all offices this one
seemed to myself, Eonestly, to be the one to which I was the
least adapted; and I dreaded to have the question come before
me. Whenever, therefore, I learned that the place had been
offered to any gentleman abroad, I addressed to him as strong
an argument as I could, urging his acceptance. But it availed
nothing, and at length the question came before myself as I
feared.
The arguments against my acceptance seemed very weighty.
In the first place I felt a strong aversion to the duties of the
office, both on account of their nature and because they were
unadapted to my habits and feelings. My constitution, natu-
rally timid and hesitating, and rendered morbidly so by more
than thirty years of wretched health, was averse to governing
men by strict military rules. If I could not control them by
moral influence I had no disposition to force or command them.
I might do it as a matter of duty, but my nature was averse
to it.
Secondly. I had no ambition to stand at the head of the
institution. I have far too much ambition in my constitution,
but it never took this direction. In my chosen department I
was willing to rise. But this I thought would be going out
of my appropriate sphere where I could best serve God and
my generation.
Thirdly. The Presidency, in the existing exigency, needed
some one who had a superior talent for collecting money from
the benevolent and the wealthy, and I had a strong conviction
Digitized by VjOOQIC
306 REMINISCENCES OP AMHERST COLLEGE.
that of all men I was most deficient in this skill. iPor I had
often made efforts to obtain endowments and benefiictions, and
though others succeeded, I always failed, so much so that I
had lost all confidence in any efibrts I might make. And
though I afterward had some success in this matter, I fullj
believe it was because God went before me and prepared the
way.
Fourthly, I had never myself been through a regular college
course, and therefore the presumption would be that my edu-
cation was very defective, and that I was not qualified to judge
in respect to the studies and the discipline of college. Hence
my appointment must awaken a strong prejudice against the
College in the literary community, instead of the favorable
impression, which seemed indispensable.
This was indeed a formidable objection. True it might be
said that I had been over, after a sort, with most of the studies
of a college course, and to some of them had given ten times
more attention than is done in college; also that I had received
unsolicited from Yale College the degree of Master of Arts at
the age of twenty-five, and of Doctor of Laws from Harvard,
in 1840; also that I had been connected with Amherst College
twenty years, and could not but have become familiar with the
details of instruction, police and government Nevertheless,
since I have learnt more fally how strong is the prejudice
among graduates towards the self-taught, I think there must
have been unusual liberality among the Trustees and officers of
Amherst College, or this last consideration would have been
thought an insuperable objection against my election.
Fifthly. My acceptance of the Presidency must defeat the
leading literary plans of my life and greatly abridge my means
of scientific research. In another place I have stated what
leading plan of my life must be given up, as in fact it was,
never to be resumed. This has ever seemed to me the great-
est sacrifice I was called on to make in accepting the ofiice,
and even now, I can scarcely think of it but with tears.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
COUNTER ARGUMENTS. 807
Sixthly. My health was qaite insufficient to assume such
onerous duties. When I commenced mj lahors at Amherst,
it was so poor that I had no expectation of holding out
more than three or four years. Yet I had now gone on
for twenty years, never failing to give my fall courses of
instruction, hesides a great amount of other labors, public and
private. But I felt, at length, so certain that I must have
some respite, that I had made arrangements for a voyage to
Europe. And, in order to meet my expenses in part, my
friend Dr. John Pye Smith, of London, had proposed to pre-
pare the way for me to give a course of lectures in that city,
and they had even been announced in one or more of the
newspapers there, and I had nearly got the course ready ; the
same that were afterwards published under the title of the
Religion of Geology. But if I took the Presidency, instead
of this relaxation and excursion, I must submit my shoulders
to an additional load of labor at home. Certainly the substi-
tution did not appear very inviting.
By what arguments, now, was this strong array of objec-
tions overcome ? The following considerations were the prin-
cipal that determined my course : —
In the first place, whatever my defects, I did know how to
work hard and to practice rigid economy. I had always been
obliged to give good heed to the latter virtue, for it had never
been an object of pursuit to accumulate money, and it had
ever been a matter of conscience with me not to make heavy
charges to government, or corporations, or individuals, for
services, so that with a large family, economy was always
necessary and did not require any self-denial, and so many
things had always conspired to keep me at work^ that unremit-
ting labor, as far as my system would bear it, had become
almost a second nature. In the exigency through which the
College was passing, both of these habits would be indispensa-
ble in its President.
In the second place, the experience of my early life fitted
me to sjrmpathize strongly with that class of young men whom
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
808 REMINISCEt^CES OF AHHEBST CX)LLEOE.
the founders of Amherst College intended to edacate, and who
had hitherto constituted the majority of it9 inmates, riz^ those
-who were obliged to depend almost entirely upon their own
efforts. I had originated from the same humble class in
society, and been obliged to contend with the same difficulties
and discouragements. I could, therefore, counsel and encour-
age those who were struggling along the same rugged path.
Thirdly, having myself known the disadvantages of not
having passed through a regular collegiate course, I could
urge others not to fail if possible of securing its benefits.
And I have found abundant opportunity to give such advice.
For, when the student is pressed by poverty and by severe
studies, it is easy to persuade him that he may as well take
a short cut, and let a college diploma go. I think I have
saved some, and I have tried to save many, from this literary
suicide.
Fourthly, the Presidency would bring me again into the
relation of pastor of a church. The idea was very pleasant,
for, during twenty years, I had been deprived of the peculiar
sympathies and pleasant duties of that office, and I felt the
need of them to refresh and invigorate my spiritual life.
Fifthly, I had entire confidence in the character and ability
of the Trustees and Faculty then in office, to devise and durry
through any plan for arresting the downward tendency of the
institution, and bringing it into a prosperous condition. My
colleagues were men admirably adapted by their superior
talents and acquirements, and by their large experience to
be popular and successful teachers, while their religious prin-
ciples and character made it certain that whatever enterprise
they conscientiously engaged in, they would hold on to with
true Puritan tenacity. Of a similar spirit and character were
the Trustees : men of excellent judgment and devoted piety,
who (as well as the officers of instruction) never undertook any
thing till they had prayed much over it, and never abandoned
it so long as they had faith to continue their prayers. * With
such men I knew that we should move harmoniously onv^aid.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
IDIOSTNGBAST. 809
and that thej would make op for my deficiencies by every
means in their power. I felt sure that if any men could suc-
ceed in such a work as was before us, they were the men.
Finally, since the interests of the College were far more
important than my personal preferences or comfort, or health,
or literary plans, I did not feel at liberty to revise to enter this
field of labor, whose doors seemed to open so widely, and into
which the finger of Providence seemed to point so plainly. I
could not indeed be made to believe that I should ever see the
Institution lifted out of the slough where it was fioundering,
but where duty was plain the event must be left with God. I
therefore yielded to the request of the Trustees, and entered,
with a rather heavy heart but a resolute will, upon the duties
of the Presidency.
This last sentence leads me to say a word about certain
peculiarities of my mental constitution, resulting probably in a
measure from my long continued conflict with disease. When
engaging in any new course of conduct I rarely have much
hope that I shall succeed in it, and yet that feeble hope does
not seem to weaken at all my efforts to succeed. After having
deliberately and prayerfully undertaken any enterprise, I per-,
severe in it long after men of sanguine temperament have
given it up. So that it often happens that I who am least
hopeful of all at the beginning, am ready to lead a forlorn
hope when the forward and ardent have thrown down their
weapons. I leave to others to explain if they can this anomaly
or contrariety in my constitution ; but the fact is important to
illustrate some portions of my history.
I ought also to state a few facts which formed a part of my
education, and which served to diminish the evils of a self-
taught course. I have already referred to the benefits which
I derived from being for many years a leading member of a
debating society. I there had an opportunity to practice
extempore speaking and composition, and to acquire facility in
philoeopUcal reasoning probably to a ten times greater extent
than does a student in college* It was also an admirable dis-
Digitized by VjOOQIC
810 REBIINISCENCES OF AHHEBST COLLEGE.
cipline I was compelled to go throagh when called to instract
in the academy in Deerfield. As there were always in the
school a number who were fitting for college, I found a
thorough review of a large part of my classical studies indis-
pensable — ^not once merely, but over and orer again, so that
the details have remained in my mind even to the present
time, and the same is true of the many other studies one iB
called to teach in an academy. It was a much more severe
discipline than if I had been through college drilling, and I
would advise no young man to venture upon it unless driven
to it, as I was, by dire necessity.
The academy owned a very good philosophical a{^)aratus,
and I prepared a number of lectures on natural philosophy,
which were delivered with experiments before the school, and
in the evening before the citizens of the village. This was my
first attempt at lecturing.
But my best mental discipline was connected with the use
of the astronomical instruments of the academy. In another
place I have described the observations which I made on the
comet of 1811, as well as other heavenly bodies. The subse-
quent winter was in a good measure devoted to a reduction of
those observations, and as I had access to only a few books, I
was obliged to calculate by spherical trigonometry many
elements which at this day are found in the tables of practical
astronomy. The mere effort to form an accurate idea of the
numerous spherical triangles I had to construct out of the
imaginary circles of the celestial sphere, was an admirable
discipline, and their acciurate solution not less so.
To give some idea of the extent of my observations and researches,
I will add the results as to the longitude, which was only one of
many subjects to which I directed my attention. These results are,
indeed, more discrepant than practiced observers obtain in fixed
observatories. But I was only eighteen years old when a part of the
observations were made, and had served no apprenticeship, and had
only a sextant and theodolite. Yet the mean of all the results does
not differ as much as two miles from the longitude as obtained in
the accurate trigonometrical survey of Massachusetts.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
ASTBONOMICAL OBSEBYATIONS.
811
Fob TBS LoKoiTUDB OF Djbbefibld Ciiuboh.
b. m. teo.
By Solar Eclipse, Sept. 17th, 1811, the beginning, . 4 49 53
End of ditto, 4 50 38
Distance of Moon and Aldebaran, Oct. 29th, 1811, . 4 49 45
Distance of Sun and Moon, Oct. 12th, 1811, . . 4 52
DittaBce of Moon and Aldebaran, Oct. 28th, 1811, . 4 48 58
By emersion of Jupiter's first Satellite, May 2d, 1813, . 4 49 52
By distance of Sun and Moon, Dec. 19th, 1817, . . 4 52 10
By distance of Moon and Aldebaran, Dec. 17th, 1817, ,. 4 52 50
By distance of Moon and Pollux, Dec. 19th, 1817, . 4 60 36
By distance of Moon and a Arietis, Dec. 2dd, 1817, . 4 52 15
By distance .of Moon and Regulus, Dec. 23d, 1817, . 4 52 10
By distance of Moon and Aldebaran, Dec. 26th, 1817, 4 49 34
By Sun and Moon, Dec. 31st, 1817, . . . . 4 49 9
By Sun and Moon, Jan. Ist, 1818, . . . . 4 50 *8
By Sun and Moon, Jan. 2d, 1818, 4 50 8
By Lunar Eclipse, Jan. 15th, 1805, (By Gen. E. Hoyt,) 4 49 33
Mean, 4 50 36
This equals 72 deg., 39 min., en arc. By the Trigonometrical
Survey, the longitude is 72 deg., 36 min., 40 sec.
I might give similar results as to latitude, and the declination of
the needle, and especially the latitude and longitude of the comet
But the above is sufficient to make not inappropriate, a quotation
from the poet Cumberland, which I find on the cover of my manu-
script of calculations : —
** These ore the studies; 'tis by these the mind
Of early youth is exercised aud taught,
That discipline which forms the reasoning man."
But a still more severe and im proving discipline grew out
of these astronomical researches. In making my calculations,
I had made much use of the Nautical Almanac, then repub-
^ lished by Edmund M. Blunt, of New York. In a work of
so high and settled a character, I should not have thought
of any errors as scarcely possible, had not Mr. Blunt placed
beneath the opening page of every month, the sentence, ^ ten
dollars will be paid on the discovery of an error in the
figures." This led roe to an examination, and I soon found
Digitized by VjOOQIC
812 REMINISCENCES OF AHHEBST COLLEGE.
that I would accumulate money rapidly if the offer was
fulfilled. I discovered a long list of errors, both in the
figures and the words, and I sent it to Mr. Blunt, but got
only evasiTe and unsatisfactory replies. I then sent the list
to the American Monthly Magazine, published in New York,
This excited Mr. Blunt's indignation, and he published a
reply, beginning thus : ^ Noticing an attack on my Nautical
Almanacs, from one Edward Hitchcock, a few remarks only
are necessary to explain the man's drift." He endeavored to
evade the force of my communication by representing the
errors there pointed out as in a part of the work used chiefly
by astronomers, and added, ^ I would rather ten errors would
escape me therey than one by which the mariner should be
deceived." And then he charges me with " shameful neglect,**
in not examining that part of the Almanac in which seamen
were chiefly concerned. It so happened that before I saw
his article, I had forwarded to the Magazine a second list
of errors in the lunar distances, in which seamen have a
vital interest. They were twenty in number, and of such
magnitude as would be fatal to the seamen, if not discovered.
This was the only reply that appeared to Blunt's scurrilous
attack upon me. I continued my researches, however, and
six months later, I sent another list of thirty-five errors in
the same almanacs, viz., those for 1815, 1816, 1817 and
1818. The effect of my effbrts had led Mr. Blunt to employ
a gentleman to recalculate the almanac for 1819. In his
preface, he says : " It will afford much satisfaction and promote
commercial advantages, if on discovery of an error in any
nautical work, publicity should immediately be made." And
yet he made no allusion to what I had done, although it
had been the means of the whole movement, and for ought*
I know, of the subsequent restoration of the English editions
to their original accuracy. He sent me, however, a copy of
his recalculated edition of 1819, which was, of course, a chal-
lenge to me to find errors in that if I could. I went to work
and soon made out a list of thirty-five, which, added to the
Digitized by VjOOQIC
NAUTICAL ALMANAC. 313
thirtj-five found in the four previous jeaxs, made seventy in
mj last communication. This was rather too heavy a shot
for Mr. Blunt to stand under, and, two months later, he sent a
communication to the Magazine, which begins by saying:
*'The communication from the pen of Mr. Hitchcock, rela-
tive to errors in my edition of the Nautical Almanac,
deserves notice, and he is entitled to much credit for his
perseverance." He then says that the thirty-five errors
which I had pointed out in his edition of 1819, he ^^had
corrected with the pen, and begged me to accept his thanks,
whatever may have been my motive." This was quite a
change of style from bis ^'one £dward Hitchcock" communi-
cation. But how mean, thus to impugn my motives, instead
of making me a present, although I had pointed out more
than eighty ^ errors in the figures," for which, had I appealed
to the law, I could have compelled him to pay me ten dollars
each, and were I to pass through a similar experience now,
I think I should seek legal redress, although in all my life
I have never engaged in a law suit. But I had worked
hard enough in discovering these errors to deserve the reward
which was fully ofiered, and at that time, almost entirely
destitute as I was of pecuniary means, it was surely honor-
able in me to seek to secure the offer.
But I had my reward. It was highly gratifying thus to
have been the means of bringing back the Nautical Almanac
to its former correctness, and thus of saving the lives, it might
be, of many mariners. But the mental discipline required was
the richest personal reward. I was a young man, almost
unknown beyond the narrow circle in which I moved, whose
prospects for life had been sadly blasted, and I had no infiu<p
ential friend to take up my cause. I had to venture alone into
this conflict. My adversary thought he could strike me dead
at a blow. In such circumstcmces a single mistake on my
part would have been fiital to my reputation. This rendered
the most rigid accuracy indispensable. They did not catch
me tripping in any case. The lesson I thus learnt was of
14
Digitized by VjOOQIC
314 EEMINISCENCE3 OF AMHEBST COLLBaS.
immense importance. Very rarely is the same lesson tangiit
in college with motives half as powerful. But it is one of the
most valuable of all experiences in early education, and without
it a literary man will go stumbling through life.
The numerous astronomical calculations which I was obliged
to go through some years before this controversy about the
Nautical Ahnanac undoubtedly contiibuted much to prepare
me for it I ought also to say that I calculated and published
the Country Almanac from 1814 to- 1818, inclusive. And
here also accuracy (except in the predictions of the weather)
was essential to success. But no complaint of errors was ever
made except in one instance. In stating the feast and fast
days of the Episcopal Church I put down Easter one year at a
different time from what the ordinary rules would give, and
both clergymen and people pronounced me wrong and mj
almanac of course useless. I defended myself in the papers,
stating that the ordinary rules for determining Easter were
that year useless, it being a peculiar case that happened only
once in some hundreds of years. The Episcopalians did not
probably believe me; but soon after their bishop issued a
circular which sustiuned my view, and that settled the matter,
and made my almanac popular.
Thus much for my early scientific training. I have men*
tioned also the important aid I experienced from repeatedly
going over some of the Latin and Greek classics in teaching.
I may be allowed also to mention a practice which I adopted,
which I have found of important service, but which I have
rarely known employed in college. I used, when studying the
classics, to keep a note-book for putting down the most striking
sentiments of the author, such as would answer for mottoes
and to introduce in essays and speeches with effect To obtain
the choicest — ^for I did not wish the number to be very large^
I was led to study all the notes where quotations are often
made from rare authors. These notes I used often to loc^
over, and thus made them familiar and fixed them on the
memory, and I have found tl^em of great value and no mean
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pBESiDEairriAL labors. 815
sabstitute for that more extended training which la given in a
college course.
Amount of Labobs as Fresidsnt.
I have given an account of the labors expected itom me as
Professor. It may not be amiss to enumerate those which
met me in the Presidency.
In the first term I gave three lectures per week on Natr
ural Theology, to the Junior Class, and heard about the same
number of recitations on Chemistry, although the latter service
was not permanently connected with the Presidency.
In the second term I had four or five recitations per week
in Butler^s Analogy, in the Senior Class.
In the third term five lectures or recitations on Geology.
This is as small an amount of literary instruction as any
President should desire, and without which he will be apt to
fail of securing much p<^ularity in college. It is the pleasant
part of Presidential duties.
The Professors who were licensed preachers kindly coi^
sented to take their turns in preaching on the Sabbath as well
as on Thursday evening, so that my turn did not come gener-
ally oflener than a quarter part of the time ; though some
years, especially on the Sabbath, it amounted to a third. As
pastor of the church, however, I usually held an additional
weekly conference, and in times of revival, meetings for -
prayer and preaching were often greatly multiplied, so that
some years as much as half my time was given to ministerial
labors. I attended and conducted prayers each morning in the
ChapeL
In a College so straitened as was ours in its funds, pecuniary
matters form no small part of a President's duties. All bills
against the College must be brought by him before the Pru-
dential Committee, and when I was President they were first
brought before the Faculty. Another important duty required /
the President to decide upon the religious qualifications of
from forty to ninety applicants for aid from the Charity Fund.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
816 BEMIKISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
r Still more oneroas is the duty of examining from thirty to
Bixtj candidates for aid from the Education Societies, chiefly
the American. For it is necessary every quarter to receive
and disburse the appropriations made to the beneficiaries, and
to make a return as often to the Society.
There are three bodies of men officially connected with
College, at whose meetings the President is expected to
preside, and for which his duty is to prepare business. The
first is the Trustees, whose meetings, in ordinary times, are
only once a year. The second is the Prudential Committee,
who look aflter pecuniary affairs, and almost any thing, in
fact, needed to be done in the absence of the Trustees.
These hold their meetings regularly as often as once a month,
and frequently much oflener. The third is the Faculty, who
hold a weekly meeting for attending to the discipline and
government of the College, considering petitions, and seeing
to it that every thing is in place and in order. Here every
thing that makes friction or is out of gear, among officers or
students, is developed, and though men who have a knack
of throwing off personal responsibility and shirking their
duties can go through such meetings lightly, and even
jocosely, they often weigh heavily upon the President, who
is personally responsible for the proper adjustment and
management of the whole machine. Consequently these
Faculty meetings, held, as they usually are, in the evening,
and sometimes protracted to a late hour, are among the
most trying of a President's duties. They often wore very
much upon me, especially when followed, as they sometimes
were, by the admonition, dismissal, or expulsion of delin-
quents. In almost every such case, the public sentiment
and sympathy in College would be with the offender, how-
ever gross his crimes. The same would generally be the
case with friends at home and with the community at large.
A college Faculty are looked upon by many as an aristo-
cratic, arbitrary and tyrannical set, whom every humane man
is bound to oppose, and multitudes who never saw even the
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EPISTOLARY CORRESPONDENCE. 817
outside of a college, feel fullj competent to sit in judgment
upon their acts and to denounce them. It is this outside
sympathy ynth those who are under discipline that does more
than any thing else to sustain them in their misdeeds and to
encourage the rebellions that are the frequent consequence of
college discipline, and it is the necessity of thus going against
the popular will, and of encountering reactions as the conse-
quence that may rend the college in pieces, that is more trying
to a President than all his literary labors. Even in a Chris-
tian college, where is often a sprinkling of some of the most
difficult elements to control, he is not unfrequently made to
feel that he sits upon a volcano, which, though now quiet, may
at any moment become active.
My epistolary correspondence in the Presidency was
peculiarly onerous. I had previously been so much of a jack
at aU trades that I had laid myself open to inquiries and
assaults £rom all classes. The same mail (and I hardly exag-
gerate the literal fact,) might bring inquiries about some point
in the theory of temperance — how to employ garnet in making
sand-paper — ^how to reconcile the imputation of Adam's sin
with our sense of justice — ^where to find the best beds of
sulphate of baryta — whether I would like to exchange or buy
shells, minerals and fossils — ^how cheaply an indigent young
man can go through the college and with what helps — ^whether I
know of any one who will make a good teacher of a conmion
school, an academy, or a professor in a college— or any one to
supply a pulpit — ^what I think of a new theory of drift, or of
latent heat†” or new views of the relations of geology to
Moses— or a new poem— or a new work — all of which are sent
and an answer requested, if possible, by return maiL During
my Presidency, I calculated that I was obliged to answer as
many as four hundred or five hundred letters, annually, and
to these should be added at least one hundred reconmienda-
tions to students going out to teach school, and for other
puiposes, and to graduates.
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818 REMINIBCEHCKS OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
Besides the above items a maltitude of misceUaneous matten
relating to the general affairs of College and its goyenunent
and discipline, devolve upon the President, from which there
is no escape, and thongh unknown to the world, thej are
among the most trying of his duties.
Pebplexino Subjects in the MANAaEMBin? of â–² New
England College.
I shall refer only to a few of the tnost prominent of these,
such as the Faculty and Trustees used to spend much time in
settling, but which, to use a homely phrase, << wouldn't stay
settled."
It would meet the approbation of neariy all college officers
to say that the government of students should be paternal, and
it has been a favorite maxim with some that they stand %n
loco parewtii. There is much truth in this view, but the
parallel between the two forms of government fails in some
points. While the general form <^ college government is
parental, in many respects it must be military. In many cases
there is a want of that reverence and affection of pupils towards
their teachers which is felt even by the wayward child towards
his parents. Hence it is necessary, on this and other accounts,
to have rules more rigid, and enforced more by mere authority
than in the &mily. In case of combined resistance to the
laws, it is necessarjT to make the military element stand out
very prominently. So that, in feet, college government is
neither strictly parental nor entirely military, but a mixture
of both, so as to be «*» generis. Precisely how much of each
element to introduce in different cases is the occasion of great
difficulty, and oRen of discordant views, and it is one of those
points which, varying with the different dispositions and views
of teachers, can never be settled.
As to the matter of government, I felt exceedingly my
incompetence when I took the Presidency. On one point,
however, I adopted views in advance of those generally acted
on in the colleges. In my Inaugural Address I said : ^' Every
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GOVERNMENT OP COLLEGE. 819
young gentleman who comes here, with scarcely an exception,
knows very well how he ought to conduct, and how he must
conduct, in order to go successfully through his four years
course. And I would say to him, < Here are our rules which
we have found necessary ; and if you join us we shall place
entire confidence in your disposition and determination to
observe them. We throw you on your own responsibility, as
a young gentleman who knows how to conduct and can be
trusted. We shall not exercise over you any vile system of
espionage, or suspect you of any secret and dishonorable
course, until forced to it by the strongest evidence.' Now, in
the hearts of most young men, before they have become
corrupt, there is too much of true nobOity to abuse such confi-
dence, and meanly to violate the rules which they know to be
good, and which they have promised to observe. Let them be
trusted, therefore, and lei not unreasonable suspicion destroy
their self-respect and sense of honor. But if you are compelled
at length to give up your confidence in the integrity of an
individual — and a practiced instructor sees this very early —
let him be privately told that since he cannot conform to the
rules of the institution, and is receiving no benefit from it, and
the influence of his example is bad, he had better leave it
before it is necessary to make his case public, and while he
can do it without disgrace."
These principles were extensively acted upon during my
administration, and we thought with no small degree of success.
Individual officers carried them so far in some instances that
when they happened to become acquainted with very serious
misdemeanors by a student, they would say to him, ^ Now if I
make these facts known to the Faculty they will be compelled
to dismiss or expel you. But if you choose to make a serious
effort to reform, I will lock this information in my own bosom
imtil you offend again, and if you permanently reform, it shall
never go from me." I am happy to say that in many cases
this course was eminently successful, and saved some men to
Digitized by VjOOQIC
REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
society who have become highly useful, but who never oould
have survived the disclosure of their misdeeds.
And here I confess that I adopted a principle on
this subject in mj treatment of young mc^n which I some-
times almost believe to be theoretically true, viz.: that
often, qtioad hoc, they are deranged, and therefore
when grossly insulted personally, I did not feel it necessary to
notice it. I mean, that in college they come under the influ-
ence of views, feelings, and prejudices, so different from those
of men in common life, that charity should lead us to regard
them as we would men under strong hallucination, if not
partial insanity, assured that after they have left college they
will see the fallacy of many of the sentiments and prejudices
that lead them while in college to abuse one another, oppose
the Faculty, justify convivial excesses, and sympathize strongly
with those disciplined for gross immoralities, so as even to
organize rebellion agfunst lawful authority* I had found that
if we could, by bearing or forbearing, get such men through
college and away from the influence of false notions, they
would generally rally and become respectable. Hence, I
made every effort to get them over this Rubicon, and never
suffered the grossest personal insults, if unknown to the
world, to prevent my laboring in behalf of one whom I looked
upon as infatuated.
But I will not enlarge on the subject of college discipline,
although memory suggests a great multitude of its facts and
phases.
Secret and Anti-Secret Societies.
These, at different periods, have been fruitful sources of
excitement, jealousy, and heart-burning among the students
and towards the Faculty. The secret societies would of course
have little prestige were they not strongly exclusive, so as in
fact to leave out a majority of the students, nor unless those
selected embraced the elite as to scholarship. But the
majority thus passed by, or rather as they would regard it,
Digitized by VjOOQIC
SOCIETIES. 821
toade the mad-sills on which the secret societies rested,
would not he very well contented in such a position, and the
same Faculty that had granted permission for the formation of
the secret societies could not refuse the application for one of
a contrary character. But this subjected them to the jealousy
of the secret societies. There ifrould be a desperate struggle
among the students to obtain the leading men in the classes for
the different societies, and they would ere long come to regard
this matter as one of the most important interests in coUege,
and they would of course suppose the Faculty took as deep
an interest in it as they did. Hence, they would imagine that
the different officers were prejudiced in behalf of or against
this and that society, and suffered their prejudices to affect the
mai^s they gave for rank, especially as not nnfrequently some
of the officers had been while undergraduates and were still
members of some of the societies ; so that if in an exhibition
or at Commencement a particular society had failed of securing
many high appointments, here was the cause. Quite as strong,
too, were the suspicions of injustice when the anti-secret
society were deficient in like manner. Occasionally, these
suspicions would break forth into, open complaints, in the
form of petitions or remonstrances. Whereas . many of us
did not know, and took care not to know, to what secret or
anti-secret society one student in a hundred belonged. But
lynx-eyed jealousy made us all active partisans, and we were
obliged to fight to avoid fighting.
This system of secret societies was not confined to one
college in the country, but extended to nearly all ; so that
if driven away from one, its members would find friends with
open arms at other institutions ready to receive them with the
honors of martyrdom. The colleges fdr a time, however,
were so annoyed, that they were led seriously to inquire
whether the evil ought not to be attacked either singly or
unitedly. Wishing to learn the views of the different Northern
Colleges, I addressed some inquiries to most of them, and
got replies from their Presidents. The evil seems for several
14 ♦
Digitized by VjOOQIC
822 BEHINISCENGES OF AMfiERST COLLEGE.
yean past to have in a good measure subsided ; at least, I
liaye heard but little of it. But I feel as if the testimony of
BO many eminent and judicious men ought to be put upon record ;
for, though like the waves of temperature which rise and fall,
the society wave be now at its ebb, it may swell again to a
dangerous height. I make, therefore, a few extracts from the
letters which I then received, suppressing names, because I
have not obtained liberty to give them.
"There was a time," says one President, "when I thought the
literary influence of these societies favorable, because they appeared
to awaken emulation in study, and thus in a considerable degree to
elevate the standard of attainment in our classes. More recently
however, and especially since their number has been so greatly multi-
plied, this influence has heen less observable. I fear, indeed, that their
influence on the standard of scholarship has in many cases proved
depressing. As it respects their moral and religious influence, I enter-
tain some doubt. There have been times when they have appeared to
furnish avenues through which religious influences have more effect-
ually reached the minds of our young men than could have been ex-
pected under other circumstances. In general, however, I fear the
opposite of this is true."
•* Could these associations be altogether removed from the institu-
tions of learning in our country, I should think it a result in which
friends of learning, and esj^ially the officers of colleges, would have
great occasion to rejoice. My conviction is that no such attempt
would be successful * unless all the institutions, where branches of such
societies exist, were united in the measure.' Might not even the most
systematic efforts directed to such an end, only result in making them
MORB SBCBBT."
Says another President : "As soon as the Faculty ascertained that
such societies were in existence, they ordered the students to break off
their connection with them, stating explicitly that they could not and
would not be permitted. The parents and guardians of the young men
were also informed by circular, that such societies were prohibited."
** We have no Phi Beta Kappa, and we are not desirous to have one.
We have understood that the Alpha Delta, etc., have had a bad effect
in other colleges, and I think the cooperation of all our colleges would
be desirable in opposing all secret societies, not fully authoriied by
the Trustees and Faculties."
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OPINIONS OF PRESIDENTS. 828
A third head of a college writes as follows : —
« It is strongly contended by the friends of these societies that their
literary influence is good, and in some respects it may be so ; but we
regard their influence as un&Torable upon the prescribed course of
study. In some few instances, which haye come to our knowledge, a
restraining moral influence has been exerted oyer young men inclined
to dissipation by their more serious or religious associates in these
societies, but we fear that the effSsct is oftener to lower the tone of
religious character in the pious young men belonging to them. Their
general effect is to sow dissensions and produce &ctions in a degree in
which they were nerer known to exist here before, and so as to render
the elections of the several societies scenes of most unhappy division."
<*Weare unanimously and decidedly of opinion that it would be
desirable to have all these secret societies rooted out of our colleges,
and have made up our minds to request the Board, at their next meet-
. ing, to pass laws forbidding their existence."
From a fourth President we have the following : —
** The literary and religious effect bad : the moral effect equivocal —
on good boys rather injurious— on bad boys rather beneficial. Mem-
bership lowers the tone of piety generally — non-membership operates
injuriously on the character and the standing of the individuals con-
cerned."
«( We once discountenanced and endeavored to suppress them — and
they were visibly suppressed, but existed imseen in a still worse form
— on the withdrawal of our influence they gradually reappeared."
<• I have made one, nay more than one ineffectual attempt to rid this
college of their influence. 80 far as I have seen all direct opposition
has only aggravated the evil : and latterly my efforts have been directed
to the modification and direction, rather than to the extermination of
these societies, which I have always regarded as an evil— latterly as
an evil inseparable from an assemblage of young men — ^perhaps of men
of any age, etc."
A fifth President speaks as follows : — •
<<The social, moral, and religious influences have been modified
with the state of feeling at different times ; but on the whole my opin-
ion is that they have been evil and sometimes very much so. They
create clans and fkctions, and put men socially, in regard to each
other, into an artificial and fklse position. Their tendency is to lead
men to associate only with a small number with whom they may have
been thrown by accident, and to narrow the intellect and the feeling.
Of course the alienation of feeling and want of cordiality thus created
are not fiivorable to a right moral and religious state."
Digitized by VjOOQIC
824 BEMINISGENCE3 OF AMHERST CX)LLEGE.
« I suppose it would be desirable that secret societies should be
rooted out of our colleges and from erery other place. If all these
paltry and rival associations could be at once and forerer broken up
there can be no doubt it would be a great blessing. As the thing is
now, I very much doubt whether, with such fiuilitics for concealment,
it would be possible for the officers of the colleges to do any thing that
would be effectuaL"
The sixth gentleman writes thus : —
** There is reason to believe that some, at least, of those societies,
have on the whole an injurious influence, by exciting animosities,
keeping late hours, offering temptations for drinking, wasting time,
incurring useless expense, etc. There are altogether too many of
them."
•<We have not undertaken to root out these societies; though we
have sometimes made the expediency of attempting it a subject of in-
quiry. Compulsory measures would probably render some of them
SB ALLY secret, instead of being little more than nominally so."
The seventh President gives his opinion as follows :—
<* I am of opinion that the tendency of such societies is bad of neces-
sity, that is so long as they have the power, by means of secercy, of
doing mischief. They have led to greater unkindness and ill feeling
than almost any thing else in college."
" I have already drawn up a series of acts to be passed by our Cor-
poration, which will, if enacted, very much tend to relieve the difficulty.
They require 1st, that the . constitution, laws, records, list of officers
and members be always open to my inspection : 2d, that all the meet-
ings be held by day-light, on Saturday, at such time and place as I
shall appoint : 8d, I, or any officer of college whom I may appoint,
shall, at discretion, attend any meeting of the society : 4th, if these
laws are violated or evaded, the Faculty have authority to suppress
them as they may deem expedient. — I would incomparably rather
resign my place than allow young men the right to meet in secret
when they choose, without the knowledge of the Faculty."
<«The A.A.«." says an eighth President, "has lately been intro-
duced here. Its professed object is literary. I do not know if there
be any other secret societies of this description."^-' • Judging^ from the
characters of the young men belonging to whose names I see
on a catalogue of the A. ^. «. printed at New Haven, in 1846, no bad
influence could well be enacted by a society of which they were known
to be members."
«< The only secret society, that already named, known to exist here,
is supposed to be harmless, and its meetings are permitted to be held.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
SECRET SOCIETIES. 325
If ony society of a different description were known to exist, it would
be prohibited ; the students would be forbidden to join it ; and if it
were found out that they persevered in doing so, after proper caution,
they would be dismissed.'*
The reply of the ninth President was as follows: —
<* Their influence not suspected at first, but found to be bad. They
break the college into parties, produce jealousies, contentions and a
difficulty of promoting any object of general utility among the students.
Nothing but evil results, or is likely to result from them upon members
themselves as students, or as Christians, and no good to those who are
not members. They are a mere plague to any college."
** The societies have not disturbed the order of the college so as to
call for discipline. But we fear the evil will grow, if unchecked, and
we are determined to arrest it by law, if the good sense of the students
does not prevail."
These testimonies and opinions were of essential service to
US in making up our minds what course duty required us to
adopt, annoyed as ve frequently were by the secret, and at
length also by the anti-secret societies. They pressed hard
upon us, most so, I am sorry to say, when the College was in
a depressed and critical state, and they thought we should
yield much rather than come to an open rupture with so large
a portion of the College. It was indeed a not unfrequent resort
in those perilous times, when parties were defermined to carry
their points, to threaten if we did not comply with their wishes
to leave College. But such an intimation always sealed the
fate of any petition, even when it might otherwise be granted.
For we should sooner have seen the College scattered to the
winds than to seem to be moved by such a threat. We did
not find it necessary to take any active measures agidnst these
societies, and they have been suiFered ever since to exist And
I am confident that the evils feared from them have much
diminished. I impute this in part to the great increase of their
number. For so long as we allowed one to exist we could not
consistently deny petitions for the formation of half a dozen
others. But such a number took in necessarily nearly all
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826 REMINISGENGES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
College, and thus jdmost eyeiy one had a chance of being one
of the elite. W
College Honors.
It would surprise most parents to be informed that the two
most powerful influences brought to bear upon their sons while
in college, are societies and college honors ; understanding by
the last tenn not merely the honors bestowed by the Facaltf^,
but bj the students also in their various organizations. Yet
such is the conclusion to which I have been forced by my
observation. I except those cases where a religious influenoey
as in conversion, comes in to overmaster all other moral forces^
and doubtless there are other individual exceptions. But the
mighty power of the two sources mentioned is too obvious to
be overlooked by any one conversant with the interior life of a
college. I shall refer to only a few of the signs by which it is
indicated.
There is first the great efforts put forth to secure the elec-
tion of favorite candidates to the offices of honor and tnist in
the various associations. These elections are often as hotly
contested as are those for the various offices in our State and
National governments. Then there is the desperate stru^le
that takes place at the commencement of the collegiate year,
to secure the best and largest number of the new comers for
the different societies, to give popularity and prestige, and thus
make office as well as membership in them more honorable.
These elections are rarely carried through without exciting
personal hostilities that do not pass away with the occasion.
But as these transactions do not come into collision with the
Faculty, I shall not go into details.
There is, secondly, the extreme sensitiveness manifested
among students in regard to the honors bestowed by the Fac-
ulty. Their rank at the various public performances and at
Commencement is the one thing on which most of them fix
their eyes from first to last most anxiously. Such is the system
adopted by the Faculty that the standing is not officially indi-
Digitized by VjOOQ IC
\
COLLEGE HONORS. 827
cated fullj till near the end of their course. Else, probably,
many more, disheartened or disgusted, would quit the institution
than now do, giving up their efforts to obtain a public education
or trying their fortunes at some other college. In Freshman
year, certainly the first term, not a few are looking confidently
for the Valedictory. However, if not intolerably self-conceited,
they soon learn to moderate their expectations. For ere long
the shrewder minds in the classes locate the rank of their
fellows often with considerable accuracy. Driven from the
Valedictory, the ambitious man, sustained perhaps by the
flattering opinion of the members of some society of which he
is member, and which would be honored by his honors, clings
for a time to the Salutatory — then to the Philosophical
Oration — ^then to the first class English Orations ; then to the
second, then to the third class, or as it used to be, to the Dis-
putation, the Dissertation, the Disquisition, the Essay, the
Colloquy, and the Conference. Many at length find them-
selves located below the line of appointments, since often that
is the place of nearly half the class. Few, however, will be
driven to that conclusion till the close of Junior year, and
perhaps the larger part not till the distribution of Commence-
ment honors at the close of Senior year. But whenever their
standing is publicly fixed, and they find it, as great multitudes
always do, below what they expected, it generally gives a
terrible blow to their hopes, and they feel as if the great object
of their education had failed. Even devotedly pious young
men often conclude that their hopes of usefulness are blasted,
and that they may as well abandon the idea of becoming min-
isters and missionaries because it now turns out that they have
not the requisite talents for usefulness. I .have repeatedly
heard such make these statements -with tears in their eyes.
Then again, it is terribly mortifying so to disappoint anxious
friends, who had been flattered with the idea that their sons
and acquaintances stood very high in college because they did
in the academy. They had calculated to be present at Com-
mencement to see their young friends honored at graduation.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
828 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
Bat now thej will not come at all, and the student himself
will, if possible, avoid being present. Indeed, it does require
no small amount of philosophy, and of religion too, to make it
a pleasant occasion for a student merely to witness the suc-
cessful performance of and the showering down of bouquets
upon successful rivals, while his only chance to appear upoii
the stage is to receive his diploma in silence.
It is natural in such cases to presume that there must have
been favoritism and injustice in assigning the rank of the dis-
appointed student, and hence strong prejudices are awakened
towards particular members of the Faculty, or against them
alL And probably at no time is the spirit of rebellion more
easily roused and developed, than after the public announce-
ment of appointments. Some are dreadfully grieved, and
some are highly exasperated. I have known a worthy young
man refuse to take a degree — and I believe he has ever since
refused — because, although he had assigned to him a first
class English oration — ^the word " Philosophical " was not pre-
fixed to it, as he expected. And many a time have I known
applicants to be released from performing the assigned part,
sometimes on account of health, or from conscientious scruples,
or for no reason, when we knew that the true reason was
dissatisfaction with the appointment.
A man in public office can hardly spend his time more
unprofitably than in assigning reasons to the proud and ambi-
tious for having disappointed their hopes. The stronger and
more numerous the reasons, the more exasperated are they.
But in this matter I found many honest and conscientious
young men, not inordinately ambitious, who sincerely thought
that their failure to receive an appointment, or only one
rather low, was an evidence that they could not be useM in
future life, and had mistaken the path of duty. I would say
to them, that three years hence not one man in ten thousand
in the community will know or care whether you received an
appointment or not in college, or of what grade it was, if they
only know that you graduated honorably. Your success in
Digitized by VjOOQIC
BANK OF MISSIONARIBS. 829
life will depend mamlj upon what jou do herectfter, and men
will accept and employ 70U for just what they find you
capable of doing. Your literary course is only just begun,
and you have now got the means of development. But aU
such suggestions made little impression. I therefore resorted
to another argument. A large number of foreign missionaries
had gone forth from our College, all of whom, with scarce an
exception, had become very useful, as every body acknowl-
edged. I looked up their literary standing when they left
College, and found, curiously enough, that it corresponded
tolerably well to the assignments of a large class at Com-
mencement. The &ct8 seem to me to posseas a permanent
interest, and therefore I subjoin a list of the appointments
and non-appointments of all the missionaries from Amherst,
described under Section YL
Valedictorian,
Heniy J. Van Lennep, 1887.
Saiuiatory.
1. Ebenezer Burgess, 1881. | 2. James G. Bridgman, 1842.
PkUosophical Orations.
1. David O. Allen, 1828. | 2. Edwin E. Bliss, 1887.
Greek Oration,
Elias Riggs, 1829.
English Orations.
1. El^ah C. Bridgman, 1826,
2. George W. Boggs, 1827.
3. Reuben Tinker, 1827.
4. Stor; Hebard, 1828.
5. Justin Perkins, 1829.
6. Samuel A. Taylor, 1887.
7. William W. Rowland, 1841.
8. Isaac G. Bliss, 1844.
9. Eliphal Maynard, 1844.
10. H. P. Herrick, 1849.
Disputations,
1. Oliyer P. Powers, 1830. 1 3. James C. Bryant, 1836.
2. Beigamin Schneider, 1830. | 4. Joseph T. Noyes, 1845.
11. Charles Hartwell, 1849.
12. Henry Lobdell, 1849.
13. S. E. Bishop, 1846.
14. G. O. Baldwin, 1851.
15. Daniel Bliss, 1852.
16. H. N. Bamum, 1852.
17. C. F. Morse, 1853.
18. M. H. Hitchcock, 1854.
19. George Washburn, 1855.
20. Amherst L. Thompson, 1856.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
830 REMINISCENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
IHsseriatioTU.
1. Stephen Johnson, 1827.
2. Benjamin W. Parker, 1829.
8. Jamea L. Merrick, 1880.
(Phflosophical Diss.)
4. Samuel C. Damon, 1836.
5. Joel S. Ererett, 1840.
6 Josiah Tyler, 1845.
7. A. G. Beebee, 1850.
8. F. A. Douglass, 1851.
9. O. P. Alien, 1852.
10. I. F. Clarke, 1864.
1. Ashnr Bliss, 1829.
2. Heniy Lyman, 1829.
8. William Arms, 1880.
1. Edward Jones, 1826. (Col'd.)
2. Isaac Bliss, 1828.
8. Aldin Grout, 1881.
4. Israel W. Searl, 1882.
5. George B. Rowel, 1837.
6. William Walker, 1838.
Joseph G. Ck>chTan, 1842.
JSBsays.
4. Henry A. Homes, 1830.
5. Obadiah M. Johnson, 1832.
6. Leander Thompson, 1885.
Confirmee*
Alonzo Chapln, 1826.
CoUoquy,
John Taylor Jones, 1825.
Ab AppoinUmmt.
* 7. Henry M. Adams, 1851.
8. M. M. Carleton, 1851.
9. Samuel C. Dean, 1853.
10. J. H. Dodge, 1856.
11. Henry M. Bridgman, 1867.
12. Alrin B. Goodale, 1858.
It is easy to see how such a table as this must make any
reasonable Christian man feel how ridiculous is his plea that he
must give up the idea of heing useful in the world, because he
failed to obtain a Commencement appointment, when he sees
such names as Edward Jones, Aldin Grout, William Walker,
and Henry M. Adams on the list of non-appointees ;' and the
same may be said of the lower appointments, where we find
the name of the martyr Lyman. It may, indeed, be true
that the higher appointments bring names before us who have
taken the lead in missionary usefulness, as superior talents
conjoined with devoted piety ought always to do in every
enterprise. But were the names of the whole preceding list
laid before a candid man and he was requested to designate
Digitized by VjOOQIC
PRESIDENT JONES. 881
their literary standing in college, from their missionary labors,
he would probably make some strange inversions of Faculty
decisions.
There is one very striking case among these missionary
non-appointees, that of Edward Jones. He was the only
colored student who ever graduated at Amherst A few years
after graduation he went out to Liberia as a missionary of the
Episcopal church. He seems to have transferred his relations
to an English society and was appointed President of the
college at Sierra Leone, Tdiere he still continues. The
English bishops, as Rev. Dr. Perkins informs me, have lately
been discussing the question of making Mr. Jones a bishop,
also, and the only reason why it is not done is that such a
dignity has never been conferred upon a colored man. It is
not probable that many of our highest missionary appointees
will get ahead of President Jones in rank and dignity.
The spirit of rebellion, as I have already intimated, is veiy
apt to be most rife in college after a class have learnt to whom
honorary appointments have been assigned and from whom
they have been withheld. It is natural that the disloyal feel-
ing should culminate about Commencement, so that if any
event should then turn up that would form a nucleus of opposi-
tion, the rebellious feelings would easily crystallize around it.
Then, too, would be the most uncomfortable time for the
Faculty to meet it, occupied as they are with the Trustees and
others from abroad. I met one case of this kind in a peculiar
manner, which may be condemned, although it was successful.
Probably neither Trustees nor Faculty ever heard of it, but
it is not now improper to describe it. One of the appointees
was requested, or perhaps required, to modify or omit certain
parts of his performance which the Faculty knew would
injure the College in public estimation. He presented a dis-
torted view of the case to his Class, and in their zeal they drew
up a remonstrance, which, probably without their being con-
scious of it, threw them into a state of rebellion. This they
put into my hands only a few hours previous to Commence*
Digitized by VjOOQIC
832 BEMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
menty when my whole time was occupied by the Tnistees. I
sent for the committee of the Class and said to them, ^ Gentle-
men, jou mismiderstand this matter. It was so and so, and
not as you state it. But your document brings you, uncon-
sciously, I doubt not, into a state of rebellion against the
government of the College. If I present it, either to the
Faculty or the Trustees, I feel sure that we shall have no
Commencement, nor you any diplomas. I have, therefore,
nearly made up my mind to pocket this paper, and not let the
Faculty or Trustees know any thing about it, but to bear the
whole force of it myself, rather than bring such evil upon you
and the College. J£ satisfied that they have misapprehended
the case, the Class should rescind these resolutions ; it would
relieve the whole difficulty. But as to that matter you can
do as you please." Not more than an hour or two after
this interview, the committee returned with a vote of the Class
rescinding the resolutions. Had I not been satisfied, from
the character of the Class, that they did not intend to insult me
or the Faculty, I should not have ventured upon this course.
Whenever the applications to be excused the performance
of assigned parts were numerous or strong, or scruples of
conscience were manifested against the system of honorary
appointments, we generally regarded it as another evidence
of great sensitiveness about rank. For we found most usually
that the wish to be excused, on account of poor health or
pressing engagements, or conscientious scruples, came from
those who had low appointments. And it would not be
reasonable to suppose that all the bad health, and all nice
sensibility of conscience, should be confined to the lower part
of the scale. I do not doubt that there are some cases in
which students are really quite indifferent to college honors,
others in which diffidence or feeble health have made them
feel really unable to perform their part, and others in which
men have had honest doubts whether honorary distinctions in
college should not be opposed. But these various excuses
have usually gone in waves over the College. At one time^
Digitized by VjOOQIC
ABUSE OF FRESHMEN. 833
formerly, conscience became so loud in its remonstrances that
the whole body of students united in a petition to the
Trustees, to do away with the whole system of honorary
appointments. The most noted rebellion the College has ever
experienced resulted from the treatment by the Faculty of one
who pleaded conscientious scruples against the performance
of his part This excuse, indeed, became so ridiculous at
length, that ebb tide on this subject has I believe continued
ever since. Yet there have been seasons since when bad
health became alarmingly prevalent. And some of the Fac-
ulty have been so uncharitable as to suppose that if the
Professor of Mathematics could have told them how to dis-
tribute a single high appointment among many, it would
have proved a great panacea, both for the mind and tiie bodv.
Abuse of Freshmen.
This is another of the standing evils of College, which
weighs heavily upon the peace of the President, especially in
Amherst, where he is located so near College that the mid-
night pow-wow can hardly fail to disturb his slumbers.
Formerly these assaults upon the new Class used to cease
after a few weeks, certainly with the first term. But in later
years the disturbance is kept up through the year, and indi-
viduals, under the name of making sport with freshmen, take
occasion to gratify personal grudges against individuals. This
of course provokes retaliation, and lays the foundation for a
quarrel through the whole of college life. But even when
fun and sport are the professed object, such recklessness and
abuse are often witnessed as to result in lasting, and some-
times fatal effects. The Scripture hath well described it
when the wise man says: "As a madman who casteth fire^
brands, arrows and death, so is the man that deceiveth his
neighbor and saith, am I not in sport ? " Take a painful
example that fell under my own observation : —
In the autunm of 1847 a young man from a neighboring
town joined College, of whom we knew little, save that he
Digitized by VjOOQIC
834 BEBONISCBNCES OF AMHE3tST COLLEGE.
vras a good scholar, and brotlier of a man who graduated only
three years before, leaving an excellent character as a schcdar
and a Christian. The Freshman, however, soon disappeared
from College in consequence of poor health. Passing near
his residence some months after, and learning that he was quite
low, I visited him, and found him indeed in the last stages of
consumption. Finding him sustained bj the Christian's hope,
and having had dark hints that his sickness had <niginated
from the treatment he received as a Freshman, I made
inquiry, and found the suspicions painfully true. His assail-
ants, whom he did not, and perhaps could not name, had
entered his sleeping room and drenched his bed with water.
But being a stranger in town, and unwilling to confess himself
driven from College, he ventured to occupy the driest part of
his wet bed. Up to that night he had never been sick ; since
that time he had never been well, and now felt himself past
recovery. "Do you now feel," said I, **as if you could £»give
those who have thus murdered you ? " For a moment I per-
ceived there was a struggle in his feelings ; but at length he
replied : " Yes, I forgive them." He had cheerf^ly given up
all his worldly prospects ; but I did not wonder that he should
reluctate when asked to pardon the authors of all his calami*
ties ; for I am afraid that my own heart even at last had less
of a forgiving spirit than his. It was more than I could bear
to see this Christian, talented young man, who had looked
forward to the ministry, now on the bed of death solely as the
result of the brutal assault of those who probably would prove
only curses to the world.
Thus died Jonathan D. Torrance, of Enfield, the victim
of a barbarous college custom. Whether his murderers still
haunt the earth I know not, but I do know that they must
meet him at the judgment seat
The Christian public cannot understand why such barbarous
practices are not rooted out of our colleges. But however
faithfiil instructors are in ferreting out and punishing them,
they will, in my opinion, continue so long as two other things
Digitized by VjOOQIC
COIXEGE FEATS. 835
ooQtinae. The first is a diBposition in respectable society to
listen with approbation and applause to the smart stories told
by collegians about "rowing Freshmen," and outwitting officers
in college. It is the desire of having some such feats to tell
of to admiring friends and companions that forms the chief
stimulus to the performance of such feats. Were their stories
met among respectable people by frowns and rebukes, instead
of approving smiles and commendations for smartness, abuses
of Freshmen would soon be given up. Until Christian men
and women will do this, I have no hope that this evil can be
eradicated, and since there is no prospect that the community
will thus act, I expect that these practices will continue.
Many expect much when classes, after having been abused,
pass unanimous votes that they will not abuse their successors.
But I have seen so much of such movements, and know so
well what such kind of unanimity means and how easy it is for
young men to change their minds, and how contagious evil
influences are in a Class, so that often it requires only a very
few on the wrong side to bring large numbers there, that I
have little confidence in any such movement.
The other obstacle in the way of reformation is the disposi-
tion too oflen manifested in the older classes, even by many
Christian, conscientious young men, to speak approvingly of
the practice on account of its good effects upon forward, self-
conceited young men. I have sometimes even heard tutors
extenuating the evil by such a view. Let Sophomores only
know that such an opinion is entertained even by a few of their
Seniors, whether under-graduates or graduates, and the decrees
of Professors against the evil will be like feathers thrown
against a hurricane. Those, therefore, take a very serious
responsibility who on so absurd a theory connive at such a
practice. So long as they do it I expect that occasionally
some unsuspectiug Torrance will faU a victim.
I might multiply almost indefinitely this list of petty annoy-
ances that make a President's seat more often a cushion of
briars and nettles than of roses or feathers, ev^ in the best
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
886 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
regulated and most Christian of our colleges. For it does not
require more than half a dozen really wicked and shrewd
young men to keep a college in an almost constant state of dis-
turbance; and the stronger the religious influence is in a
college, the more certain will it be to catch that undesirable
half dozen, because godly parents who have a reckless son
will send him there in the hope of his conversion. But I will
not enlarge further on themes so unpleasant.
Feeble and Discouraged.
Entering upon the Presidency under the circumstances
already detailed, and with such wretched health, it is not
strange that I early felt as if the pressure were too heavy for
me and made me long for relief. Even as early as my second
annual report to the Trustees I said that ^ J had reached that
state in which my life is little else but a scene of severe suffer-
ing, while I have not the consolation of thinking that those
sufferings are accomplishing any important good. I desire
indeed not to strike my tent till I clearly see the cloud rising.
Better would it be to die at my post ; and indeed I have felt
that if the College could thereby be carried through its present
exigency I ought not to shrink even fi?om such a sacrifice.
But when I see that probably the result is not to be obtained
by this means, it looks to me as if the cloud were beginning to
rise, and that I ought to be prepared to follow.^
How little understood by me at that time were the indica-
tions and dealings of Providence ! I found at length that my
feebleness and despondency were the means through which
help and deliverance came to the College. For they led me
utterly to despair of any thing I could do to this end, so that
if help should come it was not through my own strength or
wisdom. Then, and not till then, was God*s arm laid bare.
I was led, as a preparation for my own release frt)m the Pres-
idency, to seek the endowment of my Professorship, so that
sure means might be provided for the support of my successor.
God went before me and prepared the way for success, and
Digitized by VjOOQIC
SOJOURN IN VIRGINIA. 337
then in rapid succession occurred that wonderful series of
developments in our financial history which I have already
described. The exhilaration produced by the change gave me
new life to perform my duties and battle with disease. But
the conflict still went on, and in 1847 my physician advised
me to spend the spring in a warmer climate. I went to Rich-
mond, in Virginia, stopping a week or ten days in New York,
and put myself under the care of Dr. Green, with his probang,
nitrate of silver and iodine; The transition from the icy
streets and boreal blasts of New York to the green and flowery
banks of James River and the zephyrs of Richmond was
delightful, and a quiet residence of six or seven weeks in the
pleasant family of Dr. Wilder, proved of great service to my
health, in connection with Dr. Green's medication, and gave
me strength for at least two years more.
During this sojourn at Richmond I met with several inci-
dents that might be of some interest were I to describe them
here. It gave me some opportunity to witness the operations
of slavery dose at hand, which I believe is not apt to make a
Northerner in love with it, though it often awakens as much
compassion for the master as for his vassaL One also sees
how complete a metamorphosis society must undergo if slavery
is abolished, and it makes us fear that the present war cannot
do it iaway unless it obliterates the masters and colonizes the
country anew. One also becomes satisfied that the Northern
system of free schools for all. classes can never be brought into
operation in a slave country, unless it be in the cities.
But I must not go into speculations on these topics, although
the present state of the country almost irresistibly invites to
it The most interesting incident that met me in relation to
slavery, while at Richmond, was on a visit to the Mid Lothian
Goal IVIines, not far from that city. Into those mines, nearly
a thousand feet deep, Mrs. Hitchcock and myself had descend-
ed in the miner's bucket, and were wandering about in the
dark caverns of the mine, when we met with a blind slave, of
whom I gave an account in one of the Richmond papers, and
15
Digitized by VjOOQIC
838 BEMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
also in the " Amherst Express." The American Tract Society
thought the facts important enough to constitute Na 126 of
their tracts.
Tour in Europe.
In spite of the &vorahle and sustaining influences under
which I was now acting, I found my constitution yielding to
the insidious assaults of disease. I had given the Trustees to
understand that just so soon as they could find another man
to take my place, I should consider it a great favor to be
released. Indeed, there was a sort of -understanding when I
took the Presidency^ that when the College had passed throu^
its pecuniary exigency I might be allowed to fall back to my
former professorship. That exigency was now over; the
institution was free from debt, and with funds sufficient to
enable it, with economy, to go successfully forward ; the ques-
tion of its permanent existence was now settled ; its numbers
were increasing, and I did not cease from time to time to
remind the Trustees of my wishes. Instead of heeding them,
however, at their meeting in 1849 they voted, without any
suggestion of mine, and even contrary to my wishes, to give
me leave of absence for six months, for a tour to Europe. As
my health and circumstances were I had no wish for such an
excursion, but in the spring of 1850 every circumstance
seemed to point me towards the rising sun, and reluctantly
myself and Mrs. Hitchcock began our preparations for the
voyage — ^for it seemed indispensable that she should accom-
pany me, which was a real cross to her also. We went, and
though I suffered much from wretched health and depressed
spirits, yet Providence ordered every thing so mercifully —
almost miraculously, sometimes — that we were carried over
10,600 miles of travel without injury to a hair of our heads^
and almost without the ordinary discomforts of travel. I did
indeed suffer very much on both voyages, not merely from
sea-sickness, but from the stirring up and aggravation of all
my chronic complaints, and I think that my sufferings,
Digitized by VjOOQIC
TOUB IN EUROPE. 889
during each voyage of ten or twelve days, was scarcely
less than the same length of time in any fever of my life«
But on the land I was never detained by poor health
more than one or two days^ Still I seemed to be losing
ground all summer. My cough was aggravated, my appetite
poor, and I became much emaciated. Indeed, I felt as if I
oould only live to get home to die, I ought not to expect more.
But stopping a few hours in Halifax, and sauntering forth into
the city, I met the pleasant north-west breeze of October,
which always had exhilarated me in past years, if any thing
would, and did now seem to awaken some of the old feeling.
Our run to Boston was a pleasant one. I found every thing
pleasant at home, and was even received with unexpected
cordiality by the students ; so that my health went on improv-
ing for a considerable time. Health was not indeed restored,
but simply new power acquired to contend with disease for a
bnger time. This recuperative influence was not wholly lost
upon me for many years, and I doubt not that this European
four has enabled me to perform double the labor since which
I could have accomplished without it.
It is not my purpose to draw out an itineracy of my foreign trip.
It may not be irrelevant, however, to mention a few things not
usually noticed in books of European travel. And as to my route
from Liverpool, I will indicate only its general course. We were
accompanied by John Tappan, Esq., and lady, and as he had before
visited Europe four or five times, and was willing to take the direc-
tion of our pecuniary affairs, and knew how to meet every exigency
in travel, and I was ignorant of all, — his presence, with that of his
amiable wife, was a great favor, and saved me from many an uncom-
fortable dilemma. Our first trip was tlirough the mountains of
North Wales. Thence, we passed southerly, following the Wye, to
Bristol ; thence we passed to Bath and Southampton, and crossed to
the Isle of Wight, whose whole southern coast we explored, and
passed thence to London, through Brighton. Just as we were about
leaving London for the Continent, I received from the Government
of Massachusetts a commission to visit the agricultural schools of
Eufope, and this modified my coarse. I determined to visit some
of the principal agricultural schools of England, Ireland and
Digitized by VjOOQIC
840 BEMINISCENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
£teotland, before passing oyer to the ContineDt. I went first to
Cirencester, where is a large school; thence through Wales and
Anglesey, to Dublin, in Ireland ; thence along the east coast, where
are several schools, to the Gianfs Causeway; thence through Bel-
fast, to Glasgow, and subsequently to the Highlands of Scotland, as
far as the parallel roads of Lochaber ; thence to Edinburgh. From
thence I went back to London, through the central parts of England ;
from thence to Dover, and across the channel to Calais ; from thence
through Belgium, and up the Rhine to Frankfort, Weissbaden, and
Heidelberg ; from thence to Basle, in Switzerland; thence to Zurich,
and over Mount Righi, to Lucerne ; from thence to Berne and Veray ;
from thence to Geneva, across Lake Leman ; thence to Chamouney ;
thence through Tete Noire, to Martigny ; thence down the Bhone,
and over Leman to Geneva again; thence over the Jura, acroaa
France, to Paris ; thence to Versailles, and to Grignon, where is an
agricultural school ; thence back again to Paris; thence to Boulogne,
and across to Folkstone ; thehce, through London, to Liverpool,
where we embarked, and returned to Boston, having been absent
158 days, and travelled 10,647 miles : 6,000 of which were upon the
ocean, 2,444 in Great Britain, and 1,968 on the Continent. This
gave as an average for each day of travel, 67 miles. Yet we did
not hurry ; and it is an interesting fifict, that such are now the facili-
ties of travel by steam-boats and railroads, that it is not necessary
to allow much, if any time, for locomotion, so that we need only to
calculate how much time we want at our stopping places.
Before starting, I fixed upon the following as the chief objects of
the tour.
1. To recover health, or rather to arrest, for a little while, the
progress of disease. Every other object I intended should be sub-
servient to this.
2. To meet face to face, a few religious and scientific men
with whom I had had a pleasant correspondence, or for whom I had
acquired a high respect.
3. To give my first attention to objects specially connected with
my profession, viz. : the geology and scenery of the country, and
the cabinets of natural history.
4. To visit some of the most important of the literary and scien-
tific institutions, and to g^ve special attention, as I concluded to do
after reaching England, to the agricultural schools.
5. To mingle as much as I could with the common people, and
learn their condition and feelings. •
Digitized by VjOOQIC
OBJECTS IN VIEW. 841
6. To take a glance, as far as time and strength would permit, at
the old castles, cathedrals and the modem palaces, churches and
private residences, roads, railroads, bridges and the galleries of art.
7. To take the privilege of a cat in looking upon a king, a queen,
a nobleman, or military chief, should such a one cross my path.
With these objects in view, I adopted the following rules : —
1. To avoid great excitement and excessive fatigue, even though
compelled to g^ve up some of the objects above named. I curbed
my ambition to see every thing of interest when I found it would too
severely tax my powers of endurance. I met with some invalids,
much stronger than I was, who very soon got themselves on the sick
list by attempting too much, and they lost so much time in the physi-
cian's hands, that I believe I saw more in the long run than they did.
Certainly, in five months of sight-seeing, I saw more than my
memory would bring over the ocean.
2. To content myself with seeing one or two things of a sort when
not convenient to see more.
8. Not to take many letters of introduction to gentlemen of dis-
tinction, or attempt to get introduced to them, merely to be able to
say, on my return, that I had seen and conversed with them. I do
not remember to have taken any letters of introduction, except one
to Hugh Miller, kindly handed me by a gentleman as I was
leaving Boston.
We did not follow the usual route of tourists irom Liver-
pool to London, but made a detour of some five hundred miles
through North and South Wales, thence to Bath and South-
ampton, and to the Isle of Wight, and from thence through
Brighton to London. This gave us an opportunity to see
much of the most romantic scenery and the most interesting
rock formations in England, the very classic ground, in fact,
of English geology. We ascended Snowdon, the highest
mountain in England, and Cader Idris, not much less elevated.
When we reached the summit of Snowdon we encountered a
heavy shower, and were enveloped in a dense fog. But ere
long the clouds and fog settled down beneath us, and vista
after vista opened through them, bringing at length into view
all the wild scenery of the western coast of Wales, and dis-
closing prospects in every direction, of vast extent and deep
interest How interesting to be able to pick out marine petri-
Digitized by VjOOQIC
842 BEMnascENCES op amherst college.
fied shells from the rock, at the summit, now thirty-fire
hundred feet above the sea level. The views from Cader
Idris are some of them even more romantic, and the geology
no less interesting.
In passing into Wales we travelled over' the famous rail-
road constructed by Stephenson, senior, with its numerous
tunnels and its tubular bridges at Conway and Bangor, then
the only structures of this kind in the world, and the wonder
of mechanicians. At Bangor, too, is one of the best suspen-
sion bridges in the world, spanning the Menai Straits, as does
the tubular bridge. Turning into the mountains, we travelled
by post all the way to BristoL This mode of travelling I
have rarely seen noticed by travellers, and yet over the finely
macadamized English roads, it is decidedly the most agreeable
mode of transportation I have ever tried. There were four
in our party, and we usually chose the carriage called ^ The
Fly,'' which enabled us to accommodate ourselves to all kinds
of weather. We tried this mode of travelling several times
Ob thi^. Continent, where the system did not seem as well
regulated as in England, though our principal experience was
a night trip over the Jura mountains, from Geneva to Dijon.
But in England, by this mode you can go when and where
you desire, and as fast or slow as horses can carry you.
Probably the chief reasons why it is not more generally used,
are that it requires more time than the railroad, the stage, or
the diligence, and is considerably more expensive. But of all
means of locomotion which I have ever tried, post travelling
is the most agreeable.
The most interesting phenomena which met me in the
mountains of Wales, were the marks of ancient glaciers.
Although I had then never seen a gkder, and had forgotten
whether English geologists had supposed them once to have
existed in Wales, a few days* observation satisfied me that
great masses of ice must once have descended from the high-
est parts of the mountains, through the valleys, wearing down
and smoothing their bottoms and sides up to a certain altitude,
• Digitized by VjOOQIC
GLACIERS IN WALES. 343
the whole corresponding to glacier action. When, a few weeks
subsequently, I attended the meeting of the British Scientific
Association, a paper had been read on drift, and Sir Roderick
L Murchison called on me to state my views as to the drift
phenomena in Amierica, compared with the same in Great
Britain^ I took the liberty of stating my strong conviction as
to the ancient glaciers of Wales, and turning towards Profes-
sor Ramsey, who had charge of the geological survey of that
district, I said : ^' So distinct are these markings that when
that gentleman makes his final report, I shall expect to see a
map of the ancient glaciers of Snowdonia." He bowed and
smiled, but I had no subsequent oonversation with him. Yet
several years afterwards I met him at the meeting of the
American Scientific Association in Montreal, where he read a
paper on drift. I rose and stated what I had said before the
British. Association, and turning to Professor Ramsey, asked
him whether my prediction had proved true, and whether he
had mapped the glaciers of Snowdonia. "Yes," says he,
" I have done it, and I took your mode of representing drift
striae as my model," or words to that effect.
I was much pleased with what I saw of the chariicter of
the Welch. I spent a Sabbath in Dolgelly, where is the old
structure in which Owen Glendwyr held his Parliament in
1404. The day was observed with great strictness, and the
churches were filled. I became acquainted with several min-
* isters of the Independent Church, and at the request of Rev.
Cadwalder Jones, preached a sermon in English, which was
translated into Welch by Rev. Mr. Rees, the well known mis-
sionary, and the other parts of the service were in Welch. I
could see that the audience were much more interested in the
sermon as translated, with some episodes of my personal his-
tory, as I was told, than in its original delivery. I could see
also that the Welch language was admirably adapted for
impassioned appeals.
We made a rather thorough reconnoissance of the Isle of
Wight, especially of its southern and western coast. The
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844 BEMINISCEKCES OF AMHEBCT COLLEGE.
whole is full of interest, both for its civil history and its
geology. I believe tourists do not usually go farther west
than Freshwater Bay. But in my view the most romantic
scenery and geology lie beyond, among the chalk needles and
overhanging cliffs and domes of chalk, and the variegated and
upturned strata of Alum Bay. These can be best seen by
taking an open boat from Freshwater Bay, which in calm
weather is quite pleasant. Let no geologist imagine that he
has seen the Isle of Wight who has not been to Alum Bay.
Fidelity of Exolish Ch&istians.
I met with an incident on this trip, and another subsequently in Lon-
don, that led me to inquire whether there is not a frankness and fidelity
among English Christians rarely seen among as, and perhaps worthy
of our imitation. As we passed through North Wales two or three
clergymen, I believe of the Established Church, came into the cars on
a pleasure excursion to Bangor. We soon got into conversation, and
something which I said, I never could imagine what, led one of them
to the suspicion that I was sceptical, or at least ignorant of experimental
religion. I suspect that my military cap, which I had worn on ship-
board, and had not yet doffed, had something to do with awakening
his suspicions that I had no sympathy with heart religion, and he at
once, in fi gentlemanly but decided manner, made a personal appeal
and exhortation to me as to my state and prospects. As soon as I saw
his object I encouraged him to go on, by my silence at least, and per-
haps by some ambiguous remarks, for I wanted to hear him through.
When he had finished I said to him, ** I thank you, Sir, for your fidelity,
which I am rejoiced to see. I agree with you, and sympathize with
you, in all you have said, and hope I know something experimentally «
on this subject." He was taken quite aback, and apologized for his
apparent rudeness.
Agiun, -when in London, I called on a merchant in extensive busi-
ness in the -vicinity of St. Paul's Cathedral, whose name was George
Hitchcock— I called without an introduction to make some inquiries
about the name of Hitchcock in England. He received me cordially,
but said at once ** before we proceed to other business I should like to
know your views on the great subject of religion." «* Of course," said
I, ** I am a believer in Christianity." *• That," said he, •« is not exactiy
what I want to know — ^but rather whether you feel yourself to be
personally interested in Christ" This was to the point, and being
answered satisfactorily, our subsequent interview was very pleasant.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
LONDON. 845
I mention these instances because I haye not met with such frankness
and fidelity as this in our country, and it struck me not as rude and
unciyil, hot in accordance with true Christian character and impulses.
To me, a stranger in a foreign land, it was certainly very agreeable ;
much more so than the resenre and distance so common on our
thoroughfares and among professing Christians. At least I felt rebuked
for my own want of frankness and fidelity, as a Christian.
In London,
After Daniel Webster had been a fortnight in London, he
was asked what he thought of it, and he replied that he bad
not' yet done wondering. A month's sojourn there, fibrst and
last, left me with much of the same feeling. But the principal
objects and sights in and around the city have been so often
described as to need nothing further from me. Mj peculiar
tastes and objects brought me in contact with some things not
usually visited, and I shall refer to a few of them briefly.
My penchant for natural history led me to look up the
collections of geology, zodlogy and comparative anatomy. Of
course the British Museum was a place of frequent resort to
which, as w^U as to its library, I was permitted dai}^ access.
But I found other collections of deep interest. One of these
was that of the London Geological Society in Somerset House
in the Strand. It is an admirable collection, but most unfor-
tunately situated as to light. I found this to be the case with
a large part of the public cabinets which I saw in Europe.
As we were at that time about erecting cabinets in Amherst,
my attention was called particularly to this point. And I
came to this conclusion, that where the light was introduced
through sky-lights in the centre of the room, the specimens
showed well ; still better, perhaps, if brought in through win-
dows in the walls immediately below that ceiling, and best of
all, where there are such lights and sky-lights besides. This
is the case with the new Museum of Economical Geology in
Jermain Street, near Picadilly. This was erected by the
government to receive the fruits of the geological survey of
England, a similar one being built in Dublin in Ireland, and
16 •
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846 REMINISCENCIS OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
another in Scotland. I saw that onlj in Lmidon, and that
only as a special favor, for in 1850 it was not open to the
public But even then it contained a rich collection, and as
to light and arrangement, I think it aliead of any cabinet
which I saw in Europe. How much better, for instance, did
the specimens show than in the crowded and poorly lighted
rooms of the School of Mines in Paris, which is an analogous,
much older and more numerous collection.
The natural history room of the great Museum in the
city of York is lighted by windows in the upper part of the
walls, and the fine collections are thus shown off to great
advantage. How much better than in the comparatively dark
rooms in the University of Dublin, and the Hunterian Museum
of Glasgow. In the University of Edinburgh the natural
history rooms, as well as the library, are fitted up in a very
excellent manner and costly style. I noticed that the stuffed
animals are arranged in a very unusual manner. They are
placed in various attitudes all over the floor, so that the visitor
moves about among bears and hyenas, tigers and lions, with
open mouths and life-like aspect. And I should think some
persons of sensitive temperament would shrink from the
promenade. The west room, containing the birds, shells and
minerals, both in its architectural proportions and its lighting,
is perhaps the finest I saw in Great Britain. The mineral
cases are of mahogany. The library room is perhaps the
most imposing, certainly for such a purpose, that I have ever
seen. What a contrast between this and the very plain,
unpainted, unglazed shelves of some of the German
Universities !
The Hunterian Museum, near Lincoln's Inn Fields, of Comparativo
and Morbid Anatomy, is perhaps the finest in Europe, and especially
worthy the attention of Americans, because as yet we have only begun
such collections. It is admirably lighted firom near the top, and pre-
sents the subject of comparative anatomy in a most attractive light.
We have first, skeletons of the whole series of animals, from man
downwards, systematically arranged. Then, in proper order, we have
the softer parts of animals preserved in alcohol. The skeleton of the
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HUNTERIAN MUSEUM. 847
Iziah Giant, 8 feet 4 inches high, stands by the sida of that of a female
dwarf only 10 inches high. There are extinct animals here as well as
those now allTe ; among the former, the Qlyptodon, with its armadillo-
like armor, three feet in diameter ; also, a cast of the skeleton of the
&mous giant bird, the Dinomis. Prof. Richard Owen, the ablest of
European comparative anatomists, who was the soul of this collection,
it is well known, first brought to light this great New Zealand bird.
He had a room in the Museum, and kindly spent an hour or two in
showing us its riches. He brought forward the original bone — a frag-
ment of a fbmur only six inches long, from which, by the laws of com-
parative anatomy, he first constructed and described the Dinomis — the
greatest zoological discovery of the present century. His friends
warned him not to risk his reputation upon so slender a proof of the
former existence of this bird, as the mere fragment of a bone ; but he
had more confidence in the principles of anatomy than in their opinion,
and as the result showed, with good reason.
Among the private collections which I visited in London, was the
great one in conchology, of Mr. Cummings, No. 80 Gower Street.
This has a larger number of species of shells than any other in the
world ; though as to varieties, it is said that Prof. Adam's collection at
Amherst, is much richer. Agassiz pronounces it, in this respect, un-
equalled. Mr. Cummings* collection is said to contain twenty-two
thousand splcies and varieties. He paid for some small rare specimens
one himdred dollars ; for a Carinaria, one hundred and fifty dollars ;
and he spoke of another choice specimen purchased by himself, or some
other one, at three hundred and fifty dollars. His collection is not
arranged in cases so as to be accessible to public inspection, but is in
drawers, so as to require much time and patience to examine it.
I was much indebted, while in London, to the kind attentions of Dr.
Gideon Mantell and Sir Charles Lyell. The former treated me like a
brother, although I had no special claims upon his services. He
showed me many new and rare things ; among which were gigantic
Lizard bones, from the Wealden, and a specimen of the now nearly
extinct bird called the Apteryx, of New Zealand. It had no wings,
and its position was that of the Penguin. It comes nearer in character
to the extinct Dinomis than any other known bird.
Dr. ManteU also presented us with a ticket of admission to the
Botanic Garden, in Regent's Park. This is open only to subscribers,
who are the higher classes, (I believe not including the nobility,) of Lon-
don. It was promenade day when we went, and we had a fine oppor-
tunity to see the higher classes of th#English metropolis, who certainly
formed what may be called an elegant collection of gentlemen and
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^8 BBBONISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
ladiei. But the plants and flowers were still more interesting. In Hbe
Conservatory I saw several of those living tropical species that throw
light on those dug out of the rocks, such as the Zamia, the Cycaa
Araucaria, the Date Palm, etc. Beneath a large tent was collected
ahout an acre, I judged, of some of the most showy American shrubs,
chiefly the Rhododendron, Azalea (white and pink,) the Ealmia,.etc.,
all in full bloom. They were brought there to be sold, and certainly
formed' the most gorgeous floral exhibition which I ever saw.
To Sir Charles Lyell I was indebted for a ticket to dine with a Club
composed of members of the London Qeological Society, to the number
of about fifteen. The dinner was at six o'clock, after which was
a meeting of the Society, with a paper, and discussions. In such cases
W"gl'«H scientific men appear to me remarkable for two things ; first
for the frank and blunt manner in which they advanced their peculiar
views, and for the vigor, and even sharpness, with which they comment
upon those who differ from them, so that in some cases I suspected
personal hostility. But I found that when they got an opportuni^ to
speak of their opponents, personally, they were so copious in their
commendations that, in this country, we should call it flattery. I
wish we had more of this frank, generous English manner, in the
intercourse of our scientific men.
After the geological meeting, Dr. Mantell introduced us into the
soiree of the Royal Society, where was a large sprinkling^f ladles and
the Nepaul Ambassador, who was at that time producing considerable
sensation in London, but who appeared to me about as much out of
place in a scientific meeting as an elephant in a ladies drawing-room.
The same character was introduced at the meeting of the British Asso-
ciation, in Edinburgh, where the whole proceedings were stopped till
he and his train could be escorted by an epauletted official to the
platform, where he sat five or ten minutes and then stopped tha
proceedings till he could pass out.
At the Royal Society we were shown a lock of Sir Isaac Newton's
hair, which was gray, and also the little telescope which he constructed,
and which was about a foot long and two or three inches in diameter.
HoMBRTON College.
The two men in Europe whom I felt most anxious to see,
were Professor Buckland, Dean of Westminster, and Dr. J-
Pye Smith, who had been thirty or forty years at the head
of the dissenters' theological oiUege, at Homerton. Dr. Buck-
land I found to be in an insane hospital, and Dr. Smith just
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DR. J. PY? SMITH. 849
about to resign his place at Homerton, in order to bring that
institution with Coward and High Colleges into one, which
has been done, under the name of New College. Dr. Smith
invited me to be present at the last anniversary at Homerton,
when he resigned his place, and where were assembled a
goodly number of the Independent ministers and laymen of
London. I was gladly there, although it was painful to see
my distinguished friend so feeble ; yet it was gratifying to see
in his prayers and remarks so much of the spirit of heaven.
I had formed a high opinion of him in this respect, from his
correspondence, and I had an opportunity to state to the com-
pany, when they called on me for remarks, my views of Dr.
Smith, without the usual embarrassment of speaking in a
man's presence ; for he was so deaf that he could not hear a
word. He had placed me on his right hand at the table, and
introduced me in the most flattering manner. I stated to the
audience what it was that interested me so deeply in Dr.
Smith. I had preceded him in discussing the connection
between geology and religion, and in his subsequent able
work on that subject he had quoted largely irom mine, and
with unqualified commendation. Then he sent me a copy of
his work, with a letter beginning thus : —
" My Dear Sir, — ^Meditating, at some time, to do myself the honor
of addressing a letter to you expressive of esteem and gratitude, I
begin rather bluntly, but from the fear of forgetting, I will put
down,
"1. The writer whom you mention (Am. Bib. Repos. No. 25,)
is not Bishop Gilbert Burnet, but a very different person, Dr.
Thomas Burnet, of tlie Charter House.
"2. In your excellent Report, Geology of Massachusetts, second
edition, p. 395, you apparently confound Dr. James Hutton, the.
Scottish geologisiy with Dr. Charles Hutton, the mathematician, a
native of Northumberland, &c.'*
Now, said I to myself, how few, even among Christian men,
can be found who would not have reversed this process, and
first have pointed out in his work these mistakes made by a
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850 BEBimiSCENCES OP AMHERST COLLEGE.
Stranger, and then, perhaps, have informed me. It certaisly
indicates not only high Christian attainment, thus to forego
an opportunity to show his superior knowledge, bat a most
delicate sense of propriety, and I want to grasp the hand of
such a man ; and I now have the opportunity to state to his
friends this noble trait in his character, and to say that I find
him in all respects such a Christian and such a gentleman as
I had anticipated.
I might have stated, though I did not, that I had some
apology for my mistake as to Bishop Burnet, in the fact that
we have in Amherst College Library a copy of Burnet's
Theory of the Earth, published a few years ago in London,
whose title page contains the name of Bishop Burnet as the
author, and I followed this as good authority.
Mrs. Ellis's Female School at Hoddsdon.
I went to Hoddsdon, about twenty miles north of London,
chiefly to see a training school there which is somewhat
devoted to agriculture. But finding that place to be the resi-
dence of Bev. Mr. Ellis and wife, former missionaries to Tahiti,
and now to Madagascar, I called upon them chiefly with a
view to leam something of her female school and her notions
of education. They treated us with great kindness, and Mrs.
Ellis took us to Rawdon House, where her school is kept, and
which is a large and elegant mansion with groves and ponds
around it, I presume the former private residence of some
wealthy gentleman. Of course expenses are high, but Mrs.
Ellis tries to teach her pupils domestic work, and she seems to
have correct notions on this subject, but thinks it necessaiy in
England to begin with an establishment more expensive than
would be desirable, otherwise the school would be deserted
by the respectable classes. Caste, in England, exercises a
controlling power, and cannot, as in this country, be neglected.
Agricultural Schools.
I had seen the principal sights in London and was about
starting for the continent when I received from the govem-
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AGBICULTUBAL SCHOOLS. 851
ment of Massachusetts an appointment as Agricultural Com«
missioner^ with the request that I would, as far as practi-
cable, visit the agricultural schools of Europe. This changed
my plan of travel somewhat, as I concluded to commence mj
explorations in Great Britain. But I was embarrassed,
because I knew neither the location nor character of these
schools, nor where to look for the information. Sir Charles
Ljell, however, put me upon a track that afforded me light.
He introduced me to Mr. Fusej, a distinguished agricul-
turist from Berkshire, brother of the Professor Pusey so well
known in the theological world. He was a member of Parlia-
ment, and was then residing in London. He invited me to
dinner, and there I met with Hon. William Monsell, member
of Parliament from Limerick, in L*eland, who could inform
me as to the schools in that country, and with Chevalier
Bunsen, Prussian Minister at the Court of St. James, who
knew about the German schools. Mr. Pusey could give an
account of the agricultural schools in England, though I found
he had not much confidence in their utility. Mr. MonseU
could t6ll me of the Lish schools and Chevalier Bimsen knew
where they might be found in Germany. I took dinner with
Mr. Pusey Saturday evening, and Mr. Monsell invited me to
breakfast on Monday morning, when he gave me a letter to
the Bight Honorable Alexander Macdonald, of Dublin, the
superintendent of the whole system of schools in L^land, and
to some other leading scientific gentlemen, so that I had free
access to all the facilities I could desire.
On my return, I made a Report to the government upon
the agricultural schools of Europe, which they published in
a pamphlet of one hundred and five pages. I then gave a
list of three hundred and fifty-two schools, with a detailed
description of several, especially such as I visited. I found
them of various grades, the three most important of which
correspond in rank to colleges, academies, and primary schools.
But I must refer to my Report for details, for want of room
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852
REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
to give them here, except the following list of their number in
different countries : —
England, .
5
In Mecklenburg Schwerin, .
Ireland, .
68
Schleswig Holstein,
Scotland, .
2
Anhault, ....
France, .
. 76
Hesse, ....
Italy, .
2
Belgium, .
. 9
Nassau, ....
Prussia, .
. 82
the Electorate of Hesse, .
Austria, .
83
the Grand Duchy of Ba-
Wurtemberg,
. 7
den, ....
Bavaria, •
. 85
Saze Melningen,
Saxony, .
6
Russia, ....
68
Brunswick,
2
I spent the Sabbath in Cirencester, in England, where is an
agricultural college, and had a little opportunity to learn
something about ecclesiastical matters. I became acquainted
with the very worthy pastor of the Baptist Church, and could
see somewhat against what difficulties the dissenters have to
contend. The congregation was evidently composed mainly
of those quite poor, and I should judge conscientious too.
For the overshadowing Episcopal Church in the place has
$10,000 for annual distribution among the poor, but it would
be withheld just as soon as a poor man should manifest any
sympathy for dissenting views. How very few, with depend-
ent families perhaps, would relinquish this charity and accept
the poverty and odium of attaching themselves to a Baptist or
Independent Church ! One fact will give an idea of the pov-
erty of such denominations. The Baptist brother invited us
to partake of the communion with his church, which we gladly
accepted. The wine was distributed on a common japanned
server in a single junk bottle with two tumblers.
It is well known that the question of caste in most Euro-
pean countries is the grand obstacle in the way of educational
establishments, that embrace all classes, as do ours of every
grade in this country. Several teachers in England and
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INCIDENT IN SCOTLAND. 358
France confessed to me that their efforts to overcome the
difficulty had been unavailing. The truth is, "with few excep-
tions, that the lower classes are not allowed to learn in the
schools what they please, and go as &r as they can ; but only
such subjects as the higher classes consider appropriate to
qualify them for the humble sphere they are expected to
occupy.
I met with an incident in Scotland which it may not be
improper to name, and which shows that even in that enlight-
ened country this feeling about educating the lower classes
exists, and it shows, too, that it is not always the strongest
among the nominally aristocratic. Being at a soiree at the
house of the venerable Professor Jameson, his sister, who did
the honors of the occasion, her brother being a bachelor, says
to me, Countess wishes an introduction to you. As
soon as I saw her, I thought to myself what can this young
and accomplished Countess want of me, an awkward, unpol-
ished republican. I foimd there was nothing special, only
that she and her husband sympathized with American institu-
tions, and he (whom she subsequently introduced) had been
there more than once. Soon after. Miss Jameson says, Mrs.
y the wife of one of our barristers, desires an introduc-
tion. I found in her a very intellectual and accomplished
lady. As she inquired about my joumeyings, I said that I
felt more at home in Scotland than any where I had been,
because so many things here corresponded to those in New
England. Even your geology has a close resemblance to
ours ; and then your systems of religion and education corre-
spond essentially to ours. You here extend the benefits of
education to all classes, as we do. *^I know we do," said she,
" but I do not like it : it makes our servants discontented with
their condition, and they would be much better without so
much knowledge." I was rather surprised, but argued the
point somewhat, and became convinced by my acquaintance
with the two ladies, that aristocratic notions are not always
the staunchest in connection with aristocratic titles.
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854 REMimSCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
At Bonn, on the Rhine, where is an agricultaral school,
Professor Reisin offered to go to Poppelsdorf, where it is
situated, and interpret for me. Afler spending aix hour or two
in asking as many questions as I wished, we returned, and
though I had taken up nearly half a day of his time, I could
not persuade him to accept the slightest compensation*
I experienced a similar kindness from Dr. Guido Sandber-
ger, at Wiesbaden, the well known geologist and Professor in
the Gymnasium. He went with me on foot to the estate of
the Duke of Nassau, where an agricultural school is situated,
and aided me in obtaining all the information I needed.
On this walk I noticed a custom that struck me pleasantly.
As we passed the common laborers along the way, the Pro-
fessor would take his hat entirely from his head and offer
the most cordial greeting. The effect seemed to me to be
very cheering upon the laborers, and I cannot doubt but it
contributes much to cultivate and promote that kindness of
manner and that good natured affability that constitute such
a charm in German society, and sometimes, I am sorry to add,
forms the sweet pill in which fatal religious error is received.
But I do wish that Americans had more not merely of the
external marks of kindness for their fellows, especially for
strangers, of the Germans, but of their readiness to submit to
inconvenience and sacrifice for the sake of helping others. I
did not see in Germany any thing of that selfishness and self-
appropriating spirit which is so disgustingly prominent on oar
great thoroughfares in this country. I have mentioned two
examples of a generous readiness to help; let me name a third
which I fear would not of^en find its counterpart in this country.
I sallied forth one day into the crooked streets of the city of
Frankfort to see if I could find my banker, without the power
of using the German language. I wrote the banker's name
upon a card, and meeting a well-dressed gentleman, I held
the card before him and made a motion with the other
hand, which made him understand that I wanted to find
the banker's residence. He turned directly about and made
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KINDNESS TO STRANGERS. 855
a motion for me to follow. We went on at least a hundred
rods, and coming against the banker's office, he pointed to
it and with a bow left me.
I met with similar kindness in some other European coun-
tries, different from any experience of mine in this country.
In France, from the great politeness shown to one often, we
should expect much. But I confess that I too often found,
when the moment came in which help was needed, your polite
friend was missing. It might be different when one was
regularly introduced and was known, but I am speaking now
of cases where I was a perfect stranger. In Ireland I found
rery much of generous readiness to help, and I must say that
I found what I regard as more perfect examples of true gentle-
men and ladies among the higher classes in that country than
any other. On the public conveyances, even, when all exter-
nal circumstances were most uncomfortable, the constant ebul-
lition of Irish wit and proffer of accommodation cannot but
keep one good-natured. I had on one occasion been waiting
with Mrs. H. at a hotel, in the north of Ireland, for the stage,
which would just reach a railroad station in season for the
cars. I noticed a well-dressed gentlemen also waiting for the
same purpose. But when the stage came, there was only one
vacant seat ; yet this gentleman said to me that if I could in
any way contrive to get along with my wife, he would cheer-
fully resign all his right to the seat. How very likely, in this
country, a man would be to consider such a case as a God-
send for his benefit !
As a sample of Irish energy and good roads and fleet horses,
I will mention that on this occasion I found myself nineteen
miles from the railroad station and rather less than two hours
short of the time when the cars would start for Belfast, whence
I had hoped that evening to take the steamer for Glasgow. I
said to the landlord, if I give you an extra fee, is it in your
power to get myself and wife to the station in time ? He
dared not promise, but offered to tiy. In five minutes we
were mounted on an Irish car, in which you sit facing out*
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356 REMINISCENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
wards, with your feet over the wheels, and your luggage occu-
pies the body of the vehicle, and behind a smart black pony
we were spinning away over a macadamiEed road at a rapid
rate. We soon passed* the stage, and reached the station
several minutes before the end of the two hours, and the horse
was uninjured.
In Glasgow I was trying to find the residence of a gentle-
man, and meeting a man with one or two joiner^s tools ia his
hand, I made inquiries. He turned around and said he would
guide me, nor stopped till he had gone out of his way, I should
think, a quarter of a mile.
If such generous attention to inquiring strangers is given in
our cis-atlantic cities, I can only say it has never Mien under
my cognizance.
Meeting of the British Association for the Advance-
ment OF Science.
I spent a week very delightfully in the magnificent city of
Edinburgh, during the sessions of this association.
If I had room I would give the details of this meeting, as I
did ui the "New York Observer" of July Slst and August
7th, 1850. But with the exception of one or two items, I
must omit all.
One object I should have in view in such description would
be to suggest to any of my countiymen who may visit Europe,
and have any scientific tastes, to avail themselves of the privi-
lege open to all respectable gentlemen and ladies of attending
this association, which meets Bnnually in different cities during
the summer. There, without any formal introduction by
letter, which is usually a heavy infliction upon distinguished
men, you can become personally acquainted with as many as
you choose of the most distinguished personages in the learned
world. Such men at home are fully occupied, but here they
expect to be lionized.
I remember this occasion and the many acquaintances I
there formed, with deep interest. I there for the first time
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BRITISH ASSOCIATIONS.
857
met Hugh Miller, and he was kind enough to show me his rich
collection of fossil fishes — ^the same, and perhaps in the same
room, in which »ot long aflerwards he took his own life.
Number of Members.
The catalogue published on Wednesday, July 31st, and
three supplements afterwards^ give the list of members, either
for life, or for a year, or for the present meeting : —
Whole number, 1,225
Of whom there were ladies, • • • • 274
To give an idea of the classes of persons belonging to this
body, I have taken the following facts from the catalogues : —
Of the nobility, of different grades, . • 19
Members of the Royal Society, either of
London or Edinburgh, • ... 95
With the title of LL. D^ . . . . 18
With that of D. D., 17
Professors in literary institutions, . . 61
Clergymen, 97
Medical gentlemen, 104
Foreigners, 25
From the United States, .... 10
You will at once perceive from these details, what a fine
opportunity one has, by attending such a meeting, to see and
hear distinguished men, whose writings have excited high
respect. I think this perhaps the highest gratification afforded
by such a meeting.
The Moral Tons of the Meeting.
If there were room I would give some samples of the high
moral tone of Dr. Brewster^s opening address. Equally
decided were many of the subsequent speeches. In moving
a vote of thanks to Dr. Mantell, for his lecture on the Great
Birds of New Zealand^ Dr. Bobinson said that it was a
sermon, and that it not only spoke to us of God, but of the
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858 REMINISCENCES OF AHHEBST COLLEGE.
Redeemer ; alluding, I suppose, to the fact that the discoveiy
of the Dinornis, (said to be the greatest discovery in zodlogj
made during the present century,) was the result of missionary
operations. Dr. Mantell responded very happily to these
allusions, and placed moral truth immeasurably above science.
I do not believe that any skeptical alhision would have been
tolerated for a moment. Indeed, the high-toned moral senti-
mento which were uttered, received a hearty response from
the audience, and I regard this feature of the Association as its
highest glory. I could have wished that those who regard
modem science as almost synonymous with skepticism had
been present to see how the most eminent savans of Great
Britain treated that subject And here it occurs to me to
refer to the fact, that nearly one hundred clergymen were
present at the meetings. Indeed, it seined to me that the
most talented and learned members, for the most part, were
of that profession. This is the true way to give a high moral
character to the meetings^ Will not American clergymen
take a hint from these facts in relation to the similar Associa-
tion on that side of the Atlantic, which, like a young giant, is
rising so rapidly in size and strength ? It ought to have more
clerical members. They will be welcomed by the scientific
laymen who compose that body; and their presence and
cooperation will do much to remove those jealousies and
alienations which are apt to grow up between men of different
pursuits, who rarely come into contact upon common ground.
Let our clergymen stand aloof from that Association, and
neglect to become well acquainted with the subjects there
discussed, and they will be very likely to imagine scientific
men to be the secret enemies of religion, and very probably
make some of them so. But a different course will show
them how exa^erated are their apprehensions, and that a
large proportion of our men of science respect, if they do not
profess, religion. And I might make similar remarks to pious
and intelligent laymen of our country. JSIany such, in this
country, not familiar with the details of science, are present
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PEACE CONGRESS. 859
at these meetings, to encourage those who are making impor-
tant Bcientific inyestigations ; and the effect is veiy happj.
Peace Congress at Frankfort on the Maine.
We were obliged to hurry from the British Association in
order to reach the continent in season for the Peace Congress
in Frankfort, which was another occasion of interest, and
although I had never formally joined any peace society at
home, I S3rmpathized with the object aimed at by such associ-
ations, and was requested to act as delegate from the Massa-
chusetts Society. I thought it a rather bold stroke of policy
to hold this congress so far in the interior of Germany, even
where Austrian bayonets bore rule, and it seemed to me that
had the authorities been fully aware of our object and of the
doctrines that would be broached, a veto would have been put
upon our proceedings.
We spent the Sabbath in Bonn, and the next day being
very beautiful, and the company on board the steamer most
agreeable, we had a most delightful sail through the well
known romantic scenery of the Rhine, which, however, Mr.
Cobden told me he thought inferior to that of the Hudson,
except in historical monuments.
This was about the time when Professor Webster, of Cam-
bridge, should have been executed for the murder of Dr.
Parkman, and everywhere I found a deep solicitude as to the
result The intelligent gentlemen on board the steamer were
full of inquiries on the subject, and while they declared that his
escape would have a most disastrous effect in Europe, they
expressed much fear lest one so high in place as Webster
would slip the halter, and they hardly believed there was
virtue enough in Massachusetts to compel his execution. I
told them that I knew Webster weU, and also knew something
of Massachusetts courts and public opinion, and that just as
surely as a steamer should arrive that left Boston after the
first of August, they would have news of Webster's execution.
In a very few days my words were confirmed.
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860 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
Several members of the congress, and among them Mr*
CJobden and Mr. Smith, members of the English Parliament,
came up the Rhine with us, and we found them very agreeable
fellow travellers. They seemed conscious that the movement
is regarded by most of the higher classes as quixotic, and
scarcely raised above ridicule ; yet it did not trouble them.
When it was mentioned that this and that respectable man
was expected to be present, Mr. Cobden remarked that "when
we were going to l>e laughed at, it was pleasant to be in good
company."
Several of the Professors at Bonn University were also on
board, as well as the Chevalier Bunsen, the Prussian Minister
in London, so well known on both sides of the Atlantic for his
literary labors, and a fine example of a genuine gentleman.
They all spoke respectfully of the object of the congress, but
regarded it as quite impracticable in the present state of public
opinion. A very large deputation from England and Scotland
are expected to arrive to-night, and Mr. Burritt and otheis
have gone down the river to-day to receive them.
I had written out a somewhat full account of this meeting,
and think it would interest my readers, but like the account
of the British Scientific Association, it must be omitted for
want of room.
The View from Rigi Culm, in Switzerland.
If I were to allow myself, without restraint, to write about
the scenery and geology of Switzerland, I hardly know when
I should stop ; for this, of all Europe, was my favorite field.
In geology, my almost constant soliloquy was. Eureka!
Eureka! and as to scenery, I would often say, "in other
parts of Europe I have found little which has not its paral-
lel in North America; but in Switzerland I knock under,
and give myself up to gazing and admiring. But I must
limit myself here to a single scene — ^to a view I got from
Itigi Culm — which I fancy few are so fortunate as to wit-
ness. It is well known that many tourists spend the good
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RI6I CULAI. 361
part of a day in reaching this summit, where thej spend
the night in the hope of seeing the snn rise and its rosy
light reflected from the overland glaciers. But, alas, how
many find the mountain, 6,000 feet high, enveloped in clouds,
and they mu6t«Bpend another half day in getting down to
Zug or Lucerne, below, with a feeling of great disappoint-
ment I should think that on the 29th of August, 1850,
not less than two hundred of us, of all nations and languages,
stood upon the Culm before sunrise, enveloped in as dense a
doud as I ever saw, and with the almost certain prospect of
utterly failing in our object But in ten minutes that cloud
settled down so as to bring the summit, where we stood, above
it, and also, at a few miles distant, the Bernese glaciers, ready
to throw back their rosy light as soon as the sun struck them.
And in a few minutes it did strike them from a cloudless sky,
and we were in the midst of the most unearthly scene that I
ever witnessed, as we stood above, the top of the doud that
filled all the valleys of Switzerland, and I felt an almost irre-
sistible desire to launch forth on its fleecy undulations, so like
cdestial scenery did it seem. But soon the vapor began to
give way here and there, and open vistas into the regions
below. Here and there a lake, a romantic mountain, a dty,
or some spot of deep historic interest (Zug and Lucerne, the
Bossberg, Tell's Chapel, &c) would be disdosed, and alter-
nately concealed, until at length almost all Switzerland lay
beneath your feet It was enough. I never had witnessed
such a scene before and never expect to witness another.
That on Snowdon was similar, but &r inferior.
And here I would record with gratitude, that though I have
visited many mountauis on both sides of the Atlantic, I never
yet failed to get a good view from their summit In those
cases where the weather seemed most unfavorable %t first, it
served only to heighten the ultimate effect Certainly I have
been peculiarly favored in this respect
I would gladly go into the details of our experience in the
re^on of Mont Blanc, where Alpine scenery culminates.
16
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862 REBONISCENGES OF AMHERST COLLEGE. .
Were I writing only for geologists, I certainly should tell
them how deeply interested I was in the phenomena of gla-
cicrs, and the marks of their former wide extension, both
horizontaUy and yertically, and also of the vast plications of
the solid strata. But I must not become prolix on such
themes. Nor shall I fiirther prolong my account of trans-
atlantic scenes.
Kindness of Providence.
I cannot close without adverting to the kind Providence
that carried me and my companion safely through all our
wanderings, and made them instrumental of a gradual invigo-
ration of health that continued for many years. But I feel
constrained also, from a sense of obligation to God and man,
and I cannot feel it to be improper to mention what has
seemed to be a special Providence in regard to pecuniary
means. It was certainly as unexpected as a mirade, though
not a miracle.
When deliberating about a foreign tour, with Mrs. Hitch-
cock to accompany me, (and every-body said I must not go
alone as my health was,) I felt not a little embarrassed in view
of the large expenses that must be incurred, and I knew of
no quarter from which I might hope for any assistance. But
ere long John Tappan generously offered to pay our passage
($240) across the Atlantic. On our voyage myself and wife
became acquainted with Hon. Jonathan Phillips. Just before
reaching Liverpool he said to Mr. Tappan, " Where is Mr.
Hitchcock going when he lands ? " " To London, I suppose,"
was the reply. " Would he not like to see something of the
geology of England?" was his forther inquiry. "Doubtless
he would," was the reply. " Take him then," said Mr. Phillips,
"and go^where you think best, and send the bills to me."
Accordingly, when in Liverpool, Mr. Tappan proposed to me
to make an excursion into Wales, on our way to London, not,
however, informing me of Mr. Phillips' offer. I accepted
because that is classic ground in geology. But after a few
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JONATHAN PHILLIPS. 368
days spent there, I told Mr. Tappan that neither my time nor
funds would allow me to stay much longer. He then told me
with what commission he was charged, and advised me to
give myself up for a time to his guidance, which I did, and
the result was, that before we got to London, through Bristol,
Bath, Southampton, and the Isle of Wight, I had had a chance
to give a hasty glance at most of the rock formations of Eng-
land ; the Silurian, Devonian, Trias, Oolite, Lias, Wealden,
Cretacous, and Tertiary, and the trip was very delightful. It
extended to about five hundred miles, and my expenses were
$166, which Mr. Phillips paid.
Another God-send was my commission to examine the agri-
cultural schools. I succeeded in making a report that met the
approbation of the government, and they voted me a thousand
dollars for my expenses. On reaching home Hon. Samuel
Williston presented me with one hundred dollars. I had thus
received $1,506 which I had not the slightest reason to expect
when I started, and it did not fall so much as $200 short of
the whole expenses of myself and wife during our one hun-
dred and fifly-eight days of absence. The irreligious man will
say this was good luck ; what name the technical theologian
may give to it I know not ; but I recognise it as the special
providence of a merciful God.
Geological Sueveys.
Since these surveys have entered largely into my experi-
ence for more than thirty years, and I have prosecuted them
without relinquishing my place in the College, a brief history
of my connection with them may seem desirable.
I was conversant with the earliest efforts in this country to
get up geological surveys. The appointment of Amos Eaton
to survey the route of the Erie Canal, by Hon. Stephen Van
Rensselaer, was, I believe, the earliest example. He made
his first Report in 1824. In 1834, another edition was pub-
lished, to which Mr. Eaton added a section by myself, although
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864 BEMINISCENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
it was never intended for publication, but merely to aid him
by some imperfect notes.
North Carolina was the first State in our country that
ordered a survey, and the Reports by Professor Denison
Olmsted were published in a pamphlet form in 1824 and
1825. In a review of this Keport in the American Jounial
of Science, I tried to induce legislators in other States to
follow this example, but in vain. Years passed and the
subject seemed to have been forgotten.
In 1830, being upon a journey to the coal regions of Penn-
sylvania, and stopping in Hartford, I saw by the papers that
Governor Lincoln had recommended to the legislature of
Massachusetts a trigonometrical survey of the State. I at
once addressed him, urging the importance of connectiog with
it a geological survey. On my return I found the suggestion
adopted, and a commission soon reached me as surveyor. I
accepted the place on condition that I might so husband my
time as to allow me still to perform my duties in College. I
made my first Report in 1882, in a pamphlet of seventy
pages, on the Economical Geology of the State, with a geo-
logical map. In 1833, I made a full Report on the whole
subject, in a volume of seven hundred and two pages, with an
atlas of plates and a geological map ; of which a second edition
was ordered to be printed in 1884.
I was aware that these reports were very imperfect, and
that several years more should be devoted to exploration.
But as this was the first attempt in any of the Northern
States to cany through a geological survey, and as I knew
that legislators are always anxious to have their servants
prosecute and carry through their plans with energy and
dispatch, I thought it best to present them with the prelimi-
naries of a survey, rather than one complete, lest the work
should be stopped and a prejudice excited against all future
surveys. In this I succeeded ,• for the other States have been
following the lead of Massachusetts ever since, until nearly all
of them have instituted surveys, and some of them with mag-
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GEOLOGICAL BURVETS. 865
nificent results. The government of New York consulted me
in the plan of their survey and I recommended essentially
that which was adopted, viz., to form independent districts,
imder distinct heads, rather than to place one geologist at
the head of the whole. I was requested to take charge of
one of these districts, and finally consented, and with Pro-
fessor Adams as assistant, commenced the work in Duchess
County. But reflection and a poor state of health led me
to resign my post. I confess, also, that I had some hope
that Massachusetts might yet call me again into the field,
to review and carry forward the survey there, and in this I
was not disappointed. Governor Marcy's commission for the
New York survey hore date June 13th, 1836. As soon as
released £tom that State, I addressed a letter to Governor
Everett, who was then in the chair, setting forth the impor-
tance of a further prosecntion of at least some parts of the
survey. His recommendation carried the measure with the
legislature, and on the 25th of May, 1837, I received a new
commission. A liberal interpretation of it enabled me to
extend my attention to every part of the survey, and for three
or four years I prosecuted the work of reexamination with
greater vigor than formerly. In 1838, 1 brought out a Beport
on the Economical Geology, of one hundred and thirty-nine
pages, and in 1841, a Final Beport, in two quarto volumes,
of three hundred and five hundred and forty-four pages, with
fifty-six plates and two hundred and eighty-two wood cuts.
In the first survey I was obliged to report on the Zoology and
Botany, as well as the Geology, but in the re-survey, the
former were committed to several able naturalists, who made
separate and valuable reports.
In the year 1851 or 1852 I made another suggestion to the
government of the State. I had been for several years study-
ing surface geology, and having been somewhat aided by the
Smithsonian Institution, I made a report to them which they
subsequently published. I found this kind of research, more-
over, very favorable to health, as it did not demand the use
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866 REMINISCENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
of the hammer, but onlj of the barometer aiid levelling instm*
m^nts. I therefore proposed to the govermnent that if thej
would bear my necessary expenses in a very simple way of
travelling, I would explore the sar&ce geology of the State
without charge. The legislature accepted my offer, and voted
in their session of 1852 to appropriate $500 to this object. I
have not expended much more than half this sum up to the
present time, yet I have made two reports which have be^i
published. But they have not much connection with surface
geology. For I obtained permission finom the governor and
council to use some of the money in researches somewhat
different. The first report was a pamphlet of forty-four pages,
four plates, and numerous wood cuts '^illustrating certain
points in the geology of Massachusetts." The first point was
the coal field of Bristol County ; the second on the geological
age and position of the brown hematite iron ore of Berkshire
County, and the third on the marks of ancient glaciers in
Massachusetts.
My second report was on the ichnology of New England,
the result of more than twenty years of study into an intenselj
interesting but most difficult subject. I distinctly informed the
government that the matter was purely one of science rather
than of economical benefit, that I made no charge for mj
report or labors, and if they chose to publish it I should be
glad. They voted to do so even without reading my manu-
script, at an expense of some $4,000 or $5,000. Is there
another State in the Union where mere science would thus be
patronized ? My report was published in 1858, in a quarto
of two hundred and twenty pages, with sixty plates, a hundred
copies of which the legislature generously voted to present to
me. Its style of execution was such as to elicit commendation
from European reviewers and naturalists.
I had now reached that period in life, and was borne down
by so many severe infirmities, that all desire to have any thing
to do with another State survey was gone. But in 1856 I
was strongly urged to take hold as principal of the survey of
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SURVEY OP VERMONT. 867
Vermont. Its history had been a melancholy one. It was
started twelve years before; but three principals had been
successively smitten down by death, and I could not but
confess to a sort of superstitious feac that if I took the post I
should be the fourth before the completion of such a work. I
found, however, that I should be allowed to bring in my two
sons as assistants, and I accepted. My assistants executed
most of the field work, and my youngest son also most of the
maps and sections of the report, and though obliged to close
the work when only half done, because the legislature starved
us out, we did bring out a report of nearly a thousand quarto
pages, in two volumes, with thirty-eight plates and two hun-
dred and eighty-nine wood cuts, and containing a vast amount
of facts, so that in a review of the work in the "American Jour-
nal of Science" for May, 1862, by Mr. Billings, paleontologist
of the Canada survey, it is said : " Upon the whole, we look
upon this Report as one of the best that has been published
on this continent." I did not expect such a compliment from
so competent a judge ; yet for all this work of four or
five years, I never received as much as six hundred dollars
besides my expenses.
It will be seen that, whether wisely or not, geological
surveys have occupied no inconsiderable portion of the active
period of my life. Though interesting, they have been labo-
rious, both to body and mind, and brought upon me heavy
responsibility. I cannot doubt that they have done good to
the public, by awakening a spirit of inquiry, discouraging
unreasonable explorations and expectations, opening some new
channels of enterprise, and bringing to light not a few new
scientific facts. The survey in Massachusetts doubtless led the
way for the many others that followed, not merely chrono-
logically, but by the force of example. Upon the whole, the
influence upon my health has been salutary, yet this remark
should be confined to the field work ; for the preparation of
the reports has certainly been a weariness to the flesh. And
after I had got out my first general report on Massachusetts,
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868 BEMINISCENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
I suffered for months an almost total prostration of the nervous
system, which quiet only could cure ; and subsequent reports
have always severely taxed my powers of endurance. But
upon the whole, life has j^robably been lengthened by so much
out-door, exhilarating exercise.
Segbetaktship of the Massachusetts Boabd of Agri-
culture.
After I had returned fiK)m Europe I continued for some
years to act as a member of the Board of Agriculture, and
at length, without any encouragement from me, they appointed
me permanent Secretary, and urged my acceptance strongly.
Pecuniarily, I should receive two or three times my salary at
Amherst, but, though I always felt an interest in the scientific
relations of that subject, and felt it to be important to the
welfare of society, the great objects and pursuits of my life
had been in other fields, and I did not wish to change now,
especially as agriculture has no necessary bearing upon
religion. I felt that Amherst was my field for wh^t remain-
ing services I could render, and I declined the appointment.
It would have been a great mistake, had I been tempted by a
high salary or a prospective residence in Boston, to accept.
Association of Geologists and Naturalists, and
the American Association for the Advancement
OP Science.
These are one and the same Association, only with dif-
ferent degrees of expansion, and my relations to it from the
very beginning seem to require me to dwell a little upon its
history.
Those of us who had been for years engaged in prosecuting
the State geological surveys, in widely separated districts, had
long felt the need of meeting to compare notes, and try to
reduce American geology to some uniform system. After
some preliminary correspondence, the gentlemen engaged in
the New York survey issued an invitation to their confreres
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AMERICAN SCIENTIFIC ASSOCIATION. 369
of the State surveys to meet them in Philadelphia, April 2d,
1840. The following gentlemen responded to the call. I
quote here from the published proceedings : —
'^ Edward Hitchcock, Amherst, Massachusetts; Lewis C.
Beck, New Brunswick, New Jersey ; Henry D. Rogers, Phil-
adelphia ; Lardner Yanuxem, Bristol, Pennsylvania ; William
W. Mather, Brooklyn, Connecticut ; Walter R. Johnson and
Timothy A. Conrad, Philadelphia; Ebenezer Emmons and
James Hall, Albany, New York ; Charles B. Trego, James C.
Booth, M. H. Boy^, R. E. Rogers and Alexander McKinley,
Philadelphia ; C. B. Hayden, Smithfield, Virginia ; Richard
C. Taylor, Philadelphia; Douglass Houghton and Bela
Hubbard, Michigan."
'^ Prof. Hitchcock was appointed Chairman, and Prof. L. C.
Beck, Secretary."
It was then unanimously resolved to organize an Associa-
tion, to be called " The Association op American Geolo-
gists."
We spent several days together agreeably and profitably,
not in the formal presentation of many papers, but in the
discussion of various points in geology, as they had presented
themselves in our various fields. It will be seen, however,
that the names of some are in the above list who were never
engaged in the State surveys. We resolved to try to bring in
more of such. We added the word "Naturalists" to our
name, and appointed Prof. B. Silliman, although never con-
nected with a State survey. Chairman of the next meeting, and
we meant it to be understood that we should be happy to have
any scientific man join us at the next meeting, which we ap-
pointed the following year in Philadelphia. We began in fact
to cherish the hope that the Association might gradually and
quietly expand so as to embrace all the sciences, and so
become an American association for the advancement of
science, and so our proceedings were modelled after the great
European associations of this kind. We knew that not long
before the American Academy of Arts and Sciences at Bos-
16 ♦
Digitized by VjOOQIC
870 maiiNiscENCEa of amhebst college.
ton had requested the American Philosophical Society of
Philadelphia, because that was the oldest society of ^e kind
in the land, to take the responsibility of appointing such a
meeting. But they refused, lest it should prove a failure.
It ill became us, therefore, to announce any such intention,
but our desire and ambition were to accomplish the object
without saying much about it, and the result shows that we
succeeded. Our numbers and influence continued to increase
at each successive meeting. The third one was held at
Boston, and soon the cities vied with one another in giving us
invitations to hold our meetings in them, and in 1848 we for-
mally adopted the name of the American Association for the
Advancement of Science. This has continued to expand and
flourish, though temporarily checked by the war that is now
upon us.
It may not be of much consequence who first threw out the sugges-
tion that led to the formation of this Association, but as a matter
of history the question has some interest. I had never thought of
claiming the honor for myself. But my friend, Prof.W.W. Mather,
undertook to do it for me, because he thought that honor had been
lujustly assigned to another. A few extracts from his letters to me
as they appeared in the Tenth Annual Report of the Begents of the
University of New York, wiU show the groimd he takes.
'* Prof. Hitchcock, Dear Sir : I received, a few days since, the Pro-
ceedings of the American Association for the Advancement of Science,
first meeting, held in Philadelphia, Sept. 1848 ; and in it, page 91,1
found a letter from Profl Hall, and observed with some surprise
the latter part of the sentence of the second paragraph, (relating to
Prof. Vanuxem,) viz.: 'and to whom is due, above aU others, the
honor of being the first man to propose such an organization.' Now
I do not wish to detract at all from the merit due to Profc Vanuxem ;
and perhaps Prof, Hall made the representation from memory only,
or from hearsay, on the spur of the occasion; but that which belongs
to the history of the Association of American Geologists ought, if
stated where it will be referred to, to be stated accurately. You know
that he was not the first to propose such an organization in 1838.
•<In 1837, 1 received a letter from you on this subject; but it is
lost, or I do not find it on my file of letters.
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WHO FIRST PROPOSED IT? 871
" On the 12th of October, 1838, yon wrote me at Albany, and the
letter was forwarded and reached me at Newburgh, in which you say :
* And I had also hoped that ere this a meeting of American Geologists
would be brought about in New York or Philadelphia ; but I feel that
I am to be disappointed in this also/
" On the 26th of October, 1888, the day I received your letter at
Newburgh, I answered it, and said : < It gives me much pleasure to
see you express a wish to compare notes with others in relation to
geological observations. I think it is much to be regretted that there
is not greater harmony of feeling, imity of action, and interchange of
opinions and observations among our geolog^ts/ As I had to go west
before the meeting of the Geological Board of New York, and which you
had been invited by me and perhaps others to attend, I wrote to the
Board some suggestions that seemed to me important, as follows :*'
(Then follows the letter. Prof. Mather closes his letter to me with
the following :)
** You, so far as I know, first suggested the matter of such an asso-
ciation. I laid the matter before the Board of Geologists of New- York,
specifying some of the advantages that might be expected to result ;
and Prof. Yanuxem probably made the motion before the Board in
regard to it, which may have been all that Prof. Hall knew about it.
**We can each of us well dispense with the honor that might be
awarded for originating the matter in one case, and putting in train
for execution in the other : still, where the origin of an important
society and association of scientific men for the advancement of
science is recorded in its memoirs as historical fact, it ought to be
stated eorreetly"
It is true, as suggested by Prof. Mather above, that for years before
1840, I had been in the habit, in my correspondence with scientific
men, of suggesting how desirable it was to have an annual meeting of
scientific men in this country as in Europe. Indeed, it became with me
a sort of hobby. But I did not know but that others had done the
same, and did not therefore lay claim to the credit of being the origi-
nator of the meeting that was ultimately got up, nor am I very anxious
about the matter now, less so probably than would be my children
and friends.
I have attended nearly all the meetings of the Association for more
than twenty years, and have always been treated personally with much
kindness, nor have I taken much interest in several minor issues that
have produced considerable discussion and alienation of feeling among
members. But I do feel constrained to leave on record my views as
to the manner in which the original Association of Geologists and
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872 SEBONIBCENCES OF AMHEB8T GOLLBQE.
Nstunlists hM been treated by the American Association for the
AdTancement of Science. It is clear, from the statements that have
been made, that the two are just as much connected as the roots and
trunk of a tree, or the tributaries and main stream of a rirer. Yet in
the published Proceedings of the Association for the Adrancement of
Science, the entire Association is represented as commencing in 1848,
and the Association of Geologists and Naturalists which had held eight
annual meetings, is ignored, except that the names of those persons
who formed the Association of Geologists and Naturalists are printed
in capitals, and even this slight recognition is discontinued in the last
Tolume of Proceedings. A table of the meetings of the Association
since 1848, is g^ven with the names of the Presidents, Secretaries, and
Treasurers, with no allusion to those of previous meetings, and the
meetings bear date from 1848, instead of 1840. This was not probably
done by vote of the Association ; for I do not beliere it was ever
laid before them, but by the Standing CJonmiittee, who have almost
unlimited powers.
Now why is this attempt to strike out of existence the first eight
years of the Association, unless it be that the records of those eight
years would disgrace the body which succeeded in 1848 } The general
course of organization and proceedings, as we have seen, has been
essentially the same from the first as it now is, modified only to adapt
it to increasing numbers, such, for instance, as the division of the
meetings into a greater number of Sections. But from the very first,
or certainly the second year, the reading of papers with subsequent
remarks has been the chief business. The grades of officers has been
the same essentially, viz.: a President, Secretaries, Treasurer, and
Standing and Local Committees. We have always had more than one
social gathering, generally at the residence of some liberal citizen of
the cities where we met, where we had opportunity for personal
acquaintance. The retiring President has, from the first, been expected
to give an Address on the Progress of Science, and it was done as gen-
erally before as since 1848. The following table will show who were
officers and who delivered addresses before that time.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
SCIENTIFIC ASSOCIATION,
37.3
PLACE.
I
Addresses.
Secretaries.
1— Philadelphia,
2— Philadelphia,
3 — ^Boston,
4— Albany,
5 — ^Washington,
6— New Haven,
T—NewYork, .
8 — Boston,
1840— Edward Hitchcock, .
1841 — Benjamin Sllliman, .
1 aio ( George Morton, . {
^***^ I John Locke, . . J
H.D.Rogers,
John Locke, ......
1841, .
1842, .
1844, .
William B. Rogers, .
C. T. Jackson, . . .
( Amos Binnev, . .
{ William B. 'Rogers,
L.G.Beek.
C. T. Jackson.
B. Silliman, Jr.
B. Silliman.
O. Hubbard.
B. Silliman, Jr.
L L. Smith.
T. Wyman.
As to the publication of Proceedings, the Association in 1842 brought
out a Tolume (mainly through the liberality of Hon. Nathan Appleton,)
of five hundred and forty-four pages and twenty-one plates, containing
the Proceedings and Transactions of the first three meetings, which, as
to typographical execution is superior to any thing since published.
As to the number of members, though only eighteen at the first
meeting, at the third they had increased to seventy-seyen.
Now was it generous, was it just, thus to endeavor to cover up
these eight years of the successful labors of this Association, and to
convey the impression that nothing worthy the name existed prior to
1848 — as if ashamed of its parentage. For it is certainly true, however
homely our labors, that we did succeed in accomplishing what the
men who are supposed to stand at the head of American Science did
not dare attempt, viz. : to establish and bring into fuU operation the
American Association for the Advancement of Science. Setting aside
my own, are the names in the above table such in the annals of Amer-
ican Science that it would be disgraceful to acknowledge them as
pioneers in such an enterprise. So palpable is the injustice that if I
had not felt a strong aversion to introduce a subject into the Asso-
ciation that would have awakened discussion and alienation, I certainly
should have done it. For I do not believe that the Association, as a
body, would ever sanction such a course. But let it pass now : I
must do so. Yet history will place the whole transaction in its true
light, on her impartial tablet, and full justice will then be awarded to
the Association of American Oeologists and Naturalists.
CONTBOVERSY RE8FECTINO THE FoSSIL FOOTMABKS.
It has ever been an object of strong desire and efibrt, with me, to
conduct my controversies in such spirit and language as not only to
preserve a conscience void of ofience towards all, but in the end to
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874 REMINISCENCES OF AMHEBBT COLLEGE.
conciUate all reasonable men and conTert eren my penonal opponents
into real steadfast friends. And I haYe succeeded in every case save
that of the Fossil Footmarks, which I think has left lasting prejudioes
in some minds against me, and a feeling as if I had claimed what did
not belong to me. Haying argued this point fairly and fully, I have
often felt as if I wished an impartial jury could be found to sit upon
the question. Ptoyidence, it seems to me, has furnished such a jury
who have given their opinion ^thout any solicitation or suggestion on
my part. Four of the jurors are eminent European savans whose
geographical position removed them from all local influences and
prejudices. One is Bev. Adam Bedgwick, Professor of Oeoh^y in the
University of Cambridge, in England ; another is Prof. W. Haidinger,
Director of the Imperial Geological Survey of Austria ; a third is
Prof. Richard Owen, the eminent English Paleontologist ; a fourth is
Bev. John Duns, D.D., F.R. S.E., late editor of the North British
Review ; the fifth is Prof. S. S. Haldemsn, of Columbia, in Penmsyl-
vania, whose location places him also (four or five hundred miles dis-
tant) almost as completely beyond the reach of local influfmcps and
prejudices, and with whom I have never, to this day, exchanged one
word on this subject ; but after the discussion had closed I reoeived
from him the following able and interesting letter, which eairies great
weight with it, both from the great strength of its argument and the
eminent character of its author as a Naturalist.
« Chicquebaluboa, near Columbia, P4., 19th Dec., 1844.
** Dear Sir : — I have read the discussion in the American Journal of
Science, vol. 47, p. 381, between Dr. Deane and yourself^ respecting
the priority of claim to the discovery of Fossil Footmarks, and wish
to trouble you with a few remarks upon it.
** It appears to me that Dr. Deane is disposed to lay too mudi
stress upon the mere discovery of these interesting relics, and to a
certain extent, without reference to the scientific investigation of them ;
although their actual present value has arisen from the deductions
which you are aUa to make.
** It is a simple matter to lay claim to an important discovery after
it has been demonstrated ; but the merit of the demonstration itself
rests upon a very different basis from that of such a daim. If the
Ichnolites had been hastily announced as bird tracks, and had they
subsequently proved to be mere uniform concretions, the writer of the
first announcement would not probably display much anxiety if his
early views should not be brought forward Tery conspicuously ; not-
withstanding the toleration with which oolaboreis are generally inclined
to regard errors.
Digitized by.VjOOQlC
PBOP. haldeman's views. 376
« I hare heard a Conchologist remark, upon seeing the figure of a
newly described shelly that he had had the species a long time, and
< thought' or ♦knew' it to be undescribed; yet there was no merit in
the supposition. In the case of Dr. Deane, his own conviction of the
novelty of his discovery appears to have depended upon his corresDon-
dence with yourself. I have seen a newspaper paragraph credited to
the Canajoharie Radii, announcing the discovery of a fossil • horse-foot.'
Now, is thd writer of this paragraph to have any more credit for the
announcement as it stands, than if he had asserted the object to be
something < like' a * horse-foot,' whether it might prove to be a fossil
Limulus, Buckland Bridgw. Treatise, pi. 45, f. 1, (vulgarly called
♦horse-foot') a true equine hooi^ or the internal cast of a molluscous
bivalve shell ?
*• It could have been no easy task at an early day, to demonstrate
the remains of Ammonites not to be < serpents,' or Trilobites * toads,'
or pseudomorphous mineral forms, genuine crystals. If a first unsup-
ported annonncement is to bear the principal honors, modem geologists
are working in vain ; fi>r there is scarcely a philosophical deduction or
demonstrated truth which cannot be found among the cosmogonic
crudities of the last century. Dr. Franklin's discovery belongs to the
same category ; the identity of electricity and lightning having been
previously 'known' as positively as impressed bird-tracks could be.
•*I do not wish to overlook the fiict that Dr. Deane insists upon his
early assertion as to the nature of the tracks in question. This, however,
I conceive, can have no possible bearing upon the question. How
could he, or any one else at that time know that these impressions and
casts were not the floats or vesicles of a gentis of plants allied to the
recent oceanic Fucus ? Had they been such, we could account for their
regtUar ditposUion as to distance and direction. Mr. T. A. Conrad,
whose skill in paleontology will be admitted, takes this view of the
subject. Speaking of the fucoids he remarks that * some of them have
been of a fibrous reticidated structure, having vesicular appendages,
often lobed and imitating on the sand-stones the forms of tracks of
reptiles and birds which some writers have believed them to be. On
plate 26, in Buckland's Bridgewater Treatise, the foot-shaped vesicular
fucoids may be seen attached to the network, and no doubt they per-
formed the office of fioats to support the fibrous structure to which
they were appended.' — New Geological Survey, 1839, p. 60.
**Who can wonder that an observer should adopt this rational con-
clusion, upon viewing the plate in question, and particularly figure 1,
t, o, 6, e; and others, if we allow the slender reticulations to have been
washed away } Yet the Cheirotherium, which was concerned in making
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
876 BEMINISOENCES OP AMHERST COLLEGE.
these prints, has been discovered, and the subsequent discovery of
Dinomis removes the remaining vestiges of doubt.
** One or two more illustrations will suffice. In 1835, during the
voyage of the ship Beagle, an aquatic saurian was discovered, and
subsequently described under the name of Ambly&htnchus cristatus,
by Mr. Bell. Dr. Mitchill had however received it through Commodore
Porter nearly twenty years previously, and made some remarks on it,
which appeared in print, but I cannot now give the reference. He did
not, however, venture to describe this singular animal, probably because
he was not quite certain whether or not it had attracted the attention of
European naturalists ; and had he communicated specimens to Mr.
Bell, might have complained of the latter appropriating his discovery
in describing tlie animal.
**In Loudon's Magasine of Natural History, vol. viii. p. 261, Mr,
Hailstone says : * I send a description of two crabs which I have found
upon this coast ; and, if you can inform me whether they are undescribed
I shall be obliged ' ; and on p. 264, • should any of the species repre-
sented in the specimens sent prove to be known ones, I shall be glad
to receive their names, and a reference to the book in which they are
described.' The specimens alluded to were referred by the editor to
Mr \yestwood, who made extensive notes upon them, and applied two
new specific names. This proceeding brought forth the following:
* . . . . Having been fortunate enough to discover and describe the ani-
mals in question, I think I am at liberty to claim the insertion of trivial
names which seem to me more adapted to them.' The editor (p. 395)
' then makes an apology for not having given Mr. Hailstone an oppor-
tunity to apply his names. • Had Mr. Hailstone hinted a wish, or had
Mr. Westwood, when he kindly ividertook the farther identification of
the forms of Crustacea which Mr. Hailstone had described . . . Mr.
Westwood would, we are certain, have left the opportunity open.' To
this Mr. Westwood replies (p. 325) < . . .1 do not admit, so &r aa
principle is concerned, (although Mr. Hailstone is perfectly welcome to
the imposition of the names of the animals in question,) that he is at
liberty to claim the insertion of fresh trivial names . . . because,
although he caught and described the animals, yet the trouble of ascer-
taining whether they had been previously described by crustaceologists
or not was mine : and every naturalist is aware that this is a greater
task than the mere describing of an animal. Unquestionably, therefore,
as the manuscripts were placed in my hands in an imperfect state (so
far as the absence of identification and denomination, which are the
points in question) without the slightest intimation that Mr. Hailstone
wished the subject to be again laid before him in case the species are
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
PBOFS. BEDGWICK AND HATDINGER. 877
undescribed, I had the right, in order to render the paper complete, to
apply a specific name.'
<*Mr. West-wood undoubtedly takes the proper view in the last case,
which is much more pointed than your own. I had intended to allude
to several minor points in the discussion, but as you have not alluded
to them, they may not have been considered — and probably are not —
worthy of special note."
The following opinion of Professor Sedgwick, was given unsolicited
in a letter thanking me for a copy of my Ichnology.
« Whatever may hereafter be made of some of the anomalous and
perhaps somewhat doubtful foot-traces in your American rocks, no
oi^ can ever deprive you of the honor of having been a great leader
and discoverer, in a new and important branch of paleontology. Most
of your determinations will, I doubt not, stand good : and independent
of any points of doubt, I may ask, what should we have known of these
strange paleontological puzzles, if you had not made us acquainted
with them, and devoted so much precious labor on their elucidation?
« London, Sept. 9, 1859."
Professor Haidinger gave his opinion under precisely the same
circumstances.
*<I laid it, (your Report on the Fossil Footmarks of the Connecticut
Sandstone,) before our public, in a meeting of the Imperial Geological
Institute. It well deservi^s to be regarded as a monument of patient
and unremitting scientific inquiry, in one of the most enigmatic depart-
ments of Zoology as well as Geology, and in which your labors have
given us the most comprehensive general views, as well as single
observations. But the work is also a monument for the faimess of
your claims as the real scientific investigator of this most interesting
subject, which, for any thing others had done, might still be unex-
plored, had you not taken it in your hand, and unremittingly worked
at it I So we are all bound to do you proper homage."
" Vienna, Dec. 19, 1869."
The following is Professor Owen's account of this discovery in his
Paleontology : —
<*Dr. Deane and Mr. Marsh of Greenfield, United States, first
noticed in 1836, impressions resembling the feet of birds, in the sand-
stone rocks near that town. Br. Hitchcock, President of Amherst
College, United States, whose attention was called to these impres-
sions, first made public the fact, and submitted to a scientific ordeal
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878 EEMINISCENCES OP AMHERST COLLEGE.
his interpretations of these impressions, as having been produced by
the feet of living birds; and he gave them the name of Ornithicnites,
'* It was a startling announcement, and a conclusion that must hare
had strong evidence to support it, since one of the kinds of the tracks
had been made by a pair of feet each leaving a print twenty inches
in length. Under this term Ornithicnites Giganteus, however. Dr.
Hitchcock did not shrink from announcing to the geological world the
fact of the existence during the period of the deposition of the red
sandstones of the Valley of the Connecticut, of a bird which must
have been at least four times larger than the ostrich."
Dr. Duns' opinion is contained in his review of my Ichnology in
the North British Review. There was no necessity that either of
these gentlemen should touch the question of this controversy, 9or
was there the slightest intimation made to them thf^t it was desired.
" Professor Hitchcock," says Dr. Duns, ** has not, however, been per-
mitted to bear away his laurels without other hands making an
attempt to grasp them. The experience which might almost be said to
be common to all who strike out new thoughts, or bend their energies
into new paths, has been his. Rival claims to priority in scientifically
investigating and describing the footprints have been made. The con-
troversy is one which admits of an easy settlement ; and after study-
ing it without bias, we have not the least doubt but that in the pagei
devoted to it in the present Report, Dr. Hitchcock has settled it. Dr.
Deane had accidentally found some specimens of tracks * lying upon
the side- ways at Greenfield,' and had informed the author, who com-
missioned the finder to purchase them for him. They fell under the
eye of science when Dr. Hitchcock obtained them. Had they been
left to Dr. Deane alone, they would have been lying on the * side-
ways ' still. Professor Hitchcock set to work at once, and for six
years, during all which time Dr. Deane was silent, he worked con-
stantly at the footprints. Professor Hitchcock claims to have been
* the first to investigate and describe them as a matter of science.
The claim, we beg to assure him, was long ago admitted by British
naturalists. The opinion of Professor Owen, which we have quoted
above, should be decisive on this point."
List of my Publications.
It would leave but an imperfect impression of my labors if
I were to give no account of the amount of my publications ;
for with such a constitution as mine, the composition and
printing of books is i^ more trying to health than the most
Digitized by VjOOQIC
PUBUCATIONS. 879
active labors in the fi^ld, and in giving instruction in College.
I never yet completed a book without finding mj health a
good deal, and sometimes quite seriously impaired.
Most of the works and papers which I have published have
been brought out during my connection with the College.
But to make the list as complete as possible, I shall put do^vn
all I can recollect that were printed at an earlier date. Some
of these were indeed juvenile productions, extremely defective
and abounding in errors of taste, but I am not ashamed of the
leading thoughts, and believe they are all favorable to morality
and religion.
I. Belioious Voluues, Sihols Sbbmoks, E88AT8, Addbesses
AKD TbACTS.
1. A Wreath for the Tomb. 12mo. 250 pages. 1839. A second
Edition in 1842. A London Edition in 1842, with an Introduction
by Dr. J. Pye Smith. Jackson and Walworth.
2. Religious Lectures on Peculiar Phenomena in the Four Sea-
sons, with three Plates. 12mo. 143 pages. Second Edition in 1851.
Third Edition in 1861, with additions ; 176 pages. A London Edition
without date. James Blackwood.
3. Religion of Geology and its connected Sciences^ 12mo. 511
pages. 1851. A second Edition, enlarged to 592 pages. 1859.
One 8to. and one 12mo. Edition in London, in 1851. Another Lon-
don 12mo. Edition in 1855. Another London Edition with additions,
in 1859. James Blackwood.
4. Religions Truth illustrated from Science. 12mo. 422 pages.
1857.
5. An Exhibition of Unitarianism. 35 pages. 1824.
assays.
6. Did Christ advance any New Moral Precepts ? Christian Spec-
tator, Vol. 1, p. 397. 2 1-2 pages.
7. General Survey of the Works of God. Christian Spectator,
Vol. 4, p. 837. 7 pages.
8. Influence of Nervous Diseases upon Religious Experience.
Christian Spectator, Vol. 9, p. 177. 29 pages.
9. On Pulpit Exchanges between the Orthodox and Unitarians.
Spirit of the Pilgrims for 1828. 34 pages.
10. On the Connection between Geology and Natural Religion.
Biblical Repositoiy for January, 1835. 27 pages.
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880 BEMimSCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
11. On the connection between Geology tnd Revelation. Biblical
Repository, April and October, 1835. 86 pages.
12. On the Historical and Geological Deluges. Biblical Reposi-
tory, Januaiy and October, 1837, and January, 1888. 127 pages.
The above three articles were republished in Edinburgh, in the
Biblical Cabinet.
Addresses.
18. Importance of an Early Consecradon to the Missionary Work.
Before the Society of Inquiry in Amherst College. Published in
the Christian Spectator, Vol. 10, p. 578. 10 pages.
14. The Highest Use of Learning . Inaugural Address when
inducted into the Presidency of Amherst College, April, 1845. 45
pages.
15. Relations and Mutual Duties between the Philosopher and tha
Theologian, before the Porter Rhetorical Society in Andover Theo-
logical Seminary, in 1852. 45 pages. Bibliotheca Sacra, 1853.
16. Special Divine Interpositions in Nature, before the Theologi-
cal Seminaries of Bangor and Newton, in 1853. 34 pages. Bibli-
otheca Sacra for October, 1854.
17. A Chapter in the Book of Providence, before the Mount
Holyoke Seminary, in 1849. 42 pages.
18. The Waste of Mind ; before the same, in 1842. 46 pages.
19. The Cross in Nature, and Nature in the Cross; Bibliotheca
Sacra for April, 1861 . 35 pages. Delivered as a Lecture at Amherst,
Montreal, Troy, N. Y., &c.
20. The Law of Nature's Constancy Subordinate to the Higher
Law of Change ; Bibliotheca Sacra for July, 1863, 72 pages. Also,
as a separate volume. I shall not probably live to see its publication,
but as it is essentially prepared, I trust it will appear when I am gone.
21. Charge to Dr. Stearns at his Installation over the College
Church, Nov. 21st, 1854. 8 pages.
22. Yaledlctoiy Address on leaving the Presidency of Amherst
CoUege, Nov. 23d, 1854. 27 pages.
Single Sermons,
23. Utility of Natural History. 32 pages. Delivered before the
Berkshire Medical Institution at Pittsfield, in 1823.
24. Retrospection. 24 pages. Delivered in Amherst College, in
1828.
25. Pour Sermons on Diet, &c., published in the National Preach-
er. 44 pages. A fifth was prepared but never published.
26. The Sun going down at noon. At the funeral of the wife of
Rev. Mr. Lord, of Williamsburg, Thanksgiving Day, 1829. 19 pages.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
SERMONS. 881
27. The Minister's Rule of Duty. At the Ordmation of Rer.
Flavel Griswold, at- South Hadley Falls, in 1828. 81 pages.
28. The Coronation of Winter, in 1845. Published at the request
of the Students of Amherst College and Mount Holyoke Seminary.
A second Edition was published.
29. The Inseparable Trio. An Election Sermon preached before
Governor Briggs, Jan. 2d, 1850. 45 pages.
80. Sermon at the Funeral of Rer. Dr. Packard, of Shelbume.
28 pages.
81. Sermon at the Funeral of Mrs. Dr. Woodbridge, of Hadley.
15 pages.
82. The tJnited States a commissioned Missionary Nation.
Preached in Amherst College, and published by the Society of
Inquiry.
38. The Catalytic Power of the Gospel. Preached before the
Massachusetts Home Missionary Society, at its Anniversary in
Boston, in May, 1852. 82 pages.
84. The Religious Bearings of Man's Creation. Preached before
the Massachusetts Convention of Congregational Ministers in Brat-
tie Street, Boston, May, 1854. Also as an Address before the The-
ological Society of Dartmouth College. Also preached in Conway,
Mass., Brooklyn and Buffalo, N. T., and Milwaukie, Wis., and Dr.
Sprague's Church, in Albany, at the time of the meeting of the
American Scientific Association, by whose Local Committee it was
published. 81 pages.
85. Extract from my Farewell Sermon at Conway, in the Christian
Spectator, Vol. 8, p. 120. 2 pages.
Newspaper Articles.
86. Account of Revivals in Mount Holyoke Seminary. Hamp-
shire and Franklin Express, for May, 1846, New York Observer, &c.
87. Revival of Religion in Amherst College. Hampshire and
Franklin Express, April 80th, 1846.
88. Revival in 1850. Hampshire and Franklin Express, April
19tii, 1850.
89. Revival in the College in 1850. Hampshire and Franklin
Express, April 19th, 1850.
Tradif (published by the American Tract Society, N. Y.)
40. Cars Ready. 1848. 4 pages.
41. The Blind Slave in the Mines. 1848. 4 pages.
42. Murderers of Fathers, and Murderers of Mothers. 12 pages.
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882 REMINISCENCES OP AMHBBST COLLEGE.
II. WOBK8 OK TSMPBIULNCE.
1. Dyspepsy Forestalled and Resisted. Lectures to the Students
of Amherst College. 8to. 860 pages, in 1830. Second Edition in
1831, enlarged to 452 pages.
2. Prize Essay on Temperance, it heing the Fourth of the Lectures
in the ahove work. The prize of f 60 was offered in Boston, and
awarded to me. Two Editions were published in 1830.
8. Argument for Early Temperance, addressed to the Youth of
the United States. This is the Prize Essay, altered and enlarged.
18mo. 89 pages. Reprinted in London.
4. History of a Zoological Temperance Convention, held in Cen-
tral Africa, in 1847. Printed in 1850. 160 pages, 12mo., with 13
plates and 16 figures. Second Edition in 1855.
5. Argument against the Manufacture and Sale of Ardent Spirits.
24 pages. Published as a Tract by the American Tract Society in
New York.
6. Analysis of Wines from Palestine and Syria, and of American
Cider. American Journal of Science, Vol. 46, p. 249, 10 pages.
III. BlOOBAPHIXS.
1. The Power of Christian Benevolence illustrated in the Life
and Labors of Mary Lyon. 1 vol., 12mo. 486 pages, of which I
wrote 200 pages. 1852.
2. Obituary Notice of Mrs. Prof. W. C. Fowler. New York
Observer.
3. Some Account of the last hours of Prof. N. W. Fiske. Hamp-
shire and Franklin Express.
IV. SCIBNTIPIO VOLUMBS AVD PaXPHLBTS.
1. Geology of the Connecticut. 8vo. 154 pages, 2 plates and II
figures, 1823. Appeared first in the American Journal of Science.
2. First Report on the Economical Geology of Massachusetts.
70 pages and a Geological Map. 1832.
3. Report on a Re-examination of the Economical Geology of
Massachusetts. 139 pages. 1838.
4. Report on the Geology, Botany and Zoology of Massachusetts,
in 1833. 692 pages. Second Edition enlarged, ordered by the Leg-
islature in 1835. 702 pages. 18 plates, and 60 wood cuts.
5. Final Report on the Geology of Mass., in two quartos. 831
pages in all. 52 plates and 275 wood cuts. 1841.
6. Catalogue of Plants growing within twenty miles of Amherst
College. 64 pages, in 1829.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
SCIENTIFIC VOLUMES. 888
7. Catalogue of Plants and Animals in Massachusetts, (from the
State Report.) 127 pages. 1837.
8. Fossil Footmarks of the United States. Quarto. 128 pages
and 24 plates. From the Transactions of the American Academy of
Arts and Sciences. 1848.
9. Report on the Ichnology of New England. Quarto. 232 pages,
60 plates. 1858.
10. Report on the Geology of Vermont. 2 vols., quarto. In all,
988 pages, with 38 plates and 865 wood cuts. 1861. Of this work
I wrote only about 211 pages, my son Charles 508, and Mr. Hager
253. Of the plates, the first 17 were executed chiefly by my son,
and the last 21 entirely by Mr. Hager.
. 11. Report on certain points in the Geology of Mass. to the Got-
emment. Pamphlet of 44 pages and 3 plates. 1853.
12. Explanation of the newly colored Geological Map of Massar
chusetts. Pamphlet of 22 pages, 12mo. 1844.
13. Three Preliminary Annual Reports, on the Geology of Ver-
mont, in 1857, 1858, and 1859. In all, 41 pages.
14. Illustrations of Surface Geology. A quarto of 155 pages
and 12 plates. 1856. Second Edition, with two additional pages.
1860.
15. Elementary Geology. 1 vol., 12mo. 2 plates, 122 wood cuts.
329 pages. 1840. The 8th Edition, in 1847, was enlarged to 361
pages. And the 31st Edition, in 1860, was re-written. 430 pages,
and 417 wood cuts. In 1841, an Introductory Notice was written
by Dr. J. Pye Smith, and the work introduced to the British public,
but whether a distinct Edition was published in London, I never
knew.
16. Geology of the Globe. 1 vol. 8vo. 136 pages and 8 plates.
1853. Contains a Geological Map of the whole world, and another
of North America.
17. The Country Almanac for the years 1814, 1815, 1816, 1817,
and 1818. 236 pages in all.
V. Scientific Papbrs in the Joubnals.
1. Botany.
1. Description of Botrychiura Simplex, (Nov. Sp.) with a draw-
ing. American Journal of Science, Vol. 6, p. 103. I believe our
American Botanists have not generally admitted this species. But
it has been found in Germany, and was admitted there at a very
recent date.
2. Physiology of Gyropodium Coccineum^ with a plate. 4 pages.
American Journal of Science, Vol. 4, p. 56.
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
884 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
2. MinereUogy.
1. Kative Copper in Massachusetts. American Journal of Sci-
ence, Vol. 47, p. 822. 2 pages.
2. Lincolnite Idem., YoL 47, p. 416; Vol. 48, p. 64; and Vol
49, p. 416. 2 pages.
8. Tin at Goshen, Id., Vol. 16, p. 188. 2 1-2 pages.
4. Topaz at Goshen, &c., I., Yol. 9, p. 180. 1 page.
5. Topaz in the White Mountains, Id., Vol. 20, p. 410. 1 page.
6. Chemical Analysis of the Topaz of Monroe, in Connecticut.
American Journal of Science, Vol. 10, p. 852. 7 pages.
7. Various Localities of Minerals described. Id., Vol. 14, p.
215, in 17 pages.
8. Tttrocerite in Massachusetts. Id., Vol. 47, p. 851, in 2 pages.
8. Oeology,
1. Remarks on the Mineralogy and Geology of a Section of the
Connecticut Valley. American Journal of Science, Vol. 1, p. 105,
in 17 pages, and a Geological Map.
2. Geology of Martha's Vineyard, with a Geological Map. 8
pages. American Journal of Science, Vol. 7, p. 240.
8. On certain causes of Geological Change in Massachusetts now
in operation. Boston Journal of Natural History, Vol. 1, p. 69. 14
pages. 1885.
4. Sketch of the Geology of Portland and its Vicinity, with a
Geological Map and 8 wood cuts. Boston Journal of Natural His-
tory, Vol. 1, p. 806. 42 pag€s. 1886.
'5. On the Glacier Theoiy, as held by Murchison and myself.
American Journal of Science, Vol. 48, p. 896. 8 pages.
6. Remarks on the Glacier Theoiy, before the Geological Asso-
ciation. Id., Vol. 45, p. 324. 2 pages.
7. Letter from Mr. Dobson, on Iceberg Drift Id., Vol. 46, p. 169.
8 pages.
8. On the Trap Tufa of the Connecticut Valley. Id., Vol. 4, new
series, p. 199, in 9 pages, with 2 wood cuts.
9. Remarkable Trains of Drift Bowlders in Berkshire County.
Id., Vol. 49, p. 258. 8 pages, with 2 wood cuts.
10. Phenomena of Drift in North America. Transactions of the
Geological Association, Vol. 1, p. 164. In 58 pages and 2 plates.
11. Description of Sereral Species of Fossil Plants firom the new
Red Sandstone of the Connecticut Valley. Same work, p. 294.
2 1-2 pages and 1 plate.
12. Notes on the Geology of Western Asia. Same work, p. 848.
75 pages and 1 plate.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
GEOLOGICAL PAPERS. 885
18. Analysifl of MarL American Journal of Science, Vol. 86, p.
176.
14. Ornithichnology, or Description of the Footmarks of Birds
(Omithichnites) on the New Bed Sandstone of Massachusetts. 84
pages and 8 plates. 1886 : American Journal of Science, Vol. 29,
p. 807.
15. Omithichnites in Connecticut Id., Vol. 81, p. 124.
16. Fossil Footsteps in Sandstone and Gray Wacke, with a general
Table of. Id., Vol. 82, p. 174. 2 1-2 pages.
17. Five New Species of Fossil Footmarks. Transactions of
American Association of Geologists and Naturalists, YoL 1, p. 254.
11 pages and 1 plate.
18. Beport on Ichnolithology to the American Association of
Geologists and Naturalists, with a Description of Several New Spe-
cies, and the Coprolites of Birds. American Journal of Science,
Vol. 47, pp. 118 and 292. 32 pages and 2 plates.
20. Analysis of the Coprolites from the New Bed Sandstone of
Connecticut Valley. Id., Vol. 48, p. 46. 15 pages.
21. Miscellaneous Bemarks on Fossil Footmarks, with a letter
from Prof. Owen. Id., Vol. 48, p. 61. 4 pages.
22. An attempt to Name, Classify and Describe the Animals that
made the Fossil Footmarks of New England. Proceedings of Amer-
ican Association of Geologists and Naturalists, p. 28.
28. Description of two New Species of Fossil Footmarks in the
Connecticut Valley. American Journal of Science, N. S., Vol. 4,
p. 46. 12 pages and 8 wood outs.
24. On New Fossil Footmarks. American Journal of Science,
N. S., Vol. 21, p. 96. 3 pages and 1 wood cut
25. Additional Facts respecting Octozoum Moodii. Proceedings
of American Association for 1856, p. 228.
26. Bemarks upon Certain Points in Ichnology. Proceedings of
American Association of Science for 1860. 12 pages and 4 wood
cuts.
27. On Certain Conglomerated and Brecciated Trachytic Dikes in
the Lower Silurian Bocks of Vermont, with special reference to the
degree of heat at the time of their production. Proceedings of
American Scientific Association for 1860, p. 156. 2 pages.
28. Additional Facts respecting the Clathopteris of East Hamp-
ton. Same work, p. 158. 1 page.
29. Description of a Slide on Mt Lafayette, at Franconia, N. H.
American Journal of Science, Vol. 14, N. S., p. 78. 4 pages.
80. On a new Fossil Fish and new Fossil Footmarks. American
17
Digitized by VjOOQIC
886 REMINISCENCES OP AMHERST COLLEGE.
Journal of Science, Vol. 21, N. S., p. 96. 4 pages and 1 wood cut.
1856.
81. Description of a large Bowlder in the Drift of Amherst, with
parallol striae upon four sides. American Journal of Science, Vol.
22, N. S., p. 397. 8 pages and 1 wood cut.
82. On the Conyersion of certain Conglomerates into Talcose and
Micaceous Schists and Gneiss, by the Elongation, Flattening and
Metamorphosis of the Pebbles and the Cement. American Journal
of Science, Vol. 81, N. S., p. 872. 21 pages and 10 wood cuts.
1861.
83. Account of the Collections of Bocks and Minerals at Heidel-
berg. American Journal of Science, Vol. 17, p. 40O. Also Vol. 39,
p. 199. In all 7 pages.
84. New Mineralogical Hammer. Id., Vol. 7, p. 175, with a wood
cut.
35. Report on the Geology of Texas, connected with Cs^pUin
Marcy's Keport. 16 pages.
36. Abstract of paper on Terraces, &c., read before the British
Association at Edinburgh. See its Proceedings for that year.
87. New Facts and Conclusions respecting the Fossil Footmarks
of the Connecticut Valley. American Journal of Science for July,
1863, p. 46. 11 pages.
VI. PaTsics.
1. Description of Cylinders of Snow formed by Wind. American
Journal of Science, Vol. 2, p. 875.
2. Description of a Disruption in the Frozen Earth in Deerfield
Meadows. Id., Vol. 1, p. 286. 7 pages and 1 plate.
8. Singular Effects of Lightning on John Williams, Esq., of
Conway. Id., Vol. 5, p. 125. 5 pages and 1 plate.
4. Meteorological Journal kept at Deerfield in 1817 and 1818.
Id., Vol. 4, p. 333. 5 pages.
6. On the Meteoric Shower of Nov. 13th, 1833. Id., Vol. 25, p.
354. 8 pages.
6. On Vibrating Dams. Id., Vol. 45, p. 370. 1 page.
7. On the Potato Rot. Hampshire and Franklin Express.
8. Account of Spots on the Sun. In the Franklin Herald.
VII. Republications.
1. Cordier's Essay on the Temperature of the Globe — translated
from the French. 1 vol. 12mo. 94 pages, with an Introduction and
Notes ; 1828. Done noimnally by the Junior Class — but I had to
go over the whole to prevent mistakes.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
REVIEWS AND CONTROVERSIES. 887
2. De la Beche*8 Theoretical Geology, with Preface and Notes.
842 12mo. pages ; 1837.
3. Genesis and Geology, by Denis Crofton. 12ino. 99 pages. 1853.
4. Introduction to the Plurality of Worlds. 8 pages.
VIII. Reviews.
1. Of Corrybeare and Phillips' Geology of England and Wales.
American Journal of Science, Vol. 7, p. 208. 88 pages.
2. Of Olmsted's Report on the Geology of North Carolina. Id.,
Vol. 14, p. 230. 20 pages.
3. Of Buckland*s Reliquisb Diluvianae. Christian Spectator,
1824, p. 415. 28 pages.
4. Of Cordier's, Scrope's and SiUiman's Works on Internal Heat.
Christian Spectator, Vol. 11, p. 464. 18 pages.
6. Of Buckland*s Reliquiae DiluTianie, in American Journal of
Science, Vol. 8, p. 168 and 317. 45 pages. Entirely different Arom
that in the Christian Spectator.
6. Dana's Muck Manual. American Journal of Science, Vol. 48,
p. 192. 6 pages.
7. Of Owen's Paper on the Dlnomis. American Jonmal of
Science, Vol. 48, p. 194. 8 pages.
8. Of Bailey's New Method of Determining the Longitude.
American Journal of Science, Vol. 9, p. 107. 18 pages.
IX. CONTBOVEBSIES.
1. With Edmund M. Blunt, of New York, on errors in the Nau-
tical Almanac. 8 Nos. in the American Monthly Magazine for
1817 and 1818. 4 pages.
2. With the Episcopalians, respecting the time of Easter. In a
paper published in Greenfield, which is lost. It must have been in
one of the years in which I published the Country Almanac.
8. With Professor (now Bishop) Potter, about some points in the
Temperance movement, growing out of a Report of mine, of a
Convention in Saratoga. They were inserted in the New York
Evangelist, and I should think must have been equal to 8 or 10
pages. 12mo.
4. With Prof. Amos Eaton, on Geological Nomenclature. Amer-
ican Journal of Science, Vol. 9, p. 146. 8 1-2 pages.
5. With Prof. Moses Stuart, on several points of connection
between Geology and the Bible. Biblical Repository for April, 1886.
40 pages.
6. With Dr. James Deane, on the discovery of Fossil Footmarks.
American Journal of Science, Vol. 47, p. 390. 10 pages.
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
888. REMINISCENCES OP AMHERST COLLEGE.
7. Defence of my claims in this controversy, in the Springfield
Republican, and Reply to Dr. Bowditch, May, 1859. 6 pages, octaro.
8. Mr. Draper, the first discoverer of the Footmarks. Springfield
Republican, May 2l8t, 1851). 1 page.
0. With Rev. Mr. Chapin, of Connecticut, on Fossil Footmarks.
The Knickerbocker for September, 183G. 6 pages.
10. With Rev. Erastus Hopkins, on a Railroad through the Con-
necticut Valley. In the Journal of Commerce and the Hampsliire
Gazette. Perhaps 6 pages.
11. With the editor (Jonathan A. Saxton, Esq.,) of a Unitarian
paper in Greenfield, in reply to his attack upon " the^Exliibition of
Unitarianism." My reply appeared in the Boston Recorder, making,
perhaps, 4 pages of 12mo.
12. With one of the editors of the Christian Register, (Rev. Mr.
Morrison,) published in that paper in several numbers, on the Res-
urrection of the Body. 5 pages.
13. I afterwards gave a fuller reply to Rev. E. H. Sears and ProC
Haven, especially on Bodily Identity, in an Exegesis of 1 Cor. xr.
25—44, in the Bibliotheca Sacra for April, 1860, p. 303. 10 pages.
X. POKTRY.
1. Downfall of Bonaparte ; a Tragedy of 108 pages, 12mo. 1815.
A juvenile production which should not have been published. But
it contains some real poetry, and was loudly called for by the rural
population before whom it was acted with much success.
2. The Prodigal. Christian Spectator, Vol. 1, p. 300.
3. Declining Health. Franklin Herald ; date forgotten.
4. The same subject. Hampshire Gazette for 1818.
5. Fragment on Disappointment. Hampshire Gazette, March,
1818.
6. The Fate of Genius. Franklin Federalist for 1817 or 1818.
7. Scene on the banks of the Connecticut (Footmarks.) Knick-
erbocker ; date forgotten.
These poetical fragments will probably make as much as 6 or 8
pages.
XI. Miscellaneous.
1. Description of Turner's Falls in Connecticut River, with a
Sketch by Mrs. Hitchcock. Portfolio, Philadelphia, 1818
2. Review of the " Reediad." Hampsliire Gazette, December,
1818.
3. Detection of a Plagiarism in Franklin Federalist, November,
1817.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
MISCELLANIES. 389
4. No8. 49, 50, 61 and 62 of the Weekly Monitor, in Franklin
Herald for 1816. 4 pages.
6. The Moral Telescope, in 80 Nos., in the Franklin Federalist
for 1817 and 1818. The plan good, but the literary execution very
juvenile. SO pages.
6. Fragments on the Political Condition of the United States.
Franklin Herald, November, 1812,
7. Several Brigade and Division Orders, in the Franklin Feder-
alist, while I was Aid-de-Camp to Gen. Hoyt.
8. A Dream respecting the Removal of Williams College. Frank-
lin Herald, December, 1818.
9. Appeal to the Public in behalf of Amherst College — in several
Nos. of the Boston Recorder for 1882.
10. The Pangynaskean Seminary (Holyoke) Explained and De-
fended, in the Boston Recorder, several Nos.
11. Description of the Scenery in Berkshire County, in several
Nos. of the Boston Recorder.
12. Scenery of the White Mountains Described, in several Nos.
of the Boston Recorder.
18. Correspondence from Richmond, Virginia, in the Express at
Amherst ; several letters
14. Visit to the Mid-Lothian Coal Mines in Virginia, in the
Richmond Watchman and Observer ; copied with remarks into the
Richmond Times.
16. Ancient Relics in Tennessee. Hampshire and Franklin Ex-
press, for March 4th, 1846.
16. Naming Mount Toby anew. Same paper, for June 22d, 1849.
17. Mesmeric Meeting of the Senior Class of 1849. Same paper,
November, 1849.
18. Popular Description of the New Cabinet and Observatory of
Amherst College. A Pamphlet of 19 pages. Also in the Hamp-
shire and Franklin Express.
19. Railroads in Vermont and New Hampsliire. Hampshire and
Franklin Express, September 8d, 1846.
20. Report of the Meeting of the American Scientific Association,
at Washington, for the Journal of Commerce, May 28d, 1844,
21. Case of Optical Delusion in Sickness. New Englander for
1846. Vol. 8, p. 199. 7 pages.
22. Address at the Dedication of the new Geological Hall in
Albany, August 27, 1856, in Tenth Annual Regents* Report. 7 pages.
28. Address at the Inauguration of Edward Everett to the Presi-
dency of Harvard College. Published in the Proceedings*
Digitized by VjOOQIC
890
BEMINISCENCE8 OP AMHERST COLLEGE.
24. Letters from Europe, to the New York Obsenrer, in 1860,
five in number. 10 pages.
25. Address at the Quarter-Century Celebration of Mt. Uolyoke
Seminary in 1861. See the volume of Addresses.
26. The first and last chapters of Hitchcock's Elementary Anat-
omy and Physiology. 43 pages. The rest vas written by my oldest
son.
SUMMABY.
I
OnJUUgion,
Religions Yolnmes, .
Essays,
Addresses, . . . .
Single Sennons,
Newspaper Articles,
Tracts
On Ten^rance*
Yolames and Tracts,
Bioffraphiea.
Volume and Notices,
Bdeniijic Productiom,
Volumes and Pamphlets,
Papers in the Journals, .
Number, &c.,
ReviewSm
Number, &c..
CmUrofferaet.
Poetry.
Volumes and Pieces,
Number, &c..
Totals,
5
8
10
12
4
3
16
53
8
12
7
26
M76
312
862
857
?15
20
735
204
3,541
436
171
111
116
?156
13
4
200
15
16
1,085
33
171 8,001 232 1,134
Distinct Volumes, . . . .
Separate Pamphlets, (Sermons, &c.,)
Papers in the Journals,
Newspaper Articles, • . • .
. 24
. 85
. 94
. 80
Digitized by VjOOQIC
REMARKS. ^ 391
Several of the papers in the Journals that were neyer published
separate, are much more elaborate, and cost me much more labor
than some of the distinct volumes. Thus the Articles on the Con-
nection between Geology and Natural and Key^aled Religion, in the
Biblical Repository, amounted to 240 pages, and demanded much
research and study.
In looking at the preceding list I feel tempted to make
many remarks; but must be very brie£
1. In the first place it strikes me as showing that I have
written and publifhed too much, both for reputation and use-
fulness. I mean that had I spent more time in preparing my
pr(^uctions, their literaiy execution would have been more
creditable, and the thoughts more mature and eJQfective. I
refer particularly to my earlier efforts ; for the later ones, I
trusty show more of care and finish. The peculiar circum-
stances of my early life, however, first led me to write and
publish, and probably if I were to live my life over again, I
should pursue essentially the same course.
2. It ought also* to be mentioned that a large part of the
subjects on which I have written have been novel, requiring
original researches, and the descriptions have required aocu*
racy rather than literary elegance. Where supposed discov-
eries are made few men will hesitate to publish an account of
them, though a high literary finish be wanting in the
description.
3. But though my writings have been thus voluminous, it is
.some consolation to be able to say that in these eight thousand
pages, I know of nothing unfriendly to morality or religion ;
nothing that would lead men to embrace error in doctrine or
practice. For though not a few pages were written before I
embraced my present views of religion, none of my productions
would lead any one to suspect that I did not always maintain
the views I now do. This seems to me like an act of restrain-
ing grace, for which I have great reason for gratitude.
4. It is well calculated to humble pride and self-sufficiency
to realize how few, if any, of these productions will survive the
^ Digitized by V3OOQ IC
392 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
•
present generation. If any of them do, it will be owing to
their connection with Christianity. This is a thought of great
importance to authors who would give their works a permanent
value.
5. Yet it ought to be added that most of these works of
mine were not written with the expectation that they would go
down to posterity, but to aid a little in advancing present
knowledge — ^in adding some items that should go into the
general stock ; so that although the works themselves should
be forgotten, some feeble influence at least night remain upon
the great cause of learning and religion.
The work which I did aim to make of permanent v^ue,
Providence, as I have elsewhere detailed, never allowed me
to write. I mean a Treatise on Natural Theology. All that
I have written was but the scaffolding and a few of the braces
and pins of the edifice I had hoped to build.
6. I feel bound also to record the fact, that nearly all the
important works on the preceding list were written during
the thirty-seven years of ray residence in Amherst, that is,
since the time when I supposed I had nearly finished my
earthly labors. For when I came to Amherst such was my
debility that I honestly thought I could not do much more.
Yet since then, the great work of my life has been accom
plished. All that preceded was only the preparation. Hoif*
wonderful the ways of God, and how different from ours »
What encouragement does my case give to the desponding
invalid, in the early and middle periods of life. Let him not
despair so long as any stamina remains in his constitution^
and his maladies are only functional, not organic Grod may
have wonders in store for him yet.
7. Let me not omit to mention also, that for the two hun-
dred and thirty-two plates and eleven hundred and thirty-
four wood cuts in my works, I have been mainly indebted
to the pencil and the patience of my beloved wife, aided in
later years by my daughters. Though pressed by the cares
of a numerous figunily, rarely, if ever, during forty years, has
Digitized by VjOOQIC
TESTIMONIAL. 393
she turned a deaf ear to my solicitations for drawings. And
>vithout these, my scientific labors would have been meagre
enough. I tiad no means for employing a regular, salaried
artist, and my own skill in the limner's art has always been
very small. How providential that such a wife should be
given me !
Gbatipyino Subprise — Presentation op Plate.
The following statements will fully explain themselves. I trust
it will not be deemed vanity if I cbnfess the gratification which
such an event gave me, or regard it as proper to present it among
the striking features of my personal history.
President Stearns, in behalf of the Faculty and Students, spoke
as follows : —
*( Ladies and Gentlemen : The Faculty and Students of Amherst
College have been desirous to make some public expression of their
veneration and affection for a distinguished Professor of this Col-
lege, — a gentleman who, for age, for wisdom, for sterling virtues of
every character, and especially for his devotion to the College,
during the period of one whole generation and more, deserves in
some respect the title of Father of us all.
«• I can, of course, refer to no one else but the venerable and beloved
Dr. Hitchcock. We have admired the simplicity and godly sincerity
of his character ; we have admired his remarkable abilities and achieve-
ments in science ; we have admired his love for the College, — for it in
its collective capacity, for its Faculty, and most of all, his love for its
students. We have admired the kindness and generosity of his heart ;
we have admired the indomitable energy of his character, and that
Christian devotion to the highest interests of the church and the world,
which, among hosts of others, we have witnessed, and which has made
lasting impressions on our hearts.
«• We bless God that He has given to the interests of this College one
who has served it faithfully for thirty and four years, in the midst
of its good and of its evil report ; one who has stood by it in the
days of its adversity, when it went down, as it did go down, into
the depths of trial, — when false friends forsook it, and true friends
began to grow cold in heart towards it — when there was a falling
off of friendships, as the sere and withered leaves fisll from the trees
when the early frosts of winter have smitten them. Our venerable
Father, in these days of darkness, stood by Amherst College, and
with some of his colleagues, two or three of whom are still in the
17*
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
894 REMINISCENCES OP AMHERST COLLEGE.
midst of us, bore it on his noble shoulders till he bore it up and on
to prosperity, as seen here, and all around us, to-day. When recently
smitten by a gigantic disease, tears started from many eyes* and
prayers went up from many hearts ; and when the life we had loyed
was preserved, we wished to present some testimonial to him of our
delight in his recovery, and some token of thankfulness to Almighty
Ood, for this, his goodness unto us.
** It was difficult to decide what should be the gift. We knew that
there was nothing within our means at all commensurate with his
merits on whom we would bestow it, but we decided at length,
on this Fcrvice of silver which you see. These two cups which you
see before you, which might look somewhat suspicious under some
circumstances, we knew would be safe in the hands of an old veteran
temperance soldier, who gave in his pledge more than a quarter of a
century ago, and has kept it ever since. You see them as they have
come from the hand of the artist, innocent of deleterious drugs ; they
will always remain innocent while they continue in the hands of him
to whom we now deliver them.
"This simple pitcher has inscribed upon, it the name of Edward
Hitchcock ; hono/ enough for the pitcher ; even if it were made of
gold seven times purified. We could not disfigure it by the addition
of another single word.
<*This salver contains in the centre the following inscription: —
EDWARD HrrCHCOCK:
FBOM THB
FACCLTT AND STUDENTS OF AMHEK8T COLLSOE,
A TESTIMONIAL OF THEIB PEBSONAL REQABD,
AND OF THEIB HIGH APPBECIATION OF HIS BEBVICES
FOB SCIENCE AND THE COLLEGE.
•( On one side of this inscription are embossed these beautifril old
mountains, (pointing to Mount Holyoke,) on which he has gazed I
know with admiration, for half a century ; which he has traversed,
which he has measured, which he has compelled to give np the
secrets of a past eternity to his investigations, and that beautiful
river along whose banks he has so often travelled, and mused of the
revelations which they had disclosed to his view.
•• On the other side is engraved a scene which I shaU not attempt
to describe at length, save to say that it is taken from an engraving
in the volume most recently published by him, "The Ichnology of
Hassachusetts." In it you will see some of those 'footprints in the
sands of time,' the discovery and arrangement of which have contributed
Digitized by VjOOQIC
PLATE PRESENTED. 396
80 much to giye him reputation, not only in this country, but all
oyer the scientific world.
•'This, then, is in brief, an explanation of our gift. We shall
convey it into the hands of the Doctor, with the approval, I have
no doubt, of this entire congregation.
"Doctor Hitchcock, we would respectfully ask you to accept this
service of silver from the hands of the Faculty and Students of
Amherst College. We would like, if you please, to have you place
it, from time to time, in situations where your Mends and ours can
see, not how highly we esteem your merits, for that we could not
express in these outward forms, but where they can see that we loved
you.
"We rejoice in your recovery, and pray that your life's sun,
which has shone out among us so long, may shine on through a long
and peaceful afternoon, and largest and brightest at its setting.
"If it may please you, we would like that this service should be
transmitted to some one who shall inherit, in some good degree,
your ability, your taste and your devotion to science. We would
like that it should always be in the hands of some one of your pos-
terity, and we would that they might be numerous as those of the
old Patriarch, of whom it was said that his descendants should bo
as the stars of Heaven, provided only, that they partake largely of
the characteristics of their ancestor. But, whether they be few or
many, it is our hope that there may never be wanting among them,
from generation to generation, a man who shall be found walking in
the fooUma/rka of his illustrious progenitor."
"To the above address, Dr. Hitchcock replied as follows i —
" Mr. Frbsident : It is not usual for a man who has seen over
three-score years to be thrown into circumstances entirely new to
his experience; but your announcement just now has brought me
into that predicament.
" But what shall I say of the superb present you have now ten-
dered to me in the name of the whole College ? My first remark in
regard to it may seem ungracious, yet I rather think duty requires
me to make it. A glance shows me the costliness of the present,
and knowing the disposition of the members of College to aid every
noble enterprise, I fear that when they find how many other more
important objects solicit their aid, they will begin to think that they
have been too liberal towards me, and have acted more through the
influence of generous feeling than from a proper estimate of my
claims compared with those of higher moment. Perhaps, however.
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
396 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
you may say to me as a certain ancient monarch did to one who
thought him too liberal : ' the present may be too great for you to
ask,' but not too great for the members of Amherst College to bestow.
" Another remark occurs to me which may seem ungracious, for
it is a criticism which calls in question the taste you hare displayed
in the getting up of this rich gift. In the works of nature nothing
strikes us more forcibly than the adaptation of one thing to another
in order to produce harmony. Now my difficulty is, that these bril*
liant and dazzling articles, constructed of one of the most beautiful
of metals, with high artistic skill, are not exactly adapted to the well
known character of him on whom they are bestowed — a man who
has made plainness and simplicity of living a sort of hobby, and who
has rubbed so hard against the rocks that most likely they hare
given him some degree of angularity and roughness.
" But I will not be yery severe in^this matter, either upon you or
myself, for it is a true adage which says, De giLsitbus non est dispu-
tandum, (about different tastes there should be no dispute.) No,
no ; it is far better to think of the animus with which the gift is
bestowed than to be carping about its character. And in the present
case, when I reflect upon the animus, every other feeling gives place
to gratitude to the generous hearts that have devised and completed
this elegant testimonial. It has come, too, at the right time, if ever
any such gift was to be bestowed. You have waited till the working
day of my life is essentially over, and thus shown that it is a testi-
mony of approval of my past services, (always excepting my errors
and deficiencies,) and not as a stimulus to make me faithful in future.
It comes, too, at an unexpected time, as a sort of agreeable appendix
to my life, when God is granting me at least a brief respite fVom
fierce disease, and it will furnish me with some sweet remembrances
to carry with me to another bed of sickness, which may be near.
It will tend also to make me feel that I have not lived altogether in
vain, as in the hour of despondency one is apt to feel he has done.
**Thi8 testimonial, as I understand it, and as you have explained
its devices, has special reference to my labors in connection with
this College.
<* If at any time since I have been connected with the Institution,
the great Captain above had ordered me to make an attack upon
Satan and his legions in some of his strongholds, with a view to
make him a captive, I could have found here a body-guard of a
hundred men, so prepared for the enterprise that I should have gone
forth with a pretty strong hope of being able to bring back the old
fellow in chains. At any rate, those thousand men who have gone
Digitized by VjOOQIC
EARLY POVERTY, 897
forth from ns in yeaw part, have given him more trouhle than per-
haps any other thousand he has ever encountered ; and when they
are reinforced hy a few more classes, I expect the news will be, if
not that he is captured, yet, that he is cooped up in close siege in
one of his strongholds.
'* To be willing to labor hard in such an Institution, I do not think
entitles a Christian man to any special commendation, but its high
character does enhance the value of any honor it may bestow. In
conclusion, I will only say to its members,'both officers and students,
essentially what Boerhaave near the close of life said to LlnnsDus,
* I have tried to do something here for the cause of learning and
religion, but may God preserve you all, from whom the world
expects much more.'"
Obstacles in My Way.
The preceding Personal Sketches have shown that my
path through life has been hedged up by some obstacles of a
peculiar kind, which have dung to me like the coat of Nessus.
With some references to the most prominent of these, I shall
close this autobiographical sketch.
Poverty.
During all my early days, this was the gaunt giant that
stood in my path to beat me back and drive me into bye
paths. I remember the time when my money with which to
purchase books was obtained by cutting wood or doing other
servile labor, for eight cents an hour, or keeping a district
school for eight dollars per month, or thirty cents by the day.
My salary as preceptor of Deerfield Academy was only $300,
and as a pastor in Conway, only $500. In College it has
been from $800 to $1,500. I have never complained of this,
nay, I think I am now better off, pecuniarily, than if I had
had large salaries,' because the small ones necessitated rigid
economy, and compelled me to keep on the look out for side
chances to make a little money by lecturing, writing, &c
But books, apparatus, and specimens require money, and so
does the leisure demanded by successful literary and scientific
researches; and in a multitude of ways, especially to the
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
898 BEHINISCENCEB OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
youthful aspirant who has no prestige to recommend him, the
influence of poverty is painfuUj depressing and discouraging.
It was so to me during all the early part of my twelve years*
struggle for an education, hefore reaching a profession.
Weak Eyes.
Another of the lions in my path was weakness of eye-sight,
that came upon me, as elsewhere related, in consequence of
the mumps. For a year and a half, in coimection with
poverty, it almost completely cut me off from all literary
pursuits, and for fbrty years it held its grasp upon me so
firmly, that scarcely ever could I use the eyes for an hour
without pain, and severe prostration of the animal spirits,
cutting down my ability to study, as I judged, full one-half.
Through the kindness of Providence, for a few years past I
have been, in a great measure, relieved from this suffering ;
but during the active period of my life it may afford some
apology for haste and inaccuracy in my productions.
Want op a Public Education.
I have referred to this deficiency in another place, with
special reference to the Presidency of the College ; but I now
speak of it in all its bearmgs. Great as its literary disadvan-
tages are, I think them less than its other evils. It raises
presumptions in the public mind against your ability and reli-
ability, that require the most strenuous efforts to overcome,
and make your passage to place and influence very slow and
difficult But still worse, it deprives you of the sympathy
and companionship, and the assistance, when needed, of class-
mates, who occupy various positions in society ; if you have
never passed through college, you will be left to struggle
on alone when trouble overtakes you, or help is needed to
secure some boon. Little do men who have never expe-
rienced it, know what a trial it is to attempt to pass through
life as a literary and professional man, unassisted and unblessed
by kind and sympathizing room-mates and classmates, and
Digitized by VjOOQIC
FEEBLE HEALTH.
college companions. It makes life's struggle doubly severe
and trying. Weak eyes and poor health deprived me of this
boon, in spite of my efforts ; but I have never ceased to urge
young men in a literary course to secure it, if possible.
Feeble Health.
This has been the grand incubus that has, lain upon me and
oppressed me for fifty years. At the commencement of that
period dyspepsy assailed me, and has never since let go its
hold. I have never passed a whole day of those fifly years
when I was not reminded in some part of it, by pain or
discomfort of some kind, that I had not vigorous health, and
how many have been the days when serious indisposition
assailed me. For the last twenty years my symptoms have
been greatly a^ravated and have extended to other organs
besides the digestive. The intensity and continuity of my
sufferings have been gradually increasing until of late, when
they have become almost unremitting and overwhelming,
causing me to cry out earnestly for Divine Help and for the
Son of Man to walk with me in the fiimace. But why should
I attempt to describe my sufferings, both in bodily distress and
mental dejec^on ? I have no wish that any one should learn
their bitterness by experience, and I am sure that is the only
way..
But on the other hand, I ought to say that I have generally
been in such a condition that the exercise of some resolution
would bring my powers, both of body and mind, into successful
action, and dispel dejection, and that, moreover, the effort
usually reacted favorably upon my health when not carried to
excess. Hence, probably, few men have lost less of time than
I have. Though unable to labor spasmodically and with con-
densed effort, I have been able to labor constantly, almost in
fact without vacation, and here is the chief secret of whatever
success has crowned my endeavors.
I ought, however, to mention thankfully, that while the other
vital centres have always been more or less deranged, the
Digitized by VjOOQIC
400 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
brain has been unusually free from headaches and other
ailments, so that I have been able to work even in the midst
of severe pain, and in fact during some of the fevers that have
afflicted me, my head being but slightly affected, I have been
able to employ an amanuensis with success. And now when
I suffer so large a part of the time, I find it an alleviation to
have some subject of literature or science to engage my atten-
tion and divert it from my pains. The only danger is that
when so feeble I am apt to overwork.
But to stand up against so much of infirmity and mental
dejection as accompanies nervous complaints has been with
me a hard and long drawn struggle. A few words as to the
chief weapons I have employed.
CoUNTERACTINa AGENCIES*
These have been chiefly two : Tehperai^ce and Hard
Work. As to the first, though the system which I adopted
many years ago has brought a good deal of ridicule and odium
upon me, its imperfect adoption has been an indispensable
means of giving me strength and courage for my labors. It
gave me the greatest amount of bodily and mental vigor of
which I was capable, and in a measure removed the torpor and
irresolution so paralyzing in dyspeptic complaints.
Perhaps, however, it is even more important to be under
some pressure of interesting and noble pursuits, and to be
compelled to labor much in the open air, in order to counteract
these hydra-headed maladies. And in no respect have the
dealings of Providence towards me seemed more marked and
special than in placing me in such positions as demanded a
large amount of labor, and much of it mechanical and in ihe
open air. As I once said at an agricultfmd' dinner, where
gymnastic exercises had been the prominent exhibition: *'I
know nothing of technical gymnastics; but I have b^en in
three very distinct gymnastic schools. The first was the
agricultural, where I spent the first twenty years of my life,
and which was admirably adapted to develop and strengthen
Digitized by VjOOQIC
MY GYMNASTICS. 401
all the powers. The second was the chemical gymnasiumy
where I spent another twenty years, or at least an important
part of them ; and though not as good as the agricultural,
because within doors and associated with too many mephitic
gases, yet the active labor it requires made it to me a valuable
schooL The third was the geological gymnasium, the best of
all to me, because I could adapt its exercises fi'om gentle to
severe, to the varying states of my health, also because it opens
before the mind such grand and exhilarating truths. In this
school I have spent more than forty years/' And were I not
too feeble for geological explorations even now I might hope
to feel the powers of life rallying anew for yet further labors.
But alas ! I can never climb the glorious mountains more. I
can only gaze at them as I pass away from earth, anticipating
celestial mountains and a celestial geology far transcending
those below.
It is obvious, from this history, that though Grod has won-
derfully adapted my circumstances to my constitution by a
variety of means, modified in each successive position which
I have occupied, yet geology has been by far the most impor-
tant instrumentality by which I have so long resisted the slow
workings of disease, and* been able to labor, almost unremit-
tingly, for half a century. I am inclined, therefore, in closing
these autobiographical sketches, to let the benefits which I
have derived from this science stand instar omnium — ^a sort
of representative illustration of God's merciful dealings in all
respects.
I wish to testify publicly to my deep indebtedness to
geology ; or rather to that kind Providence which first turned
my attention to this science, and has allowed me for a period
of fifty years to study it practically. It was not my first
scientific love, for, at an earlier date, the heavens above
had charmed my intellect and awakened youthful enthusiasm.
But when failing health forbade nightly communion with
the stars, I turned to the earth as a child to its mother,
in hope of relief; nor was I disappointed. For, in the pnu>-
Digitized by V3OOQ IC
402 BEMINISCENCES OF AiMHEBST COLLEGE.
tical study of this science, I have ever since found such relief
as no medical skill could give, although in fact it is just the
prescription which the ablest physician would make; for I
have always found that when able to go forth a la mode geO'
hgique^ and clinch the mountain top, there drinking in the air
as pure as Grod first made it, and partaking of my frugal
repast by the side of the clear, sparkling spring, then anon to
penetrate the deep and wild mountain gpi^e, with its ragged,
overhanging cliffs above, and its murmuring waters below;
and then to open the long-folded leaves of the rocky strata,
and find the register there of mighty revolutions and strange
races in the hoary past: to find, in fact, eveiywhere mar-
vellous disclosures of the great plans of Jehovah, such as
make one forget his ailments and ordinary cares — ^I have
always found, I say, that such excursions have proved the
best of restoratives to the exhausted system. How often,
when worn down by professional labors and distracting ^ares,
and feeling the prostration of lurking disease, have I thus cast
myself into nature's maternal arms, and nursed for a time on
her bosom, have returned reinvigorated to my work, buoyant
and happy. I feel, then, that I owe my life, at least many-
years of it, to geology. For I can honestly say, with Richard
Baxter, that I have now lived forty years since the time when
I would gladly have accepted of Hezekiah's lease of fifteen.
Nor do I believe that without the hygienic aid of geology I
should have exceeded the king of Judah's lease.
But I am deeply indebted to this science, also, for the
enjoyment of life ; I mean physical and intellectual pleasure.
He is most conscious of enjoyment from health, who feels it
wholly or partially returning to his long debilitated and suffer^
ing frame. That feeling have I often experienced as the result
of the excursions I have described ; or at least the exhilara-
tion thus produced has made me forgetful of my real and
fancied ailments, and even expelled the nervousness and
gloom of dyspeptic, bronchial and neuralgic attacks. But it
is mainly the intellectual enjoyment of geological research to
Digitized by VjOOQIC
INFLUENCE OP GEOLOGY. 408
which I refer. I reckon, and who does not reckon, among
the purest pleasures of life, the opportunity to gaze upon the
beautiful, the bizarre and the sublime in natural scenery.
Such occasions form delightful oases along life's barren sands.
We never forget them. They have few or no drawbacks,
and we enjoy them by retrospection over and over again, and
with increasing relish. But though such scenes lie not exclu-
sively within the province of the geologist, he is prepared
better than others to enjoy them. His home is among them.
There is no mountain so high that he does not scale it, no
gulf too profound for his adventurous step ; no region so wild
and desolate that is not full of interest to him.
** His are the mountains and the valleys his,
And the resplendent rivers ; his to enjoy
With a propriety none else can feel. ^
Are they not his by a peculiar right,
And by an emphasis of interest his ? "
For he sees in them what others do not. Their views are
limited by the present aspect and outline. But he sees, in
imagination, those mountains originally rising out of the deep,
by igneous agency, and then anon disappearing again beneath
the waters, whose oceanic waves and currents, loaded with
icefloes and icebergs, grind down and striate the rocky bottom.
Again these ocean beds rise to the daylight, and from their
summits glaciers descend along the valleys to the ocean, and
at length returning heat melts them away, and the surface
assumes its present outline, and becomes a habitable world.
Nor are these mere fancy sketches, but the evidences of the
changes meet the geologist on every side. Thus in his mind
moral beauty and sublimity are added to those that are
natural, increasing vastly his interest and enjoyment.
And the same effect follows from the immense antiquity of
geological changes, so far exceeding that of human history.
The very dawn of chronology indeed forms only the starting
point of the geologist, and its whole extent forms scarcely a
Digitized by VjOOQIC
404 REMINISCENCES OF AMHERST COLLEGE.
measurable unit of the almost immeasurable past Does the
archseologjst become enthusiastic as he studies the catacombs,
the pyramids, and the hieroglyphics of Egypt, because they
lead so far back into history ? But the geologist can point to
the delta of the Nile already nearly OMnpleted when the pyra-
mid builders lived and the mummies were embalmed ; or to
the fossil forest near Cairo which grew long before the delta
was begun ; or to the other formations along the borders of
the desert which preceded the forest by countless ages. Or he
can run back far, far beyond all this, still surely conducted by
the thread of geological facts. And what by the side of all
this is even Egyptian antiquity, and why should not the
geologist feel at least equal enthusiasm with the Egyptologist?
Wo contemplate with a kind of awe the old carved bulls
and lions and winged gods dug from the ruins of NineveL
But the geologist knocks out the petrified shell found in those
figures, and can trace back its history ten thousand ages to the
time when it lived in cretaceous or oolitic seas.
In this country we speak of an Ante-Columbian history as
giving a hoary aspect to our annals, and making them there-
fore of intense interest. But the geologist can point to beds
of gravel and sand near the tops of most of the New England
mountains, and to the erosions of their summits by icebergs
and glaciers, showing that once the ocean stood for ages above
them, and that an arctic climate prevailed ; nay, he can show
where the Connecticut and the Hudson, by the slow action of
their streams, have cut gorges into the rocks a thousand
feet deep. Indeed, passing beyond the Rocky Mountains and
following down the Colorado, he can show you canons or gorges
a mile deep which that river has worn into the solid strata.
Compared with the' period requisite for such a work, how
dwarfed into a point is all human history. And how can this
immense antiquity of geological events but give them intense
interest, and their investigation, rich enjoyment. For almost
every stroke of the hammer brings up a new relic of some
geological Nineveh.
Digitized by VjOOQIC
GEOLOOT CONFIRMS RELIGION. 405
But I have found in geology a still higher source of gratifi-
cation and one not expected. It has deepened my convictions
of the truth not only of natural but of revealed religion. It
has bound together into one system these two great branches
of the subject It has done more. It has illustrated and con-
firmed many of the truths denominated evangelical. What
are called the Doctrines of the Reformation, which I adopted
on the testimony of the Scriptures, I could not now give up
without discarding geology also. Covered over as the geolog-
ical records are with proofs of Divine Benevolence as exhibited*
in a fallen world, and of miraculous and providential interven-
tions, how gratifying the labor of deciphering them. I was
once wandering in the deep darkness of a coal mine a thousand
feet below the surfiice, when I was accosted by a Welsh miner
with the inquiry, " What is the state of religion where you
came from? We have a revival here!" An appropriate
place, thought I, to find evidence of God's special care of the
spiritual wants of man, enveloped as we were by the proof
of his prospective and special provision for his physical wants.
As I once stood by the side of the Mer de Glace at
Montanvert on the side of Mont Blanc, looking across the
Glacier, we saw rising before us those numerous needle shaped
mountains which form one of the most striking features of the
Alps, one of them, the Auguille Yerte, shooting up seven
thousand feet. Together they seemed a city o£ gigantic mina-
rets or church spires, and so impressed was an English gentle-
man by my side with the resemblance and the grandeur of the
scene, that he requested my companion, an American clergy-
man, to offer prayer. And the request seemed appropriate ;
for
^ So like a temple did it seem that there
A pious heart's first impulse would be prayer."
And so, were the heart right, would many other spots seem
which the geologist visits.
I know, indeed, that many imagine geology to be un&vorable
to piety, and tending to scepticism. I can say only that it has
'Digitized by V3OOQ IC
406 REMINISCENCES OF AMHEBST COLLEGE.
not been so with me, but the reverse ; strengthening my faith
in the great principles of the gospel, and enabling me to see
something of the Cross in Nature and something of Nature in
the Cross.
But my special object in giving these details of private
history and feeling, is to induce my readers to turn their
attention, at least as a matter of recreation, to the out-door
study of geology. Confined as most men are, a large part
of the year, by engrossing pursuits, seasons of relaxation
. abroad are indispensable not only to their comfort, but to
enable them to do the most at home. Gladly at such times
would I entice you into the wild scenes of Nature. The
mountains, the valleys, the gorges, the beetling clifi^, the
caverns, the mines, the wild cataracts, the deep solitudes, stand
ready to welcome you, to inspire you with fresh vigor, and to
feast you with their beauties and sublimities, as much as if
none before you had revelled upon them. In the height of
balmy summer then, when nature cries out for a respite &om
protracted cares and labors, let me exhort you to go forth, not
with fishing tackle and fowling-piece, (the meagre resort of
many,) but with minds well stored with scientific principles, a
hanuner in hand, and an aneroid barometer by your side, and
laying your course for the mountains, learn the character of
the rocks, their origin and fossil contents, and seek the
evidences of those stupendous revolutions which they have
undergone, not forgetting to trace the Divine Hand in them
all. If you join botany and zoology to geology, so much surer
wUl you be to acquire a settled relish for Nature's works. That
once attained and you have secured a source of health and
happiness, and of mental improvement too, of which no earthly
change can rob you. Strange would it be, if as years roll on,
some of the bright eyes that scan these pages should not be
dimmed by sorrow, and the wan and pallid countenance succeed
to the rose of health now in full bloom. Strange if the icy
blasts of disappointment or bereavement, or the treachery or
neglect of the world should not chill some of the generous hearts
Digitized by VjOOQIC
CHRISTIAN LOVE OP NATURE. 407
whom I address. But oh, what a solace will you find in a
sanctified, Christian love of Nature ! She is the kind parent of
us all, and she always has a soothing voice and a healing balm
for her disheartened and afflicted children. Nor can even ^the
infirmities of age chill and paralyze this holy love for her. I
testify at the age of threescore and ten, that though I find the
powers of life giving way, and a growing indifference to the
works of Man, my attachinent to the works of Nature has all
the ardor and enthusiasm of youth. Hannah More testified
that it was so with her at fourscore and two. And why should
it not be so with the Christian forever ! for though the first and
the sweetest song of heaven is, Worthy is the Lamb that was
slatTij yet the second sounds from the same golden harps, with
a rapture scarcely less, great and marvellous are tht
WORKS, Lord God, Almighty I
Digitized by VjOOQIC
'Digitized by VjOOQIC
INDEX,
Paire.
Abbott, Jacob, ... 33
Adams, C. B., ... 91
Adullam or Sunderland Cave, 270
Agents to procure fhnds, . 122
Agricultural Schools, . • 850
in Europe, . . . 352
Agriculture, Board of in Mas-
sachusetts, appointed Secre-
tary, ....*. 868
Alden Ebenezer. ... 13
Allen, Dr., speecn on Konotuck, 248
Almanac, Inautical, errors in, . 311
Amethyst Brook, . . . 267
Anatomy, Instruction in, . 293
Antirenenean Society, . . 162
Members of, . . . 155
Appleton Cabinet. ... 63
Arcbseological Cabinet, . . 104
Astronomy, Love of it. . . 284
Astronomical Obser\'ations, . 311
Association of American Geol-
ogists and Naturalists, . 869
Association, American, for Ad-
vancement of Science, . 869
Beaches, Old Sea, and Bot-
toms, Old Sea, ... 276
Beneficiaries, Number of, . 205
Billings, Elisha, ... 6
Biographical Notices, . . 1
Blunt, Edmund M., contro-
versy with, .... 311
Boaltf'J. H., Speech on Kil-
bumPeak,. ... 257
Boltwood, Lucius, . . 9, 120
Botanical Collections, . . 98
Bowlders, .... 264
Buckland, Professor, in an In-
sane Hospital, . . . 348
Bunsen, Chevalier, Anecdote
concerning,. ... 302
British Association, Scientific,
meeting of, . . . 356
Members of, . .' . 357
Moral tone of, . . . 358
18
Cabinets, History of, . . 74
• pecuniary value of, . . 108
scientific estimate of, • 110
use of, . . . . Ill
Cabinet of Society of Inquiry, 107
Calhoun, William B., . . 12
Canons on the Colorado, . 405
Charity Fund, . . 118, 147
amount expended, . . 205
Chain Ponds, .... 267
Child, Linus, .... 18
Christians, English, fidelity of, 844
Cirencester, Incidents at, . 852
Clark, Daniel A., ... 21
Joseph S., • • • 23
W. S., Prof., ... 41
Cobden, Richard, his opinion
of the Scenery on the Hud-
son, 359
Cowles, Rufus, ... 6
College Duties, amount of as
Professor, ... 289
amount of as President, . 315
College Honors, . . . 326
College Hill, ... 213
Condit, J. B., Prof., . . 40
Conway, Dismissal fh)m, . 287
Conveniens in College, . . 162
Correspondence, Epistolary, • 317
Credit, Building on, . . 139
Crescent, . . . . 218
Crisis in the Historjr of the
College terminated, . . 130
Crosb}'. Joshua, ... 3
Crowell, E. P., Prof., . . 42
Dangers of the College, . 207
Debt of the College, . . 119
Effects of, ... 123
Cancelled, ... 133
Debtor's Prison, ... 141
Dedication of the Cabinets, . 136
Delta Terraces, ... 277
Departments of Study, time
for each, .... 52
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410
INDEX.
Dickinson, Auatm, . 9
Edward, ... 8
Enoo, .... 67
Samuel F., . • • 5
Nineyeh Oalleiy, . . 67, 104
Diploma of Antivenenean So-
ciety, .... 156
Discoara^pementandFeeblenetB, 836
Dormitones, .... 163
Dons, Dr., on the Footmark
ControveTBy, . . . 878
Dunes, 278
Education, Public, wanting, . 898
Socie^ its Benefidariea, 805
Edwards, Heniy, ... 18
BelaB., ... 23
Ely,Alfnd, .... 21
Ellis, Mrs., her female school, 850
Eolus, Naming of, . . . 261
Estabrook, Professor, . . 88
Esty, W. C 42
Europe, Tour in, ... 338
Tour in, objects and rules of, 840
Eyes, Weak, ... 898
jCxcursions for Naming Monn-
Uins, 212
Expenses, Annual, of the Col-
lege, .... 180
Annual, increasing, • 208
Field, T. Pm Prof., . . 40
Financial History of the College, 117
of the Crisis in, . . 124
Fieke, N. W., Professor, . 80,77
his Speech on Holyoke, . 224
Fiske, John, .... 19
Fortification taught in College, 296
Fossil Footmarks, ControveiBy
about, 874
Fowler, William W., Speech
on Rock Rimmon, 246
William C, Prof., . . 40
Freshmen, abuse of, . . 833
Funds of the College, . . 148
Ezpaading, ... 149
Geology around Amherst, 270, 811
Geology, its benefits, . . 401
Geologist's Dell, ... 227
Geologist, his peculiar plea-
suresu 408
Geological Surveys, . . 864
Ghor, 243
Glaciers, marks of, in Wales, 842
Gneiss, 271
Golden Gate, . ... 217
Goff^e Terrues, . . . 277
Greenstone, .... 278
Graduates, Number o^ . . 44
Graves, Rufus, ... 4
Gymnasium, .... 68
Gymnastics, three kinds, 401
Haidinger, Prof., his opinion
on the Footmaik Controversy, 877
Haldeman, Prof., Letter fiom, 874
Haidy, Alpheus, ... 14
Haven, Joseph, Prof., . 89
Health, Feeble, ... 890
improved by Geology, . 403
Hiawatha, Mt, ... 258
Heirick, T. P., Speech on Po-
cumtuck, .... 955
History, Ante-Cohmibian, . 404
Hitchcock, Edward, Speech on
Holyoke, ... 235
Speech on Morwottack, . 232
Speech on Nonotuck, 218
Speech on presentation of
Plate, .... 995
Mrs. O: and Daughters,
their drawinffs, . 294, 892
Edward, Jr., Speech on
Mettawompe, . 42, 234
C.H., Speech on Pocumtnck, 255
Professorship, its endow-
ment« .... 292
Homerton College, • . 848
Hooker, John, ... 10
Hovey, Sylvester, ... 84
Hoyt, Gen. Ep., my patron, . 888
Humphrey, Dr., Sietch of, . 25
Leonard, speech on Nor-
wottuck, • 228
Hunterian Museum of Ana-
tomy, London, . . . 846
Ichnological Cabinet, . • 81
Cost of, .... 88
Indian Relics, ... 108
Influence of Friends during
revivals, .... 170
Instructors, Names of, . . 50
Inquiry Meetings, ... 178
lo, 266
40
67
Jewett, G. B., Prof., .
Johnson Chapel, .
Jones, Edward, (colored) Pres-
ident of a College, . • 831
87
King, Jonas
Kindness to Strangers in Ger-
many and Scotland, . . 854
KilbumPeak, ... 257
Laboratory,
72
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J*t«i*l Terraceg Paw /
"^ 52? ^22.^^
attention, . '
Mather, R.H. p^f '
-^nature, * '^^^ 'ove of
Cwtor, .
goljoke,
tot?"*' ^ "* «'»i
«««i«te,;
OJd«, Pj^> • . . .
193 l^-'onNuto^k " ' '
*'«ttidency, invitation toT ' JS2
arguments for and agaSist ^
Pi.f. accepting it, . .
"ate present^ .
PowderPlot, . .
providence, Kindness of,
I'ttblications, List of, .
1
2
205
407
?«
263
252
218
21*
220
253
210
216
^® Rebellion, Case of,
93
296
287
411
261
J79
389
264
227
2i6
258
897
216
254
160
38
347
378
20
39
40
309
281
71
363
259
254
353
68
39
125
397,281
167, 178
305
37^
Acoeuion, uase of, .
Religious Views, . . *
Heligion confirmed by Qeoll
OR^, ....
Religious History of the Coll
lege, . . . . "
Remmiscences, Sad,
Revivals, . . . '
^1
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412
INDEX.
PAg*.
Serivmls, Means used in, 168
Different Trpefl of, . . 184
Kevival of 1850, ... 183
of 1858 186
Rhine, Fellow Pawengen
through itd Gorges, . . 860
Richmond, Va., Sojourn at, . 337
Rigi Culm, View firom, . . 361
River Beds, Old, ... 278
RockEtam, .... 266
Oreb, .... 264
Rimmon, . . • . 245
Rocking Stone, ... 265
Sandstone, .... 275
Scenery, 211
Scholarships, .... 149
School of Mines in Paris, . 346
Sears Fund, . . 115, 132
Sedgwick, Prof., on the Foot-
mark Controversr, . . 877
Seelje, J. H., Prof., . . 41
Sentinel, The. ... 265
Silliman, Prof. , his instruction, 288
Shelbume Falls, ... 269
Shepard, Prof. C. IT.. . . 101
Speech on Holyoke,. . 221
Cabinet .... 101
Smith, Dr. J. Pye, his rare ex-
cellence, .... 848
Smith, Nathaniel, ... 8
Smith, Heniy B., ... 39
Snen,E.S., .... 35
Societies, Secret and Anti-
Secret, . ... 820
Opinion of Presidents con-
cerning, . . . 822
Statistical Uistoiyof Amhent
College, .... 43
Steams, Dr., his Character, . 41
his Speech, . . 393
Speech on Nonotnck. . 248
Speech on Pocomtock, . 257
Stimpson*s Fund, its amount, 205
Students, Indigent, assisted, . 204
Number of, in Amherst
College, ... 44
Non-graduates, . . 46
Studies in College, time de-
voted to, .... 92
Subjects perplexing in College, 318
Sugar-Loaf, .... 251
Summaiy of Works published, 390
Snmmanr of the Contents of
the Cabinets,
Sunderland objects to naming
Ml Toby, . .
99
286
Tappan, John,
Taylor, James,
Temperance, Histoiy of.
12, 151, 363
. 3
• 151
Temperance^ the gnmd remedy, 400
m Eating and Drinking, 297
the System Taught, with
its Modificatiotts, . . 298
Terrace Lake, ... 267
Titan's Piazza, ... 226
Pier, .... 227
Torrance, J. D., his life sacri-
ficed, 834
Trap Tuff, .... 274
Tracks in Stone, Disooveiy of, 86
Trask, Israel F^, ... 10
Trustees and Friends, Sketches
of, ... . 14
Votes of. In 1847, . . 133
Tuckerman, £., Prof., . . 42
Turner's Falls, ... 268
Tyier, W. S.,. ... 127
Univenity of Edinburgh, its
Cabinets and Library, 346
Vain, Joseph, . .19,122
Veins of Copper and Lead, . 279
Vibrating Falls at South Uad-
ler, 269
Victoria, Queen, at Pnyen, . 303
Vose, J. G., Prof., . . 41
Wales, Travel in, ... 341
Warner, Aaron, . • 127
Wayland, Francis,. . . 22
Webster, Noah, ... 11
Webster, Daniel, on Temper-
ance, ..... 302
Wilder, S. V. S., . . . 10
Williston.Sam'l, Sketch of, 16,69,135
Wine at Breakfikst, 304
Woods Cabinet, ... 60
Worcester, S. M., ... SO
Works published. Remarks on, 391
World, its immense Age, . 404
Zoological Cabinet,
90,94
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