Eleazar
Wheelock
Born:
Windham; April 22, 1711
Died: Hanover, New
Hampshire; April 24, 1779
Entry
by Bruce P. Stark
Eleazar
Wheelock was a Congregational clergyman and the founder of Dartmouth
College. He was graduated from Yale College in 1733, was licensed
to preach in 1734, and in 1735 was ordained minister in Lebanon
Crank. Soon after his installation, his parish was stirred by
a religious revival and Wheelock became one of those New England
ministers who prayed for a wider awakening of religion. When George
Whitefield launched the Great Awakening in the fall of 1740, Wheelock
was one of its most energetic supporters, preaching widely throughout
New England. He was a popular and persuasive preacher and was
one of a handful of men who labored most ardently to make the
Awakening a success. Although deprived of his salary in 1742 for
intinerant activities, Wheelock was an established minister who
was horrified by the religious excesses associated with James
Davenport (c. 1716-1757) and was one of the men who successfully
persuaded Davenport to retract his errors.
Like
many ministers, Wheelock supplemented his meager income by
preparing
young men for college. In the wake of the Great Awakening, he
recognized that the hitherto neglected Indians needed attention,
and as early as 1743 he began to instruct privately a young
Mohegan
Indian, Samson Occom (1723-1792). Wheelock eventually envisaged
a plan for educating and converting Indians that involved removing
them from their native environment to Lebanon, training them,
and sending them back to their own tribes as missionaries.
In
1754, with the financial backing of Joshua More (1683-1756) of
Mansfield, he launched More's Indian Charity School. His educational
efforts with Indians were marked, however, by disappointments.
Many of his Indian students sickened, died, or were spoiled
by
the amenities of white civilization. By 1768 he had aroused the
enmity of Sir William Johnson, who withdrew all Indians from
the
Six Nations from his school. Plagued also by salary difficulties
with his parish, Wheelock began to think about enlarging his
educational
program to include a college. Emissaries in Great Britain had
secured some ₤12,000, and in December 1769 Wheelock obtained
a charter from Governor John Wentworth to establish Dartmouth
College. The College was established in 1770 in frontier Hanover,
New Hampshire. For the remaining nine years of his life Wheelock
was president of Dartmouth College and More's Indian Charity
School.
Eleazar
Wheelock was a strong supporter of the Great Awakening. His missionary
zeal inspired his Indian education experiments and these in turn
led to the founding of Dartmouth College.
For
Further Reading
McCallum,
James D. Eleazar Wheelock, Founder of Dartmouth College.
Hanover, New Hampshire, 1939.
*
Entry under revision.
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