Tag Archives: Phillip P. Brown

Students organize the University Corps. (p. 168)

George Arrowsmith, Class of 1859, Lt. Col., 175th N.Y.S. Volunteers, Alumni Files, p168 William McIntyre, Class of 1861, Lt., 61st N.Y.S. Volunteers, Alumni Files, p168

 

 

Wendell Phillips, Gerrit Smith, and other molders of public opinion who lectured in Hamilton. Lincoln’s call for troops after the fall of Fort Sumter ·cam~ two days before they left for the four-week spring vacation. In their absence George Arrowsmith, Class of 1859, a young man of great promise for whom they all had a cordial affection who was studying in a Hamilton law office, enlisted and raised a company of local volunteers. His example had a sobering effect on the returning undergraduates, not only because of his engaging personality but also because they knew he was a Democrat and had frequently contributed partisan articles to one of the village newspapers. Arrowsmith’s company elected him captain and after a year’s service he became Lieutenant Colonel in the 157th Regiment of which. his friend, Professor Brown, on leave as Principal of the Grammar School, had been made commanding officer. Arrowsmith fell in the first day’s fighting at Gettysburg.

In May 1861, the students organized a company, known as the University Corps, more than 100 strong, for military drill and elected as captain Knut O. Broady, a senior who had seen military service in

p. 155 – Recovery and expansion, 1850-1869

of Biblical Criticism and Interpretation in the Seminary and Professor of Evidences of Revealed Religion in the College met a cordial reception from President Taylor and the entire faculty. Son of a daring, impetuous Salem clipper-ship captain and a gentle, pious mother, he graduated at the age of twenty-one from Brown where President Wayland had grounded him in religion and logical, practical reasoning. During his student days at Newton, President Barnas Sears developed in him a genuine allegiance to intellectual freedom. His fiery temper and firm will he usually concealed, but both were constant. After four years of teaching he went to Germany to work under the theologians, Tholuck and Dorner; none of his colleagues had been able to enjoy the advantages of foreign study and travel. Members of his classes found, on his return, that his theology was somewhat misty, a characteristic which they laid to the German influences. In 1861 he followed Professor Spear as Librarian and served until 1868. The most valuable and significant period of his career both as teacher and administrator unfolded after he became President.

Phillip P. Brown, on his graduation in 1855, succeeded Professor Osborn as Principal of the. Grammar School. Prior to entering the sophomore class he had been in charge of a Choctaw mission school in the Indian Territory and later of the preparatory department of Shurtleff College, Alton, Illinois, where he was also enrolled as a student. He left the Madison campus in 1862 to become colonel of the 157th Regiment of New York Infantry, which he commanded with bravery at Gettysburg.

The Trustees appointed Hezekiah Harvey as Professor of Ecclesiastical History and Pastoral Theology in the Seminary and Civil History in the College in 1857. He had graduated from the College in 1845 and the Seminary two years later and had served as village pastor. A saintly man, often in ill-health, he was an effective teacher for students preparing for the ministry. In 1861 he became Professor of Biblical Criticism and Pastoral Theology. On Harvey’s return to the pastorate three years later, Dr. Albert N. Arnold, a contemporary of Dodge’s at Brown and Newton, and a New Testament Greek scholar, succeeded him and remained on the faculty until 1869.

Perhaps the most brilliant faculty member of the ’60’s was William Ireland Knapp who, upon graduation in 1860, was given a one-year appointment as the first Professor of Modern Languages. Since his