Ohio History Journal




THE BEGINNINGS OF HIGHER EDUCATION IN THE

THE BEGINNINGS OF HIGHER EDUCATION IN THE

NORTHWEST TERRITORY

 

By THOMAS N. HOOVER

 

Rufus Putman never attended a university; but fathered the

first institution for higher learning in the Northwest Territory.

He seldom if ever went to school; but contributed much to the

cause of education. His mother, when Rufus was still a small

boy, inflicted upon him an undesirable, domineering, illiterate

step-father, who required the lad to work all day, and denied him

a candle, that he might study at night. In spite of such handi-

caps, Putnam became educated. He was outstanding as a civil

engineer, serving with distinction in the Revolutionary War, and

later as surveyor-general of the United States.1

Putnam, at the close of the Revolutionary War, was most

interested in the vast region west of the mountains. He was

chairman of the Newburgh meeting, which on June 16, 1783,

petitioned Congress, in the name of the two hundred eighty-eight

Revolutionary officers present, for grants of lands within the

limits of the present State of Ohio.2  He sent the petition to

General Washington, to be presented by him to Congress. With

the petition, Putnam sent a letter, in which he stressed the need

for settling the western region. He urged the construction of

forts, the survey of lands into townships, the sale and settlement

of the land, and the support of schools and churches, "to banish

forever the idea of our western territory falling under the domin-

ion of any European power."3   Washington, with his own letter

of endorsement, transmitted the petition and the Putnam letter

to Congress.

A year later, in 1784, Putnam again wrote to Washington,

"The settlement of the Ohio country, sir, engrosses many of my

 

1 For a brief biographical sketch of Rufus Putnam see Dictionary of American

Biography (New York, 1928-1937), XV, 284-5.

2 A copy of the petition and names of signers is included in William Parker

Cutler and Julia Perkins Cutler, Life, Journals and Correspondence of Rev. Manasseh

Cutler,LL.D. (Cincinnati, 1888), I, 159-67.

3 Ibid., I, 167-72.

(244)



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thoughts, and much of my time. ... we are growing quite im-

patient; and the general inquiry now is, when are we going to

the Ohio?"4

Putnam's suggestions were incorporated in the famous Ordi-

nance of 1785.

On the night of January 9, 1786, Rufus Putman had a guest

at his Rutland, Massachusetts, home. He was Benjamin Tupper,

another native of Massachusetts, Revolutionary officer, and like

Putnam, a civil engineer. Tupper had been in charge of surveying

the first seven ranges, and, like Putnam, was much interested in

the region west of the mountains. Together these men drew up

a document called the "Information" dated January 10, 1786,

and signed by Putnam and Tupper.5

This was to inform persons interested in the Ohio country

that a meeting would be held at the Bunch of Grapes Tavern in

Boston, on the first day of March, 1786, for the purpose of form-

ing an association to be known as the Ohio Company. Delegates

were to be chosen at meetings held on the fifteenth of February.

Rufus Putnam, Benjamin Tupper, Winthrop Sargent, John Mills,

Manasseh Cutler, John Patterson, Jelaliel Woodbridge, Thomas

Cushing, Crocker Sampson, and Abram Williams attended the

meeting, formed the stock company, and planned for another

meeting a year later, for a report on the sales of stock.6

At the meeting in March, 1787, it was reported that two

hundred fifty shares, at $1000 per share had been sold. Generals

Samuel H. Parsons, Rufus Putman and Rev. Manasseh Cutler

were selected as directors of the company. Parsons was sent as

the representative of the company to New York, to present a

memorial to Congress, for the purchase of a tract of land of the

public domain in the Ohio country.7 He appeared before the

Congress on May 9, and presented the memorial. This was

referred to a committee of five members, James Madison and

Edward Carrington of Virginia; Rufus King and Nathan Dane

of Massachusetts; and Egbert Benson of New York.8

 

4 Ibid., I, 174-6.

5 Ibid., I, 179-80.

6 For the organization of the company, ibid., I, 180-90.

7 Ibid., I, 191-2.

8 Journals of the Continental Congress (Washington, D. C., 1904- ), XXXII,

276.



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Two days later, began a period of no quorum, which con-

tinued till July 4. The committee, however, had considered the

Parsons memorial, and made its report, signed by the five mem-

bers, on July 10. This report "Resolved, that the Treasury Board

be authorised and empowered to contract with Samuel Holden

Parsons Esq. or any other Agent or Agents, duly authorised, by

the Company stiled [sic] and known by the name of the Associ-

ation for the purchase of Lands on the N. West side of Ohio

River. . . ." The report further recommended that, in each

township, lot sixteen be reserved for schools, twenty-nine for the

purposes of religion, and eight, eleven, and twenty-six reserved

for Congress, and "four complete Townships to be given per-

petually for the purposes of an University, be laid off by the

Company, as near the centre as may be, so that the same shall

be of good land to be applied to the intended object by the

Legislature of the State."9

In the summer of 1787, Manasseh Cutler was assigned the

task of trying to contract with Congress for the purchase of land

for the company. Cutler was born in Connecticut in 1742. He

was a graduate of Yale in 1765. He was a minister of the

Gospel, lawyer, doctor, teacher, and shrewd politician from the

little village of Ipswich, Massachusetts. On the 24th of June

he set out from his home on his long trip to New York with his

one-horse, two-wheeled gig. He arrived at New York on the

afternoon of July 5. On the next day he appeared before Con-

gress and "delivered my petition for purchasing lands for the

Ohio Company, and proposed terms and conditions of purchase.

. . . As Congress was now engaged in settling the form of gov-

ernment for the territory; for which a bill had been prepared,

and a copy sent to me, with leave to make remarks and propose

amendments, I returned the bill with my observations."10

On July 9, Cutler attended the Committee at Congress cham-

ber, debated on "terms but were so wide apart that there appears

little prospect of closing a contract." Cutler then took a short

trip to Philadelphia, where many of his friends were attending

 

9 Ibid., XXXII, 312.

10 Cutler's diary of this period, Cutler, Cutler, I, 208-42.



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OHIO HISTORY CONFERENCE, 1941             247

 

the Constitutional Convention. On his return to New York,

the 17th of July, he found that the Ordinance had been passed

on July 13 and all of his suggestions had been incorporated in

the final document.

On July 23 conditions of a contract were submitted to Cutler

but were not acceptable. Although Cutler was anxious to make

a contract with Congress, he appeared to be absolutely indifferent.

He played a shrewd game. He accepted invitations where they

would do most good.    He spent an evening (closeted) with

Colonel William Duer. The final bit of politics that he played

was that the President of Congress, Arthur St. Clair, should be

the first governor of the Territory.11 This proposal was accept-

able to Cutler and on the 27th of July, the contract was agreed

upon. In this contract was the following provision: "and also

reserving out of the said tract so to be granted, two complete

townships to be given perpetually for the purposes of an univer-

sity, to be laid off by the said parties of the second part [The

Ohio Company], their heirs or assigns, as near the center [of

the Ohio Company's purchase] as may be, so the same shall be

of good land, to be applied to the intended object in such manner

as the Legislature of the State wherein the said townships shall

fall, or may be situated, shall or may think proper to direct."12

This contract was signed on October 27, 1787.13 Thus Con-

gress set aside two townships, 46,080 acres of land, for the support

of the first university in the Northwest Territory, and sixteen

years before there was the State of Ohio, bequeathed to the

future State the guardianship of the university.

But two townships of land would not make a university.

The Northwest Territory must be settled, Indian wars must be

fought, a Greenville Treaty must be signed before it would be

safe to venture into the interior of the company's purchase.

On May 16, 1789, the directors of the company ordered

Putnam and Cutler "to make such further application [to Con-

gress] as they shall judge expedient respecting an establishment

 

11 Ibid., I, 295-6.

12 A copy of the contract, in W. E. Peters, Legal History of Ohio University

(Cincinnati, 1910), 43-8.

13 Cutler, Cutler, I, 326.



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of instructors in the University and procuring a charter for that

Seminary."14

As early as 1790, the directors of the company took steps

to have the two townships for the university definitely located.

Indian wars however checked this movement for five years.

On January 10, 1795, the directors of the company

Resolved, that the committee appointed by a resolution of the 9th

of Nov., 1790, for the purpose of designating the two townships reserved

for the benefit of an university be requested to be ready to go up the great

Hockhocking with the directors as soon as the season will permit, for the

completion of the business for which they were appointed and that the

Superintendent [Putnam] furnish a surveyor and a suitable number of

hands for the occasion, also fifteen men as a guard and hands in the above

resolution, and that a suitable number of canoes or boats be provided for

the purpose of transporting the necessary provision.

Resolved that for caring [carrying] the above business into effect it

will be necessary that there be provided for [by] the Ohio Company eight

hundred pounds of good salt pork called Middleings, also twelve hundred

of flour and hard bread, three bushels of beans and forty gallons of

whiskey.15

Thus supplied, Rufus Putnam and his men rowed down the

Ohio, up the great Hockhocking and located the two university

townships, 8 and 9 in Range 14.16

But Rufus Putman would not let the project die. Two

townships of land in themselves would not be a university. Early

in 1799 Putman wrote to Cutler informing him of the location of

the two townships which would ultimately bring to the support

of the university more than $5,000 per year. He further sug-

gested that someone should be authorized to erect buildings,

appoint officers, and get the university going.17

Cutler replied on July 15, as follows:

So far as I have had opportunity, I have consulted the charters of

public seminaries in Europe and America. Those in our own country are

generally more modern, and the best adapted to the purpose intended; but

none appear to me to accord with a plan so liberal and extensive as I think

ought to be the foundation of the Constitution of this University. The

14 A. B. Hulbert, ed., Records of the Ohio Company (Marietta, O., 1917), I, 107.

15 Ibid., II, 233-4.

16 Ibid., II, 183.

17 Cutler, Cutler, II, 18-9.



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Constitution ought to be composed of mere principles as clear and few as

may be.18

On August 7, 1799, Putman replied to Cutler:

We are totally destitute of any copy of an incorporating act or charter

of a College, or even an Academy; but this is not my principal reason for

applying to you. It is a subject I know you have long thought of, there-

fore, I request of you not only the form but the substance. I want you to

make out one in detail, or procure it done for us, and forward it by mail

to me as soon as it is ready.19

Cutler complied with the request of Putnam         and on June

30, 18OO, sent a model charter, with a letter of explanation. The

charter contained a preamble and ten sections.         The preamble

stated that "Institutions for the liberal education of Youth are

essential to the progress of Arts and Sciences; important to

Morals and Religion; friendly to the peace, order and prosperity

of Society; and honorable to the government which patronizes

them."

Cutler proposed the name, American University; a Board

of Trustees of eleven members who should elect a president and

other officers of the university, approve the giving of degrees,

prescribe the duties of the faculty, and require quarterly exam-

inations of the students.     Cutler urged the importance of this

as a part of the constitution "since it is so apt to be neglected by

the Government, and so often opposed and resisted by the stu-

dents." He was opposed to any large buildings for

with regard to erecting public buildings for the University, I can not

so fully express my mind to you as I could wish. At present, I should not

think it best to erect any considerable public buildings. It will be necessary,

in the first instance, to open a Latin school, for I conceive it improbable that

any youth can be found in the country qualified for admission as the stu-

dents of a college. Or if a Freshman class can be formed, it must be small.

A building of two stories, pretty large on the ground, in the form of a school

house, may answer every purpose for some years. I feel an aversion to

large buildings for the residence of students, where there are regular fami-

lies in which they can reside. Chambers in colleges are too often made the

secret nurseries of every vice and the cages of unclean birds. It must

require time to mature plans for large buildings, I will endeavor to attend

to the matter, and give my idea of Public Buildings.20

18 Ibid., II, 20-1.

19 Ibid., II, 21-2.

20 For text of the recommended charter and Cutler's letter, see ibid., II, 22-31.



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Putnam replied to Cutler on August 2, 18OO, with a letter

of appreciation for the model charter. He differed from Cutler

on the question of buildings. He thought there would be plenty

of students ready for college by the time buildings might be

constructed. "Indeed," he wrote, "I am more apprehensive that

we shall not be able in due time to erect the proper buildings and

support the expense of officers, than that we shall want students,

although for several years the number may be small."21

At the same time Putnam was writing Cutler regarding a

model charter, he was laying plans for a Board of Trustees. On

November 20, 18OO, he worte to Paul Fearing as follows:

With respect to the University, in my opinion nothing local should

influence our minds in naming the trustees as it respects counties. The nearer

they live to the spot and one another, the more easily will they be con-

veaned [sic] and the less expensive, and for this reason I would by no

means appoint more than eleven in the first instance. There can be no need

of more for transacting the business until the University is opened and

besides we know not what characters may come forward as promoters of

the institution or what additional donations may be made. We ought there-

fore to leave a wide door open to admit such characters as partners in the

trust. I think it not improbable that some worthy characters may soon settle

in the University townships and is it not possible that some worthy, able,

public spirited gentlemen in Adams and Ross County, may make donations

to the institution whom it might be thought proper to appoint trustees.22

In the letter Putnam suggested names of persons who might

constitute the first Board.

On December 18, 1799, the newly established Territorial

legislature passed an act providing that Rufus Putnam, Benjamin

Ives Gilman and Jonathan Stone be requested to lay off in the

most suitable. place within the townships, a town plat to contain

a square for the colleges, lots suitable for house lots, and gardens

for president, professors, and tutors, bordering on or encircled

by spacious commons. They were likewise requested to lay out

a plan for a town. Putman was in charge of the work and

selected sections 9, 1O, 15, 16, and 22 in township 9 for the

college campus.    He also laid out the streets for the town of

 

21 Ibid., II, 31-2.

22 Paul Fearing was delegate to Congress from the Northwest Territory, 1801

and 1802. Paul Fearing MSS. (in Marietta College Library), V, 58.



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Athens. These plats were approved by the Territorial legislature

on December 6, 1800.23

In the last session of the Territorial legislature held before

Ohio became a state, on January 9, 1802, the Assembly passed

an act providing for the university. It followed somewhat closely

the model charter from the pen of Manasseh Cutler. The follow-

ing were the main provisions of the act:

Whereas institutions for the liberal education of youth, are essential

to the progress of arts and sciences, important to morality, virtue and

religion; friendly to the peace, order and prosperity of society, and honorable

to the government that encourages and patronizes them--and whereas the

Congress of the United States did make a grant of two townships of

land, within the purchase made by the Ohio Company of Associates, for

the encouragement and support of an university therein; and whereas the

interference of the legislature is rendered necessary, to point out and direct

the mode in which the same shall be brought into operation, that the benefits

of the grant may be applied to the purposes designed:

Therefore,

Sec. 1. Be it enacted by the legislative council and house of repre-

sentatives in General Assembly, and it is hereby enacted by the authority

of the same, that there shall be an University instituted and established in

the town of Athens, . . . by the name and style of the 'American Western

University,' for the instruction of youth in all the various branches of the

liberal arts and sciences, for the promotion of good education, virtue, religion

and morality, and for the conferring of all degrees and literary honors

granted in similar institutions.

Sec. 2. That there shall be and forever remain in the said University,

a body politic and corporate, by the name and style of 'The President and

trustees of the American Western University,' which body politic and

corporate shall consist of the president ex-officio, and not more than seven-

teen nor less than eleven trustees, to be appointed as herein after is provided.

Sec. 3. That the Hon. Rufus Putnam, Joseph Gilman, Return Jona-

than Meigs, Jr. and Paul Fearing, Esquires, the Reverend Daniel Story,

Griffin Greene, Robert Oliver, Ebenezer Sproat, Dudley Woodbridge and

Isaac Pierce, Esquire, together with the president of the said University,

for the time being, to be chosen as herein after directed, be, and hereby are

created a body politic and corporate, by the name of 'The President and

trustees of the American Western University,' and that they and their

successors, and such others as shall be and remain a body politic and

corporate, in law, by that name forever.

The trustees were to elect a president, secretary, professors,

23 Peters, Legal History of Ohio University, 75-8.



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treasurer, etc., and prescribe their duties. Seven members would

constitute a quorum. They were to fix salaries, make rules, sus-

pend officers and fill vacancies temporarily.

The faculty was to fix the course of study, make rules, and

hold quarterly examination of students. Other provisions were

for the administration of the two townships for the purpose

designated by the Congress of the United States.

The final provision was "That the Hon. Rufus Putnam,

Esquire, shall be, and he is hereby authorized and empowered,

to fix the time and place for holding the first meeting of the

said corporation, of which he shall give notice in writing to each

member, at least fourteen days previous to such meeting."24

Rufus Putnam called the trustees to meet at the home of

Stephen Pierce, inholder, on May 21, 1802.25

The year after Ohio became a state, on February 18,

1804, the General Assembly of the State passed an act "Estab-

lishing an University in the Town of Athens."26

The preamble was the exact language of the first six lines of

the preamble in the act of January 9, 1802.

The name was changed from the American Western, to

"Ohio University." The trustees were to be the governor of the

State, the president of the university and from ten to fifteen

members. The original trustees, named in the act, were Elijah

Backus, Rufus Putman, Dudley Woodbridge, Benjamin Tappan,

Bezaleel Wells, Nathaniel Massie, Daniel Symmes, Daniel Story.

Samuel Carpenter, Rev. James Kilbourne, Griffin Greene, Sr., and

Joseph Darlington. The powers and duties of the corporation

were similar to those under the former law. Public examinations

were to be held quarterly. Further provisions pertained to the

administration of the two townships and construction of a build-

ing. The governor of the State was required to notify the

trustees of the first meeting of the Board.

Thus the infant institution, conceived by the founding fathers,

financed by a grant of land from the Federal Government and

24 For the Act of Jan. 9, 1802, see ibid., 76-99.

25 Fearing MSS., IV, 291.

26 For the Act of Feb. 18, 1804, see Ohio Laws, Statutes, etc., Acts, 2 .Assemb.,

1804, 193-206.



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by that government bequeathed to the State, was accepted by the

State of Ohio. So proud was Ohio of this first institution for

higher learning in the Northwest Territory, that it gave its own

name, Ohio, to the young university.

The Congress of the United States had given a "Local Habi-

tation," the State of Ohio had given a "name," but even so, until

46,080 acres of land would bring in some cash, Ohio University

would be principally "Airy Nothingness."

Ohio's first governor, Edward Tiffin, called the first meet-

ing of the trustees of Ohio University to be held at the home of

Dr. Eliphaz Perkins in Athens on the first Monday in June, 1804.

Attending the meeting were Rufus Putman, Elijah Backus, Dud-

ley Woodbridge, Daniel Story, Samuel Carpenter and James

Kilbourne. Tiffin presided. Woodbridge was made secretary

and Perkins treasurer. Provision was made for surveying the

lands and laying out roads, in the college townships. For several

years the main task of the trustees was that of leasing the lands

and getting an income.27

At the meeting on April 3, 1806, when the treasurer was

called upon for his report, the condition of the treasury showed

"not one cent."28 At this meeting, however, the first steps were

taken for a building. Jacob Lindly, Rufus Putnam, and William

Skinner were the members of the committee in charge of having

an academy building constructed. Putnam, Buell and Wood-

bridge were to draft a set of rules for the university.

On Christmas day, 1806, the trustees approved the plan

for an academy building presented by Rev. Jacob Lindly. In

due time the building was completed, a two-story, two-room,

brick structure, 24 by 30 feet, built by Jehiel Gregory at a cost

of $500. It was ready for occupancy in June, 1808.29

It fell to the lot of Rufus Putnam to select a preceptor.

His choice was Rev. Jacob Lindly, graduate of Princeton in

1800, Presbyterian minister at Waterford, Ohio, in 1803 and

since 1805 a member of the Board of Trustees.

On March II, 1808, Putnam wrote the Presbyterian congre-

 

27 Board of Trustees of Ohio University, Records, I, 1-7.

28 Ibid., I, 8.

29 Ibid., I, 10-28.



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gation of Waterford for the release of Lindly. The letter in

part follows:

The Trustees of the Ohio University take the earliest opportunity to

inform you that they have invited your Reverend Pastor to the office of

Preceptor of the Athens Academy which they expect will be ready for the

reception of students next June.

We sincerely sympathize with you in your fealing [sic] on the ocation

[sic] and hope through the blessing of Divine Providence you may shortly

obtain another Pastor and teacher in whom you will be as happily united.30

Putman had reason to suspect that the good Presbyterians

of Waterford would be unwilling that their pastor should leave

them for Ohio University. He therefore wrote the Ohio Presby-

tery, as follows:

The trustees of the Ohio University (by their Committee appointed

and Authorized for that Purpos [sic]) beg leave to inform your Reverend

and honorable body, that they have made Choise [sic] of the Reverend

Jacob Lindly of Waterford, to fill the office of Preceptor of the Athens

Academy. They doubt not of your approbation of their choise, and solicit

your consent that Mr. Lindly have leave to resign his charge at Waterford

and take upon him the more immediate government of the Ohio University,

which first opens in the Athens Academy, and will be ready for the reception

of students in June next.

The committee of Trustees have writen [sic] to the Church and Con-

gregation of Waterford on the subject of Mr. Lindly's leaving them. We

understand they mean to oppose Mr. Lindly's removal and that an agent is

appointed for that purpose to attend the Presbytery. This opposition was

expected, and is always to be expected from every people on a like ocation.

It has been the general if not the uniform practice in similar ocations to

select from among the Setled [sic] Clergy a character suitable to fill such

an important office: the objections of their people being no sufficient bar

to their removal when a more enlarged Sphier [sic] of usefulness in pro-

moting the general good appeared to call for them. That it is of the utmost

importance to place at the head of such an institution (and especially the

Ohio University) a gentleman of an established character, one acquainted

with the genius and maners [sic] of the people around him, and one in

whom those who have children to educate place confidence, all will admit.

But if the objections of Waterford be admitted as a sufficient bar,

their [sic] remains no probability of obtaining such a character because if

it is right that the objections of Waterford should prevale [sic]: so ought

the objections of every other society who have a settled minister to bar his

removal. Besides as their [sic] is no settled minister in the County of

30 Putnam MSS. (in the Marietta College Library), II, no. 33.



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Athens, nor are any of the settlements able (separately) to support stated

preaching, therefore it has appeared of very great importance to the

Trustees, to place a minister at the head of the institution who would as time

and opportunity presented, preach to the people: it is therefore to be hoped

Mr. Lindly (by the blessing of God) may serve the cause of religion by

preaching in Athens and its vicinity as much as he would, should he remain

at Waterford.

Reverend and honored gentlemen

If the agent from Waterford appear as we expect we hope it will prevent

the necessity of a delay for the purpose of citeing [sic] the people of Water-

ford to appear as in ordinary cases.

Again as it is not an ordinary removal of a Minister from one Con-

gregation to another, may not we presume to hope that the Presbytery will

consider the application as not coming within the ordinary prescribed rules

of delay, as in Common Cases, and therefore come to a decision at their

present session.31

The Reverend Jacob was given his release from the Water-

ford Church, and was transferred to Athens, to assume the duties

of preceptor of the academy, and president pro tem. of the Board

of Trustees of Ohio University, at an annual salary of $500.00.

On June 1, 1808, the academy opened its doors to first

students, with an offering of arithmetic, English grammar, Latin

and Greek languages, geography, mathematics, logic, rhetoric,

natural and moral philosophy.    The students were to pay $2.00

each quarter, to recite six days per week, to be examined quarterly

by the trustees, and to appear once a year in a public exhibition.

Three of the trustees were to dig and stone a well and "direct

the apparatus proper for drawing water from the same, erect a

Necessary and clear the College green reserving suitable trees

for shade."  The requests of William Weir for two acres of land

for a brewery and of Jacob Wolfe for land for a tanyard were

rejected. Joel Abbot was paid $87.00 for building the "Neces-

sary" and Alexander Stedman $43.00 for the well (this did not

include the rope).32

A resolution of May 16, 1809, provided that payments to

the university might be made in hemp at $6.00 per cwt.: steers

three years old and not over eight at $2.50 per cwt. the hide and

31 Ibid., II, no. 5.

32 Trustees, Records, I, 69.



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tallow to be included; barrows and spayed sows weighing alive

not less than 250 pounds at $3.00 per cwt.

The rules of Princeton were adopted temporarily as the

rules for Ohio University, but in March, 1812, the trustees

adopted the following:

No student shall possess or exhibit any indecent picture; nor purchase,

nor read in the University any lacivious [sic] impious or irreligious book

or ballad, nor sing or repeat verses of like character; and if any student

shall be convicted thereof or of lying, profaneness, drunkenness, theft, un-

cleanliness, playing at unlawful games or other gross immoralities, he shall

be punished according to the nature and heinousness of the offense by ad-

monition public reprehension, or expulsion from the University.

If any student shall quarrel with, insult or abuse a fellow student or

any person whatever he shall be punished according to the nature of his

fault.

No student shall keep by him, nor bring nor cause to be brought into

the University, on any occasion any spiritous or fermented liquors without

the expressed permission of the President.

No student shall go to a Tavern, Alehouse, Beerhouse, or any place

of like kind for the purpose of entertainment or amusement without special

permission from some one of the faculty; nor shall he, on any occasion, keep

company with a person whose character is notoriously bad under penalty of

admonition, and if the practice be continued of expulsion.

It is required of the students to treat all persons whatsoever with

modesty, civility and due respect; but more especially, to exhibit at all times

the most respectful deportment to the officers of the University, and if any

student shall wistfully [sic] disobey any officer of the University, or shall

either in speech or action manifest disrespect towards the President, he shall

be admonished and make due acknowledgement to the offended party, or be

suspended, as the Faculty may decide.

If any student shall refuse to appear personally before the President

or any other officier [sic] of the University when required to do he shall be

punished for contempt of authority: and the most prompt and implicit

obedience shall be yielded by each student to the lawful commands of the

President of the Institution.

Any student remaining in University or in town, in time of vacation

shall be subject to all the laws respecting decent and orderly conduct; and

shall be under the control of such officiers of the University as may reside

there during vacation.

No hallowing, whistling, jumping nor any other boisterous or tumultu-

ous noise shall be permitted in any of the apartments of the University,

under such penalty as the nature of the offense may require.

No student shall disguise himself by wearing women's apparel, or in



OHIO HISTORY CONFERENCE, 1941 257

OHIO HISTORY CONFERENCE, 1941                   257

 

any other way whatever under such penalty as the President and any two

trustees may see cause to inflict.

If any meeting or combination of students shall at any time take place,

either for resisting the authority of the University, interfering in its govern-

ment or for concealing or executing any evil or disorderly design, every stu-

dent herein concerned, or in any manner engage, shall be considered guilty

of the offense thereby intended; and the faculty are empowered and directed

to destroy all such combinations and associations as soon as discovered and

to inflict a suitable punishment therefore.

No servant shall be employed in the University unless by the President

at a stipulated salary and with the concurrence of the faculty, by whom the

duties of such servants shall be pointed out. Should any such servant be

found to violate any of the laws of the Institution, be negligent in duty, or

otherwise misbehaved, he shall be immediately dismissed.

Should any student or students destroy, trespass or in any manner

wantingly [sic] injure the property of any person in the town or elsewhere

or in any manner by improper conduct, disturb the quiet of any private fam-

ily, or should fail to deport himself or themselves decently and orderly in

any private family where he or they may be permitted to board; the parties

so offending, shall be dealt with according to the nature, quality and degree

of the offense; and any unlawful combination, to prevent the execution of

the civil law, shall meet a severe and exemplary punishment.

In every dismission from the University the person shall receive a

certificate, signed by the President, specifying the cause and reasons thereof,

and the student's standing as a scholar.

Whenever and so often, as it may be necessary or expedient for any

or the whole of the students to board in private families, care should be

had, that none be permitted to board at improper or disorderly houses; and

in no case, shall a student be allowed to board in a tavern without special

leave of the President.33

In March, 1812, Rufus Putnam                 was called upon to draft a

plan for a college edifice.  Putnam                      prepared a plan for a group

of three buildings. The first to be constructed was called the col-

lege edifice, erected near the center of the campus. Putnam found

the need of help from an architect. He secured the services of

Benjamin Corp of Marietta, whose fee for his services was $6.00.

Corp was also employed to oversee the construction of the build-

ing. The final plans provided for a building 82 feet long and

55 feet wide. It was begun in 1816 and completed in 1818 at a

total cost of $17,806. This seemed to the trustees far more than

sixty-five billions seem to Franklin D. Roosevelt.

33 Ibid., II, 29-32.



258 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

258    OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

In 1814, a committee headed by Putnam petitioned the State

legislature for a lottery for raising funds to meet the cost of the

college edifice.  In 1817 Jacob Lindly went to Columbus, the

new capital of the State, and lobbied through the lottery bill and

collected his expense account of $60.     The trustees, however,

did not resort to the lottery, but instead solicited subscriptions

and thus raised the funds for paying off the indebtedness. Rufus

Putman was first on the list with a contribution of $200. A Mr.

Patterson, of Pittsburgh, gave $20 because the university had

not resorted to gambling in the form of a lottery for raising the

funds.   Manasseh Cutler, very much disgruntled because the

building had not been named Cutler Hall, grudgingly gave $20.

Undoubtedly there was some great rejoicing in heaven in August,

1914, when the trustees gave the name, Manasseh Cutler Hall, to

the first building for higher education in the Northwest Territory.

A course of study leading to a bachelor's degree was pre-

scribed in 1812. The first students to complete the course were

John Hunter, of Zanesville, and Thomas Ewing, of Athens

County. They were the members of the graduating class of

1815.34

In 1817, the university expanded. In addition to the presi-

dent there was now a faculty member, Joseph Dana, professor

of languages -- salary, $250 a year. Dana continued in the service

of the university till his retirement in 1835.

In 1819 the course of study was revised as follows:

The Freshman Class--Lucians Dialogues, the Georgics and Eclogues

of Virgil, Sallust, the Odes and Epodes of Horace, Writing Latin exercises,

Latin and Greek Prosody, English Grammar, English Composition, Declama-

tion, Geography, Arithmetic.

Sophomore--Horace, Cicero, Xenophon, Homer's Iliad, Composition

in Latin exercises, Rhetoric, English Composition, Declamation, Geometry.

Junior--Tacitus, Terence, Collectanea Gracca Majora, Latin and Greek

Antiquities, Latin and Greek Composition, English Composition Rhetoric,

Criticism, History and Chronology, Moral Philosophy, Algebra, Law of

Nature and Nations--Grotius, de Veritate Religionis Christianae.

Senior Class--Classical department discretionary with the faculty--

Natural Philosophy, Moral Philosophy, Metaphysics, Logic, Astronomy,

34 Ibid., II, 60.



OHIO HISTORY CONFERENCE, 1941 259

OHIO HISTORY CONFERENCE, 1941                 259

 

English Composition, Criticism of the best Writers, Declamation, Law of

Nations and Nature.

Each student was required to submit English compositions

every two weeks to the faculty and two long themes each year

to the trustees.   Some additional rules and regulations were

adopted for the moral welfare of the young men attending the

university. Students guilty of profane cursing or swearing, riot-

ing, keeping company with lewd or infamous persons or gam-

bling or any other known immorality should be punished.

Students were examined orally twice each year by the mem-

bers of the Board of Trustees. Seniors were examined by the

trustees on all the work of their four-year course. Commence-

ments were held about the middle of September each year.

After Lindly had collected $500 for his services on the build-

ing committee in connection with the construction of the college

edifice, he was retired from the presidency in 1822 and was de-

moted to a professorship. In 1826 it was found necessary to

elect one of the three faculty members to be dropped because of

lack of cash. When the votes were counted, it was found that

Rev. Jacob Lindly was the one elected to be dropped. He con-

tinued a member of the Board of Trustees, and attended a meeting

of the board in 1837, from Waterford. He moved to Mississippi

from this board meeting and charged the mileage, $57, to the

university. Next year he was expelled from the Board. But

in 1853 he was given the D.D. degree. The last chapter on

Lindly was the naming of a fine dormitory for him, but misspell-

ing his name.

Rufus Putnam at last was unable to make the trip from

Marietta to Athens to attend the meetings of the Board. In the

trustee's Records of September 11, 1822, is the following:

The Board will doubtless hear with much pleasure that a valuable

donation of books consisting of one entire set of Dobson's Encyclopedia35 has

been made to this institution by the honorable Rufus Putnam of Marietta,

such munificence in this aged benefactor of the human race cannot but in-

spire our gratitude and prompt us to its natural and obvious expressions--

 

35 Encyclopaedia; or a Dictionary of Arts, Sciences and Miscellaneous Literature,

published in Philadelphia by Thomas Dobson, 1798, in 18 large volumes, with three

supplementary volumes published in 1803.



260 OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

260  OHIO ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL QUARTERLY

 

your committee therefore recommended the adoption of the following reso-

lutions:

1st, That the thanks of this board be tendered to the Hon. Rufus

Putnam for his highly esteemed donation to the University of Ohio.

2nd, that the secretary of the Board be directed to transmit to him a

copy of this Resolution.36

Ripe in years and rich in accomplishments, Rufus Putnam,

at the age of 86, passed to his reward.

James Irvine, professor of mathematics, was made president.

Because of ill health he was absent most of the two years of

his term. He resigned in 1824 and was followed by a real uni-

versity president, Robert G. Wilson, who served from 1824

to 1839, when he in turn was succeeded by William Holmes

McGuffey.

Just before Wilson came, the trustees in resolutions drawn

up at their annual meeting, with almost prophetic vision saw the

Ohio University of future years.

Our finances are in a deranged state--ur treasury is exhausted--we

are in debt. But although these objects cannot be realized at once we should

never lose sight of them. We should approach them as speedily as possible

and we should even now commence a system of measures bearing upon them.

We have gone too far to draw back. The work is too important to pause.

We are debtors to public confidence. We are debtors to the rising genera-

tion. We are debtors to posterity. Under these claims we should move

forward with inflexible firmness, resolved that nothing shall be wanting on

our part to secure to the Present and perpetuate to future generations the

blessings of Education.37

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

36 Trustees, Records, II, 122.

37 Ibid., II, 131-2.