James Fairchild

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James Fairchild
3rd President of Oberlin College
In office
1866 (1866)  1889 (1889)
Preceded by Charles Grandison Finney
Succeeded by William Gay Ballantine
Personal details
Born (1817-11-25)November 25, 1817
Stockbridge, Massachusetts
Died March 19, 1902(1902-03-19) (aged 84)[1]
Oberlin, Ohio[1]
Spouse(s) Mary Fletcher Kellogg
Alma mater Oberlin College (BA, 1838)
Profession educator

James Harris Fairchild (18171902) was an American educator, author, and former president of Oberlin College.

Biography

Harris was born in Stockbridge, Massachusetts, on November 25, 1817. His father was Grandison Fairchild. Soon after his birth his parents moved to Brownhelm, Lorain County, Ohio, and settled on a farm about ten miles from the present site of Oberlin College.

When Oberlin opened its doors in 1834, Fairchild entered as a freshman. He graduated in 1838. The year after graduation he was appointed tutor in the college, was ordained in 1841, and in 1842 became professor of Latin and Greek. In 1847, he was transferred to the chair of mathematics, and in 1858 to that of theology and moral philosophy. In 1866, he became the third president of the college. During his tenure, the faculty and physical plant of the college expanded dramatically. In 1889, he resigned as president but remained as chair of systematic theology.

His wife, Mary Fletcher Kellogg, was one of the first group of five women to be admitted to a college in the United States. She was the only one who didn't graduate, as her father's business failed. Her family moved to a frontier area of Louisiana, and Fairchild, who'd known her while they were students at Oberlin, came down and married her in November 1841.[2]

Fairchild wrote a history of Oberlin, which was published in 1883. He also wrote works on philosophy.

A biography of Fairchild, James Harris Fairchild: or Sixty-Eight Years with a Christian College, was written by Albert Temple Swing and published in 1907.[3]

Bibliography

  • Oberlin: The colony and the College, 1833-1883 (1883)
  • Moral Phylosphy; or, the science of Obligation
  • Elements of theology, natural and revealed

References

Notes

Sources consulted

  • National Cyclopaedia biography (public domain')
  • Fairchild entry, World Cat

Further readings

  • "Fairchild, James Harris." American National Biography (1999). 7:682-683.
  • "Fairchild, James Harris." The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography (1895). 2:464-465.
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