RULES, ORDERS, ANTD STATUTES OF HARVARD COLLEGE INSTITUTED'- BY THE PRESIDENT AXD ('O 0 UNTXCIL OF INE I F ENGLAND 23D JULY, 168(t PIRESENTED) AT A MIEEITING 01F THE MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL SOCIEITY INx IARClIH, 1876; WITH REMlAIKS BY TIE SECIIETAIIY RULES, ORDERS, AND STATUTES OF HARVARD COLLEGE INSTITUTED BY THE PRESIDENT AND CO UNCIL OF NEW ENGLAND 23D JULY, 1686 PRESENTED AT A MIEETING OF THE MASSACHUSETTS HISTORICAL SOCIETY IN MARCH, 1876; WITH REMARKS BY THE SECRETARY CAMBRIDGE PRESS OF JOHN WILSON AND SON 1876 LAWS OF HARVARD COLLEGE, 1686. AT a stated meeting of the Massachusetts Historical Society, on the 8th of March, 1876, the Recording Secretary, Mr. DEANE, read the following letter from Prof. CHARLES ELIOT NORTON, of Cambridge, transmitting an early copy of the laws of Harvard College:CAMBRIDGE, March 7, 1876. MY DEAR MR. DEANE, - A college lecture will prevent me, much to my regret, from being present at the next meeting of the Historical Society. I was much interested in the published account of Dr. Green's communication at the last meeting concerning an early copy of the Laws of Harvard College. I send you, herewith, a copy of the Rules, Statutes, and Ordinances of the College, of somewhat later date, 1686; which may be worth comparing with the earlier manuscript. This is of interest, as you will notice, from having pasted into it the Admittatur of President Leverett, signed by President Urian Oakes. Toward the end of the little book is a curious admonition of one Ballantine for the sin of excesive drinking. A certain John Ballantine graduated in 1694. If this be the person admonished, the admonition would probably have been administered by Increase Mather. By a comparison of the citation from the Statutes in the admonition, with the similar passage on page 3, it would seem that both were written by the same person. This little manuscript came, so far as I can ascertain, from the papers of old Professor Wigglesworth. Should the Society wish to print it or any part of it, I shall be pleased to leave it in your hands so long as it may be needed for this purpose. I am sincerely F-ours, ( E. NORTON. CHARLES DEANE, Esq., Recording Secretary. 4 Mr. DEANE proceeded:This little manuscript seems to be a memorandum book of Tutor John Leverett, afterwards President, whose admittatur to Harvard College is pasted inside of the second leaf.* A number of matters relating to the College are entered in the book, all in his well-known hand. On the first three pages he has entered the code of laws for the government of the College, established by the President and Council of New England in the brief presidency of Joseph Dudley, in the year 1686. The unhappy condition of the College, for a number of years after the dissolution of the colony charter in 1684, is thus referred to by Mr. Quincy in the first volume of his " History of the College," at pages 57, 58:"During the period which elapsed between the dissolution of the old charter of the colony in 1684, and the arrival of the new charter in 1692, the College partook of the embarrassments of the colony. The public records of the latter, for several years, are lost; and those of the former are extremely deficient. It appears, however, from such of them as remain, that Joseph Dudley, who held, between May and December, in the year 1686, the commission of President of the colony; and William Stoughton, who held, during the same time, that of Deputy President, availed themselves of their transitory power to place the College on a basis adapted to the uncertainty which hung over its destinies in common with those of the colony. On the 23d of July, in that year, they, with their Council, met at Cambridge, and appointed Increase MIather Rector, and John Leverett and Thomas [Williarn] Brattle Tutors; enjoining upon the Rector to make his'usual visitations,' and vesting in the two last'the government' of the College." The manuscript College-Book, No. IV., begins with the meeting at Cambridge, 23d July, 1686; and the following is a copy of the record of that meeting, in the handwriting of Leverett: - * Augusti 23~, 1676. Admittatur Johannes Leverettus in Collegium Harvardinum, per me Urianum Oakes, Presidem. Daniel Gookin & Sociis. Ammi Ruhamalh Corlett, 5 HARVARD COLLEDGE.,JOSEPH DUDLEY, Esq., Pres.t At a meeting of the HonWr STOUGnTON, Esq., D. Presdt ourable President and CounMAJ. JN~ PINCIION 1 MA~lAJ. J.X~ PINCIION l cil, at Cambridge, July 23~, Present M{AJ. PET. BULKLEY ci, Anno Domi' 1686, CAPT. WAITE WVINTHORPE Esqrs Anno Dorn' 1686, | HAPT 110II OMFW GIDXNFPEY Ir~ JIt was unanimously agreed JN USHFOOMER IDNEY j upon and declared, 1. That the Revd Mr Increase Mather be desired to accept the Rectorship of the Colledge and make his usual Visitations. 2. That Mr Jn~ Leverett and Mr WMm Brattle be the Tutors. and enter upon the Government of the Colledge, and manage the publick reading in the hall. 3. That Charlestown ferry and Mr Penoyer's Legacy, i.e. one moiety of it, as it falleth, be settled upon the Sd Tutors as their Sallary. 4. That their Pupills each of them pay to their Respective Tutors ten Shillings p Quarter for their Tuition. 5. That Andrew Boardman, the Cooke of the Colledge, do henceforward manage the office of Steward in the manner as of late. This " Dudley Code " of laws (if I may thus designate it), bears the same date as the meeting at Cambridge; namely, "10~ caleud. Sextil. Anno Domini, 1686 "; and it may be added that the code is entered in College-Book, No. IV., at pages 13 and 14, in Leverett's hand. This Code, largely compiled from the previous one in Quincy, I. 577-579, has never been printed, and I have never seen any reference in print to the existence of such a code. The Statutes in Mather's " Magnalia," Book IV. pp. 132-134 (probably those that were in force when that work was completed in 1698), though similar to the greater part of these, are more numerous. The preamble also has been changed, and the old title of President restored, in the Mather copy. The preamble or heading of this Dudley Code may be rendered thus: " The rules, orders, and statutes, approved and constituted by the Honorable President and Council of the Territory and Dominion of our Lord the King, in New England, to which scholars admitted, and to be admitted, into Harvard College, are to be obedient, for the promotion of good letters and manners, during the pleasure of his most serene royal Majesty, or until it is otherwise ordered." 6 This memorandum book contains next, on page 4, a minute of an admonition of one E. G., 23 April, 1688: and a minute that on 12th September, of the same year, S. M. and D. D. publicly confessed their fault in violating the statutes, and promised future obedience. The triennial shows that the only E. G. who could have been censured in 1688 was Edmund Goffe, of the class of 1690. S. M. may be either Samuel Moody, of the class of 1689, or Samuel Mather, or Samuel Mansfield, or Stephen Mix of 1690. As D.D. is joined in the offence (the " nefarious" one of using the vernacular in their conversation within the college precincts, the statute forbidding which, by the way, is not in the Mather copy of the Laws), and as the only D. D. in College at this time was Daniel Dennison, of the class of 1690, probably one of the S. M.'s of that class is the person referred to. Next follow the forms of presenting and admitting candidates for degrees,- the same as those in use in President Dunster's time, as given by Quincy, I. 580, except that the "Placetne" is added in the margin. President Leverett notes that he took these forms from the archives of the College, 1 July, 1690. On the next page is an extract from the Statutes of the University of Oxford, the section " on the respect to be paid by Junior Students to their Seniors"; * and then, after a break of several blank leaves, we have three minutes concerning the monitorship. Lord (Joseph, of the class of 1691) is appointed monitor on "quarter-day, 17 October," and is continued in the office on the next quarter-day, 17 January, 1690-91. On the April quarter-day, 1691, he renders up the monitor's office and bill, which are committed to White (Ebenezer, of the class of 1692). The book closes with a minute of a public admonition inflicted on one Ballantine (John, of class of 1694), for excessive drinking. No date is given. As Increase Mather, the President, did not reside at the College (he did not return from * Every thing thus far described in this little book is in Latin. What follows is in English. England till May, 1692, after an absence of four years); and, as the language of this admonition could hardly have come from his lips or pen, it is probable, I think, that we have here the precise words used by Leverett as Senior Fellow, in administering it; and it may have been written out by him here in anticipation of this duty. But few records of corporation meetings exist during these years, and these notes of college punishment may be worth preserving. These public admonitions were administered after morning prayers, before all the students. The following is the language of the admonition administered to Ballantine:The pspect you have before you is a sufficient explication of this your unusuall being called together; nor should we have any occasion, if' it were no more necessary for wt we have to say to him w~ is ye single and sorrowfull object of all our eyes, then it is for your information, to tell you that this person stands before us convict of the sin of excessive drinking, wch is a violation both of ye Divine laws and the Statutes of this house. We have amongst those R's and Statutes, by which we are to govern you, and by which you are to be governed, such an One as this: [statute 11 is here recited]. The crime which we thus publickly animadvert upon is one of those atrociora delicta, which might and would have been more severely reflected upon then now it is, if an early sense in the Criminall, had not moved Compassion to temper justice wth an allowable alloy. It is one of those ill things against wch there ought not, nor ever must there be any Expectation in any one of a graduall pceedure. It is as hath been said a breach made upon the Laws of god, and the Rules of this house. It falls therefore wthin the Compass of the late-recited Statute, which Statute also helps us with an hint of the manner of punishment we may Pceed in. Conforminably eno to it we have Censured this delinquent to be thus publickly admonished, and to make as publick a Confession of Fault. Wherfore, you Ballantine, we are now to admonish you; and wish to Almighty God thy [sic] you may recv our Admonitions with Endeavours like to our designs, wch are that they may be for your good: for we have no other designs as you [sic] nor desires, then that you may so see the no pfit of that thing wherof we trust yu are now so ashamed, as never to repeat it, or any other so unpfitable, so ill a thing. We therefore do now wth such desires and designs admonish you; and we are to admonish you of two things chiefly, 1. of the evil nature of yor Crime, and 2. of the way wherby you may be freed both from ye guilt and scandal of it. 1. We are to admonish you of the Evil nature of your fault. You 8 and every body else know, that yr is no fault, but is the transgression of som Law. And it is as knowable that the purer any laws are the fouler is ye fault wCh is a transgression of.: The Dudley Code here follows: Regula Ordinationes et statuta approbata et constituta p Honorabilern Praesidem et colcilium Territorii et Dominii D. Regis in NovAnglia quibus Scholares et admissi et admittendi in Collegium Harvardinfi ad boilas Literas et mores promovendum, subjiciendli sunt, dum Serenissimwe Regie majestati ita visum fuerit, aut aliter mandatum. Dat. ex Aula' Coll' Harv! 100 (Calen(d. Sextil. Anno Domini 1686. Annoqc Regcni R. Jacobi Secundi Secundo. (1.) Cuicunque fuerit peritia legendi Ciceronem, aut quemvis aliurn ejusmodi classicum autllorem ex tempore, et congrue loquenidi ac scribendi Latine facultas, oratione thm soluta quam ligata, suo, ut aiunt, marte, et ad unguem inflectendi Graecorum norninum, verborumque paradigmata; hic adlmissionem in collegium jure potest expectare. Quicunque vero destitutus fuerit hac peritia, admissionem sibi neutiquam vendicet. (2.) Quicunque in collegium admittuntur, iidem etiam contubernio excipiendi sunt; et unusquisque scholarium aeconomo tres libras, cum hospitio eccipitur, numerabit; eidemque ad finem cujusque trimestris quoi( debitum erit, solvet: nec licet ulli acalemico, nondum gradu ornato, convictum extra collegium quaerere, nisi veniia impetrata a Rectore aut suo Tutore. Si quis a. hanc Rectoris aut Tutoris inrdulgentiam obtinebit, consuetudinem usitatain fideliter observabit; sin autem aliquis h collegio des(etlendo privatam institutionem qulesierit, copia vel a Rectore, vel'a Tutoribus illi non facta, nullo privilegio academico potietur. (3.) Dum hic egerint, tempus studiose redimunto, privilegio thm communes omniurn scholarium horas, quam suis pralectionibus destinatas, observando. (4.) Unusquisque scholarium exercitia omnia scholastica et religiosa, thm publica quam privata sibi propria, preestabit. Adhuc in statu pupillari degentes, sexies quotaunis rostra oratoria ascendent. Unlaqiaque septimanl bis disputationibus publicis sophista interesse debent: Cum baccalaurei tum sophistan analysin in aliquam S. literarum partem instituent. Baccalaurei singulis semestribus publice quastiones philosophicas sub Rectoris moderamine discutient: absente vero Rectore, duo seniores Tutores moderatoris partes alternatim agent. (5.) Ne quis, sub quovis proatextu, hominum, quorum perditi ac discincti sutnt mores, consuetudine utitor. (6.) Nemo in statu pupillari degenls, nisi concessa priuis'a Tutore, venia', ex oppido exeat: nec quisquam, cujuscuuque gradfis aut ordinis fuerit, tabernas aut diversoria, ad comessandum, aut bibendum, 9 accedat, nisi ad parentes, curatores, nutricios, aut hujusmodi accersitus fuerit. (7.) Nullus schglaris, quicquam qd Lex denarios valeat nullo parentum, curatorum, aut Tutorum approbante emito, vendito, aut commutato. Qui autem seciis fecerit,'a Rectore aut Tutore, pro delicti ratione, multabitur. (8.) Scholares inter Se venacula lingua intra Collegii limites nullo praetextu utitor, nisi ad Orationem aut aliud aliquid exercitium publicum anglice habendaf evocati fuerint. (9.) Siquis scholarium'a precibus aut pralectionibus abfuerit, nisi necessitate coactus, aut Tutoris nactus veniarn; admonitioni, aut aliusmodi, pro Rectoris aut tutoris prudentia, poence, si plus quam semel in hebdomade peccaverit, erit obnoxius. (10.) Nullus scholaris quavis de causa (nisi promonstrata et approbata Rectori ant Tutori suo) a studiis statisve exercitiis abesto: excepta semi-hora jentaculo, prandio vero sesqui-hora, concessa; nec-non ccenve usque ad horam nonam. (11.) Siquis scholarium ullam Dei, aut hujus collegii legem, sive animo perverso, seu ex supina negligentia' violarit, postquam fuerit bis admonitus, gravioribus, pro Rectoris aut Tutoris prudentia, poeilis coerceatur. In atrocioribus autem delictis, ut adeo gradatim procedatur, nemo expectet. (12.) Quicunque scholaris, probatione habita, poterit sacras utriusque instrumenti Scripturas de textu originali Latine interpretari, et logice resolvere; fueritque naturalis et moralis philosophive princil)iis ilnbutus; vitaque et moribus inculpatus; et publicis quibusvis comitiis ab inspectoribus et Rectore collegii approbatus, primo suo gradu possit ornari. (13.) Quicunque scholaris locum habuit communem, scriptamque synopsin vel compendium logicre, naturalis aut moralis philosophiae, arithmeticre, geomnetrim, aut astronomiae, exhibuerit, fueritque ad theses suas defendendas paratus; nec-non originalium, ut supra dictum, est linguarum peritus; quem etiamnum morum integritas ac studiorum diligentia cohonestaverint, publicis quibusvis comitiis probatione facta, secundi gradus, magisterii nimirum, capax erit. (14.) Unusquisque scholaris harum ordinationum exemplar, h Rectore et aliquo Tutorum subscriptum, sibi comparabit, priusquam in collegium admittetur. (15.) Denique Quicumque admissi sunt in collegium dictis Ordinationibus subjectionem suam subscribendo significabunlt.