Alexander Twilight

Alexander Twilight
In office
1836–1857
Personal details
Born September 23, 1795
Corinth, Vermont
Died June 19, 1857 (aged 61)
Brownington, Vermont
Nationality American
Spouse(s) Mercy Ladd Merrill
Profession Minister (Christianity)
Religion Congregational Church

Alexander Lucius Twilight (September 23, 1795 June 19, 1857), born free in Vermont, was the first African-American person known to have earned a bachelor's degree from an American college or university upon graduating Middlebury College in 1823. An educator, minister and politician, he was licensed as a Congregational preacher, and worked in ministry and education all his career. In 1829 Twilight became principal of the Orleans County Grammar School. There he designed and built Athenian Hall, the first granite public building in the state. In 1836 he was the first African American elected as a state legislator, serving in the Vermont General Assembly.

His house and Athenian Hall are included in the Brownington Village Historic District, listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP).

Early life and education

Alexander Lucius Twilight was born September 23, 1795, at Corinth, Vermont.[1] His father Ichabod Twilight was free, of mixed-race, and a Revolutionary War veteran. His mother Mary, also free, was described as white or light-skinned.[2]

Twilight worked for a neighboring farmer in Corinth, starting around 1802 when he was eight years old. For the next 12 years he read, studied, and learned mathematics while working in various farm labor positions.[3]

He enrolled in Randolph’s Orange County Grammar School in 1815 at the age of 20. From 1815 to 1821, he completed all secondary school courses as well as the first two years of a college-level curriculum.[3] He then attended Middlebury College in 1821, where he graduated in 1823. His baccalaureate degree made him the first African American to receive a degree from an American institution of higher learning, although this fact was not made widely known until Amherst College claimed to have awarded the first bachelor's degree to an African American to Edward Jones in 1826.[4]

Career

Twilight studied for the ministry with the Congregational Church and served several Congregational churches.[2] His career was in ministry and education, fields which were considered closely allied at the time. His first job was teaching in Peru, New York.

While continuing to teach, Twilight studied theology, the church and the ministry. He occasionally led worship services and preached. The Champlain Presbytery of Plattsburgh licensed him to preach.[3]

Twilight taught for four years in Peru, then moved to Vergennes, Vermont in 1828 to teach during the week and hold services on weekends in Waltham and Ferrisburg.[3]

In 1829 Twilight was hired as principal of the Orleans County, Vermont Grammar School in Brownington, the only secondary school in a two-county area. He also served as minister of the Congregational Church, building a house for his family shortly after arrival, which still stands.[5]

Photo of the Old Stone House, Brownington, Vermont.
Athenian Hall, now better known as The Old Stone House.

Wanting to ensure a place for students from out of town, from 1834-1836 Twilight designed, raised funds for, and had built a massive four-story granite building which he called Athenian Hall. The first granite public building in Vermont,[2] it served as a dormitory for the co-educational school, also known as the Brownington Academy. Both buildings are today part of a recognized historic district listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[2][6]

In 1836, Twilight was elected to the Vermont General Assembly, becoming the first African American to be elected to a state legislature.[7]

He left his job as headmaster in 1847.[8]

After his death on June 19, 1857, Twilight was buried in the churchyard in Brownington.[2]

Alexander Twilight Hall at Middlebury College.

Marriage and family

From 1824 to 1828, Twilight worked as a teacher in Peru, New York,[3] There Twilight, 31, married Mercy Ladd Merrill in 1826.[2] She was about 21 or 22.

After they came to Brownington and built a house, they used the second floor to house students who needed a place to board for school.

Legacy and honors

Howard Frank Mosher, Vermont Life Magazine, Autumn, 1996:

"I like the way the Stone House still looms up on that hilltop, where the wind blows all the time. There it sits, unshaken and monolithic, as I write this sentence and as you read it, every bit as astonishing today as the day it was completed. What a tribute to the faith of its creator, the Reverend Alexander Twilight: scholar, husband, teacher, preacher, legislator, father-away-from-home to nearly 3,000 boys and girls, an African American and a Vermonter of great vision, whose remains today lie buried in the church-yard just up the maple-lined dirt road from his granite school, in what surely was, and still is, one of the last best places anywhere."

Footnotes

  1. "Catalogue of Officers and Students of Middlebury College in Middlebury, Vermont", Middlebury College
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 "Alexander Twilight", Black Past, accessed 15 Dec 2008
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Old Stone House Museum.
  4. "A History of Amherst College".
  5. "Alexander Twilight House", Old Stone Museum, accessed 15 Dec 2008
  6. "Athenian Hall", Old Stone House Museum, accessed 15 Dec 2008.
  7. He was the second Afro-American to be elected to any office, behind Wentworth Cheswell of New Hampshire.
  8. Northeast Kingdom Civil War Roundtable newsletter, March 2009.
  9. Aspire Alexander Twilight College Preparatory Academy.

Further reading

External links