Samuel
Johnson
Born:
Guilford; October 14, 1696
Died: Stratford; January 6, 1772
Entry
by Bruce P. Stark
Samuel
Johnson was an Anglican priest, a missionary of the Society for
the Propogation of the Gospel, and from 1754 to 1763 was president
of King's College, now Columbia University. Johnson was graduated
from the Collegiate School in 1714, and two years later after
teaching school in his native town became a tutor at the Collegiate
School. He served as a tutor for three years, studied theology,
and in March 1719/20 was ordained pastor of the Congregational
Church in West Haven, now Orange. He read widely in theology and
church history, particularly studying Anglican writings, and in
September 1722, along with six others including Timothy Cutter
(1684-1753), rector of Yale College, confessed that he doubted
"the validity of Presbyterian ordination in opposition to
Episcopal ordination." The shock of this apostacy reverberated
throughout Connecticut and New England. Johnson abandoned his
parish and in November 1722 sailed to England. He was subsequently
ordained a priest in the Anglican Church and was appointed missionary
to Stratford by the Society for the Propogation of the Gospel
in Foreign Parts.
Johnson
devoted the rest of his life to the Anglican cause. In his zeal
to promote the fortunes of the Church of England, however, Johnson
proved to be insensitive to the religious and political anxieties
that troubled his Congregational enemies. His arguments in favor
of an Anglican episcopacy in North America and his attacks on
Connecticut charter government for its support of the Congregational
Church isolated Johnson from the main currents of New England
thought and served to increase tensions between Anglicans and
non-Anglicans. Nevertheless, the Anglican Church grew rapidly
due to the efforts of Johnson and other SPG missionaries and assisted
by a conservative backlash to the religious excesses associated
with the Great Awakening. By the time of the American Revolution
some ten percent of Connecticut's inhabitants identified with
the Church of England.
After
thirty years in his Stratford parish, Samuel Johnson in 1754 became
the first president of King's College in New York City. He resigned
this position in 1763 after the death of his second wife and returned
to Stratford. He once again became rector of the Anglican Church
and spent his remaining years caring for his family, continuing
to write in favor of an Anglican episcopate in North America,
and helping to train future Anglican priests.
Samuel
Johnson was a college president, voluminous writer, a philosopher
of some note, and a crucial figure in the establishment of Anglicanism
in strongly Congregational Connecticut.
For
Further Reading
Ellis,
Joseph. The New England Mind in Transition. New Haven,
Connecticut, 1973.
*
Entry under revision.
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