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Abolitionists as Academics: The Controversy at Western Reserve College, 1832–1833
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 February 2017
Extract
During 1832 to 1833, the faculty and trustees of Western Reserve College in Hudson, Ohio, were embroiled in a controversy over immediate abolition. The faculty advocated immediate abolition and the establishment of biracial equality in the United States; the trustees urged gradual abolition and the colonization of freed slaves in Liberia. The controversy at Western Reserve College raises the question of why some people adopted immediate abolitionism while others of similar background remained colonizationists? Although the case of Western Reserve College provides no Rosetta Stone to unravel the mystery of motivation, there were notable differences in age, in relationship to the community, and in enthusiasm for the evangelical doctrine of the immediate repentance of sin that distinguished the main protagonists among the faculty and the trustees from one another.
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- Copyright © 1982 by History of Education Society
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1. Histories of Western Reserve College include Cutler, Carroll, A History of Western Reserve College during Its First Half Century, 1826–1876 (Cleveland, 1876); Waite, Frederick Clayton, Western Reserve University: The Hudson Era (Cleveland, 1943); Millis, John S., Western Reserve of Cleveland: One Hundred Thirty-Two Years of a Venture in Faith (New York, 1957); and Cramer, Clarence H., Case Western Reserve: A History of the University, 1826–1976 (Boston, 1976).Google Scholar
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4. An outstanding example of the argument for establishing educational institutions in the West is Beecher, Lyman, A Plea for the West (Cincinnati, 1835).Google Scholar
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30. Ibid., Dec. 27. 1832.Google Scholar
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33. Observer and Telegraph, Feb. 14. 1833.Google Scholar
34. Ibid., Feb. 21. 1833.Google Scholar
35. Liberator, Jan. 5. 1833.Google Scholar
36. Liberator, May 22, June 1, 8, 22, 1833; Emancipator, June 8, 22, 29, 1833; Boston Recorder, June 5, 1833; George W. Benson to Isaac Knapp, May 27, 1833, Weston Papers, Boston Public Library; and Wright, Jr., to Beriah Green, June, 7, 1833, Wright Papers.Google Scholar
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40. American Anti-Slavery Society, First Annual Report (New York, 1834), p. 42.Google Scholar
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49. That one faculty member was Rufus Nutting, professor of languages from 1829–1840, who did not take an active part in the abolitionist controversy. Little information exists about Nutting. See Wright, Elizur Sr., to Wright, Jr., April 10. 1829, Wright Papers, and Waite, , Western Reserve, p. 61. 487.Google Scholar
50. Wright, Elizur Jr., to Phelps, Amos between June 7 and and October 3, 1833, Wright Papers.Google Scholar
51. Wright, Elizur Jr., to Storrs, Charles B., Aug. 31, 1833, Folder 3GW1, University Archives, Case Western Reserve University.Google Scholar
52. Fairchild, James H., Oberlin: The Colony and the College, 1833–1883 (Oberlin, 1833), pp. 48–77, and Fletcher, Robert S., A History of Oberlin College: From Its Foundation through the Civil War (Oberlin, 1943), p. 144, 147, 150–178.Google Scholar
53. Barnes, Gilbert, The Antislavery Impulse, 1830–1844 (New York, 1933), p. 39, incorrectly contends that Weld converted Storrs, Wright, and Green to abolitionism when the reverse is true. As late as September 27, 1832, Weld declared himself a colonizationist—Weld to Birney, James G., in Dumond, Dwight L., ed., Letters of James Gillespie Birney, 1831–1857 2 vols. (New York, 1938), I, p. 27. The following two letters provide further evidence that the abolitionist controversy at Western Reserve College led to Weld's conversion-Wright, Jr., to Weld, Dec. 7, 1832, in Barnes, and Dumond, , Letters of Theodore Weld, I, pp. 94–97, and Weld, to Wright, Jr., Jan. 10, 1833, Ibid., pp. 99–101. Thomas, Benjamin, Theodore Weld: Crusader for Freedom (New Brunswick, 1950), p. 36, supports the position that Storrs, Wright, and Green had a significant influence on Weld's adoption of abolitionism, as does Abzug, Robert H., Passionate Liberator: Theodore Dwight Weld and the Dilemma of Reform, (N.Y. 1980), 87–88.Google Scholar