Jeremiah Chamberlain
Jeremiah Chamberlain was an American Presbyterian minister, educator and college administrator. He was president of three institutions of higher education between 1823 and 1851, specifically Centre College, the College of Louisiana, and Oakland College.
Born in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, to a former Continental Army colonel, Chamberlain studied under David McConaughy in his youth before enrolling at Dickinson College. He graduated from Dickinson in 1814 and from Princeton Theological Seminary in 1817. Following a mission trip, he took his first pastorate at a Presbyterian church in Bedford, Pennsylvania, where he stayed from 1818 to 1822. He left upon his election as president of Centre College, which had been chartered nearly four years earlier and was struggling financially. During his time in Danville, Centre awarded its first five degrees and transferred governing authority to the church in exchange for financial support. Chamberlain left Centre in 1826 to become president of the College of Louisiana, a predecessor of Centenary College of Louisiana, and stayed until 1828. He then moved to Mississippi and made plans, later approved by the church, to open a school in Claiborne County. The school opened as Oakland College in May 1830; Chamberlain was its first president. He was strongly anti-slavery and helped to create the Mississippi Colonization Society during the 1830s.
Chamberlain was murdered at his home in 1851 by a local landowner named George Briscoe, who struck Chamberlain with a whip several times before fatally stabbing him in the chest. Most reports agree that the men were engaged in an argument, though the subject of the argument is disputed; some conclude the reason to be Chamberlain's anti-secession and anti-slavery views, while other reports make note of a student that was recently expelled from Oakland for a pro-secession speech as a possible motive. Chamberlain was buried two days later in Oakland College Cemetery, the same day Briscoe's body was found following his purported suicide. Oakland ultimately did not survive the Civil War and the death of another of its presidents; the campus was sold to the state of Mississippi in 1871 and reopened as what is now Alcorn State University.
Early life and education
Jeremiah Chamberlain was born January 5, 1794, in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. His father was James Chamberlain, the son of immigrants from Ireland and a colonel with the Continental Army in the American Revolutionary War, and his mother was Ann Sample, from York County, Pennsylvania. He was one of five sons in the family. Jeremiah was raised on his family's farm near Gettysburg, and he received his primary education from a classical school in York County. In 1809, aged fifteen, Chamberlain left the family farm to study under, and board with, the teacher and minister David McConaughy, described by the biographer William Buell Sprague as having "kept an excellent school for the preparation of young men for college". He graduated from Dickinson College, in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, in 1814; after leaving Dickinson, he enrolled at Princeton Theological Seminary and was a member of its first graduating class in 1817. Jeremiah's brother, John Chamberlain, also attended Dickinson and graduated in 1825; he was later a member of the faculty at Oakland from the college's opening until Jeremiah's death.Career
Missionary work, 1817–1822
Starting in November 1817, shortly following Chamberlain's graduation from Princeton, he began mission work in the Old Southwest and visited Natchez, Mississippi; New Orleans, Louisiana; and Mobile, Alabama, on the trip. In mid-1818, he was ordained as a minister by the Carlisle Presbytery and took his first ministry role as a preacher in Bedford, Pennsylvania. The Bedford church had been organized around 1780 and Chamberlain is listed as its third pastor by church historian George Norcross. Chamberlain also directed a classical school during his time at Bedford, and he preached from time to time at a church in Schellsburg. In 1819, he was appointed to more missionary work by the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America, this time for six months in the Missouri Territory.Entrance to academia, 1822–1828
On December 31, 1822, Chamberlain was elected president of a young Centre College in Danville, Kentucky. Centre had been chartered by the Kentucky General Assembly in January 1819, and its first president, James McChord, had died in May 1820, nearly three months after his election as president but before he actually ever took office. Chamberlain entered office upon his formal inauguration on July 2, 1823. He received an annual salary of $2,000 in the position. He inherited a college in the midst of serious financial struggles; Centre was receiving financial assistance from neither the state legislature, which had inadequate resources to help, nor from the church, which did not wish to help since it did not control the school. Much of these financial woes were put to an end in 1824, when an agreement was reached that the PCUSA take control of the school in exchange for a donation of $20,000. Centre graduated its first five students over Chamberlain's three years in office; the first graduation, in 1824, featured two students, one of whom was future Centre president Lewis W. Green. A new charter for the college was put into effect during Chamberlain's administration; among other things, it included a stipulation that the college could open a seminary, which it did in October 1828 with funding and personnel primarily provided by the PCUSA. In addition to his administrative and teaching duties at Centre, Chamberlain preached and taught bible classes for the duration of his time in Danville.Chamberlain was voted president of the College of Louisiana, in Jackson, Louisiana by the school's trustees on June 15, 1826. He won the vote over one William Walker of Massachusetts by a tally of eight to three. Chamberlain accepted the position no later than December 1826, and likely earlier as he had vacated Centre's presidency in September 1826. His immediate successor at Centre was David C. Procter in an interim capacity for roughly seven months until Gideon Blackburn was appointed to the full-time role. Chamberlain was the first of three consecutive Dickinson-alumni presidents of Centre.
In Louisiana, like at Centre, Chamberlain taught classes as part of his role as president, though only those for juniors and seniors; he was paid $3,000 annually. He was one of four members of the school's faculty, though one faculty member worked as principal of the preparatory department; the next additions to the faculty took place in 1829. The first literary societies were founded at the College of Louisiana during Chamberlain's time there. He resigned this position in 1828 in order to focus on opening his own school. Henry H. Gird was later elected president and professor of mathematics by the board in April 1829; he had begun this role by November of that year.
Oakland College, 1828–1851
Chamberlain moved to Mississippi and began his efforts to open a school in mid-1828. During this time, he preached at Bethel Presbyterian Church in Alcorn. After presenting his plans to the Mississippi Presbytery, the school was approved and the PCUSA opened Oakland College in Claiborne County on May 14, 1830, with Chamberlain as president. Its initial enrollment was three students, all of whom had come to Oakland from Louisiana, though it grew to 65 students by the end of the first term. The college received a charter from the Mississippi Legislature in 1831. A donation of $20,000 by John Ker allowed Oakland to establish an endowed professorship in theology in 1837; the minister S. Beach Jones was the first person permanently appointed to the position, though he had left to take a pastorate in New Jersey by October 1838. By 1839, the college's assets had grown to include a campus of, nineteen buildings, and an endowment approaching $100,000. Oakland received one of the largest donations to any antebellum Mississippi school, a $50,000 gift from the Natchez, Mississippi, businessman David Hunt, who donated roughly $150,000 in total to the school over its lifetime. By 1850, Oakland had graduated roughly 100 students.Personal life
Chamberlain married Rebecca Blaine, of Carlisle, on July 29, 1818. The couple had eleven children before Rebecca's abrupt death at age 43. Chamberlain remarried to Catharine Metzger, of Hanover, Pennsylvania, in 1845; they did not have children. One of Chamberlain's sons attended Oakland and graduated in 1851 but shortly after died of yellow fever.Chamberlain was opposed to both slavery. In the 1830s, he helped to create the Mississippi Colonization Society, an auxiliary of the American Colonization Society, whose goal was to send free people of color and freed slaves to the Mississippi-in-Africa colony, later annexed by the Colony of Liberia and now part of the modern-day Republic of Liberia. Others who were involved in founding the organization included the planters Isaac Ross, Edward McGehee, Stephen Duncan, and John Ker.
Chamberlain received an honorary Doctor of Divinity degree from Centre in 1828.
Death and legacy
There are many details regarding Chamberlain's death, though some are conflicting. He was murdered at around 4:30 p.m. on September 5, 1851, at his home on Oakland's campus in Lorman by a local landowner named George Briscoe. While Briscoe's exact motives are not known, sources agree that he arrived outside Chamberlain's house, perhaps drunk, and the men began to argue. Briscoe proceeded to accuse Chamberlain of dishonesty and made other disparaging remarks before knocking Chamberlain to the ground by hitting him in the head with a whip. When Chamberlain stood, holding a piece of wood in an attempt to defend himself, Briscoe stabbed him in the chest with a Bowie knife. Reports of the incident vary in the amount of time between the stabbing and Chamberlain's death; the Whig State Journal claimed that his death was "almost instant", though a modern biography by Dickinson College says he died in his wife's arms some "minutes later" and a contemporary report from The Port Gibson Herald and Correspondent specifies that he died in roughly fifteen minutes. The latter source also claims that Chamberlain, after being stabbed, walked back into the house before collapsing to his knees and speaking his last words—"I am killed." He was buried two days later in the Oakland College Cemetery; his first wife and four of their children are buried with him. Briscoe, who fled the scene, died two days after the incident; officially, the cause of his death is unknown, but several contemporary and modern sources list it as a suicide. Reported motives include Briscoe's general unhappiness with Chamberlain's anti-secession, anti-slavery views and the expulsion of a student, supposedly for giving a speech in favor of secession. Some sources classified the murder as an assassination.Fate of Oakland College
Immediately following Chamberlain's death, a minister and Oakland professor named John Russell Hutchinson became interim president. It took roughly three months for a permanent successor, the minister Robert L. Stanton, to take the presidency, which he did in early November 1851. Its next two presidents were James Purviance, a missionary and minister who resigned due to ill health in 1860, and William L. Breckinridge, a minister who, like Chamberlain, later became president of Centre College. The college closed in 1861 at the outbreak of the American Civil War. It reopened briefly after the war's end, under the leadership of president Joseph Calvin, though his death soon after quickly led to the school's permanent end. In 1871, the campus was sold to the state, and it reopened as Alcorn A&M College.In 1879, Chamberlain-Hunt Academy opened in Port Gibson, Mississippi, under the auspices of the Synod of Mississippi. It was named for Chamberlain and David Hunt. The academy functioned as a Presbyterian prep school—it became a military school in 1895—and was considered the de facto successor to Oakland. The school closed in 2014 due to low enrollment, as it had fewer than thirty students during its last academic year. Chamberlain's papers were originally housed by the academy before being moved to the Mississippi Department of Archives and History in Jackson.