William Andrus Alcott | |
---|---|
Born | 6 August 1798 Wolcott, Connecticut |
Died | 29 March 1859 Auburndale, Massachusetts |
(aged 60)
Nationality | American |
Occupation | educator, physician, author |
William Andrus Alcott (6 August 1798 – 29 March 1859) was an American educator, educational reformer, physician, and author of 108 books. His works, which include a wide range of topics including educational reform, physical education, school house design, family life, and diet, are still widely cited today.
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William Andrus Alcott was born in Wolcott, Connecticut. His father was a farmer, Obedience Alcox (1776–1847); in the 1820s, like many members of the family, he altered the spelling of his last name, which on his tombstone appears as "Obid. Alcott" [1]. His mother was Anna Andrus (1777–1864) who was the daughter of a Revolutionary War soldier and William's most important educational influence [2] He attended local schools and became a close friend with his near neighbor Amos Bronson Alcott who would later enjoy wide fame as a philosopher and as the father of writer Louisa May Alcott. Although sometimes described simply as "cousins" the two were actually second cousins; William's grandfather David Alcott (1740–1841) was the brother of Amos Bronson Alcott's grandfather, Captain John Alcott. The two boys shared books, exchanged ideas, and started a small library together. Odell Shepard had written of Amos Bronson Alcott, "Indeed there is a sense in which nearly everything Alcott wrote and did is attributable to William" [3]
At the age of 18 Alcott began teaching in a school located just a few yards from his father's house. With brief interruptions, he would continue to teach for the next nine years. His experiences as a student country school teacher would later become the subject of many of his later publications. He observed that the benches used by students were often painful and, at his own expense built backs onto the benches; these became the ancestors of the later school desks. He campaigned for better heating and ventilation in schools. He labored to improve the intellectual content of classrooms. While he was successful as a teacher [4] In the summer of 1824 he suffered an attack of the disfiguring dangerous skin infection erysipelas,[5] and about this time was beginning to suffer from tuberculosis. He would suffer symptoms of both for the remainder of his life [6]. Realizing that his health problems might bring an end to his teaching career, in 1824 he began on his to study medical texts. His formal study of medicine was brief. In the winter of 1825–26 he attended "a regular course of medical studies" in New Haven, Connecticut. In March 1826 he was granted a license to practice medicine. In addition to teaching, he practiced medicine at least until 1829 [7]
In the spring of 1830 he met William Channing Woodbridge. Woodbridge had just returned from Europe and was in the process of revising his second geography. Alcott at first worked as an assistant to Woodbridge for which he was paid twelve dollars a month to check facts and improve maps. The two became close friends. In 1831, when Woodbridge purchased the American Journal of Education and renamed it Annals of Education. The two men then moved to Boston. Alcott wrote many articles for the journal, especially those dealing with school design and physical education. Even after Woodbridge lost control of the Journal in 1836 and became its foreign editor, Alcott continued to write for the publication[8]. He would later publish a poignant memoir of Woodbridge's life [9]. While still teaching he had begun to contribute articles to newspapers and started work on the book that would become The Young man's Guide [10].
On 14 June 1836 he married Phebe Lewis Bronson (14 June 1812 – 9 November 1907. They had three children. For a time they shared a house, Cottage Place, with the family of his old friend and cousin Amos Bronson Alcott. In the 1840s William moved to the town of Newton, Massachusetts, just outside Boston. Eventually he would settle into a house in Auburndale in the town of Newton. He died here of a lung infection. He worked until the day before he died. William Andrus Alcott is buried in Newton Cemetery[11].
Alcott became one of the most prolific authors in early American history. He wrote frequently on the topics of education and health. In 1836 he wrote a letter to the editor of the Boston Medical and Surgical Journal titled "The Graham System" (May 4, p. 199-201; he signed it "M.D." The cause of greatest interest [in Alcott throughout his life was vegetarianism. In 1850 he wrote three long letters on vegetarianism to the editor of the New York Tribune - at the request of the editor (Aug. 14, Nov. 6). Here he shows clearly that his preference was for a diet that used no animal products - what would today be called a vegan diet.
Alcott wrote The Phisology of Marriage in 1856. He deplored free courtship manners. He specifically deplored "conversation which is too excitable", "presence of exciting books", "unnecessary heat", and many other courtship practices prevalent in 18th century America but steadily going out of fashion by 1856. He warned young people of the dangers of courtship. He is criticized by modern day feminists for his "rigidity".
Alcott was a founding member (in 1850) and the first president of the American Vegetarian Society.[12] He was also the author of The Vegetable Diet As Sanctioned by Medical Men and By Experience in All Ages. He also founded The American Physiological Society in 1837, the world's first physiological society.[13]
Alcott, William A."Memoir of William C. Woodbridge" American Journal of Education 5 (1858)51-64. Hyowitz, Carol; Weissman, Michaele: A History of Women In America
Wikisource has the text of an 1879 American Cyclopædia article about William Alcott. |