Henry Dunster

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Henry Dunster

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Henry Dunster c.1612-1659, first president of Harvard, b. Lancashire, England, educated at Magdalene College, Cambridge (M.A., 1634). He emigrated to New England in 1640 and was almost at once (Aug. 27, 1640) appointed president of the new college. He formulated its rules and patterned its procedure after the English schools, worked actively for its support, and gave freely of his meager salary for its success. Because of his adoption of Baptist principles he was forced to resign in 1654, and he spent the remainder of his life as a pastor in Scituate, Mass.

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Henry Dunster

Encyclopedia of World Biography | 2004 | Copyright 2004 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Henry Dunster

Henry Dunster (ca. 1609-1659), an English-born American clergyman, was distinguished as the innovative and forceful first president of Harvard College.

Henry Dunster was born in Bury, Lancashire, England, the fifth child of a yeoman farmer. At 17 he entered Magdalene College at Cambridge University and, upon completion of requirements, received a bachelor of arts degree. He returned to Bury as a teacher and curate, studied Oriental languages, and in 1634 was granted a master of arts degree from Cambridge. Under spiritual stress, Dunster gravitated to Puritanism and emigrated to New England.

Although relatively unknown, Dunster was chosen president of Harvard College upon his arrival in Boston in 1640. He revived an institution that was virtually defunct, reuniting the scattered student body and establishing degree requirements. With Cambridge and Oxford as models, he was determined to put Harvard on secure foundations. The college laws were first codified in 1646, a charter obtained in 1650, and the holdings of the library increased through gifts. Dunster and Thomas Shepard, the eminent Puritan and theologian, petitioned the New England Confederation for contributions from the inhabitants, obtaining £250 in gifts of wheat by 1653. Dunster advocated 4 years residence for the bachelor of arts degree, and although protesting students refused to pay commencement fees, he successfully instituted the change. Edward Johnson in his Wonder Working Providence (1654) observed that "the learned reverend, and judicious Mr. Henry Dunster [was] fitted from the Lord for the work."

In 1641 Dunster married Elizabeth, the widow of Jose Glover. Marriage brought President Dunster financial security and also Glover's printing press. Operated for years in Dunster's house, this press was the first one in the Colonies and was later acquired by Harvard. His wife's death in 1643 led to conflict between her children and Dunster over the estate. In 1644 he chose a second wife, Elizabeth Atkinson, who outlived him.

While a member of the Cambridge church, Dunster refused to have an infant son baptized. Public hostility to his Baptist views led to demands for his resignation from Harvard. On Oct. 24, 1654, he resigned, later becoming a minister at Scituate in Plymouth Colony. He died there in 1659.

Further Reading

Jeremiah Chaplin, Life of Henry Dunster: First President of Harvard College (1872), is the standard biography. Samuel Eliot Morison, The Founding of Harvard College (1935), gives an excellent account of Dunster's presidency. Two informative background works are Morison's Builders of the Bay Colony (1930; rev. ed. 1958) and Louis B. Wright, The Cultural Life of the American Colonies, 1607-1763 (1957).

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Free Article Reminds me of '54.(letters to the editor)(Letter to the Editor)
Magazine article from: National Review; 6/20/2005

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"I Spake the Truth in the Feare of God"; The Puritan Management of Dissent During the Henry Dunster Controversy
Magazine article from: Historical Journal of Massachusetts; 1/1/2005; ; 700+ words ; ...1653 when Harvard College president Henry Dunster converted to the Baptist faith...social upheaval on the other, both Dunster and his opponents weighted the Harvard...Ultimately, the wrangling over Dunster's fate demonstrated that the leaders...
Exciting arrivals at dunster castle ; They haven't been seen by the public for more than 120 years, but when historic Dunster Castle opens to the public on Saturday two superb Gainsborough portraits on show will be in their element.
Newspaper article from: Western Daily Press (Bristol UK); 3/5/2009; 563 words ; ...Luttrell family who had been at Dunster Castle since the beginning of...Luttrell with Anne's brother Henry Fownes which saved Dunster Castle from the receivers...alongside the family portraits of Henry and Margaret Fownes Luttrell...
Portraits to go on display for first time in 120 years ; Two paintings by the great English artist Thomas Gainsborough are to go on display at Dunster Castle in what will be their first public showing in more than 120 years.
Newspaper article from: Western Morning News, The Plymouth (UK); 3/5/2009; 568 words ; ...manager. It was Mr Fownes' brother Henry who married into the Luttrell family, who had been at Dunster Castle since the beginning of...union of Margaret Luttrell with Henry Fownes which saved Dunster Castle from the receivers...
HARVARD'S TOP OFFICE HAS LONG TRADITION PURITAN MINISTERS AMONG LEADERS
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 5/30/1990; 700+ words ; ...without the title," since Rev. Henry Dunster became president in 1640, according...presidents of Harvard: 1. Rev. Henry Dunster 1640-1654 2. Rev. Charles Chauncy...1781 Eliphalet Pearson 1804-1806 Henry Ware 1810-1810 Henry Ware 1828...
Agents of Wrath, Sowers of Discord: Authority and Dissent in Puritan Massachusetts, 1630-1655.(Book review)
Magazine article from: Church History; 12/1/2006; ; 700+ words ; ...ministers George Philips, Roger Williams, Henry Dunster, and John Cotton and his sometimes allies Henry Vane and Anne Hutchinson. Wood never really...these six--he exaggerates to say that Dunster and Philips have been "omitted" from the...
ANOTHER VICTIM OF TUMULTUOUS POLITICS
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 2/28/2006; ; 700+ words ; ...controversy over orthodoxy. Harvard's first president, Henry Dunster, was forced to resign after he opposed the baptism...as now, orthodoxy trumped freedom of inquiry, but Dunster lasted longer than Summers. Indeed one of the reasons...
Harvard's Indian ties
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 5/18/1997; 700+ words ; ...outfit whose sole purpose was to provide funds for educating and converting Indians. Harvard's then-president, Henry Dunster, wanted Harvard to be "the Indian Oxford as well as the New English Cambridge." Despite this fervor, preliminary...
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Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 4/4/1997; ; 700+ words ; ...harmful and indulgent habit. The General Court of the Colony passed a regulation in 1632 banning smoking in public. Henry Dunster, one of Harvard's early presidents, declared that "no scholar shall take tobacco unless permitted by the president...
Anxious Anniversary
Newspaper article from: The Jerusalem Report; 10/4/2004; ; 700+ words ; ...an event seen as marking the dawn of Jewish life in the United States. That same year, Charles Chauncy succeeded Henry Dunster as president of Harvard. Jews delight in noting that both men were eminent Hebraists. But as Shalom Goldman of Emory...
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Newspaper article from: St Louis Post-Dispatch (MO); 9/28/1997; ; 700+ words ; ...9-13). Born a Nipmuck Indian in the late 1600s, yet raised in the house of the president of Harvard College, Henry Dunster, James Printer early on falls in love with the written word. He learns first how to set type and stitch a binding...

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