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Timothy Dwight

 
Biography: Timothy Dwight

Timothy Dwight (1752-1817), an American Congregational minister, was president of Yale College and New England's leading religious politician.

Timothy Dwight was born in Northhampton, Mass., into one of New England's most extraordinary families on May 14, 1752. His maternal grandfather was the famed theologian Jonathan Edwards. His mother, a woman of great intellect, educated him according to her own ideas. A child prodigy, Timothy was ready for college at 8, but Yale did not enroll him until he was 13. Studying 14 hours a day, he earned highest honors at graduation in 1769 but also developed an eye ailment that plagued him all his life.

Dwight assumed the headship of the Hopkins Grammar School in New Haven, Conn., for 2 years before returning to Yale as a tutor. There he joined the brilliant "Connecticut Wits," John Trumbull and Joseph Howe, who were patriotic belles-lettrists ambitious to make America "the first in letters as the first in arms." When Yale's aging president was forced to resign in 1777, Dwight, only 25, was pushed by some for the presidency. But the Yale Corporation had other opinions of the witty young man and called for his resignation instead. Before he left, Dwight married Mary Woolsey on March 3, 1777.

The following October the U.S. Congress appointed Dwight chaplain of the Connecticut Continental Brigade. A year later, on his father's death, he returned to his family in Northampton. He spent 5 vigorous years running two farms, preaching, sitting in the Massachusetts Legislature in 1781 and 1782, and founding a coeducational academy in 1779 to teach modern subjects as well as Latin and Greek. He left the school for the pulpit of Greenfield Hill, Conn., on July 20, 1783, where he established another school.

Dwight's journalistic assault against Yale started in 1783 in the Connecticut Courant; he used the pen name Parnassus. But when Yale's president Ezra Stiles prevented any legislative "intermeddling in college affairs," Dwight returned to the writing that had earned him prominence among the Connecticut Wits. The Conquest of Canaan, written earlier but published in 1785, was the first epic poem produced in America.

On June 25, 1795, Dwight accepted the presidency of Yale, a few weeks after the death of Stiles. For almost 22 years "Pope Dwight" (as the unregenerate called him) administered the college with great ability, ushering it into its modern era. No scholar himself, he had the vision to appoint men who were or would become scholars, and he allowed greater faculty participation in college government, traditionally the monopoly of the Yale Corporation and the president. Student relations were significantly improved, though Dwight held autocratic sway. Besides administering an exuberant college and giving counsel of weight in the affairs of state to visiting dignitaries, he taught the moral philosophy course to the seniors, supplied the college pulpit twice a Sabbath, and served as professor of divinity.

On Jan. 11, 1817, Dwight ceased to reign. His stormy life had personified the contradictions and strengths of New England Puritanism wedded to Federalism.

Further Reading

The definitive biography of Dwight is Charles E. Cunningham, Timothy Dwight, 1752-1817 (1942). Kenneth Silverman, Timothy Dwight (1969), is a scholarly study. See also Leon Howard, The Connecticut Wits (1943). Ralph Henry Gabriel, Religion and Learning at Yale: The Church of Christ in the College and University, 1757-1957 (1958), contains a chapter on Dwight and American Protestantism.

Additional Sources

Cuningham, Charles E., Timothy Dwight, 1752-1817: a biography, New York: AMS Press, 1976.

Wenzke, Annabelle S., Timothy Dwight (1752-1817), Lewiston, NY: E. Mellen Press, 1989.

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Columbia Encyclopedia: Timothy Dwight
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Dwight, Timothy, 1752-1817, American clergyman, author, educator, b. Northampton, Mass., grad. Yale, 1769. He renounced legal for theological studies and after 1783 was pastor for 12 years of a Congregational church at Greenfield Hill, Conn. During his pastorate he became famous throughout New England for his preaching and for the excellent private school he established near his church. One of the leaders of the Connecticut Wits, he tried to modernize the curriculum at Yale. At the death of Ezra Stiles, Dwight was named president of Yale, and from 1795 to 1817 he presided over the college. A great leader and teacher in his day and a strong believer in theocracy and Federalism, he vigorously opposed the rising Republicanism of Connecticut and the nation. His theology owed much to that of his grandfather, Jonathan Edwards.

Bibliography

See his Theology, Explained and Defended (5 vol., 1818-19) and Conquest of Canäan (1788, repr. 1970); biographies by C. E. Cunningham (1942) and K. Silverman (1969).

Works: Works by Timothy Dwight
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(1752-1817)

1769The Meddler. A series of essays published from September 1769 to January 1770 in the Boston Chronicle. The authors -- writers and poets associated with Yale University and subsequently among the Connecticut Wits -- cover a wide range of subjects such as religion, comedy, flirting, language, and sin. Trumbull probably wrote most of the essays, noteworthy for their witty criticism.
1773The Correspondent. Dwight and Trumbull collaborate once again on a series of essays, some of which are published in 1770 and the rest in 1773. Trumbull writes the majority of the essays, and his tone in The Correspondent is more sincere than it had been in The Meddler (1769). However, both series share Trumbull's characteristically witty critiques and reflections.
1785The Conquest of Canaan. According to Dwight, his allegorical reflection of the American Revolution through Joshua's conquest of Canaan is "the first epic poem to have appeared in America."
1788"The Triumph of Infidelity." Dwight's satiric poem, written in heroic couplets and published anonymously, upholds Calvinist orthodoxy while lambasting Voltaire, Hume, Priestley, and their "infidel" followers.
1794Greenfield Hill: A Poem in Seven Parts. An imitation of John Denham's Cooper's Hill, the poem contrasts the virtues of American village life to European depravity. Written after Dwight had become a minister in Greenfield, Connecticut, it includes accounts of historical events.
1815Remarks on the Review of Inchiquin's Letters. Dwight comes to the defense of Charles Ingersoll's Inchiquin, the Jesuit's Letters (1810) after it is harshly attacked in the English Quarterly Review.
1818Theology; Explained and Defended, in a Series of Sermons... with a Memoir of the Life of the Author.... Posthumously published in five volumes, this collection of sermons, presented while the author was president of Yale College, are very popular in their day and remain influential works on religious matters. The author defends his faith with intelligence, eloquence, and originality.
1821Travels in New-England and New-York. Dwight's most famous prose work details and comments upon the scenery, history, religious organization, public education, and statistics gathered from travels during his academic vacations in the years 1796-1815.

Quotes By: Timothy Dwight
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Quotes:

"Education ought everywhere to be religious education. Parents are bound to employ no instructors who will instruct their children religiously. To commit children to the care of irreligious persons is to commit lambs to the superintendency of wolves."

"For what end shall we be connected with men, of whom this is the character and conduct? Is it, that we may see our wives and daughters the victims of legal prostitution; soberly dishonoured; speciously polluted; the outcasts of delicacy and virtue, and the lothing of God and man?"

 
 
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Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Works. The Chronology of American Literature, edited by Daniel S. Burt. Copyright © 2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
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