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| Hosea Ballou II, 1853 |
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Hosea Ballou II (1796-1861)
Hosea Ballou, 2d (1796-1861) was the first president
of Tufts College, serving from 1853 until his death in 1861. He
was born in Guilford, Vermont, in 1796. He was a Universalist clergyman,
theologian, and historian. He presided over the parishes of Roxbury
and Medford, Massachusetts, from 1821-1852, published the "Ancient
History of Universalism" in 1829, and received an honorary Doctorate
of Divinity from, and became an Overseer of, Harvard University
in 1845.
Having been one of the biggest influences in the establishment
of the College, Hosea Ballou 2d became the first president of Tufts
College in 1853. He was its first professor of History and Intellectual
Philosophy. Hosea Ballou 2d established the college's first curriculum
which led to the Bachelor of Arts degree. He died in office in 1861.
His personal library remains as a legacy to the university to this
day.
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