PROF. BENJAMIN HALE. PROF. ALPHEUS CROSBY. PROF. IRA YOUNG.
From reliable sources we have the
following account of another gentleman of distinguished
worth, who was an instructor also both in the Academical
and Medical departments of the college.
Benjamin Hale was born on the 23d
of November, 1797, in Newbury, Mass., now a part of
the city of Newburyport. He was the eldest son
of Thomas Hale, who was the grandson of the fifth
Thomas, in that series of Hales, whose first representative
came to Newbury in about 1637. His mother was
Alice Little, a daughter of the Hon. Josiah Little
of Newbury, and grand-daughter of Col. Moses
Little, an officer in the Continental Army. On
both sides of the house Benjamin Hale came of a race
of vigorous, industrious, and useful men, held in honor
by their fellow citizens, and invariably distinguished
for their exemplary habits, their domestic virtues,
their sterling goodness, and their faithfulness in
the discharge of trusts and duties. In childhood
he was studious, quiet, kind, and genial; fond of
books, the favorite of his youthful companions, and
the cheerful companion of the aged.
In the autumn of 1813, he went to
Atkinson Academy; and in September, 1814, entered
Dartmouth College; but his health becoming impaired,
he went to Dummer Academy, Byfield, in the autumn
of 1815, to pursue his studies under the direction
of its principal, the Rev. Mr. Abbott. In February,
1816, he entered the Sophomore class at Bowdoin College,
then under the presidency of the venerable Dr. Appleton,
whose grave kindness soon won his reverent love.
He at once secured an honorable position in his class,
which was the largest that had then been in that college.
In September, 1818, he received the degree of B. A.;
his part at Commencement being the salutatory oration.
Having been previously offered the academy at Saco,
and recollecting a remark of his old pastor, Dr. Spring,
that “one who meant to be a minister would do
well to try his hand at being a schoolmaster,”
he took charge of the academy for one year.
In the autumn of 1819, he became a
member of the Theological Seminary at Andover, Mass.
Here his college classmate, Rufus Anderson, afterwards
the distinguished Secretary of the American Board of
Commissioners for Foreign Missions, was his class-mate
and room-mate. Dr. Anderson thus writes of him:
“Our friendship was founded in mutual knowledge
and esteem, and continued during his life. The
operations of his mind were effective, equally so
in nearly every branch of learning. He was quick
and accurate in the Mathematics, in the Languages,
and in Music. I know not in what one branch he
was best fitted to excel. While perfect in all
his recitations, he was social, always ready for conversation
when I desired it. He had, and through his whole
life retained, my entire confidence as a man of God,
nor was I surprised at the eminent position he afterwards
attained in the church of Christ. Pleasant is
his memory, and pleasant is the thought of meeting
him in a better world.” While at Andover
he had leisure for reading, and that part of it which
he devoted to Ecclesiastical History had an important
influence as it turned out, in deciding his future
ecclesiastical connection.
At the Commencement of Bowdoin College,
in 1820, he was appointed tutor. He taught the
Junior class in Natural Philosophy, and Locke’s
Essay on the Human Understanding, and the Sophomore
class in Geometry and some other parts of Mathematics,
and in Logic. At the same time he continued to
pursue his theological studies, and in January, 1822,
was licensed to preach by the York Association.
In September, 1821, he delivered a Latin valedictory
oration, and took his degree of A. M. With regard
to this period of his life, his fellow tutor, now the
venerable Prof. Packard, thus writes: “Mr.
Hale gave at once the impression of a kind, generous,
faithful heart, a clear, acute, and rapid intellect,
and a vigorous grasp of any subject to which he gave
his thought. He was a diligent student. He
loved books. Without conceit he had sufficient
self-reliance, which was always of service to him
as a teacher and governor. He always had the good-will
of his pupils, and whether with them or with his colleagues
he exerted an influence above rather than below his
age and standing. He was a true man, unselfish,
of a decidedly social turn, of warm affections, of
a genial humor.”
In the summer of 1822, he received
proposals from R. H. Gardiner, Esq., of Gardiner,
Me., to take charge of a new institution which he
had determined to establish for the education of farmers
and mechanics in the principles of science. Mr.
Hale accepted, and closed his connection with Bowdoin
College in 1822, and entering upon his duties January
1, 1823, opened the Lyceum, was inaugurated as its
principal, and delivered an address on the occasion.
He soon after returned his license, finding it inconvenient
to meet the many calls for preaching extended to him,
and having become also so settled in his preference
for the Protestant Episcopal Church that he determined
to take Orders therein, should he ever be so situated
as to think it his duty to preach again. On the
9th day of April, 1823, he was married to Mary Caroline
King, the eldest daughter of the Hon. Cyrus King, M.
C.
The Lyceum soon attracted students
and became a flourishing institution. Its principal
gave lectures in Chemistry and taught Mathematics
and Natural Philosophy, and in winter had classes in
Architecture and in Agricultural Chemistry. For
the former of these classes he prepared, in 1827,
a work on the “Elementary Principles of Carpentry.”
In July, 1827, having received an
invitation to succeed Professor Dana in the chair
of Chemistry at Dartmouth College, Mr. Hale accepted,
and delivered his inaugural address on the day after
Commencement. His esteemed and able colleagues
in the Medical College were Reuben D. Mussey, M.D.,
Prof. of Anatomy and Surgery; and Daniel Oliver, M.D.,
Prof. of Theory and Practice of Medicine. It should
be noted that at that period the importance of physical
studies was not fully appreciated at Dartmouth.
The college had not taken a scientific periodical
in half a century. There was no cabinet of minerals.
“There was not,” writes Dr. Oliver, “a
single modern volume in the college library upon either
Mineralogy or Geology; and scarcely one, if one, upon
Chemistry, later than the days of Fourcroy or Vauquelin.
The prevailing taste was decidedly anti-physical.
It was directed another way, and not only so, but
there was among the college Faculty a disposition
to undervalue the physical sciences.” Dr.
James F. Dana, the predecessor of Professor Hale,
writing of the college in reference to physical science,
used the following remarkable expression: “It
was anchored in the stream, and served only to show
its velocity.” When Professor Hale was
engaged, his duties comprised a course of daily lectures
to the medical class through the lecture term, to which
lectures the members of the Senior and Junior classes
were to be admitted; and instruction to the Junior
class in some chemical text-book by daily recitations
for five or six weeks. This was all.
Professor Hale, however, addressed
himself to his work with characteristic activity and
zeal. He proceeded to give each year to the college
classes a separate course of over thirty lectures,
and discharged the expenses of them himself.
He substituted a larger and more scientific text-book
for that in use, and obtained an allowance of forty
or more recitations instead of thirty. He laid
the foundation of the cabinet of minerals by giving
five hundred specimens, classifying and labeling all
additions, leaving the collection in respectable condition
with 2,300 specimens. He gave annually about
twenty lectures in Geology and Mineralogy; and for
some years was the regular instructor of the Senior
class in the Philosophy of Natural History. For
two years, also, he took charge of the recitations
in Hebrew, and occasionally took part in other recitations;
and, with another, served as building committee during
the whole process of repairing and erecting the college
edifices.
December 11, 1827, Professor Hale
wrote, in a family letter, “I have made out
a plan, for the repair of the College building, and
the addition of a building for libraries, etc.,
for the use of Trustees at their next session.
It takes with the president mightily, and I think
they will make it go.”
And in another family letter, the
first after returning from a journey, under date of
March 20, 1828, he wrote:
“My arrival at Hanover was very
opportune. I was looked for for sometime, and
letters were about being despatched for me....
I have the honor of being one-half of the building
committee, Professor Chamberlain being the other moiety,
and we are commencing operations. The prospects
of the College are now so bright, that the plan
I at first proposed, and which was adopted by the
Trustees, is abandoned, and we are preparing to
erect two brick buildings, three stories in height,
and fifty feet by seventy. One for students’
rooms, and the other for public rooms.... And
what is more comforting, our funds are improving so
much that the building will not distress us very much
if the $30,000 should not be realized. A good
many old debts have been collected, and are coming
in, by which one building could be erected. About
$13,000 have already been subscribed, and subscriptions
are daily arriving.”
All this was voluntary and gratuitous
work. It is no wonder that students thus cared
for should respond, as they did, with enthusiasm and
regard. Happily, in this department as well as
in all others, Dartmouth College is now in motion,
and fully up with the foremost in the current of physical
study.
During his last three years, Professor
Hale was President of the Phi Beta Kappa Society.
His portrait, presented, it is believed, by the members
of that society, now hangs in the college library.
While at Hanover, Professor Hale thought
it his duty to resume his purpose of preaching, and
was accordingly ordained Deacon by the Rt. Rev.
Dr. Griswold, Bishop of the Eastern Diocese, September
28, 1828, at Woodstock, Vt.; and Priest by the same
bishop, in St. Paul’s, Newburyport, January
6, 1831. In taking this step he violated in no
respect the charter of the college, he undertook nothing
which conflicted with the duties of his professorship,
he acted neither obtrusively nor illiberally; but
while he occasionally preached in neighboring churches,
he always, in Hanover, scrupulously observed the appointment
at the village meeting-house. On Sunday nights,
however, he held a service in his own house, for his
own family, and the family of Dr. Oliver, and such
other communicants of the Episcopal Church, and friends,
as might desire to attend. Difference in sentiment
on religious subjects, between Professor Hale and
the Trustees of the college, and action on their part
which can hardly be regarded as justifiable, led to
the termination of Professor Hale’s connection
with the college, in 1835.
In 1835, Professor Hale published
two works, “A Valedictory Letter to the Trustees,”
and “Scriptural Illustrations of the Liturgy.”
In August of that year he attended the General Convention
of the Protestant Episcopal Church as a delegate from
the Diocese of New Hampshire. In October, 1836,
the degree of D.D. was conferred upon him by Columbia
College. In December, having had a severe attack
of bronchitis, he sailed to St. Croix to spend the
winter. His published letters under the signature
of “Valetudinarius” were very pleasant
to the reading public.
In the course of the next year he
entered upon the laborious and high duties of an office
which occupied the remaining years of his active life.
He was elected, August 2, 1836, to the Presidency of
Geneva College, N. Y., and entered upon his duties
in the following October; delivering an inaugural
address on the 21st of December. It is of course
impossible here to give the varied and interesting
details of his presidential life. To this institution
he freely gave the wealth of his well stored and acute
mind, his tried experience, and his cheerful, patient
resolution. The trials were sometimes great, the
laborers few, the support scanty, and there were times
when it seemed as if the one man only stood between
the life of the college and its death. As one
of the Trustees wrote, “Life was already nearly
extinct, and death would have soon followed, had not
the president given himself wholly to the work with
a faith that never faltered, a perseverance which
strengthened with difficulties, and a thorough conviction
that his work, if well done, would promote the glory
of God and his church through all time.”
And he was successful, as much so as it was within
the power of one man to be, both in correcting the
evils which he found existing, and in securing the
stability of the college beyond all peradventure.
Wherever he was, in the recitation room, in the academic
circle, in the Medical School of which he was ex
officio president, in the Board of Trustees, in
the councils of the bishop and the Diocese, in the
conferences with the Vestry of Old Trinity Church,
before the Board of Regents, before the Legislature
of the State, he was always the learned, sagacious,
loyal, and inspiring president; respected and beloved
always, by all who entered the circle of his influence;
and illustrating daily in his own character, the symmetry,
strength, and purity of the principle by which he was
governed.
Dr. Hale instructed easily in every
department of learning. He was most fond of ethical
and metaphysical studies. His class room will
never be forgotten by those who delighted to go to
it, and regretted to leave it. His courses of
lectures for many years included Civil and Ecclesiastical
Architecture. He loved music, and read it as easily
as the words. His diction was always remarkable
for the best English, expressed in the happiest style.
His memory and power of association were almost unerring.
His temper was held in the nicest balance. In
preaching he was a Chrysostom in wisdom, truth, and
sweetness.
We have not space to dwell upon this
theme, nor upon the wholesome influence which Dr.
Hale exerted in the diocese in which he was placed,
both towards preparing the way for a second diocese
in the State of New York, and in ministering in his
place to its unity and order, when under the Episcopal
charge of the noble De Lancey. In 1858, he left
Hobart (once Geneva) College, and in 1859 he left
Geneva, with this distinguished record: “The
thorough and skillful teacher, the laborious and self-sacrificing
president, the sympathizing friend, the genial companion,
the judicious adviser, the courteous Christian gentleman;
in all these relations so bearing himself as to gain
the profound respect and tender affection of all who
knew him.”
Dr. Hale retired to live in Newburyport,
near his birth-place and by the graves of his forefathers,
with his children around him. Even then “his
influence upon the community distilled like the dews
of heaven to gladden the earth.” He departed
to his rest in Paradise on the 15th of July, 1863.
Dr. Hale had four sons and three daughters, of whom
the sons (one has since departed) and one daughter
survived him.
His published works, beside communications
to newspapers on current topics, are: “An
Address to the Public from the Trustees of Gardiner
Lyceum,” 1822. “An Inaugural Address
at Gardiner,” 1823. “Address to the
Public in regard to the Lyceum,” 1824. “Introduction
to the Mechanical Principles of Carpentry,”
1827. “Sermon before the Convention of
New Hampshire,” 1830. “Lecture before
the American Institute of Instruction, On the Best
Method of Teaching Natural Philosophy,” 1830.
“Sermon, On the Unity of God, preached before
the Convention of the Eastern Diocese,” 1832.
“Scriptural Illustrations of the Liturgy of
the Protestant Episcopal Church,” 1835.
“Valedictory Letter to the Trustees of Dartmouth
College,” 1835. “Inaugural Address,
Geneva College, On the Equalizing and Practical Tendency
of Colleges,” 1836. “A Lecture before
the Young Men’s Association of Geneva, On Liberty
and Law,” 1838. “Baccalaureate:
Education in its Relations to a Free Government,”
1838. “The Present State of the Question,”
a pamphlet, in relation to the division of the Diocese
of New York, 1838. “Baccalaureate:
The Languages,” 1839. “Baccalaureate:
Mathematics,” 1841. “Lecture on the
Sources and Means of Education,” 1846.
“Baccalaureate: The Position of the College,
the State, and the Church,” 1847. “Historical
Notices of Geneva College,” 1849. “Sermon
on the Death of Major Douglass,” 1849.
Professor Alpheus Crosby, who was
elected to the Chair of Greek and Latin in the College,
in 1833, Professor Calvin E. Stowe having filled the
position in the interval after the death of Professor
Chamberlain, was the son of Dr. Asa and Abigail (Russell)
Crosby, and was born at Sandwich, N. H., October 13,
1810. Although less than twenty-three years of
age, his superior scholarship fully warranted the
appointment. After ably filling this chair several
years, by a division of labor he was permitted to
confine himself exclusively to the Greek language
and literature. To his refined and sensitive nature
the stern old Roman was less attractive than the more
polished Greek. It is quite probable that Professor
Crosby was more largely indebted than he himself was
aware to the moulding influence of his amiable and
excellent mother, for that particular type of mind
and heart which placed him among the foremost Grecian
scholars of his time. Professor Crosby’s
career as a linguist illustrated two distinct forms
of success. He excelled both as a teacher
and as an author. His success as a teacher
no one will question who had the privilege of listening
to his instructions, if only for a single hour.
He questioned the student with a critical eye and
ear, but a womanly gentleness. His translations
might well be likened to celestial music, long pent-up
in foreign caves, but now finding rich and varied and
sweet expression, in the mother tongue. His success
as an author is sufficiently indicated by the extensive
use of his text-books, especially the “Greek
Grammar.”
His classmate, Rev. Dr. Tenney, says:
“It is very pleasant for me
to bring back before me your brother as I remember
him at the commencement of our college life. He
was, as you know, a boy of twelve years, dressed in
a boy’s jacket with a ruffled shirt, collar
coming down over his shoulders, such as boys wore in
those days playful as a kitten, and as innocent
as the purest-minded girl. He was probably the
best fitted (as the phrase is) for college, of any
member of the class. He had, I believe, gone over
all the studies of the Sophomore year. Without
any apparent effort he maintained his pre-eminence
through his entire college course, not only in the
Languages, but also in Mathematics and Mental Philosophy.
My recollection is that he had committed to memory
all the Greek primitives before he left college, yet
with all his pre-eminence as a scholar he never seemed
to have the remotest consciousness that there was
anything remarkable about himself. We had ambitious
men in the class and some bitter rivalries, but no
one ever thought of questioning his position.
In short he was both the pet and pride of the class;
his conscientiousness as a boy was that which characterized
him as a man. I do not think he would have done
a consciously wrong thing for his right hand.
I remember being with him one Sabbath, when a letter
was handed him from home, and his views of the sacredness
of the Sabbath were such that he would not open it
until the Sabbath was passed. I mention this,
not to illustrate the earnestness of his conscience,
but simply to show its authority over him.
“As your brother was the youngest
of the class, I was one of the oldest, but from the
commencement of our class life our intimacy was constant.
I could very readily tell why I was attracted to him,
but his friendship for me I could never understand;
sure I was that I never loved any other man as I did
him; he visited me a number of times; as I was at
his home in Salem not long before his lamented death,
he seemed to me the same at the end as he was at the
beginning, one of the most lovable and remarkable
men I ever knew, and the world has seemed to be poorer
ever since he left it.”
Mr. C. C. Chase, Principal of the
High School in Lowell, of the class of 1839, says:
“I have had many laborious,
faithful teachers, but only one genius, and that was
Professor Alpheus Crosby. He was accurate upon
a point not because he appeared to have looked it
up in the books, but because he instinctively knew
it. It was in the Greek that I was instructed
by him, and I clearly recall, at this day, the expression
of his face, as he explained it to us. He seemed
to revel in the beautiful thoughts and splendid conceptions
of the great dramatists. He did not appear to
be so anxious as most teachers, that our recitations
should show our critical grammatical knowledge, but
rather that we should appreciate and enjoy the wonderful
creations of the great minds of antiquity. He
loved to teach. It seemed to be his delight to
tell others what he had so much enjoyed himself.
It was the study of his Greek grammar that first gave
me a love for the noble language of ancient Greece.
I know of no grammar that has so few bones and so
much meat in it. One can really enjoy reading
it in an idle hour! It so clearly reveals the
fact that that most beautiful of languages, with all
its sweetness and euphony, is but a transcript of
the mind of the race of men that knew more of beauty,
of taste, and of philosophy than all the ancient world
besides. Professor Crosby entered into the secret
chambers of Greek thought, and became himself a Greek,
and seemed to feel a perpetual flow of delight, as
he told to others what seemed so charming to himself.
Others might compel an indolent student to devote more
time and study to his lessons, but none could equal
him in leading those who loved to follow, into the
‘green pastures’ and ‘sweet fields’
of the domain of learning.”
Hon. George Stevens, of the class of 1849, says:
“My acquaintance with Professor
Crosby began upon my admission to college. My
preparation in Greek was imperfect, and my knowledge
of the language was quite limited. His manner
of dealing with and instructing the class soon won
my admiration, love, and respect for him, and opened
to me a new and unexpected source of pleasure in the
beauties of the Greek language. The primitive
simplicity, the euphony, sweetness, and artistic perfection
of the language awakened a response and an appreciation
which only those who are like him can feel. This
appreciation of the beauties of his favorite language,
kindled in him an enthusiastic love for it. His
manner of teaching imparted something of this same
enthusiasm in the students. The thoroughness of
his instruction, his perfect courtesy towards all
the students, the extreme kindness with which he always
treated them, his constant mildness and equanimity
in the presence of the class, in the face even of
rude conduct and inexcusable ignorance of the lesson,
his great love and supreme devotion to his duties,
apparent to all, won the love and respect, and gave
him the control of every student under him, which
no sternness or severity could ever have secured.
I never knew the least disobedience to him or the
slightest disrespect shown towards him, either in
his presence or absence. The great simplicity,
purity, and honesty of his character, was a perfect
shield to him against all attacks, in word or act,
open or covert. I consider him, after years of
reflection and experience, the best teacher I ever
had; and of all the impressions of the teachers of
my boyhood and youth, those made by him upon me I
find are the deepest and most lasting, and now, after
the lapse of more than a quarter of a century, are
the dearest to me.”
Professor Hagar, in the “New
England Journal of Education”, says:
“Professor Alpheus Crosby, whose
death occurred in Salem, Mass., on the 17th of April,
1874, was so widely and favorably known as a scholar,
and was so much esteemed as a man, that a notice of
his life and labors, more extended than has hitherto
appeared, is justly due his memory.
“Professor Crosby very early
showed remarkable power in the acquisition of knowledge.
He learned the rudimentary branches of education almost
without a teacher. Mathematics, Latin, and Greek
came to him almost by intuition. When engaged
in study, he was so deeply absorbed that he seemed
wholly unconscious of time, place, or surroundings.
When in his tenth year he was taken to Hanover, the
seat of Dartmouth College, and was placed temporarily
under Professor Adams in Algebra and Euclid, under
Tutor James Marsh in Latin, and under Tutor Rufus
Choate in Greek; and these gentlemen pronounced him
fitted for college. He was then returned to Gilmanton
Academy, and, to prevent him from trespassing upon
college studies, he was put to the study of Hebrew,
under the Rev. John L. Parkhurst, who was well known
as a ripe scholar. He was subsequently sent to
Exeter Academy to bridge over, with various studies,
the months which his friends thought must be passed
before he should enter college. At the fall term
of the college, in 1823, in his thirteenth year, he
entered; and he passed through the four years’
course of study without a rival and far beyond rivalry.
His power of acquisition and retention was marvelous.
“After his graduation, he was
kept at Hanover four years; the first, as the preceptor
of Moor’s Indian Charity School, and the following
three as tutor in the college. During this period
he joined the college church, and formed his purpose
to prepare for the ministry, and spent nearly two
years at the Theological Seminary, in Andover, Mass.
He was appointed to a professorship of Latin and Greek,
in 1833. In 1837 he was released from the Latin
and became professor of Greek only, which office he
held until 1849, when he resigned; but he remained
Professor Emeritus until his death.
“In 1834 he married Miss Abigail
Grant Jones Cutler, only child of Joseph and Abigail
Cheesboro Grant (Jones) Cutler, of Newburyport, Mass.
Mrs. Crosby becoming an invalid, Professor Crosby took
her to Europe and traveled with her through England,
Germany, and France, until they reached Paris, where
Mrs. Crosby died. On his return he resumed the
duties of his professorship. After the death of
his father-in-law, Mr. Cutler, he resigned his professorship,
and removed to Newburyport to care for Mrs. Cutler,
who was an invalid. His Greek Grammar, theological
disquisitions, and the superintendency of schools
in Newburyport occupied his attention until Mrs. Cutler’s
death in 1854, when he entered into the employment
of the Board of Education in Massachusetts as its
agent. In this capacity he rendered the State
most valuable services by visiting the public schools
in various parts of the State, and by his instructive
and practical lectures on educational subjects.
So efficient were his labors, that in 1857 he was
appointed by the Board of Education to the principalship
of the State Normal School in Salem; this important
post he occupied eight years. To the interests
of this school he zealously devoted his great knowledge
and ability, raising it to a high standard of excellence
and giving to it a most honorable reputation.
He gave the school the largest part of its valuable
library, and obtained for its use the most of its
considerable cabinet. By his heartfelt kindness
and his faithful instructions he secured the love
and profound esteem of his pupils, who will ever hold
him in affectionate remembrance. In the Normal
School and elsewhere, as he had opportunity, Professor
Crosby earnestly advocated the liberal education of
women, believing that their educational advantages
ought to equal those enjoyed by men.
“While principal of the school
at Salem he, for several years, was the editor-in-chief
of the ‘Massachusetts Teacher,’ performing
gratuitous labors which were highly appreciated by
the teachers of Massachusetts and of other States.
“Having traveled through the
Southern States, that he might gain a better knowledge
of his own country before he went abroad, he became
deeply impressed with the iniquities of slavery, and
dropped readily into the ranks of the abolitionists.
He was intensely interested in all the discussions
and phases of freedom, from Adams’s ’Right
of Petition’ crusade down to the day of his
death. His patriotism during the war was full
and glowing. The political disquisitions in his
‘Right Way,’ which he edited for a year,
upon the question of reconstruction, were keen and
convincing. He also published a series of elementary
lessons for teaching the freed-men of the South to
read.
“During all these years, after
leaving his professorship, he was building other educational
books besides his Greek Grammar ’Xenophon’s
Anabasis,’ ‘Eclogae Latinae,’
’Lessons in Geometry,’ a ‘Greek
Lexicon’ for his Anabasis, and, last, ’Explanatory
Notes to the Anabasis,’ which he had nearly ready
for the press when death closed his labors.
“The heart of Professor Crosby
was full of love for everybody and every creature
of God. He drank deeply at every spring whence
flowed charity, benevolence, freedom, and patriotism.
He remained to his death a member of an orthodox church,
but, during the last years of his life, he worshipped
with Christians of other denominations, having softened
his early faith by a more liberal trust in the boundless
love and mercy of God, his Heavenly Father.
“In his association with teachers
of every class, he showed himself a friend to all.
His geniality of manner, his pleasant words, his sympathizing
spirit, his overflowing desire to make others happy,
his seemingly inexhaustible knowledge, and his intelligent
and ever-courteous discussion of controverted questions
in education, morals, and religion, secured for him
the warm affection and deep respect of all who were
privileged to know him.”
Mr. Collar, of the Roxbury Latin School, says:
“Professor Crosby belonged not
to Massachusetts alone, but to all New England to
the whole land. Our country is poorer by the loss
of an eminent scholar, one of that small band of classical
scholars in America who are known and honored at foreign
seats of learning. In the latest, freshest, and
most original Greek grammar that I am acquainted with,
that by Professor Clyde, of Edinburgh, the author acknowledges
his obligations to four distinguished scholars, three
Europeans, and one American, and the American is Professor
Crosby.”
“Professor Crosby’s first
marriage has been referred to; his second wife was
Martha, daughter of Joseph Kingman, of West Bridgewater,
Mass.”
The following paragraphs, from an
authentic source, introduce another eminent teacher.
Ira Young was born at Lebanon, N.
H., May 23, 1801. His parents were Samuel and
Rebecca (Burnham) Young.
His early years were chiefly spent
in working at his father’s trade, that of carpenter,
though every winter after he was sixteen, he taught
in one of the district schools in the neighborhood.
He cherished a strong desire for a collegiate education,
but was not at liberty to take any steps in that direction
until he became of age. Want of means would have
been with many int his circumstances an insurmountable
obstacle, not so with him. By the willing
labor of his hands, he obtained in eight months the
means of fitting for college at Meriden Academy, where
he studied one year, and soon after leaving that institution,
where he stood high in scholarship, he entered Dartmouth
College. Neither in this year of preparation,
nor during all his college course, did he ever receive
pecuniary aid from any individual or society.
He paid his way by teaching.
While at Meriden, he became, with
many of his classmates, savingly interested in religion,
and made a public profession of his faith in Christ
in his native place. His religious experience,
we have reason to believe, was deep and thorough, producing
an humble, loving faith in Christ as the only Saviour,
and a sincere, benevolent goodwill to all around him to
all mankind. His mind was calm and peaceful not
subject to the agitations felt by so many in their
religious life, and his trust and confidence in God
were never shaken. He could never bear to hear
any questioning of the ways of Providence, however
dark and mysterious they might appear. “God
wills it,” was always enough for him.
Through his college course he passed
with honor and success, taking high rank in a class
which was exceptionally good, producing a large number
of men who were afterwards distinguished in professional
and public life. Though himself guided in all
things by the highest Christian principle, he yet
knew how to feel for those who were in danger of falling
into evil courses; and certainly in one instance, by
his tender and watchful care, he was the means of reclaiming
and saving a young friend from threatening ruin.
He graduated in 1828, and taught afterwards
for a year in Berwick Academy, Maine, and subsequently
in a large public school in Boston, from which, in
1830, he was called to a tutorship in Dartmouth College.
He held that position for three years, during which
he continued his theological studies, which he had
commenced with the ministry in view, and in that year
he preached regularly in some of the neighboring towns.
He gave up this purpose, however,
when he received the appointment of Professor of Mathematics,
Natural Philosophy, and Astronomy, in place of Professor
Adams, who resigned at that time, August, 1833.
Before the close of that month, he became Professor
Adams’ son-in-law by marriage to his youngest
daughter, Eliza, and seldom were father and son more
closely united in affection or more happy in mutual
intercourse.
In regard to his qualifications for
his department and success in the same, it may be
well to refer to some remarks contained in an obituary
notice of him, written by one who for many years was
associated with him in instruction, and who is now
placed at the head of a sister institution.
“Professor Young had some qualities
which fitted him eminently for this position.
He was, in the first place, thoroughly master of the
science and literature of his own department.
Distinguished while in college for mathematical attainments,
he never relaxed in careful and constant study of
those branches to which he particularly directed his
attention. His mind was thoroughly disciplined
for truth and not for victory, and thus he was ready
to test his attainments by the most thorough methods.
As he was thorough with himself, so he was with his
pupils, trying them with doubtful questions which the
studious could easily answer, but which the ignorant
could not evade. Yet he was never harsh, nor
captious, nor irritating, though quick and ingenious
in exposing mistakes and follies. Besides his
ample knowledge, he possessed remarkably the power
of clear and distinct statement. It was the habit
of his mind to reduce his facts to principles, and
to present them in their simplest forms. Few
instructors have excelled him in the facility with
which he could disentangle and elucidate a complicated
problem, whether for the satisfaction of his own mind,
or the instruction of another. And he was as
patient as he was acute. Of a quiet temperament,
not easily roused, nor rendered impatient at the dullness
or want of perspicuity in another, unless this resulted
from a moral rather than an intellectual weakness.”
In April, 1858, he went to Europe
and spent five months abroad, for the purpose of procuring
books and instruments for the college, especially
those which were needed for the equipment of the Observatory,
whose foundations were laid that year. He had
labored successfully in obtaining funds for this object,
in which he took a deep interest, and after the completion
of the building, it afforded him much pure enjoyment,
as it gave him greatly increased facilities both for
observing and instructing in his favorite field of
science.
Teaching was to him a real pleasure,
and he often said that he would not willingly exchange
it for any other employment that could be offered
him. He felt a truly affectionate interest in
the young minds that successively came under his care,
sympathizing with them in their perplexities and troubles,
grieving for their errors, and rejoicing in whatever
advances they made in scientific attainments and true
excellence of character. Remembering his own early
struggles, he felt much sympathy with young men similarly
situated, and often rendered them efficient aid....
Nor was his care and interest limited exclusively
to the college, but he sought to do good “as
he had opportunity,” and in the manifold relations
he sustained to others, in the family, the church,
the neighborhood, the village, his unselfish kindness
was ever manifested. He held the office of Treasurer
of Meriden Academy for several years after the resignation
of his predecessor, and at the time of his death had
been a deacon of the church for twenty years.
During the summer term of 1858, he
was unusually occupied with college labors, being
employed most of the day in attending his recitations
and lectures, and in preparation for them. He
had obtained some new philosophical apparatus, which
interested him much, and he never seemed to find more
pleasure in his work than then, though it often left
him quite weary and exhausted.
At that time there was a remarkable
degree of religious interest throughout the country,
in which the college and the village shared, and it
resulted in numerous conversions. He often attended
the noon-day prayer meetings of the class he was then
instructing, and spoke of them with much pleasure;
and his own heart was deeply moved by the heavenly
influence.
Near the close of July he began to
suffer much from a malady which, though hidden, must
have been long in progress. His sufferings were
most acute and severe, but never did he lose that sweet
patience and serenity of spirit he had always manifested,
nor that calm submission to his Heavenly Father’s
will. He died September 13, 1858.
In the words of one of his most esteemed
associates: “The village mourns, for it
has lost an excellent citizen; the church mourns, for
it has lost an efficient officer; the college mourns,
for it has lost a revered teacher; the State mourns,
for it has lost an exemplary subject, one
who belonged to that class who are justly styled ’the
light of the world!’”
Few men in America have ever been
called to teach the abstruse science of Mathematics,
who combined in such desirable proportions a thorough
knowledge of the science with a faculty of presenting
it in a pleasing manner in the recitation room.
In the happy adjustment of Professor Young’s
powers one could but observe a union of quick perception
with almost perfect self-control. Whatever the
deficiencies of the student, a hasty or unguarded
or inappropriate or even an unscientific word was
seldom found in Professor Young’s vocabulary.
His most impressive rebuke was silence.
In a commemorative “Discourse,” President
Lord says:
“During his college course he
was an earnest and successful student. He carried
his work before him, finished it in its time, and did
it well. He studied his lessons and a few related
books, and scattered not his mind by light, promiscuous,
and aimless reading. He gorged not, but thought
and digested, and never had a literary dyspepsia.
Of course he grew right along. He was resolved,
prompt, exact, untiring, and true as steel. Everybody
knew where to find him. He studied no popular
arts. Though never rough or crusty, he was curt
and sarcastic; but no man ever took offense who knew
the kindness of his heart. His fellow-students
loved him. His abilities and knowledge commanded
their respect; his moral excellence secured their
confidence, and his example gave him power over their
minds and manners. He hated and reproved vice,
frowned upon all disorder, disdained artifice and
trick, and stood out manfully in support of virtue.
Once, in the same entry, a few noisy and vicious young
men set up to be disturbers. They particularly
insulted a worthy but timid student, who was his neighbor.
He took that student to his own room, and gave him
countenance and protection. Then they committed
outrage upon his room, and threatened personal abuse.
When his remonstrance availed nothing, he protested
that he would not see such evil perpetrated in college,
but would report them. They knew him, believed
him, desisted, and gave him then the honor of his
disinterested virtue, as virtue always receives its
meed of honor when it stands erect on its own prerogative,
and is not moved by the contradictions of unreasonable
and wicked men. Yet he was no ascetic. He
liked companionship, was not fastidious or exacting,
never petulant or vindictive, but gentle and forbearing.
He had especial tenderness for those ‘good-hearted’
young men who can never refuse to do wrong when they
are invited. A distinguished officer of one of
our professional institutions once said to me, ’I
was, at one time, when in college, thoughtless, self-indulgent,
fell among bad companions, and was nearly ruined.
Mr. Young pitied me, took hold of me, and saved me.’
That excellent man could not now speak of his benefactor
without tears of gratitude.
“How he stood at college, that
is, what rank he held, whether first, second, or a
lower figure in his class, I never inquired, and, if
I ever heard, I have forgotten. Probably he was
not equally indifferent, for if there be a more excellent
way of judgment, it was not quite evident to his calculating
mind. I have often admired how his professional
bias led him in his measurement of men, almost as by
instinct, to arithmetic, as if figures must, of course,
be true, and as if insensible moral and physical causes
did not often greatly modify or neutralize numerical
computation. But it was a generous prejudice,
and I have also admired how, in his practical judgment,
he would unconsciously neutralize or modify his professional
idea. He wanted nothing but realities. He
went for scholarship and not the show of it.
He accepted no metal that would not ring. He was
accordingly judged by others in reference to his sterling
qualities. There might have been men about him
who made a greater figure than himself. It is
very likely. For, as I remember, strangers sometimes
undervalued him. Soon after he left college,
I was sent to offer him the place of tutor. I
had not previously known him, and my first impressions
were not agreeable. I hesitated to do my errand.
After all it was rather performed than done, more
after a Roman than a Saxon fashion. But it turned
out better for his character and the public good, than
for my own discernment. So of another commission
not only from the Trustees, but the venerable Professor
Adams, to assure him that he would, after a while,
be wanted to take the chair of that noble old man,
one of the princes of the earth. They who knew
him best had marked him, even when he took his parchment,
for that high position. How well he filled it,
and every other office he sustained, everybody who
knows the college knows.
“Professor Young was a consummate
teacher. During his college course he taught
school every successive winter, as he had done for
years preceding, and earned nearly enough to pay the
expenses of his course, for he had high wages, and
never wasted them on his clothes or pleasures.
That discipline settled in his mind the elements of
knowledge. The principles of all true knowledge
were already laid; first, when he was born; and, secondly,
when he was born again. He had, of course, tools
to work with, and facility to use them for the good
of others, enlarging all the while his own fabric till
he became the man of science that he was for his successive
trusts. He loved, as few men ever love, to teach,
and as no man can love who begins not early and makes
not teaching his profession. He went to his last
recitation when he should have been upon his bed, to
find relief from the agonies he suffered, and take
off his mind from the greater that he feared.
He was never more at home, or more at ease, than with
his class. He loved to enrich them out of his
own stores, and thereby draw out and sharpen their
independent faculties. He was not disconcerted
when he sometimes drew to little purpose; though sure,
by set remonstrance, or by his peculiar, quaint, dry
and caustic humor, to rebuke indifference and neglect,
or expose the artifice of a bold, shrewd, or sly pretender.
He was sure of what he knew, and never gave way without
a reason. I have sometimes thought him too sure
before he scanned a question. Yet he would never
persist when he saw no foothold. He was set but
not dogmatic, or no more so than a sincere man must
be when he believes what he teaches and is in earnest.
He would never defend before his class a theory because
it was new, or because it was learned, or because
it was his own, or because it was popular, or because
he would otherwise be ruled out of the synagogue,
till he had made it sure by calculus, or probable by
analogy. When convinced that an hypothesis could
not be verified in the present state of knowledge,
or never in logical consistency with established facts,
or moral certainties, he abandoned it like an honest
man. But where he had his ground he stood, and
would have it understood. Of course his teaching
was effectual. Those who would be made scholars
he made sound and good ones. He gave a strong
character to his departments, and his departments
were an honor to the college.
“Professor Young was a ripe
scholar in general. He was conversant with the
accredited branches of knowledge, and held an honorable
place among learned men. He was modest and retiring,
content to know, and unconcerned about the appearance
of it. He liked not to open his mouth in the
gate, but he had wisdom to deliver the city. Nothing
crude, partial, superficial, or one-sided, ever came
from him. His judgments were clear, comprehensive,
and decisive. He was slow, critical, and cautious
in forming his opinions, and where he settled there
he stayed. No man could cajole or browbeat him
out of his convictions.
“When our professor lay dead
before us, the thought arose that, now, no longer
plodding his way to yonder dome, with steps restrained
and painful from an unknown disease, no longer weary
with watching, through his telescope, the distant
orbs, nor with numbers and diagrams to find their
measure, he could survey, without a glass, infinitely
greater wonders from a higher sphere; for he had profited
by his earthly discipline: the heavens had declared
to him the glory of God, and the firmament had showed
his handiwork. The day had uttered to him speech,
and the night had showed to him knowledge. Next
it occurred how natural religion had been thus reproduced
in his mind and illustrated by a higher Revelation:
’The law of the Lord is perfect, converting
the soul; the testimonies of the Lord are sure, making
wise the simple; the statutes of the Lord are right,
rejoicing the heart; the commandment of the Lord is
pure, enlightening the eyes.’”