■f/fA 7>/ ff& Hollinger Corp. P H8.5 H JJ rn, OF H J" uuJi' H i, _i^:tT ^ididibess BY HON. WM. McKEE DUNN, LL. D., EX-JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL OF THE U. S. ARMY. DELIVERED AT THE SEMI-CENTENNIAL COMMENCEMENT OF HANOVER COLLEGE, JUNE 1.3, 1883. MADISON, IND.: THE COURIER COMPANY, PRINTERS AND BINDERS. 1883. HANOVBE COLLEGE. "II 3119 10 Al ^Jj 8 Forty years ago the tide of emigration flowed rapidly and steadily from the east toward the broad and fertile plains of the great West. The Presbyterian church was weak and her ministers few. An educated ministry trained up in the midst of this growing population was a felt necessity. To meet this necessity, Hanover Academy was organized in 1828, which, in 1833, was incorporated as a College. Since that time the Institution has gone steadily forward— at times under great difficulties and discouragements— accomplishing in a high degree the work for which it was founded. Of the 332 graduates of the College, 163 have studied Theology: about 50 have become teachers; and of the remainder, a large proportion are filling positions of usefulness and honor. From 4.000 to 5.000 young men have studied within its halls. 800 of whom have devoted themselves to the sacred ministry. In the comparatively brief period of its existence, the institution has enjoyed 27 revivals of religion, the last of which has just been experienced. Many of the students and of the citizens on the last Sabbath of February, publically professed their faith in Christ, some of the latter having past the meridian of life. Thus has the Lord again set his seal of approbation on the College at Hanover. The Institution is under the care of the two synods of Indiana. One-half of the Trustees are appointed by the synods, and the other half are elected by the Board itself. The College is situated on one of the bluffs of the Ohio River, six miles below the city of Madison. The different railroads and the river place it within twenty-four bonis of the principal points in Indiana. Kentucky. Western Ohio and Illinois. A new rail- road is also in prospect on the north side of the Ohio, from Cincinnati to New Albany. A hack runs daily from Madison through Hanover. The location is remarkable for the unrivaled beauty of its scenery, its healthful- ness and its freedom from the ordinary temptations to vice pertaining to towns and cities. No intoxicating liquors are sold in the village or township. Persons can judge lor themselves of the effect of these things upon the character, habits and interests of the students. Seligievs iffi^tettciton*) All the students meet at 9 o'clock A. M., on Sabbath to receive Biblical instruction. Divine service is conducted at 3 o'clock P. M., each Sabbath, by the President or one of the Professors. Every student, unless excused, is required to attend these exercises. All of them are also expected to attend the morning services of the congregation in the village. There is. also a weekly prayer-meeting in the College, under the super- vision of the Faculty, and the students hold weekly meetings in their rooms. The Scriptures are read in the original languages during the course. - Ctoneral deiise ef l&ftteuetf «n« This i> divided into three departments. 1st. The Preparatory Department, which i* arranged in two divisions, called the junior and senior, emhracing one year each. To enter this department, the student must have studied English Grammar, Geography and Arithmetic. 2d. The Scientific Department, embracing every thing tought in the Collegiate Course, except the Ancient Languages. The majority in this department study Latin to some extent 3d. The Collegiate Department, extending over a period of four years from the time the student enters the Freshman (lass. lenra ei Vulifen* Tuition is $30 per year, which may he paid in three portions, one at the beginning of each session, in addition to the tuition, a Contingent Fee of $10 is charged to meet the incidental expenses of the College. There are under the control of the Faculty, a limited number of scholarships, upon which students, who may need such assistance— especially candidates for the minis- try—can he placed The hooks and instruments needed in the course, are kept for sale by one of the Professors, at Cincinnati prices. oardiiij ; • Boarding may be had in private families — including a furnished room— at from $3 to $4 per week. A limited number of students can be accommodated at the College boarding house at $2 50 per week, furnishing in part their own rooms. The College Year is divided into two terms, and three sessions. The 1st term be- gins on the first Wednesday of September, and continues 1(5 weeks The 2d term be- gins on the first Wednesday of January and continues 24 weeks. The Annual Com- mencement occurs on the Thursday before the 25th of June. A recess of a few days is given at the close of the first session of the second term, at the first of April. The Church has in this College the product of 40 years" care and labor; a large. substantial and well appointed building, situated amid the most beautiful scenery on the charming Ohio, and every facility for the acquisition of a thorough education. It was founded for a noble purpose, and consecrated by the prayers and tears of the godly fathers who are now enjoying their reward in heaven. Shall their hopes be di> appointed? Will their descendants prove recreant to their sacred trust? Will they not continue to rally round the Institution with increasing zeal and energy, and fill its halls with students, and place it on a broad and solid foundation? Will not >ome- whom God hath blessed with means, imitate the example of Mrs. Lapsley and of tin- late Rev. W. A. Ilolliday. and give of their substance to enlarge and complete its en- dowment? Dear reader, we respectfully ask you to consider the claims and advan- tages of this Institution, and to give it your influence and patronage. Send us your sons, and remember us in your prayers. like Btaeutty. Rev. G. D. ARCH IRA LI). D. I).. I'res. and Prof, of Moral Science Rev. S. II. THOMSON. A. M . Prof. Mathematics. Rev. J. B. GARRITT, A. M , Prof. Ancient Languages. Rev. E. .J. HAMILTON, A M.. Prof. Mental Phil, and Logic Prof. F II. BRADLEY, Afcl*. Natural Sciences Rev. L B. \V. BHRYOCK, A. M.. Prof. Ex. of Latin, and Fin. Agent. Hanover, Ind., March 5th, 1869. EARLY HISTORY OF HANOVER COLLEGE. AN ADDRESS BY HON. Wm. McKEE DUNN, LL. D., EX-JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL OF THE U. S. ARMY. Delivered at the Semi-Cent ennial Commencement of Hanover College, June 13th, 1883. Mr. President, Ladies and Gentlemen: The duty assigned to me, in the programme of the celebration of this Semi-Centennial of Hanover College, is to address you on the early history of the College. Now, if I should at once turn my back on my text, I trust the learned Doctors of Divinity and other clergy- men present will not be the first to cast stones at me. I propose, in the first place, to speak of the early history of THE HANOVER NEIGHBORHOOD. We do not have to grope among fables and legends to find the time when this settlement began. The beginning is definitely fixed at a distance of three-quarters of a century. To reach this point, we must go back in our country's history to a time when Kentucky and Ohio were border States, and Indiana Territory the frontier territory of the West; to a time when Thomas Jefferson was President of the United States, and William Henry Harrison was Governor of the Ter- ritory of Indiana; to a time when a narrow strip of land along this border had, not long before, been purchased from the Indians, recent- ly surveyed and within a year offered for sale by the Government; to a time when the puff of a steamboat had never been heard on the Ohio River, and no county of Jefferson or town of Madison was known on its western shore. Could we reverse the course of time and go back by years and decades, and all the familiar objects around us, this College, the Church, the houses and all the works of man disap- pear as in a dissolving view, and in their places the works of nature be restored, the majestic trees again grouping themselves together in the grandeur of silence and greatness in which they had stood for centuries, then we would reach near the time of the commencement of the settlement of this neighborhood. The wild beasts still roamed in the forest and the Indians yet lingered in the hunting grounds they had reluctantly sold. Then occasionally might be seen men on horse- back, usually two or three together, winding their way through the deeply shaded forests, turning aside sometimes to avoid impenetrable thickets, keeping together for company and mutual protection. They were armed with old-fashioned flint-lock rifles ; for they might have an opportunity to shoot a deer or a bear, or possibly they might find their rifles convenient for pacifying lurking, treacherous Indians. They were a land hunters; 1 ' that is, men from Kentucky or elsewhere seeking homes in this great wilderness. They examined this tract of land and others in the neighborhood. One of them remained and in- spected with great care the soil, the timber, the stones, the springs and brooks on this tract. He found that there was not an acre that was not fit for cultivation and that it was well watered on every side. There was not a better tract of land for farming purposes in all this neighborhood. This "land-hunter," a young, vigorous, determined- looking man, made careful examination and note of the surveyors' marks on the trees, so as to be sure of his tract, and then rode away. A day or two afterwards, he might have been seen at the Land Office in Jefferson ville, making purchase of this land. When he received his certificate of purchase, he found it to read about as follows: — November 28, 1808. "This certifies that Williamson Dunn, of Mercer County, Kentucky, has this day purchased from the United States, the southwest quarter of section twelve, (12) town three (£) north, range nine (9) enst, in the Jeffersonville land district." And thus this quarter-section of land, which the Indians had orig- inally held by tribal-tenure, and the United States had held as part of the National domain, became, for the first time since the world was created, so far as we know, the property of a private individual. Then this quarter-section became a separate blank leaf on which its history was yet to be written. The purchaser returned here the next autumn to take possession of his land. He was accompanied by his wife and two little boys. The mother was but eighteen years of age, and did not look like a person well suited to meet the privations and hard- ships incident to the settlement of a new country. The first thing to be done by this pioneer in the "forest primeval," was to get a shelter lor his little family ; so he looked carefully over his land to find a site, not for a school-house, nor for a church, nor for a col logo, but for his log cabin. This must be on an elevation and near to a spring of never-failing water. The site he selected was just east of and adjoin- ing the house where Prof. Young now resides. There, with such as- sistance as was available, he speedily erected a cabin and entered it with his little family. This was the beginning of the settlement of this neighborhood.* Then, that he might have sunlight and fields for culture, he commenced the arduous labor of cutting down and burning up the immense forest trees that stood thickly around. The rifle, the axe and the log cabin have ever been in the vanguard of civilization in its march across this continent. Settlers came in rap- idly, and the stroke of the axe and the sound of falling trees, the burning of logs and the blazing of brush heaps, were the sounds and sights most familiar ab >ut here. Sometimes I almost imagine that those great trees were sentient beings and sympathize with them in the horror which they must have felt, as these sounds and fires pre- saged the doom from which they had no power to escape. These early settlers were mostly Scotch-Irish Presbyterians, who, or their ancestors, had emigrated from the north of Ireland to Virginia, thence to Kentucky and thence to these new homes. The neighborhood southwest of this — the Crirmel neighborhood — was settled by the same class of emigrants, except that they were Pres- byterians of a sterner sort, commonly called Seceders. I must be permitted here to say of these settlers of both neighborhoods, that, according to my remembrance and observation, they were the most orderly, industrious and religious people I have ever found among the pioneers of any country. These hardy pioneers had to pay two dollars an acre for their heavily timbered land, whilst for many years past the Government has been giving to every actual settler a quar- ter-section of as good land as the sun shines on. Three years after this" first settlement, the war of 1812 with Eng- land commencad, and the Indians became dangerous neighbors. They massacred nearly a whole settlement at "Pigeon Roost, " near where now is Vienna, Scott county. This massacre created great *NOTE.— Christopher Harrison, a bachelor from Maryland, who, from a disappointment in love, as was supposed, sought the solitude of the Western Wilderness, had, a few months before Judge Dunn's purchase, bought land adjoining on the east. Mr. Harrison, a few years afterwards, sold his beautiful place to George Logan, Esq., and the property remains in the Logan family to this day. Mr. Harrison moved to Salem and, on the organization of the State, was elected our first Lieutenant-Governor. Dr. David H. Maxwell bought, and, for several years, lived on the quar- ter-section immediately south of Judge Dunn's tract. He sold it to Amos Butler. Dr. Maxwell, Samuel Smock and Nathaniel Hunt were the delegates from this county to the convention which met at Corydon in 1816, and made the constitution under which Indiana was admitted into the Un- ion. The enrolled copy of this constitution on file in the office of the Secretary of State, is in Dr. Maxwell's excellent handwriting. Not long after Judge Dunn's purchase, he bought the ad- joining quarter-section on the north, and, afterwards, considerable land adjoining on the west. alarm among the scattered inhabitants along this frontier. For the protection of these inhabitants Congress passed an act for raising companies of mounted troops, called Rangers. These troops were to scout along the frontier to prevent incursions of marauding, murderous bands of Indians. Williamson Dunn, my father, raised and was made Captain of one of these companies. Almost every able-bodied man of this neighborhood joined his company. This was the best means for protecting their families. After the Cap- tain and his Rangers entered upon their duties, their families, in- cluding my mother and her four little children (two hrving been added to the family in their new home) sough! refuge and protection in a stockade on the Maxwell farm, the place on which Mr. French now lives. The Captain of the Rangers was absent from home most of the time for nearly a year. Meanwhile, danger from Indians on this frontier ceased; but fear of them still remained in the minds of the women and. children. Everything is so peaceful and bright about here now, and you are so safe in your homes, that it is difficult for you lo appreciate the darkness of the woods and the ter- ror of the Indians, that filled the minds of the women and children in the days of which I have been speaking. Two little personal in- cidents that occurred about this time, may perhaps enable you to un- derstand this feeling better than you would from any general state- ment. Not long after the Captain's family had taken their place in the stockade, something was wanted from the home. The Captain's eldest son, a little boy about six years of age, was sent over for it with a colored boy somewhat older — Ike — whom many here knew as a man. There were no locks to doors in this region at that time. In case a cabin was to be vacated, a small boy, if one were handy, was left inside to fasten the door when the rest of the family had gone out. This he did by putting a wooden pin obliquely in an augur hole in the door-frame and then climbed out a small window. The process had to be reversed to open the door. On this occasion, when Ike was pushing my brother through the window to open the door, he heard a noise in the bushes near by, and his mind being filled with the fear of Indians, he hurriedly thrust the little fellow through the window and took to his heels. My brother fell on his forehead upon the puncheon floor and received an injury I'wr.n which he never fully recovered. The other incident to which 1 refer is this : ( !aptain Dunn and his Company spent the winter along the Wabash frontier, and were mua tered out of the service at Vincennes in March, 1814. His family in the meantime had come back to their home and were awaiting his return without any definite information as to when he might be ex- pected. After his muster out, the Captain started home and at the end of several days hard travel through the wilderness, reached here about dusk. The lights were streaming brightly from the cabin windows. To announce his arrival in military style, he fired off his horse-pistols. He was surprised that his salute was not answered by the rushing out of his wife and children to meet him. He was still more surprised when, on entering the cabin, there was no one to be seen. But upon calling his wife by name, she, followed by her little children crawled out from under a bed, where they had taken refuge in their alarm at the firing of ihe pistols ; and they were rejoiced to meet a husband and father instead of the ever-dreaded Indian. In December of that year an event happened in that cabin, re- markable only in this, that the child born was so very small. So small a child was never before seen by any of the dwellers in that region, except one old woman. There is always an old woman in every neighborhood who has seen, or claims to have seen, more than all the other women put together. The women came to see this lit- tle child and wondered at his diminutive size. He had such a little face, suc'i little hands and feet, indeed was so little all over — they had never seen the like before. As they went away talking together, they ''reckoned' 1 Mrs. Dunn would never '-raise*' that baby. Indeed they did not think he was worth raising and said there were "getting to be too many stalks in that hill anyhow.'* The mother shared their impression that the little fellow would not survive long, and, there- fore, did not bestow upon him the name which she had intended to give him, had he been a child of ordinary size and promise. She did not wish to name for her stalwart husband, a child who might soon carry the beloved name to the grave. Nevertheless, the little fellow worried along and began to look as if he had come to stay. And so it happened, at the next communion season of the Madison church, held in this neighborhood (which was at Mr. Maxwell's barn), when with other children, the Captain and his wife brought theirs, includ- ing the youngest to be dedicated to the Lord, this child, when "bap- tized with water,'* was christened "William McKee** — being thus named lor his mother's grandfather who lived in Kentucky — so far off as likely never to see, and who never did see, his insignificent namesake. Thus you see how I failed to receive the name I would have most loved to bear. Nevertheless, I became in time, the largest 6 of my father's seven sons, and am said to resemble him more than did any other one of his children. MISSIONARIES. This locality seems to have been favored from the beginning with an abundance of preaching. Among the earliest events of my recol- lection were the visits of missionaries to my father's house and their preaching there and in the school-house. Two of them I well re- member. One was Rev. David 0. Proctor, who soon abandoned the missionary field and married a widow near Shelbyville, Ken- tucky. The other was the Rev. Orin Fowler, who was a favorite preacher, and I presume from his language in a letter to my father, it had been hoped he would make this his field of labor. The letter bears date Fairfield, Connecticut, August 2d, 1819. In this letter, writing of his journey home, which was of course on horseback, he says : "I arrived at my father's after a long and very tiresome journev of sixty or seventy days. Since I arrived I have not enjoyed ray usual health, though I have no other than complaints which arose in consequence ot the labor and extreme fatigue of my long tour." We could now travel from here, or rather from Madison, to Fair- field in less than two days. He also, among other messages, sent this : "Tell McKee he must improve, so that he may be a missionary in good season." Well, I failed to become a missionary, but he succeeded in be- coming a member of Congress, having been tw r ice elected to the House of Representatives from Massachusetts, in 1849 and 1851. In the public service he maintained his Christian character and did nothing to lower the dignity of his ministerial office. I remember now (what did not strike me at the time as strange), how great a number of flint arrow-heads were to be found on my father's quarter-section. When 1 was a little boy the road most trav- eled probably, in the State, passed by the front of our house. Every hard rain washed out this road, and after such a wash-out these ar- row-heads were to be found along the road. Indeed, they w T ere turn ed up elsewhere on the farm at every ploughing. They were of Hint stone such as is to be found near by. This may have been a place where the Indians manufactured them, or this may have been a scene of an Indian battle, or it may have been a favorite hunting-ground. I cannot account for the abundance of these arrow-heads: neverthe- less, the fact remains that they were abundant. THE SCHOOL-HOUSE. In traveling over mountains, in rainy weather, when the deep valleys were filled with mist arid the mountain tops were covered with clouds, I have sometimes seen a gleam of sunshine penetrate through a rift in the clouds and rest upon some cot on the distant mountain side, bringing it and its surroundings to view with a dis- tinctness they would not have hai in an unclouded sky. So, sometimes, to my mind, through the obscurity of decades of years, the scenes of my childhood appear before me with the distinctness of something re- cent and near. Thus, now. my mental vision rests upon the school- house, where I commenced the struggle with all the mysteries of Webster's Spelling-book. It stood on the ground where Dr. Spear afterwards built his residence, on the edge of the village. A strip of woods intervened between it and my father's residence, and the great poplar trees in the springtime, used to drop their sweet bloom on the pathway of the children as they wended their way to school. The house was built of split logs put up edgewise; the floor was of puncheons. The windows were made by cut- ting out parts of two logs next to and parallel to each other, and instead of glass, greased paper was used. There was a large chimney at each end of the house built of stones, sticks and clay. Long, inclined boards along the side and end of the school house were made for those who were worrying with pot hooks and other exercises in writing. There were no metallic pens in those days, and the making and mending of quill pens and setting copies occupied much of the time of the teachers in and out of school. All the bench- es were narrow, hard and without backs, and those for little children, as I well remember, were a weariness to the flesh. Nevertheless, the scholars generally were ruddy and happy, and, I suppose, were well instructed. The masters usually were Scotch or Irish, who believed in doing a good day's work every day themselves, and required the children to do the same. Good beech switches were always on hand back of the teacher's chair ready for use, and I can bear testimony that they were used. The excitement of the day commenced toward the close of school in the afternoon, when all the recitations were over except the spelling lessons, and the children were told to learn them. These lessons we were permitted to learn aloud, and then Babel was turned loose. Every scholar with his spelling-book in hand spelled, or pretended to spell, the words at the very top of his voice. We almost mad^ the clap-boards on the roof rattle. Some- times in the evening the older boys would have exercises in dialogues and declamations. I can now almost see the tallow dips and the lard Aladdin-shaped lamps that used dimly to illuminate the school-house 8 on such occasions. But boys and girls were being educated in that school-house who have since appeared where the gas light burned brightly. One of the favorite scholars was the amiable and gifted man who as a boy bora the name of Noble, but afterwards made him- self known in the world of letters as Noble Butler. His brother was a pupil there also. We boys called him "Jack" for short, but tho people who now know him well speak respectfully of him as Judge Butler. Another of those boys, James A. Maxwell, was an honored Judge in Mississippi, for many years, so much respected there that he was continued in office during the war, though he never yielded in any way to the demands of secession. But this address cannot be protracted by ever so brief biographical sketches. This school-house was also used for a place of worship. There was not then a school such as is now called a public school in the State of Indiana. As I have said before, the first settlers in this neighborhood were principally Scotch-Irish Presbyterians, and by the early establishment on this frontier of schools for instruction in the Latin Language, with the fidelity of their race and religion, they carried out that requirement of the first book of discipline in the Scotch Church, which was that u a school should be established in every parish for the instruction of youth in the principles of religion, grammar and the Latin tongue.' 7 This requirement bears date sixty years before the landing of the Pil- grims on Plymouth Bock. For religious instruction, we used ihe New Testament as a reading book, and for the same purpose the his- torical books of the Old Testament. We were thoroughly instructed m all ''the Lord said unto Moses." In that school-house Latin was first taught in this neighborhood. HANOVER. CHURCH. Presbyterians in this neighborhood in December, 1819, subscrib- ed two hundred dollars for one-half the time of Rev. Thomas 0. Searls, who was then preaching to the church in Madison, and this seems to have been the first arrangement for regular preaching here. This little book, or. so much of it as I show you here, contains an ac- count of the organization of Hanover Church. The following is a list of the original members as herein recorded: Williamson Dunn, Mi- riam Dunn, Eleanor Dunn, Robert Symington, Nancy Symington, William Heed, Mrs. Reed, Win. Alexander, Jane Spear, Hugh Linn, Mary Linn, Mrs. Maxwell, Benj. Smyth, Mrs. Smyth, George Logan, Susan Logan, Mary Wallace, Nathaniel Wallace, Mrs. Loring, Senith Mount, Elizabeth Davis and Martha Woods, twenty-two in all. Many of these persons had previously been members of the Presbyterian 9 Church in Madison. This organization was effected in February, 1820, and the following persons were elected the first officers of the Church: George Logan, William Alexander, Robert Symington, and William- son Dunn, ruling elders; Benjamin Smyth and Hugh Linn, deacons. The Church at this place was named Hanover as a compliment to the wife of Reverend Mr. Searls, she having been previously to her marriage, a resident of Hanover, New Hampshire, where Dartmouth College is situated, of which college Mr. Searls was a student and a graduate. The post-office took its name from the Church, as did the neighborhood, the village, the township, the acade- my and the college. The first anl only Presbyterian Church edifice ever erected here was a stone building commenced in 1823, which stood near where the public school building now stands, on a part of my father's quarter section. Previously thereto, religious services were held in the school-house and dwelling houses in the winter, and in groves and barns in summer, the threshing floor of Maxwell's barn furnishing the auditorium on all grand occasions in the neighbor- hood. The Rev. John Finley Crowe was the first pastor of this church, and seems to have entered upon his duties as such in June, 1823. In reading over the brief record contained in this book, I have been much interested to observe with what solicitude and kindness the pastor and elders watched over their flock. While careful that the good name of the Church should not suffer from the misconduct of any of its members, in the few cases of discipline recorded, there is manifested great consideration for the feelings and reputation of the persons of whose conduct the Session felt it their duty to take notice. As an illustration of a condition of things, now happily passed away, the following extract is made from the record of this Church in re- gard to one of its colored members: "June 28, 1827, Nancy Gray, colored woman, appeared before the Session and reported herself as living with William Gray, never having had the rites of matrimony celebrated, this in conse- quence of their being in slavery at the time they came together." Whereupon the Session appointed Elders Symington and Logan to visit the parties, give them such instruction as they might seem to need and report to the Session, which then adjourned to meet the 4th of July at four o'clock. As the result of their visit, the committee then reported that William and Nancy Gray had presented them- selves before the Rev. J. F. Crowe, having obtained license of the County Clerk, and were regularly joined in the bonds of matrimony. This disposition of the case was satisfactory and the member freed from further censure. As one of the results of the great war, people of color in every part of this country can now be joined together in 10 the holy bonds of matrimony according to the Lord's ordinance, with none, for this reason, to molest them or make them afraid. Under the pastorate of Mr. Crowe the Church increased greatly in numbers and grew strong in Christian grace and usefulness. When my father removed to Crawfordsville, in 1823, Mr. Will- iam Reed, the father oi Rev. Dr. Reed, who is next to address you, was elected an elder in my father's place, and soon afterwards John Houston and Samuel Smock were added to the eldership. My feelings were recently somewhat shocked by reading a pub- lication in which this stone church edifice is described as looking like an old still-house. I entered this church for the first time after my father returned here with his family in 1829, and when I did so it was the first Presbyterian -'meeting-house" I had ever been in, and, indeed, though I was then in the fifteenth year of may age, it was the only "meeting-house" I had ever been in except a little Methodist gable ended one at Bloomington. It made a great difference at that time in the impression made upon you whether you approached this k - meeting-house" from the east or west. I came to it from the west, and was impressed with the greatness of its proportions, its high pul- pit, its stiffbacked seats, and the large wooden pillars that supported the ceiling. A postoffice was first established here in December, 1830, and Rev. John Finley Crowe was the first postmaster. The office was called South Hanover, because there was another postoffice in Shelb} r county called Hanover. That office was subsequently discontinued or its name changed, and then the prefix w 'South" was dropped from the name of the office here. The plat of Honover village was recorded in 1832. HANOVER ACADEMY. The sources of great rivers are generally found in mountain springs or lakes in the woods. Every great human enterprise may be traced to obscure beginnings. When the mountain streams and tributaries from the almost unknown lakes become united they con- stitute great rivers. So influences from obscure places may unite and result in enterprises of great good to mankind. We have bucL a union of influences now brought together. A neighborhood com posed mainly of Scotch Irish Presbyterians, a school house in which their children were afforded the best opportunities for education at that time possible in this State, and a church, composed of zealous Christian men and women. Here were elements ior usefulness if properly organized. Then came the Rev. John Finley Crowe, and 11 became the pastor of this church. He had the wisdom to unite the influences of this neighborhood, this school-house and this church for the further promotion of Christian education. The result was an- other log cabin erected near his dwelling, where he received six stu- dents for higher instruction. This was January 1st, 1827. From this came Hanover Academy. I have procured from the office of the Secretary of State, in In- dianapolis, copies of the several acts of the Legislature of Indiana relating to the literary institutions located at this place. The first is an act approved January 6th, 1829, and is entitled ''An act to Incor- porate Hanover Academy." This act is preceded by the following preamble : Whereas, It has been represented to this General Assembly that a number of citizens of Jeffer- son County, residing in the vicinity ol Hanover in said county, have, by the aid of private con- tributions, established an Academy at Hanover, by means of which a liberal education may be ac- quired by the youth of that vicinity ; and whereas, it is represented to this General Assembly that an act to incorporate the said Academy would greatly promote the laudable object of the citizens aforesaid." And thereupon, it was enacted that John Fi nley Crowe, James H. Johnson, Williamson Dunn, George Logan, John M. Dickey, Sam- uel G. Lowry, Samuel Smock, William Reed, Samuel Gregg and Jere- miah Sullivan should be, and they were thereby constituted a body corporate and politic to be known by the name of the Trustees of Hanover Academy, and were granted the usual powers and subjected to the usual liabilities of such corporations. The Trustees of said Academy were authorized to put the same under the direction and supervision of any body of learned men and to receive donations and legacies of personal and real estate. It was carefully provided, how- ever, that the land to be held by said corporation at any one time should not exceed 160 acres. In 1829 the Academy was placed under the care of the Synod of Indiana. The following resolution was adopted by the Synod : Resolved, That this Synod adopt Hanover Academy as a synodical school, provided that the Trustees of the same will permit the Synod to establish a Theological Department, and appoint Theological Professors." The condition was readily granted, and the Synod unanimously elected the Rev John Matthews, D. D., of Shepherdstown, Virginia, to the chair of Theology. Dr. Matthews accepted, and, with charac- teristic zeal, gave his whole time and talents to the interests of the institution. The Theological Department was continued at Hanover until 1810, when it was removed to New Albany, Indiana. It was subsequently removed to Chicago, where it is now situated, and known as the Northwestern Theological Seminary of the Presbyte- rian Church. 12 During this year (1829) an academy building was erected of brick,, about forty feet long, twenty-six feet wide and two stories high. It was located on the quarter-section heretofore mentioned on what had been my father's sugar camp. It was constructed mainly by the contributions and labor of the people of the neighborhood and of Madison — much after the manner that the ^Children of Israel," when the tabernacle was to be built in the wilderness, "brought a willing offering unto the Lord, every man and woman whose hearts made them willing to bring gifts." Similarly, for our wilderness enterprise, any and all useful gifts were acceptable and accepted. I remember that one of the contributors, who probably had more live stock than money, gave a horse, which was utilized in the work of construction and very appropriately called "Donum" In 1832, the Trustees of the Academv erected a three-storv building, of which the body of what is now the village church was the first story. The new building was connected with the old struct- ure, which stood just east of it. By an act of the Legislature, amendatory of the preceding one, approved February 2d, 1832, authority was granted to the Trustees of the Academy to hold a permanent landed estate to an amount not exceeding 640 acres. HANOVER COLLEGE. At the same session of the Legislature, my father visited the State Capital and made an effort to procure a college charter for the Academy. This effort was defeated by his brother-in-law, Dr. David H. Maxwell, then President of the Board of Trustees of the State Col- lege at Bloomington. The bill for the incorporation of Hanover Col- lege had parsed the House, been sent to the Senate and referred by that body to their Committee on Education, of which Hon. James B. AVhitcomb, Senator from the Bloomington district, was a member. He was afterwards Governor of the State and United States Senator. He was instructed by the Committee to report the bill back to the Senate with the recommendation that it be passed. About this time, Senator Whitcomb received a letter from Dr. Maxwell, strongly urg- ing him to defeat the bill chartering Hanover College, and Senator Whitcomb managed to do so, in a way not unknown to modern times, that is by pocketing the bill. This defeat caused a pretty sharp cor- respondence between the two brothers-in-law; Dr. Maxwell maintain- ing that it was better that the few active friends of education in the State should unite in the support of one college and make it prosper- ous and efficient rather than that they should fritter away their 13 strength on several weak colleges. My father maintained, on the other han'l, that there should be no monopoly in education, that the people should have as many colleges as they were willing to support, and informed the Doctor pretty plainly that he would have better success the next time he applied for a charter for Hanover College. He attended the next meeting of the General Assembly of the State and procured the passage of an act, which was approved January 1st, 1833, to amend the act incorporating Hanover Academy, changing the name of the institution to Hanover College, and conferring upon it all the usual powers of collegiate corporations. This act, however, was not procured without much difficulty. Its passage was vigorous- ly opposed by the friends of the State College, and also by many members of the Legislature, who were averse to chartering sectarian institutions, and especially the Presbyterian ones, on account of the great prejudice prevailing at that time against Presby- terians, mainly because of their opposition to the carrying of the mails on Sunday. I have heard my father say that this charter would probably not then have been procured, had it not been for the earnest efforts «>f Hon. John Dumonr. State Senator from Switz- erland County. Afterwards, when Mr. Dumont was a candidate for Governor, we gave him a strong vote in this township, although the State policy advocated by him was not the popular one here. The news of the passage of the act did not rea *h this village by railroad, or by telegraph, or telephone; but when it was received, it created an excitement as intense as if it had come by either of those ways. By the aid of tallow-dips an impromptu illumination of the Academy — now a College Building — was gotten up, and, we, villagers, Faculty and students, experienced as much joy, individually and collectively, as could well be contained by a community of its size. By the second section of this act, it was provided that the stu- dents in said college of sufficient bodily ability, should, during the time they continued as such, be exercised and instructed in some species of mechanical or agricultural labor in addition to the scien- tific and literary branches there taught, and that the Trustees should annually report to the Legislature the plan, progress and effects of such agricultural and mechanical exercise and instruction upon the health, studies and improvement of the students. The organization of classes under the college charter was made in May at the opening of the next session. There were then two ses- sions a year of five months each, the vacations being April and Octo- ber. At that time, my connection with the institution commenced, 14 as I had been elected Principal of the Preparatory Department. Whilst all were called students, fully two-thirds of those in attend- ance were in this department, and at least half of my pupils were older than myself. I had to teach Geography, Arithmetic, English Grammar, Algebra, Latin and Greek. The lesson, of the first class that recited to me was in Virgil, and the class consisted, according to my recollec- tion, of about forty students. There was at that time a large influx of students of an age greater than that of those usually in colleges. This was mainly due to the manual labor S3 7 stem. These young men had come, not to pass away time, but to get an education, (most of them having in view the Christian ministry), and were, as a body, the most diligent and faithful students I ever knew. I have seen men who afterwards became distinguished Doctors of Di- vinity, physicians, lawyers, professors in colleges and followers of other useful vocations, cutting cord wood, mauling rails, working in the cooper shop, in the printing office, shoving the plane, working as farm hands, or otherwise engaged in manual labor to defray the ex- penses of their education. The students generally were anxious to become good speakers. and the woods were full of embryo orators declaiming from the tops of rocks, from under waterfalls, everywhere, indeed, where they could find a secluded place. I remember that one of the stoutest and oldest students in the college dug a cellar for my father. I used to envy him his great muscles and feel a regret that such strength should be diverted from laborious physical employment. Not long after this cellar-digging, a traveling elocutionist made his appearance in Hanover, and organized a very large class from among the students, for afternoon exercises. He had a paper covered with extracts of poetry and prose. Among these was an extract from Paradise Lost, '•Eve's lamentation upon being expelled from Paradise." About this time, I was out in the far corner of my father's meadow, late one af- ternoon in haying time, helping about the work, when I heard a voice of what appeared to be a woman in greatest distress over in the woods, in a grape-vine thicket beyond the meadow. Immediately I scaled the fence, pitch fork in hand, determined as a true knight to rescue the dame or damsel in distress, when, upon approaching near enough to get a view, I found it was my cellar digger student prac- ticing on ''Eve's Lamentation. " I did not kill him, but, leaving him in his agony, returned to mj' work and thrust the prongs of my blood- less fork into the inoffensive hay. The next afternoon, lie got oil' his recitation in the college chapel, exciting more the laughter than the 15 tears of his audience. Excellent man as he was, he did not prove a success in the role of Eve. I continued to be Principal of the Preparatory Department for two years, and usually taught seven hours a day, four in the morn- ing and three in the afternoon. Sometimes when the recitations were over I could scarcely stand up; all this for three hundred dollars a year. Then I was elected to a professorship in the college, to take effect after a year's absence, which I spent at Yale. When I returned I entered upon the duties of Professor of Mathematics. Prof. Har- ney, who had previously filled that position, had, at his own request, been transferred to the chair of Natural Philosophy, Chemistry, etc. Although my duties as Professor of Mathematics were far easier than those I had discharged as Principal of the Preparatory Department, the pay was much better — eight hun-lred dollars per annum. I have found, through the experience of a long life, that usually the higher the position and the better the pay, the less is the drudgery to be performed. You observed that one provision of the college charter required that the Board of Trustees should make a report of its affairs to the Legislature at every session. Many of these reports were submitted and were printed by the Legislature, us its journals show, but, after the mo-t diligent search made at the State Capital at my request, a copy of but one of these could be found, viz : the one presented to the Legislature December IT, 1834, and subscribed "John Matthews, Chairman of the Executive Committee, Board of Trustees," frem which excellent report I quote the following: "Less than eight years ago a little grammar school of six scholars commenced on the manual labor system, formed the nucleus of Hanover College, which numbers at this time nearly two hundred students And that intellectual improvement is not impeded by two or three horns per diem, devoted to some healthful employment, the trustees are happy to be able to appeal to those gentlemen who have attended the examination of their students, being persuaded that it would bear a comparison with the examination of students of the same grade in any of the colleges of the West. Vigorous health and an almost entire freedom from those diseases to which students and men of sedentary habits are subject, form no unimportant item in the good effects of the sys- tem. This is conspicuously shown in our institution. Dyspepsia is scarcely known by name, and there has but one death occurred among the students since its organization, and that was a year and a half ago, by cholera. Jn fine, the spirit of independence and enterprise, together with the habits of industry and economy generated and cherished by the system, should be' sufficient to recommend it to all patriots and philanthropists, were there no other good effects resulting from it. Of the College, the Faculty at present consists of the following gentlemen, viz: James Blythe, D. D., President. John F. Crowe, A. M., Vice-President. John H. Harney, A. M., Professor of Mathematics. M. A. H. Niles, A. M.. Professor of Languages. W. M. Dunn, A B., Principal of the Preparatorv Department. C. K. Thompson, A. B ., Tutor. The College proper is divided into four regular classes, comprehending altogether about eighty students. Connected Avith these are the preparatory and scientific departments, comprising some- thing above a hundred. * * * * At this moment of religious and political excitement* ' / 16 ■when other institutions, both in the East and in the West, have been convulsed by a spirit of dis- organization, it is peculiarly pleasing to find so large a number of young gentlemen collected trom eight or nine different States, manifesting towards each other no other feelings than those of fraternal affection. While there is a careful avoidance of the inculcation of purely sectarian principles, the great and fundamental doctrines of the Bible are not only made the basis and standard of morality, but daily impressed upon the minds of the students as worthy of their most serious attention. In conclusion, the trustees have only to regret that they are unable, for want of funds, to carry out their plans and the consequent hazard to which the experiment is unavoidably exposed." It may be asked how could so great a number of students be ac- commodated with board and lodging. Nearly every farm-house in the neighborhood received them as boarders at low rates ; almost every house in the village was filled to its utmost capacity with them, and most of the second and all of the third story of the college building was divided off into lodging-rooms. Then there was a hotel owned by the college, which was afterwards burned down. The college corporation also erected a row, containing eight or ten rooms for students, known as '^Bachelors' Row." Some students built rooms for themselves ; many clubbed together in messes, thus materially reducing their expenses ; others did their own cooking in their rooms. Indeed, this village was then a perfect hive of busy students. There was no college in the West so accessible. There were no railroads in the West at that time, and long journeys were usually made by water. Students could reach Hanover, as they did, in that way, from all parts of the Mississippi valley. But the manual labor system ultimately failed, as seemed to be rather foreboded in Dr. Matthews' report, and that failure caused a great dispersion of students. This system failed because either the students had to be paid much more for their labor than it was worth, or the amount they would receive therefor would be too small to be of any material help to them. The college corporation, in striving to encourage the students by high wages, became bankrupt. THE BRIDGE. The people and students who were here before 1835, do not only remember how muddy were our streets, but they will particularly re- member the difficulty of making the steep and slippery ascent to the college from the west. To remove this difficulty, the ladies held a fair in the college to raise funds for the erection of a bridge, and, principal ly, by the funds so raised, a bridge was constructed, which proved to be a great convenience. Not long after the construction of this bridge and before there were any railroads in Indiana, Hon. Richard W. Thompson, late Secretary of the United States Navy, in driving with his wile in his carriage from Madison to Bedford, in this State, where he then resided, stopped for the night at the village hotel we then had here. i 17 Taking a walk together next morning, when crossing this bridge their eyes being blinded by the rays of the rising sun, they did not observe that some planks had been removed from the bridge, and so Mrs. Thomp- son fell through down upon the rocks and was so badly injured that she was obliged to remain some time here under medical treatment. The planks, it was supposed, had been removed by some mischevious stu- dent, whose recklessness barely escaped causing a homicide. THE TORNADO. On the 4th of July, 1837, there passed over this place shortly be- fore sun-down, a tornado or cyclone, which I venture to say has not- been forgotten by any who witnessed it. The afternoon had been close and sultry. My sister had two young lady friends visiting her that- evening and Eev. Mr. Mills, a young minister from New Jersey, who was at that time supplying the church of this place, was also of the company. Stepping to the front door after tea, I noticed the clouds in the west were very black and in tumultuous commotion. The tornado came rushing on the wings of the wind and struck the west end of our house with a violence which it seemed as if nothing could resist. The ladies were terribly frightened ; indeed so much so that I had great difficulty in keeping the two visitors from rushing out of the house to seek their home, so alarmed were they for the safety of the loved ones there. Mr. Mills, looking from the window, frightened them still more as he announced the destructive progress of the storm. "There," said he, "goes the big locust tree," and "There," he exclaimed, "goes the roof off Dr. Matthews' house. Oh! the college is blown to pieces! and there goes Prof. Niles' house, all of it." The tornado caused this destruction almost as rapidly as Mr. Mills told of it. Dr. Matthews' house, which was unroofed, was the house now owned by Mrs. Eastman. The roof and third story of the college were, in effect, destroyed, and what had been the first academy building adjoining the college, was blown down to the very foundation stones. The home of Prof. Niles, who was then with his family visiting in the East, a frame house with verandahs to the lower and upper stories, was so completely demol- ished that even the ground floor with heavy oak sills was carried some dis- tance from the foundation. His furniture and books were carried off. Some of the latter, together with love letters which had paseed between himself and wife before they were married, were scattered about across the river on the Kentucky hills, and carried even as far as Carrollton. The tops of the trees were twisted off down the deep ravine on the right and up the hill-side over the river, leaving the course of this tor- nado well marked for many years, and perhaps still to be seen. The 18 tornado was followed by a very heavy fall of rain. The scene at the col- lege chapel at prayers next morning was enough to discourage almost any heart. As the Faculty and students walked in, the broken glass on the floor was crunched beneath their feet, and hardly could they find dry places upon which to be seated. Those were doleful days for Hanover. But when everything else fails in regard to this college, then the work of prayer and faith seems to gain additional strength. The congregation here had torn down their old stone church edifice and raised about fifteen hundred dollars for building a new one on the old site. An arrangement was made be- tween the Trustees of the Church. and the Trustees of the College by which this church subscription was turned over for the repair of the college, and the congregation thereby secured the College Chapel per- manently as their house of worship. By this means and such dona- tions as could be raised, the third story of the college edifice was wholly taken down, a new roof put on and other repairs made so far as there were means to make them. At the close of the session after the tornado I resigned my Pro- fessorship on account of the financial embarrassments of the college, I severed my relations with the Faculty and students with great regret, the most cordial good will having always existed between us. Dr. Blythe, the first President of the College had previously been Presi- dent of Transylvania University at Lexington, Kentucky. He was a man of exalted Christian character, of enthusiastic nature and drew to himself the warm affection of all who knew him. Dr. Matthews, who succeeded him as acting President, was an Apostle Paul in his strong convictions, logical force and earnest Christian character. Of Dr. Crowe, who was the Vice President of the College, I need not speak here to you. His memory is enshrined in all your hearts. Professor Harney was a stalwart, physically and mentally. Years afterwards, when he was editor of the Louisville Democrat, he bravely held aloft his country's banner when the fury of rebellion raged all around him. Professor Niles was an excellent scholar and a faithful and efficient instructor. He did not return here after the destruction of his house and property. He became pastor of a Congregational Church in Massachusetts. Tutor Thompson was for many years one of the most faithful and useful ministers in the Presbyterian Church in this State. All these blessed men, with whom I was associated so early in life, have passed away; "and I only am escaped alone to tell thee." SURRENDER OF THE COLLEGE CHARTER. Here I might end this address, for I have, as best I could, per- formed the duty assigned to me on this occasion to give a sketch of the u early history" of Hanover College, but as I have copies of acts of the Legislature which have had great influence on the career of this institution, I think it best to complete its legislative record. I will 19 pass over all the intervening history between the close of my connec- tion with the Faculty to the surrender of the College charter to the State Legislature. This surrender was brought about through the great influence of the Rev. Dr. E. D. McMaster, President of the College. While we may greatly regret the course he pursued in this regard, we do not withdraw from him our admiration for his character, or our high appreciation of his scholarship and ability and success as an instructor. He procured a charter for a University to be located at Madison, and an act approved January 18th, 1844, which recited that, "Whereas, The Trustees of Hanover College have proposed to surrender to the General As- sembly of the State of Indiana, the charter of the College and to dissolve the said corporation on certain conditions by them stated, and have requested the said General Assembly to take the necessary and proper measures for the settlement of the pecuniary affairs of said corporation." It was, therefore, enacted that the act creating Hanover College be repealed, and that the Governor should appoint some suitable person as receiver or trustee for the settlement of the pecuniary affairs of said corporation, who was authorized to sell all its property, real and per- sonal, and to apply the proceeds to the payment of its debts. The Governor appointed me receiver under this act. The corpor- ation was insolvent, very. 1 proceeded to sell at public auction all its property. I stood on the platform where I had so often sat as a mem- ber of the Faculty, and sold the college edifice, performing the duties of auctioneer myself to save expenses. "Going ! Going ! Going ! Gone," struck off to Williamson Dunn, the only bidder, for the nominal sum of four hundred dollars. By the same act it was provided that if there should be any surplus of effects after paying all the debts of the cor- poration, such surplus thereby was granted and given to the Trustees of the Madison University. It was further provided that the Union Lit- erary and Philalathean Societies should thereafter sustain the same re- lation to the Madison University that they had previously sustained to Hanover College. An additional section of this law revived the act incorporating Hanover Academy, and provided that John Finley Crowe, Tilley H. Brown, Williamson Dunn, George Logan, William Reed, John M. Young, James H. Graham, Thomas D. Young, Robert Symington, Ja- cob Haas and John D. Smock should be Trustees under the provision, of said act, and that all the privileges, immunities and property possessed and held by said corporation at the time of its incorporation or erection into a college should be restored. THE RE-CHARTER OF HANOVER COLLEGE. The experiment of establishing a university at Madison failed main- ly for the reason that the Synod of Indiana refused to accept it as a substitute for Hanover College. The result was that an act to re-char- ter Hanover College passed by the General Assembly of the State, and approved December 24, 1844, enacted that John Finley Crowe, Wil- liamson Dunn, James Henderson, Daniel Lattimore, Tilley H. Brown, James A. McKee, Thomas W. Hynes, Robert Symington, John D. Smock, James H. Graham, David Monfort, Jacob Haas, Thomas D. Young, John M. Young, George Logan and William Reed, should be constituted a 20 body corporate by the name and style of the Trustees of Hanover Col- lege, to have succession and exist forever, with the customary powers of college corporations. This charter further provided that "one-half of the Board of Trustees should be filled by the Board itself, the other half by the Synod of Indiana, in connection with the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America, commonly known and distinguished as the Old School Presbyterian Church." The Legislature also passed acts rescinding the acts transferring the Union Literary and Philalathean Societies to the Madison Univer- sity. This I believe is a full history of all the legislation respecting the literary institutions established in this place up to and including the act restoring the College Charter. CONCLUSION. Begging the pardon of this patient audience for detaining them so long, I will conclude my remarks by repeating almost verbatim a part of the address which, as the representative of the Board of Trustees, I delivered here twenty-four years ago to the Rev. Dr. Wood on his in- auguration as President of this College : From the College edifice, "-beautiful for situation as Mount Zion," we may now look down upon the Ohio, flowing in its peaceful course, without a murmur and almost without a ripple on its quiet surface. That river has had its flood time, when its swollen waters could have floated the commerce of the world. It has had its summer droughts when the fountains of its supply, in mountain and valley, were well nigh dried up ; when the great red sun, day after day, poured down upon its bosom his fervid rays, drinking up its w T aters and laying bare its depths. It has had its autumn mists and fogs, filling its valley from hill top to hill top, and burying it from sight. It has had its winter, when its chilled waters were locked in icy chains, and, to the eye, it moved not but was dead. But look ! there it is to-day, a constant ever- useful stream, winding its peaceful course through the beautiful hills of the lovely landscape before us. Like to these are the vicissitudes through which this college has passed. It has had its flood-time of pros- perity, when students crowded its halls, so that there was not room to receive them. It has had its summer droughts, when its resources were exhausted ; and its autumn when gloom and discouragement as a cloud enveloped it. It has had its winter too, cold and dreary, when it stiff- ened in the firm frost. Then its enemies exclaimed: "It is dead!" and its friends, with hands hanging down in sorrow, seemed to answer: "It is dead! It is dead !" But yet Hanover College lives. It is a thing of life like that beautiful river. The fathers, who founded it in faith and prayer, have all passed away. Their sons and other friends have arisen in their places to cherish and care for the institution which the fathers founded; and thus we trust it shall be from generation to generation, and that so long as that river shall flow, marking its course by the ver- dure of its banks and the fruitful ness of its valleys and hills, so long- shall this College remain, marking its course in the history of our race by the rich blessings it shall confer on mankind. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 029 908 915 # V Hollinger Corp. P H8.5 \ LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 029 908 91 u~ii; n ,w»- c.