Henry Harris Jessup
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Henry Harris Jessup (1832-1910) was an American Presbyterian missionary, author, and a founder of the American University of Beirut. He was born at Montrose, Pa., son of the jurist William Jessup (1797-1868), and enrolled at Cortland Academy in Homer, NY, for one year before attending Yale University. He graduated at Yale in 1851 and at Union Theological Seminary in 1855 at which point he was officially ordained; he immediately entered the foreign-missionary service of the Presbyterian church. He spent his first four years of service in Tripoli, Syria, devoting much time to leaning Arabic at which he proved extremely deft. He married Caroline Bush during one trip back to America in 1857 and returned to Tripoli within a matter of months. During the Druse Revolts, the Jessups moved to Beirut and had three children. His wife took ill on sea voyage prescribed by a doctor and she died in Alexandria, Egypt. Jessup remarried in 1869 to Harriet Elizabeth Dodge with whom he had five children, though she too died in 1882. Jessup served as the acting pastor for the Syrian Church of Beirut and superintendent of its school for thirty years, teaching almost any grade. He also became the first secretary of the Asfuriyeh Hosipital for the Insane, acted for a time as missionary editor for the Arabic journal El-Neshrah, and in 1866, was one of the founders of the Syrian Protestant College now known as the American University of Beirut. Serving and teaching in Beirut tirelessly, he refused a professorship at Union Seminary in 1857, a position as secretary of the Presbyterian Board in 1870, and the post of United States minister to Persia in 1883. During one of his few trips back to America in 1884, Jessup married for the third and last time to Theodosia Davenport Lockwood. Jessup also authored numerous books about Syrian history, which culminated in the work for which he is best known, Fifty-Three Years in Syria published in 1910, a two volume memoir and historical account of his life there. He died and was buried in Beirut.
[edit] Writings
He wrote, besides various works for the American Press at Beirut:
- The Women of the Arabs (1873)
- Syrian Home Life (1874)
- The Mohammedan Missionary Problem (1879)
- The Greek Church and Protestant Missions (1884)
- The Setting of the Crescent and the Rising of the Cross (1898)
- Kamil, a Moslem Convert (1899)
- Fifty-Three Years in Syria (1910)
- This article incorporates text from an edition of the New International Encyclopedia that is in the public domain.