Tag Archives: Village of Hamilton New York

p. 66 – The expanded program, 1833-1846

 Claremont, the Spear Home, A1000-64, Folder 2, p66

 

 

attractive, well-built stone houses on the Hill, “Claremont,” “Woodland Height,” and “Beech Grove” (also called “Inwood”). “Claremont” and “Woodland Height,” which were situated so as to command sweeping vistas through the woods toward the west and the village and the valley to the north, were among the most admired residences in the vicinity. Mrs. Eaton supplemented the natural beauty of her home by a fine garden of flowers and shrubs, some of which the eminent botanist of Union College, Professor Isaac W. Jackson, gave her. Down in the village, on Broad Street, the A. C. Kendricks and the Raymonds were for a few years neighbors, and other friends lived near by.

Kindred spirits, these young professors and their gifted and gracious wives dispensed a warm hospitality. Winter sleigh rides, summer rambles, picnics in the surrounding woods, and tea parties gave zest to their social life. One evening a week they spent at each other’s homes reading aloud translations from German authors or Shakespeare, Dickens, and other favorites. This reading group they called the “U. D. C.” (Utile Cum Dulce). For a few years the men formed a cooperative organization for supplying themselves with periodical literature. Happy memories of these free and cordial social contacts remained with the members of the group and their families long after they were scattered in later years.

Social life in Hamilton was necessarily influenced by the isolation of the community; its residents, like those of any country village, depended largely on their own efforts for diversion and amusements. Utica

Charter passes (p. 13)

members in favor and 35 against, Root contenting himself by voting with the latter. Wakeley wrote years later that he never knew whether the Speaker called the General to the chair by design or “whether it was a kind providence leading in a way to save the bill which would probably have been lost had Root been on the floor …” The Senate passed it, apparently without opposition; and on March 5, 1819, it became a law,* with the Council of Revision’s approval.

The charter gave the Society the usual privileges granted corporations but restricted it to ownership of property with an annual income of not more than $5,000 and prohibited the Society from making “any law or regulation affecting the rights of conscience.”


View Selecting a location for the Society’s institution in a larger map

Selecting a location for the Society’s institution was another matter of concern. The committee on this subject, chosen in 1818, was unable to agree though they had investigated the villages of Elbridge, Throopsville, Skaneateles, Fabius, Sangerfield, and Hamilton, noting in each place climate, soil, accessibility, economic conditions and the state of the local Baptist church. They also considered the bid of Peterboro but do not seem to have made a special visit there. A second committee revisited these communities and reported to the Executive Committee which decided on Skaneateles, provided the people of that village would raise $10,000. But when the Trustees learned that the citizens required that the seminary should operate as an academy and be open to local students, they felt it necessary to seek another site, since they believed that the Constitution of the Society authorized instruction only for prospective preachers. Confronted with the problem a second time, they wavered between Peterboro and Hamilton. The minutes of the meeting, November 3, 1819, read:

After mature deliberation, on receiving ample securities from Hamilton, that they will furnish by the first of May next, the upper story of the academy in the village of Hamilton, well furnished for
the use of the Society, and in four years procure the whole building or one equal to it, estimated at $3500, and $2500 to be paid in board at 12 shillings per week in five equal annual payments provided the
Society shall require it in that time or in a longer period.
Voted unanimously, that the Theological Seminary be permanently located in or near the Village of Hamilton, Co. of Madison and State of New York.**

 

* New York State Laws (1819) Chapt. 35.
** Baptist Education Society of the State of New York, Trustees, Minutes of
Meeting, Nov. 3, 1819, a loose ms.