THE following brief
statement, which appeared in the public papers immediately after the
exercises it describes, was admitted by the friends of the institution
to be a correct view of the state of things at Chapel Hill, and will
form our introduction to the University of the State.
At half-past tell o'clock
on Thursday morning, June 3d, 1842, the usual procession of students,
faculty, trustees, and visitors, was formed in front of the South
College, and moved through the beautiful grove of native forest trees,
carefully preserved as an ornament of the University grounds, round the
monument erected to the memory of the first President, the Rev. Joseph
Caldwell, D.D., who cherished the infant university and presided over
its destinies for some forty years, to the chapel, where the exercises
of Commencement Day were opened with prayer by the Rev. Professor
Mitchell, of the Presbyterian church, and closed with prayer by
Professor Green, of the Episcopal church.
During the exercises, His
Excellency Governor Morehead on the right of the President of the
University, Ex-Governor Swain, occupied the centre of the stage, and the
orators of the day, nine in number, in their rear; and the Trustees and
Professors on the right and left, occupied the wings of the stage,
leaving a space in front of the two presiding officers for the speakers'
stand; immediately in front of the platform were the students of the
University in a company.
The performances of the
young gentlemen, candidates for the Baccalaureate, adorned each with the
insignia of the literary society of which he was a member, were
characterized by correctness of sentiment and chasteness of style and
delivery; and an entire absence of the artificial action and pompous
diction sometimes so prominent in academic exercises. Before the
Bachelor's Degree was conferred, one of the Trustees read the report of
the Faculty, giving individually, and by name, the rank of each of the
candidates for the honor, from the time of entering the University till
the close of his studies; and in a general manner the standing of the
under-graduates. The senior class occupied a small area in front of the
stage, while the statement was read from the college records. Their rank
in scholarship, their behavior in recitations, public worship, and daily
prayers, and the number of absentees from any college exercise, were
each stated in order. The deep interest with which the whole assembly
listened to this record, evinced the power of the appeal to the sense of
honor and propriety in the bosoms of the young men. A strong sensation
pervaded the assembly when it was announced that on account of
inattention to college duties, after repeated admonitions, two
undergraduates were in clanger of being remitted to their parents; their
names were not mentioned; and it would have been cruel to have scanned
the anxious company for the discovery that might have been made. The
report closed by announcing that twenty-nine young gentlemen were
admitted to their first Degree; of these, one had not failed in an
exercise or duty during the whole four years' course; six others had not
failed during the senior year; and three others had not in their course
voluntarily failed; their few absences being the consequence of
unavoidable necessity.
The degree of A.B. was
then conferred by the President, calling the young gentlemen by name,
upon the stage, pronouncing the form of admission in Latin, and
presenting the parchment on which was written a certificate of the fact,
signed by the trustees and faculty. After the parchment had been given
to each Bachelor, a beautifully bound copy of the Bible, the pocket
edition of the American Bible Society, was presented, by the President,
to each of the graduates, with a Latin Form expressive of the desire of
the Faculty and Trustees—that it might be their guide to eternal life.
It is understood that besides public worship on the Sabbath, and daily
prayers in the chapel, instruction in the Bible forms a part of the
regular College course.
An air of solemnity
pervaded all the proceedings of this day, in the beautiful classic grove
of Chapel Hill. Events had occurred, which touched all hearts, in this
little community, composed of the Faculty of the University, their
families, and the students, and a few families connected with the
Institution. Death, perhaps, has not as many terrors in a retired
village, as in a crowded city; but it is more solemn and affecting. The
throng of business and Heartless dissipation in the city, neglects the
sick, the dying, and the dead, and makes it horrible and loathsome to
die. In a secluded village, or retired community, the death of a single
individual, for a time, stops the current of business, changes the tide
of feeling, awakens the tenderest sympathies, and brings Bome the truth,
that the narrow resting-place of the grave will soon be the home of us
all.
An amiable young lady,
the daughter of the Rev. AIexander Wilson, D.D., of Caldwell Institute,
Greensborough, returning in company with her father, from a visit to
Raleigh, had been detained a few days at. the house of Professor Philips
of the University, by a fever, which yielded to no medicine, but went on
slowly and steadily in its work, till, on the last day of May, it
triumphed over its victim. What parent could check the feelings of
sympathy with a 'parent for a sick child? What youth could shut the
heart against that indescribable interest, that surrounds an amiable
female, cheered in her struggles with disease and death, by the hope of
immortal life through Jesus Christ, her Lord? Simply to say, however,
that the inhabitants of Chapel Hill sympathized with the afflicted
parent and his dying child would be saying little of that classic
community.
A sense of religion had
grown up with that young lady, and the duty and privilege of prayer had
been felt and enjoyed from her earliest days. Her religious principles
maintained an unbroken ascendency through the various stages of her
disease till about a -day before her death, when the last struggle of
unbelief preceded the last struggle of mortal life. Her disturbed
appearance and restlessness of body exciting attention, she said—"it was
not pain of body, but that her mind was dark, and fears had come over
her, lest her hopes were vain, and would desert her in the last hour."
The Professor, whose hospitality was privileged in ministering to the
wants of the dying one, was immediately summoned from his college
exercises,—prayer was offered around her couch, till her soul was
quieted in the good hope through grace. From that time she enjoyed
unbroken peace, till she fell asleep in Jesus. The solemn funeral
services, conducted by Professor Philips, took place the evening
preceding the commencement, and her remains were laid in the
burying-ground of the University. You will see her monument as you pass,
a little distance from the gate.
The impression of the
whole scene on commencement day was entirely favorable; creditable alike
to the students, the Faculty and the University. Under the present
admirable arrangements, a studious youth may acquire as complete an
academic education as at any college in time Union; and parents and
guardians may be assured that unceasing attention is paid to the morals,
religious instruction, and studious habits of the young men committed to
the fostering care of the University."—(Watchman of the South, June
16th, 1542.)
The University of North
Carolina, introduced to the kindness of criticism and the public
sympathy by the preceding notice, is not a Presbyterian institution,
neither does it belong to, nor is it under the peculiar management of
any religious denomination. It is the child and property of the State at
large, in which all have an interest, and over it the Legislature the
ultimate control. As part of the community that loves the education of
youth, the Presbyterian congregations and families have a great and
increasing interest in the University, now rising in the public
estimation, in actual merit and in the influence on the public mind;
they must, in common with all the denominations in the State, feel the
pulsations of this literary and scientific heart of the State; as
patriots, they must, and do wish well to this nursery of citizens and
rulers, for its disease and pollution, or its health and moral action,
must affect every section of the State, and sooner or later guide the
fortunes of the whole. Who can estimate the influence of a well endowed
popular literary institution, as it pours out its streams, year after
year, into the bosoms of society, and like the Nile of Egypt, watering
every garden on the plains!
But there is another view
in which Presbyterians have been, and are, deeply involved as a
community that love their creed, and fully believe that, in the fair
working of their principles, the best interests of society will advance
with a rapid pace, even to the full enjoyment of the rights of man in
freedom of conscience, and undisturbed possession of life and property;
a view in which, as we look at the University, every Presbyterian may
point at it, as an exhibition or development of one part of their
principles, which convinces, not by argument, but by facts, that the
Presbyterian Church is neither monarchical nor aristocratical, nor
grasping, but is seeking honestly the welfare of the whole. This view
will be set forth in this sketch of the history of the institution, and
a short notice of him, justly styled the Father of the University,
JOSEPH CALDWELL.
On the 11th of December,
1789, the Legislature of North Carolina, in accordance with the
provisions of her constitution, adopted December 6th, 1776, requiring
all useful learning to be promoted in one or more universities,
incorporated an university with the following preamble to the charter:
"Whereas, in all well regulated governments it is the indispensable duty
of every legislature to consult the happiness of a rising generation,
and endeavor to fit them for an honorable discharge of the social duties
of life, by paying the strictest attention to their education; and
whereas an university supported by permanent funds, arid well endowed,
would have the most direct tendency to answer the above purpose, Be it
therefore enacted," &c., &c. The following forty names were inserted as
"the trustees of the University of North Carolina," viz.; Samuel
Johnson, James Iredell, Charles Johnson, Hugh Williamson, Stephen
Cabarrus, Richard Dobbs Speight, Win. Blount, Benjamin Williams, John
Sibpeanes, Frederick Harget, Robert W. Snead, Archibald Maclane, Hon.
Samuel Ashe, Robert Dixon, Benjamin Smith, Hon. Samuel Spencer, John
Hay, James Hogg, Henry Wm. Harrington, Wm. Barney Grove, Rev. Samuel E.
McCorkle, Adlai Osborn, John Stokes, John Hamilton, Joseph Graham, Hon.
John Williams, Thomas Person, Alfred Moore, Alexander Mebane, Joel Lane,
Willie Jones, Benjamin Hawkins, John Haywood, sen., .John Macon, Wm.
Richardson Davie, Joseph Dixon, Wm. Lenoir, Joseph McDonald, James
Holland, and Wm. Porter. Some moderate endowment was made by the State,
which cost her nothing, by way of old debts due from receiving officers
previous to 1st Jan., 1755, and all the property which had escheated to
the State or should thereafter be escheated. The latter part of the
endowment was repealed in a few years.
The first meeting of the
trustees was held in Fayetteville, the 15th of 'November, 1790, and the
work of gathering funds to erect buildings and maintain teachers was
commenced. In December, 1791, the State made a loan of $10,000, which
was afterwards converted into a donation, and the trustees determined to
select a site and erect buildings. According to the charter "a healthy
and convenient situation, which shall not be situated within five miles
of the scat of government, or any of the places of holding the courts of
law or equity," was to be chosen by the trustees according to their
discretion. On the 1st of November, 1792, a committee of six met at
Pittsborough, to determine the precise location of the university, the
trustees having decided in August in favor of the neighborhood of
Cypress Bridge, on the road from Pittsburough to Raleigh. Liberal offers
were made by various proprietors to secure time location on their tract,
or in their neighborhoods. On the 9th time committee unanimously chose
Chapel Hill, and the same day the citizens of the neighborhood conveyed
eleven hundred and eighty acres of land to the university, and made a
subscription of about $1600 to assist in carrying the designs of the
trustees into speedy execution. The North Carolina Journal, Halifax, for
September 25th, 1793, says "The seat of the university is on a high
ridge. There is a gentle declivity of 300 yards to the village, which is
situated in a handsome plain considerably lower than the site of the
public buildings, but so greatly elevated above the neighboring country
as to furnish an extensive landscape. The ridge appears to commence
about half a mile directly east of the college buildings, where it rises
abruptly several hundred feet; this peak is called Point Prospect. The
Peak country spreads off below, like the ocean, giving an immense
hemisphere, in which the eye seems to be lost in the extent of space.
"The University is
situated about twenty-eight miles from the city of Raleigh, and twelve
from the town of Hillsborough. The great road from Chatham, and the
country in the neighborhood of that county, to Petersburg, passes at
present directly through the village, and it is a fortunate and
important circumstance, both to the Institution and the town, that the
road from all the Western country to the seat of Government will also
pass through this place, being the nearest and best direction."
On the 12th of October,
1793, the first lots in the village were sold, and the corner-stone of
the first building was laid, with masonic procession and ceremonies, by
William Richardson Davie. The Rev. Dr. McCorkle, of the Presbyterian
church, the only clergyman then in the corporation, addressed the
assembly at length. From his speech the following are extracts:—"It is
our duty to acknowledge that sacred scriptural truth, Except the Lord
build the house, they labor in vain that build it; except the Lord
keepeth the city, the watchman waketh but in vain. For my own part, I
feel myself penetrated with a sense of these truths; and this I feel not
only as a minister of religion, but also as a citizen of the State, as a
member of civil as well as religious society. These unaffected feelings
of my heart give me leave to express, with that plainness and honesty
which becomes a preacher of the Gospel and a minister of Jesus Christ."
"To diffuse the greatest
possible degree of happiness in a given territory is the aim of good
government and religion. Now the happiness of a nation depends upon
national wealth and national glory, and cannot be gained without them.
They in like manner depend upon liberty and laws. Liberty and laws call
for general knowledge in the people, and extensive knowledge in matters
of State; and these, in fine, demand public places of education. * * * *
How can any nation be happy without national wealth? How can that
nation, or roan, be happy that is not procuring the necessary
conveniences and accommodations of life ? How can glory or wealth be
procured or preserved without liberty and laws, as they must check
luxury, encourage industry and protect wealth. They must secure me the
glory of my actions, and save from a bowstring or a bastile; and how are
these objects to be gained without general knowledge? Knowledge is
wealth,—it is glory—whether among philosophers, ministers of state or of
religion, or among the great mass of the people. Britons 'glory in the
name of a Newton, and honor him with a place among the sepulchres of her
kings. Americans glory in the name of a Franklin; and every nation which
has them boasts her great men. Savages cannot have, rather cannot
educate them, though many a Newton has been born and buried among them.
Knowledge is liberty and law. When the clouds of ignorance are dispelled
by the radiance of knowledge, power trembles, but the authority of the
laws remains inviolable; and how this knowledge, productive of so many
advantages to mankind, can be acquired without public places of
instruction, I know not. * * * * "May this hill be for religion as the
ancient bill of Zion; and for literature and the Muses, may it surpass
the ancient Parnassus! We this day enjoy the pleasure of seeing the
corner-stone of the University, its foundations, its materials, and the
architects of the buildings, and we hope ere long to see its stately
walls and spire ascending to their summit." The discourse was followed
by a short but animated prayer, closed with the united Amen of an
immense concourse of people.
The buildings being in a
state of sufficient forwardness to accommodate students, notice was
given for the opening of the institution. Rev. David Kerr, a graduate of
Trinity College, Dublin, a member of the Presbyterian church, who had
emigrated to America in the year 1791, and had resided in Fayetteville
as the preacher, and also as teacher of a classical school for about
three years, having a reputation for talents and scholarship, was the
first Professor selected by the trustees; and with hint was associated
Mr. Samuel A. Holmes, as tutor in the preparatory department. The first
student on the ground was Mr. Hinton James, from Wilmington, who arrived
on the 12th of February, 1790, and on the 13th the public institution
commenced. Mr. Kerr remained but a short time in the employ of the
trustees; went to Lumberon in Robeson county, commenced mercantile
business and the study of law; and when prepared for legal business,
removed to the Mississippi territory, was made United States ?Marshal,
and soon after appointed Judge; and closed his career in the year 1810,
having acquired both property and reputation.
In the course of the year
1795, Mr. Charles W. Harris, of Cabarrus county, a graduate of Nassau
Hail, New Jersey, who was pursuing the study of the law, was appointed
professor of mathematics, and Mr. Holmes professor of languages. Mr.
Harris accepted the office only for one year, and declined renewing his
term of engagement, wishing to follow his profession, in which he became
eminent, being considered one of the best lawyers in the State, when
death suddenly closed his career. He directed the attention of the
trustees to Mr. Joseph Caldwell, a tutor in Nassau Hall, with whose
deportment and scholarship he had been acquainted while a member of
college, though there had never been any intimacy with him. This
recommendation led to a correspondence, of which Mr. Harris was the
organ; and finally the removal of Mr. Caldwell to Chapel Hill, in the
fall of 1796, as the Professor of mathematics in the University. The
course of instruction in the University had been carried on about
eighteen months, and the regular course of studies not yet settled, or
the regular classes formed. Everything was new, and in an unformed
state; the funds small, and the students few; the library and apparatus
yet to he procured, and the faculty not more in number than is required
for a high school. But the work was commenced, and an effort must be
made for an University. The history of the institution as a place of
education, properly commences with the labors of Joseph Caldwell. He was
the presiding Professor, and then the President; and for some forty
years directed the studies of the classes, performing the duty of a
laborious professor and of the president, of a faithful teacher and the
responsible governor, till the institution, which began so small, grew
up to a standard of excellence, at his death, unsurpassed by any
institution of a similar kind in the southern country, and second to few
in the United States. As for forty years the history of the man is the
history of the University, and the history of the University is the
history of the man, a few notices of his early life, which may introduce
us to the Rev. Joseph Caldwell as he appeared at the Hill in 1796, will
facilitate our acquaintance with the rise and progress of the University
itself. His matured years gave a finishing touch to the work of his
youth.
Dr. Joseph Caldwell, a
respectable physician in New Jersey, the descendant of an emigrant from
the province of Ulster, Ireland, a country fertile in enterprising men,
as Carolina can witness, came to an untimely end, from the rupture of a
blood-vessel, on the 19th of April, 1773, at Lamington, a village on the
little stream called Black River, that empties into the Raritan. In the
20th his body was committed to the dust; and on the 21st his widow gave
birth to a son, which, in her desolation of widowhood, she called
Joseph, in memory of the husband and the father. As the child grew he
received religious instructions from his pious mother, Rachel Harker,
the daughter of a Presbyterian clergyman, and granddaughter of a
Huguenot. Mr. Lovel, the maternal grandfather of Joseph Caldwell, fled
from France after that memorable epoch, 1684, when, by the revocation of
the Edict of Nantz, the French Protestants became the prey of
persecution without mercy. He took his residence first in England; and
after a few years emigrated to America, and settled on the west end of
Long Island, near Oyster Bay, and not far from Hempstead Plains. Here he
lived an exemplary Christian life, and trained up his family- in habits
of religion, infusing much of his own decision, promptness, and
determination, in matters of religion, and in the ordinary business of
life. Of his maternal grandmother, Rachel Lovel, Mr. Caldwell used to
speak in the highest terms, having lived with her when young, and
gathered from her the traditions of the family but of his mother, his
admiration knew no bounds, as a kind parent and Christian woman. Of the
discretion of his mother, he used to give a pleasing instance,
exemplifying unintentionally his own natural tenderness of feeling, and
his sense of propriety. While quite it young lad, during a short
residence at Bristol, he ventured to transgress the rules of his mother,
by going on a Sabbath to indulge in bathing : narrowly escaping being
drowned, he was taken home sick and exhausted, requiring careful
attention to recover his lost strength. His mother kindly attended upon
her son, and, to his surprise, said nothing to him about1his
disobedience, or exposure to loss of life. Whatever was her motive, the
effect was great her silence distressed lain more than any reproof she
could have given: his conscience chastised him for his sin in grieving a
mother he so much loved. The boy's heart was tender, and the mother knew
her child. The religious impression soon passed away, but the moral
remained. Through life he retained the impression of this dealing of his
mother, and, as far as practicable, governed his students in the same
principle, throwing them upon their sense of honor, with unabated
kindness, always forbearing exposure, and public and even private
reproof, as far as reclaiming the offender, and the interest of the
institution, would permit. A lad was far gone in moral insensibility
that could know Dr. Caldwell and rebel against him for any length of
time.
Mr. Lovel, the
grandfather of Dr. Caldwell, was a firm believer in those doctrines of
religion, and that consistent Christian practice, which, in England, was
called Puritanism, and in France obtained for its followers the name of
Huguenots. Pond of music, he brought with him from France a parlor
organ, on which he played himself, accompanying with his voice, and
taught his children to play upon it as they grew up, using it as an
assistant to their music in the daily family worship. This instrument is
probably in existence still, as it was carefully preserved, and in use
by the descendants of Mr. Lovel in the days of Mr. Caldwell's. youth.
Mr. Lovel was peculiar
for his conscientious abstinence from meat diet. Living on a most
productive farm, which he managed ,yell, he reared his family in total
abstinence of all diet that required the slaughter of animals, believing
that such a course was more consistent with the constitution of men and
the state of innocency, than the indulgence of appetite at the expense
of animal life. In his domestic economy, he accustomed his children to
exercise their ingenuity and skill in overcoming difficulties; and
mingling strict discipline with parental kindness, had possessed their
veneration and love, and his family was esteemed the abode of
cheerfulness and domestic happiness.
Mr. Harker, a
Presbyterian clergyman, married Mr. Lovel's daughter Rachel, and settled
in a place in Morris county, New Jersey, called Black River. Remarkable
for his size, strength and vigor of body, and also for his intellectual
powers, his preparations for the ministry commenced after he had passed
the days of his youth in manual labor. The habits of activity he had
formed, were continued through life. A practical man and faithful
pastor, he was a leading man in the community. A daughter of his, named
Rachel after her mother, was Mrs. Caldwell. Another daughter married a
man by the name of Symmes, and became the mother of a son noted for his
theory of the earth's concavity at the poles.
The war of the Revolution
coming on when Dr. Caldwell was a child, and New Jersey being the track
of the hostile armies, he was removed from place to place, as the
ravages of war pressed upon his retreat. During all his early life, his
mother's residence was unsettled, and his education conducted
irregularly, as opportunities were presented. His mother having a
temporary residence in Bristol, he commenced the study of the
mathematics, in which he delighted through life. Her residence being for
a time in Princeton, he was presented with a Latin grammar by a student
from Charleston, South Carolina, and commenced his classical studies in
the preparatory school under the direction of Dr. Witherspoon, President
of the college. This school was famous for the thorough instruction and
the consequent close application and correct method of the pupils. Young
Caldwell was a close student, and laid the foundation for his future
scholarship and excellence while in this school, and received
impressions and imbibed principles which characterized him in his labors
at Chapel hill, and in his efforts to establish and sustain grammar
schools of a high order. When his mother removed to Newark, his progress
in his education was delayed by the change of system, and the different
course of studies, and his being put in a class less advanced than
himself. It is not improbable that his own experience of the
inefficiency of some popular modes of instruction, and more general
courses of study, fixed his judgment so firmly in favor of thorough
drilling in the rudiments of science, and of a liberal course in the
languages.
From Newark ark his
mother removed to Elizabethtown, and ,while there, on account of her
narrow circumstances, abandoned the project of giving him a liberal
education, and fixed upon the printing business as his future
occupation. With some difficulty she obtained a place she thought
eligible for her son, but when the time carne for his being apprenticed,
she expressed a strong disinclination to act, first delaying, then
opposing, then abandoning an engagement she had sought, and for which
her son had at length contracted a strong predilection. Some time after
this, Dr. Witherspoon, as he passed through Elizabethtown in the stage,
called to see her, and after consultation respecting her son, removed
all her difficulties, and promised, on his being sent to college, to be
his patron, if he stood in need at any time of more assistance than was
convenient for her to give. With unbounded satisfaction young Caldwell
became a member of the Freshman class at Nassau Hall, August, 1787, in
his fifteenth year, with a passionate desire for improvement, without
any definite ultimate result in view.
His progress in study and
his standing as a scholar while in college, is understood by his
honorable appointment to the Latin Salutatory for the exercises of
commencement day, August, 1791, when he received his Bachelor's degree,
being then in his nineteenth year. His deportment and success during his
college course attracted the attention of Mr. Harris, and led to his
appointment as professor in the University of North Carolina.
Being a young man of
tender feelings, and that amiable disposition that desires to please
others at a sacrifice of personal comfort, he was sometimes induced
while in college to engage in sports which involved some breach of
strict propriety in college discipline, yielding to the solicitations
and persuasions of his fellow students, who had less of that tenderness
of conscience, self-respect, and sense of propriety, that never failed
to inflict on him, as with a whip of scorpions, a full measure of
distress for his impropriety. Speaking of his course as a student, he
says "If there was any pleasure in the moments of clandestine acts of
mischief, it was so mixed, in my bosom, with the agitation of
apprehended discovery and dread of consequences, that I should be far
from recommending it on the score of enjoyment. In all such cases, and I
thank God they were not numerous, as soon as they were over, the gloomy
cloud which they brought upon my feelings, and which kept hovering
around me for days, was enough to decide most unequivocally, that much
was to be set down on the page, not of profit but of loss. The miseries,
more or less, which, in compliance with solicitation, I sometimes
consented to inflict upon myself were only a portion of the consequent
suffering." With this tenderness of feeling and of conscience, there was
connected a degree of resolution when called imperiously to act, which
all combined and governed by Christian principle forms a Christian hero;
a man not rash, nor timidly afraid; sensible of dander, but more
sensible of propriety; tender of others' feelings, but more tender of
truth and right; for convenience and accommodation of others yielding
all that can be yielded, but purchasing nothing by giving up or
concealing principle; that would not hurt the hair of the head of
ingenuous, helpless innocence, and yet would die for the truth and
righteousness. This character went with Caldwell through life, and was
often displayed while performing the duties of professor and president
at Chapel Hill. For at times you might have found him all kindness while
dealing with inexperienced youth, in whom he thought he saw an ingenuous
noble spirit to confess and forsake an error, and then with those in
whom he discovered a spirit of insubordination, you might see him
rigorous, uncompromising, till the dignity of the law was vindicated.
And in his intercourse and necessary connection with the board of
trustees on circumstantial things, giving up his better judgment and
greater experience with cheerfulness, in obedience to the expressed will
of the majority, as if he had no fixed purpose or resolution of soul;
and then on subjects on which he saw his own or the dignity of the
institution depending, resolutely setting himself, with a calm firmness,
against propositions and measures, as if he had never known what it was
to yield his opinion to any body of men.
After receiving his
degree of A.I3., he returned to the residence of his brother Samuel, who
then occupied the farm given him by his grandfather Harker, at Black
River, which was also the residence of his mother. Not being prepared to
enter upon a course of professional studies, nor inclined to labor on
the farm, he opened a small school in the neighborhood, and exercised
himself in teaching little children, commencing, unintentionally, where
the best teachers begin to learn the rare science of teaching well, with
the unformed, or infant mind. There is a philosophy in the alphabet and
in teaching it; and more skill may be required to teach a column of
words of two letters to a lively or a dull boy, than to lead a class
through an equation.
From this place, after
some months, he was removed to Elizabethtown, to occupy the post of an
usher or assistant, in a classical school, and was made more intimately
conversant with the rudiments of a classic course, by recalling his
boyish exercises in study, and adding to his acquirements, while leading
others to Parnassus hill; finding out his own deficiencies, and
gathering new rays of light on abstruse subjects, in the preparation to
unfold the mystery to the curious minds of studious boys, who catch, as
by intuition, from the preceptor, the knowledge of his unfitness, or his
capability to teach. Here he came under the preaching of that gifted,
zealous, and erratic man, David Austin. A fervent and successful
preacher, of tall stature and commanding appearance, fine voice and
impressive delivery, he manifested the unhinging of his mind, and
tendency to mono-madness, on the return of the Jews, which he first
rejoiced in, then preached, then believed was just at hand; and then
becoming too absorbed in the bewiIdering subject to be able to perform
the duties of pastor, he left his people. His enthusiasm and eloquence
carried many of his people with him to the verge of folly, if not
insanity. But before, and after this temporary alienation of mind, he
was a fascinating, impressive, and useful preacher of the gospel. With
this gentleman, then in his zenith of usefulness, Mr. Caldwell began a
course of study for the ministry, his mind having become settled both on
the truth of the gospel of Christ, as a Revelation from God; and on his
personal interest in that salvation revealed in the gospel. These being
settled, the work of the ministry appeared to his mind and heart, in
some manner, as it had to the pious mind of his affectionate mother, as
the most desirable work for his strength and days. The kindness of his
pastor, of whom he always spoke with feelings of the most affectionate
reverence, his fervent exhortations in the pulpit and his private
communications, together with the affectionate attentions of Mrs.
Austin, who won his heart as a matron in the gospel, confirmed his
faith, and stimulated his desires for spiritual excellence, and for
accomplishing the greatest good for his fellow men. The cause of Christ
appeared the cause of all the world. His companion in study was a Mr.
Sherman, a nephew of Mr. Austin.
The views and impressions
of religious truth which he obtained at this time were of an abiding
nature, and confirmed by his residence as tutor at Nassau Hall, where he
pursued his theological studies under the direction of great and good
men, particularly Dr. Witherspoon; they were the articles of his belief
and principles of his preaching, till the end of his life, and the joy
and crown of his last days. While Professor at Chapel Hill he received a
letter from Mr. Sherman, his fellow student at Elizabethtown, for whom
he felt a strong regard, who had been settled in the ministry of the
orthodox faith, and had imbibed the spirit of rationalism that for a
time pervaded a part of the church, and flattered by its show of wisdom
and science, had been decoyed by its novelty from the orthodox faith of
the Puritans, informing him of his change of views respecting the
character and person of Christ, and consequently of his work for the
salvation of men. To this Mr. Caldwell replied, that having examined and
settled those matters, he did not expect ever to change his views, and
did not feel a desire to think differently on that subject from what he
then did, and had done for a long time. His practical mind and sound
sense were for "going on to perfection, from the principles of the
doctrine of Christ, not laying again the foundation of repentance from
dead works and of faith toward God."
In April, 1795, he
received the appointment of tutor in his Alma Mater; and being released
from his partial engagements to the trustees of the academy at
Springfield, with the cordial approbation of his friends, he entered
upon his new office with cheering prospects of usefulness 4nd
improvement. His duties as tutor called into almost constant exercise a
quality of mind and Heart of which he was capable, but to which he was
not very strongly inclined; a quality indispensable to extensive and
paramount usefulness,—firmness of purpose that could produce vigor of
action. He was in no danger of exercising harshness or severity to the
youth committed to his care; he knew as well as others that his failings
leaned the other way. The innocent never dreaded his power of command;
and the culprit sometimes hoped to escape by his tenderness. The
confidence of the one was never disappointed; and the hopes and
expectations of the other seldom realized. His sense of duty could nerve
his heart to overcome all false compassion, and make him do firmly what
he did tenderly.
While tutor he was
associated with Mr. Hobart, afterwards Bishop of the Episcopal church in
New York.
In the summer of 1795 the
correspondence commenced between him and Professor Harris that led to
his giving consent to be run as candidate for the Professorship of
Mathematics in the University of North Carolina. On being informed of
his election he immediately made preparations to repair to Chapel Hill.
Being licensed to preach the gospel by the Presbytery of New Brunswick,
he set out in a private conveyance for the new field of his labors in
North Carolina, in September, 1796. Stopping in Philadelphia to pass the
Sabbath, he preached for Dr. Green in Arch Street Church. On Monday
morning he was visited by two gentlemen to procure his stay in the city,
to visit and preach for a vacant congregation, in view of settlement.
Happily, in this case of difficulty, —the choice between a congregation
in the most pleasant circumstances in a flourishing city, and the
laborious occupation of a teacher in a new institution, of doubtful
issue, and small present promise, either in profit or fame,—he had an
adviser in Dr. Ashbel Green, since so long and so extensively ]known in
the church. The opinion of this judicious man, that, if he should be
blessed of God to raise up an institution for the instruction of youth,
that should be worthy of the name of The University of North Carolina,
the amount of usefulness to society at large, and to the Church of
Christ in particular, would far outweigh his usefulness as pastor in any
charge, and amply compensate him for any labor or trial he plight be
called to endure for its accomplishment; that, though his success was
doubtful, and there were many trials in his path, the object was worthy
of his best effort, turned the scale suddenly. Without waiting for Mr.
Caldwell to reply, the Dr. said, somewhat abruptly, "he is on his way to
Carolina, and io Carolina he is certainly to go. To speak of other
places will be in vain." How true it is that words fitly spoken are like
apples of gold in baskets of silver, even though uttered, as Mr.
Caldwell thought these were, with abruptness. It was good counsel to a
worthy person, well followed, and crowned with great success, by God's
blessing. And was it not of God that Joseph Caldwell event to Chapel
Hill"? The widow nursed the infant boy, on whom a father's face never
smiled; a southern boy gives him his grammar to begin his literary
course; the President of Nassau Hall, Dr. Witherspoon, takes him from an
unemployed life, and puts him to the college desk.
Austin leads him into the
study of Theology; Harris, the Professor, turns his attention to Chapel
Hill, and secures his election and Green, wise in counsel, sends him on
to his field of labor, where many trials awaited him before he should
get his crown. And no one of these ever seemed to be influenced by an
opinion that he possessed splendid talents, uncommon genius, or peculiar
faculties for some wonderful work; but by a conviction that there was in
him a certain something, made up of a well-balanced mind, probity of
heart, sense of propriety, and desire of usefulness, all clothed with
great modesty, that marked him out as the man to accomplish a work that
called for piety, Humility, patience, prudence, and untiring industry.
Evidently God sent him to Chapel Hill.
In November, 1796, he
entered on his duties in the infant university. Rightly to understand
his labors, it is absolutely necessary to take a survey of the
advantages and disadvantages under which he labored in the performance
of his duties, and in his efforts to rear the institution to vigor and
usefulness. His advantages were, 1st: The State patronage; some
permanent funds in hand, and much more in prospect from the increased
price of lands, and the escheats and debts of the State, which had been
appropriated by law. However small the patronage of the State may be,
yet, if it be constant, it gives an advantage in gathering students and
in keeping the public attention so as to increase the number he might
have at any given time. And 2d: The influence of the forty members of
the Board of Trustees, afterwards increased to sixty-five, all of them
intelligent and influential men, and desirous of building a State
institution, who might be expected to assist in gathering students, and
also in collecting funds. Being chosen from all parts of the State, and
not confined to politics or denomination, he had the privilege of
looking, through them, to the whole State, for his help. And 3d: The
institution being entirely in its infancy, he had the opportunity of
forming its first shape and spirit; on the given spot and with the given
advantages, he planted the acorn, which he watered and cherished and
pruned to the vigorous oak, whose branches now overshadow the land.
His difficulties were
great, arising from the nature of the case and from human nature. 1st.
There were in operation in the State, particularly in the upper part of
it, some academies of high merit and established reputation. The embryo
university, without apparatus and without a competent number of teachers
to perform the labors of the university, could, after all the patronage
of the State, offer little to draw students from these established, well
known schools, to come to Chapel Hill. It was by no means evident that
Mr. Caldwell was superior to those well tried teachers: he might not
even be equal, and at the best there was little probability that he
would immediately surpass any of these academies. There was the school
of David Caldwell in Guilford, in active operation, sending out its
pupils to be divines, physicians and lawyers, and ultimately professors
in institutions and judges of the courts: the public were not sure that
Joseph Caldwell could equal, much less excel him. And then there was the
academy of Dr. McCorkle, one of the Board of Trustees, a man of
literature and reading, kept in the bounds of Thyatira congregation,
near to Salisbury. And a little further on was the school of Rev. Mr.
Wallis, at Providence, twelve miles from Charlotte, a man of logical
mind, connected with a vehement spirit, afterwards a member of the Board
of Trustees. And next the school in Bethany, Iredell county, under the
direction of the well known servant of God, the Rev. Capt. James Hall,
D.D., the soldier of the Revolution, and the leading domestic missionary
of the South. Next, the school at Rocky River, from which many excellent
men carne. And next, in the mountains, now a part of Tennessee, was
Martin Academy, planted by Mr. Deak, and by him enlarged to a college,
the nursery of many professional men. To these add the public academies
of Charlotte, Mecklenburg, which occupied the place of Liberty Hall and
Queen's Museum; the Academy in Duplin, which has been more or less
flourishing; Science Hall, near Hillsboro'; Warrenton Academy, under Mr.
George, who, with Bingham and Kerr, were graduates of Trinity College,
Dublin; Granville Hall, and the academies in Edenton, Newborn and Onslow.
In all these different places it had been customary for young men to
complete their classic education, if, through want of funds or other
circumstances, they did not seek for further instruction at Nassau Hall,
or some New England or foreign college. And it could not immediately
appear that Chapel hill, with the name of University, could do more for
the pupils, or as much as some of these institutions.
2d. In the next place the
Board of Trustees were almost entirely unacquainted with the system of
management proper for an University. The only Literary and Scientific
institution of any importance in the management of which any of them had
been engaged was Liberty Hall, unfortunately of too short duration, on
account of the invasion of Cornwallis. Many of them had never even been
members of a well endowed college, having received their education at
one of these Academies, or at some institution of a similar kind. Mr.
Caldwell probably understood the proper management of a University
better than the whole Board by whom he was to be guided, and to whose
will he not unfrequently with reluctance yielded, till longer
acquaintance convinced them of the propriety of listening to his
counsels in things pertaining to the discipline of the students, and the
course of studies. The plan of studies at first proposed partook of the
spirit of the day, and is mentioned not as singular, for all public
institutions felt the shock, but as a part of that peculiar influence on
a new institution, moulding its form and directing its course, more
decidedly than it could have done with an University or college of long
standing. From a card published by a Committee of the Board in the North
Carolina Journal of December 12th, 1792, is the following extract:- "The
objects to which it is contemplated to turn. the attention of the
students, on the first establishment, are the study of languages,
particularly the English; History, ancient and modern; the Belles
Lettres; Logic and Moral Philosophy; Agriculture and Botany, with the
principles of Architecture." This list of studies is faulty, not in what
it embraces, but in what it leaves out. There was a disposition then
growing in the United States to put a lower estimate on the acquisition
of what are called the "Dead Languages," than had been previously the
habit of colleges consecrated by irnmemorial usage, or than is now put
on them by universal consent. It was more difficult to displace them
from their seat of preeminence in established colleges, than to
introduce them to an institution from which they had been excluded. Had
Joseph Caldwell attempted to build the University on the principle of
giving the Dead or Classic languages a lower place than Logic or Belles
Letters, or the English language, the University would not now be that
flourishing institution, the ornament of the State. He must gain the
confidence of a Board who were prepared cheerfully to employ him as the
teacher of youth, but not at all ready to receive from his hands the
actual direction of the whole course of study and general discipline.
One glance at the subject will show the difficulty involved in the
situation of the young professor. how many trials must be made; how many
years pass before he could gain that hold on the confidence of the
trustees and the community at large, to enable him to put the University
on a firm foundation of usefulness and success. It is interesting to
look at the progress of the confidential feeling that commenced
immediately on his entrance upon the duties of his office. After acting
one year as Professor of Mathematics and the head of the institution, he
resigned the superintendance, and held the office of Professor of
Mathematics; his successor failing to gain the confidence of the Board,
Mr. Caldwell was induced to become head professor again in 1799. In 1804
he was elected to the office of President, being the first to fill that
chair in the University. In 1812 he resigned that office, and confined
himself to the Mathematical department; but his successor, as in the
former instance, failing to gain the confidence necessary to give
efficiency to his discipline and instruction, Mr. Caldwell was again
called to the chair, in 1816, and continued to hold the office till the
day of his death, Tuesday, January 27th, 1833. It was under his
management that the University grew from a high school to the
flourishing condition in which his successor found it so favorable for
his talents and energy to make it a blessing to his native State in the
education of her sons.
The third difficulty was
perhaps the more perplexing, requiring prudence, forbearance, and yet
great resolution, together with confidence, the child of experience and
triad; this was the religious state of the university and of the public
mind at the time Mr. Caldwell became Professor. It is now a matter of
history in philosophy, politics, and religion, that the discussion that
had been progressing in France, in which all religious things had
undergone the same revolutionizing scrutiny as the errors in politics
and the misrule of the government, reached America some time previous to
Mr. Caldwell's connection with the University. The whole subject of
religion was investigated anew. The arguments against the Bible were set
forth in formidable array; Paine's Age of Reason passed from hand to
hand, and the Inifidel productions of France flooded the country; the
strongest holds of religion were shaken; and in many places the
arguments for reason, as paramount to revelation, gained a temporary
victory. Where there were faithful and learned ministers of the gospel
the battle was fierce; where there were none, the infidel argument for a
time possessed undisputedly the public mind. In France there were
hurtful, degrading superstitions, and wrongs, and outrages, justified
openly in the view of the nation by antiquity and the claims of
religion, on which the excited revolutionary multitude fed and fattened
to madness; and in tearing down the gross deceptions that had been built
up through the land as castles, and convents, and tithes, and orders of
prelates, and of nobility, without number or mercy, they set fire to the
whole edifice of religion in France, and in the dreadful conflagration
of ignorance, and superstition, and misrule, and notorious falsehood,
they verily believed the Everlasting Word had perished. The gospel had,
in the opinion of the Infidel party, gone with the royal house and the
nobility; and France expected liberty "when the neck of the last king
was strangled by the bowels of the last priest."
In America there were no
such evils. The Revolution had swept off the political wrongs and the
civil misrule, and whatever there was, in the different States, of
oppression in religious things. There were no superstitious or
hereditary wrongs in sacred things to search out; no time-honored
observances to undo; no lost rights of conscience to recover. The
question was, whether the Bible was true; and all the influence of
France, fresh from her sympathies in our contest for liberty, and hot in
her struggle for her own, and fervid in her pursuit of Science, of
fashion, and gaiety, was thrown against the Bible. In France they were
already wicked; and the sweeping away of superstition gave relief from
oppression, and the commission of some sins; and France appeared to the
philosopher to be regenerated by the change. In America the war against
the Bible proved, in the end, a war against morality and domestic
enjoyments, and wherever infidelity got the mastery, there the community
suffered. In France rivers of blood washed out the stains of Atheism; in
America the voice of the Bible and the claims of society were at length
heard, and without bloodshed or civil commotion, religion, the religion
of the Bible, regained her ascendancy. The evil was great, but the
remedy has been sure. There was a time when the best men feared lest
infidelity should first get the mastery as in France, and then rivers of
American blood wash out the stains. It was while infidelity, of which
Paine's Age of Reason was a text-book, was striding our land, the
University went into operation. The first professor, Mr. Kerr, who had
been a Presbyterian minister, and had preached in Fayetteville some two
years after his arrival in this country, had abandoned the belief in
inspiration, and while he was at Chapel Hill was an infidel. Holmes, his
assistant teacher, and subsequently a professor of languages, had also
given up the gospel, and its hopes, and was a believer in Paine, whose
writings he so highly prized, that the only volume he gave the
University library, contained the works of that arch-infidel. This
unbelief was no silent exercise of his own opinion permitting the
community to go on in the belief and practice of Christianity, each man
acting as he might choose; in the communication drawn up by the Faculty
requesting his dismission from the University, they say, "he teaches
that there is no such thing as virtue; that the love of virtue is no
more than superstition, degrading to the minds of men, and not sure to
answer their purposes. That to shake off its obligations, and bend with
ease to the character and circumstances of the times so as to advance
our own interest or ambition, is the best morality. That therefore, for
any person to profess to be governed by the fixed principles of justice
or honor, of truth or generosity, is sufficient to stamp him as a
hypocrite and a designing knave, "that is lying in wait under these
characters for the happiness of others." Kerr left the University in
1795, and Holmes in 1799. While multitudes in Carolina were, as in other
parts of the United States, prepared first to doubt and then to
disbelieve the Bible, and consequently to set aside religion as a
superstition, few were prepared to go the length of Paine and his
disciple Holmes, and deny the existence of moral virtue. And when the
matter was fairly presented by the amiable and clear minded Caldwell,
the board of trustees felt that if rejecting the Bible was rejecting
morality, the Bible with all the objections that had been urged, must be
retained. Mr. Caldwell tells us that he looked to General Davie, one of
the leaders of the Legislature, "the father of the house " as he was
styled, that session of the Legislature he attended soon after his
arrival in Carolina, and that he was a warm friend, supporter, and
trustee of the University. He tells us that he had long and most
interesting communications with him on the subject of the truth of time
Scriptures, and that his mind was deeply impressed with the
conversation. Davie had been taught in his youth to believe the Bible,
had passed through the Revolution with Honor, doing good service for his
country in the camp, was high in the respect of his constituents, and
had fallen from his belief in the Bible taught him by his maternal
uncle, the Rev. William Richardson, whose name he bore, and whose estate
he inherited, more probably by sympathy with the popular distrust, than
by argument. Caldwell gained his confidence and possessed his friendship
to the last, reviving the belief of his youth; and who can say but that,
like the hero of the Cowpens, he at last looked to Jesus and found life.
Harris, who directed the attention of the trustees to Mr. Caldwell as
his successor, was at that time himself shaken in his belief, and
thought the Bible was to be abandoned. But his young successor stood up
for the gospel of Christ; all that he saw of the fruits and workings of
infidelity only turned his heart more strongly to his God and Saviour.
"Religion," he says, in 1797, soon after his arrival, "is so little in
vogue and in such a state of depression, that it affords no prospect
sufficient to tempt people here to undertake its cause. In New Jersey it
has the public respect and support; but in North Carolina, particularly
in that part that lies east of us, every one believes that the first
step he ought to take to rise into respectability is to disavow, as
often and as publicly as he can, all regard for the leading doctrines of
the Scriptures. They are bugbears very well fitted to scare the mass of
the ignorant, and the weak, into order and obedience to the laws; but
for men of letters and cultivated reason, the laws of morality and honor
should, and will be sufficient for the regulation of their conduct."
"How unhappy is it for
these men, and how instructive to the rest of mankind, that the whole
tenor of their lives, and the wretched state of their society, combine
to exhibit their doctrines in all their haggardness and shocking
deformity." This strong disgust to infidelity from its effects was not
confined to the Professor; there being no superstitions and erroneous
observances to be thrown off, by a rejection of the religion of
Protestant Carolina, the denial of the Bible could only weaken the
sanctions of virtue and morality, and taking away the fears of future
retribution, take away the fear of crime. This fact staring the
community in the face, gave the amiable Professor the advantage in his
argument the thinking and intelligent were made to feel they needed
some-timing like the Bible, which men should believe to be true, to hold
society together. Caldwell was not what is termed a genius, and probably
it is well he was not; but with clearness and meekness, he could and did
defend the religion of his Lord and Master, in a most difficult
position, the number of trustees that were at that time firm supporters
of the Bible being few, though therewere some. Whether he could have
raised the University, had he yielded to the wave that went over the
land and swept off so many-, we need not now inquire; but this is
certain, he fought a great battle without noise, and gained a great
victory without triumphing; and permitted the anxiety of the contest,
and the blessedness of the victory, to pass along the current of events
without exclamation, or demand from his coevals or posterity. We may say
of him, as was said of a modest and noble Virginian, by the Speaker of
the House—"Sit down, sir, sit down, your modesty is equalled only by
your worth."
The last difficulty was,
the smallness of the funds and the inadequate support yielded by the
patronage of the State. The funds appropriated by the State were, in
part, soon withdrawn, and the rest, together with the donations of
individuals, Were, for a time, unproductive. It was not till 1811, that
by an excursion through the State, and making application to
individuals, a list of whose names he preserved, and the amount of their
individual donations, he obtained funds to erect buildings sufficient to
accommodate the students. In the excursion, he received $12,000.
Notwithstanding all this, there was great difficulty in obtaining
sufficient means to afford a proper support for the necessary teachers.
The wonder is, in looking over the small salaries given for the great
labor required, in a situation that offered little attractive in the
forests of Carolina, that able men could be obtained to bring talents,
and acquirements, and labor adequate to the demands of the rising
institution. How could a President, whose doors must be open to a
succession of visitors, sustain himself on a thousand dollars a year,
and get his own Iibrary—and the professors and tutors on a
proportionable salary—When a library itself costs some thousands of
dollars? It is a matter of surprise that men could be found to attempt,
and more so, that they should succeed in, such an enterprise.
Happy in the choice of
his assistant Faculty, and blessed with invincible perseverance, he
rejoiced to see all these difficulties overcome. In 1824 he was sent to
Europe "in order to direct in person the construction of a Philosophical
Apparatus, and to select books for the library." At his death he left
the University, still limited in its means, With buildings for the
accommodation of a large number of students, with funds for the support
of the instructors, with a respectable library and apparatus, and an
able Faculty. When he went to Chapel Hill, in 1796, it was doubtful
whether anything was to be gained in literary advantages at the Hill
over the private schools and public academies in the State; and certain
that the morals and principles of the young men were in great danger
from the infidel principles that prevailed among the teachers:—When he
died, January 27th, 1835, it was the best institution in the State for a
complete classical or scientific course, held a respectable stand
abroad, and in point of morals as safe as any in the land, and
increasing in its reputation. So it is now; and so may it be for ever.
It was affirmed that the
building of the University exemplified the genius of Presbyterianism.
This it does in the following particulars: 1st, It shows the
unconquerable attachment of its clergy to a sound and liberal education
of youth: 2d, their ability to rear a proper institution in very
unpropitious circumstances: 3rd, their invincible attachment to sound
principles of religion and morality and 4th, their public spirit; that,
while it was well known the University never could become a Presbyterian
institution, or be under the direction of that denomination, but, on the
contrary, would belong to the State, and very likely always be under a
board, the large majority of whom should not be Presbyterians, and an
equal proportion of the Faculty, or even all, might at any time be
adverse to Presbyterian creed and order, the efforts to make the
institutions of the State worthy of the State, and safe for her sons,
were unremitted and unequalled. Let religion, and science, and morality,
and literature prevail in the Alma Mater of the future children of
Carolina, and Joseph Caldwell was satisfied: if his denomination, which
he loved, might not have its control, let it be controlled by whom it
may, only let the streams that flow from it be pure.
The false notions of what
constituted education for young men, that prevailed in the early part of
his labors, might have been mentioned as a serious difficulty for our
young professor to encounter. In the year 1797, one warm friend of the
University, a member of the board, of high political standing, sent up
to Chapel Hill, with letters of introduction to Mr. Caldwell, and high
recommendation of excellence in his profession, a dancing-master, to
teach the boys manners, with expressions of a hope that the students,
with the youths in the neighborhood, would form a school of sufficient
income to secure the services of this eminent gentleman, with his little
son. This was not (lone in opposition to Mr. Caldwell; there is every
evidence of frankness and candor and conviction of propriety in the
gentleman. The difficulty was, that very many in the board who wished
well to the institution, did not understand fully what a proper
education was; how much attention should be given to the mental, and how
much to the physical, training; or even what this training should be. By
his kindness and firmness, Mr. Caldwell kept the confidence of the
board; and led them to the establishment of a sound and liberal course
of education, that may advantageously compare with other institutions;
and under the influence of strict, religious, and elevated morality.
Such a man is an ornament of his church and generation.
Previous to his removal
to Chapel Hill, he had been licensed to preach by the Presbytery of New
Brunswick; and while performing the office of professor and president,
he did not forget the preaching of the Gospel. He judged it impolitic to
take charge of any congregation in the neighborhood; and in that he
doubtless judged rightly; but he also judged it proper to preach the
gospel to his students, and occasionally, abroad, as he had opportunity.
As there was no regularly organized Presbyterian church in the
university, and Mr. Caldwell did not choose to be connected with a
congregation in the neighborhood, and the Synod of the Carolinas being
particularly opposed to ordaining without charge, no effectual steps
were taken for his ordination, till the year 1810; when the Presbytery
of Orange overturned Synod for leave to ordain Mr. Joseph Caldwell of
the university; and the Synod, in consideration of his usefulness being,
in all probability, greatly increased, authorized the ordination. The
next year his name appears upon the records of Synod, reported from
Orange Presbytery. This year (1811) he made his circuit through the
State, to collect funds, and everywhere made a favorable impression, as
a man, a Christian, a minister, and the head of the university. Having
received the degree of A.M. at the university and also at his Alma
Mater, the honorary title of D.D. was conferred by both institutions;
that from Nassau Hall bears date in 1816, the year he was the second
time chosen president. In 1812 he resigned his office as president, and
aided in procuring Rev. Robert H. Chapman as his successor; but a
vacancy occurring by the resignation of Dr. Chapman, he was recalled to
the chair, and filled it to the clay of his death.
Dr. Caldwell might, from
the specimens of preaching he gave from time to time, have excelled as a
pastor, had his whole time been given to preaching and the pastor's
office. Plainness, simplicity and kindness, characterized his
discourses; often great strength and distinctness were mingled in an
interesting manner. He wrote and published a variety of essays on the
subject of the improvement of the mind, and the soil; the citizens, and
their State. On the subject of common schools, he was read with
interest; and his essays on improving the State by roads, had an
acknowledged effect. But his great work by which he was, and is to be
known, was the building the University; leaving to the State, at the
conclusion of a laborious life, an institution worthy of his labors and
their fostering care.
If a man's talents are to
be judged by the works he accomplishes, Dr. Caldwell will be adjudged a
man of talents. If the excellency and permanency of the works
accomplished are a standard of the degree of talents, then the father of
the university will not hold a low place. He was not esteemed a genius
by his contemporaries, or looked upon as a man of splendid performances;
but when his plans and operations are compared with his contemporaries,
posterity will judge that he had excellences the exertion of which could
not be fully tested till years had tried the permanency of his works,
and which will give him a place among the worthies of the Presbyterian
church, and the benefactors of his race.
But while he was acting
on the most enlarged principles and views, he did not suffer himself to
be led by generalities to forget particulars; laboring for the whole
State, he did not forget that he was a Presbyterian, and a Presbyterian
minister. He strongly advocated and encouraged the institute at
Greensborough, which, in honor to him for his services to literature and
religion, was named Caldwell's Institute, to be a high school, under the
especial care and discipline of the Presbyterians, in which teaching the
doctrines of the Presbyterian church, in connection with the Bible,
should form part of the regular exercises on the Sabbath. He thought it
due both to the church and to the community, that such an institution
should be established; and the location of it should be in the county
where some of the earliest Presbyterian congregations were formed, and
where the trials of the Revolution had been known. He also schemed a
plan for a theological institution to be located somewhere in the upper
country of Carolina, in which his sound judgment and practical mind were
eminently displayed. But as the theological department, in connection
with Hampden Sydney, had been the nursery of many preachers in Carolina,
and was, about that time, in progress of being enlarged to a full and
complete seminary, after a full and free discussion, he laid by his
plan, and united with the Synod of Carolina in giving support to Union
Seminary. And no man acquainted with the usefulness of Caldwell
Institute or Union Theological Seminary, in training and sending out
laborious servants of the church and public, can for a moment doubt the
soundness of his conclusions, or fault his anticipations from these
seminaries.
The active part he took
in the internal improvement of the State, publishing frequently on the
subject in the regular papers, was on the principle that the produce of
the mountains and upper country of Carolina should seek the ocean
through a port on the sea shore of the State; and for this purpose
passways should be opened from the east and west, sufficient to
encourage agriculture and population; the products of the west should be
the riches of the east; and the enterprise of the east should reward the
labors of the west. The soundness of these principles will one (lay be
discussed again in Carolina.
Of Dr. Caldwell's
personal religious experience we have an account of much that is
interesting, in his own handwriting, though less in quantity than could
be desired. He commenced in the latter part of his life, an
autobiography, which he carried on till the period of his journey to
Chapel Hill, in 1796; then it closed abruptly. From that manuscript most
of the facts respecting his early life have been derived. From that is
derived the following information respecting the exercises of his mind
and heart.
The first religious
exercises, which were esteemed by him worthy of notice, as religious
exercises, were felt while he resided with his mother at Bristol. The
escape from a watery death has been mentioned, and also his mother's
kind treatment. He says the alarm at the thoughts of immediate death was
inexpressible, and led him to pious resolutions: but, "the feelings
gradually faded from my thoughts, and I lived as heedlessly as
ever."—"But a circumstance which most impressively marks this period,
is, that here I began, for what reasons I know not, to turn my thoughts,
with greater earnestness than before, on the subject of religion. A part
of the time while I was in this village, my mother went abroad, leaving
me to board at a neighbor's table. This was so near, that one of the
rooms in the house, which she occupied, was left open for my use, both
day-and night. There I slept; and whenever I chose, to this I retired. I
got hold of a religious book, and finding it gave me pleasure in the
reading, I would sit, or traverse the room alone, reading with an
interest that grew so as utterly to preclude every disposition to stop.
My feelings were excited by it, and they grew into ardor and intensity.
I deserted all amusement. My reacting, my reflections, and a gratifying
sense that I might be engaged in the service of God and have his
approbation, abstracted me from any of the diversions that occurred to
my mind."
"My experience at that
time was probably one of the first fruits of the pious sentiments which
my mother had instilled into me from the first dawnings of reason. She
was not there; but the spirit of God was, doubtless, fostering these
principles in my heart, and reducing them into action. I have since
reverted to the few days which passed in these circumstances, and with
these emotions alive in my bosom, as among the most grateful seasons of
my life, and to be remembered with renovated satisfaction."
"While living in Newark
my religious impressions were often renewed. I do not know that I
resisted them, or strove to repress or shake them off, but it is very
certain that at various times when they had been felt with much force,
alarm of conscience, and a dissolving tenderness of affection, they soon
passed away, and I becarne as thoughtless and careless as ever. Dr.
McWhorter's preaching was generally animated, plain and practical. He
sometimes became warm, pointed the guilty sinner to the coming wrath,
showed the clanger of growing hardened to all the considerations of
God's mercy, his justice, his judgments, the means of grace, the
opportunities of improvement, the uncertainty of life, dread
consequences of failing to prepare in this time of discipline and
probation for the eternity that is to follow. I would come home like the
wounded hart, with the arrow in my side; but it dropped off; the wound
closed, and it ceased to be remembered."
Again the Dr. says of
himself, in his review of his early life:—"I can remember many occasions
in those early years, in the various places in which they were passed,
when my reflections were directed on God, a future state, and the
eternal world. The interest I took in them when they were impressed upon
me by the scriptures, or by any other cause, was the same in its aspect
and species as it has been through late years. The intervals sometimes
are apparent as to their cause, and sometimes they seem to have become
irrecoverably lost to my remembrance. Whether they had a connection with
one another, and by what ties of circumstances, or thought, or emotion,
as they were successively renewed, it would be impossible for me to
determine, though to the spirit of God who produced them and witnessed
all their effects, they are present now as at the moment when they
agitated my bosom." Sometimes I would return from church with a heart
deeply affected with the considerations presented there of my
obligations to God for his goodness in the ordinary blessings of food
and raiment, relations and friends, health and pleasures, connected with
it. Conscience impressed upon me portentously the consequences of my
thoughtless ingratitude. The prospects of heaven to the good, and the
endless misery of the wicked, drove from me, for a time, every wish for
the amusements on which I was commonly intent."
"The love of God in
sending his Son into the world to redeem me from death, and open the way
to Heaven, combined with all its force in impressing my conscience with
the responsibility imposed by this consummation of mercy. My mother was
often engaged in giving me religious instruction, and deepening its
impression upon my heart. Sometimes an accident would happen to set
before me the utter uncertainty in which I lived. The death of a
neighbor, by sickness, or by some sudden accident, the grave-yard, the
darkness of night, when in solitude, naturally plunging my thoughts into
the spiritual world; everything of this nature exerted in me a sense of
religion, a reference to God, and to the danger I was in of being lost
for ever if I should die without being made the subject of his saving
grace. It was all the striving of his spirit to prevent me from being
wholly engrossed with the earth, and to educate me in the school of his
providence for better and more glorious purposes than the interests and
pleasures of a mere earthly existence. An excellent practical writer on
Keeping the Heart, remarks, that Providence is like a curious piece of
tapestry, made of a thousand shreds which, single, appear useless, but
put together they represent a regular and connected history to the eye."
While residing with Mr.
Austin in Elizabethtown, these impressions were ripened into the deep
conviction, that it was his duty to devote himself to the services of
God in the gospel of Christ. I-low far he fulfilled the covenant of his
devotion and performed the duties of a Christian Minister to his
fellow-man, his services in the University of North Carolina will
abundantly testify.
In one of the elegant
society rooms in the University is a bust of Dr. Caldwell, taken after
his death, and a portrait drawn in his earlier years. The bushy
eyebrows, and overhanging forehead, and calm countenance of the bust,
impress the beholder with the power of reflection, self-possession, anti
unshaken firmness, combined with an amiable disposition.
There is a monument
erected for him near the College buildings, in the beautiful grove, but
at present it is without an epitaph. The omission was undesigned. But
could the generation with whom he Iived write his epitaph?
He wrote his biography,
or rather, began to write it, in his old age. In that, as we have seen,
he refers with tenderness and emotion to the fervency of his early
experience. From that single circumstance, we should be satisfied that
the pure flame was burning with the brightness of youth and the
intensity of experienced age. The testimony of others is, that "the
nearer he approached his God, he but loved him the more." It is not
improbable that, in his multiplied duties, his personal piety may for a
time have suffered; his friends have thought it did! They may have been
mistaken. But the same friends also thought that, in his advanced years,
the flame burned more brightly on the altar of devotion, and that he
became more lovely as he became more heavenly minded.
As the University
increased in numbers, and the students could be admitted to a much less
degree of intimate acquaintance, it is very probable the President,
looked at from the distance of pupils that saw him more in the executive
duties of his office, and less in his domestic tenderness, appeared more
stern than kind, more resolute than forbearing. That the government of
the University was an unit, and the President was really that unit,
after consultation, cannot, perhaps, be denied,-it was never concealed
nor boasted of. "Were I to live," said one who had served under him in
the University, "under one who governed with despotic sway, I would
choose Dr. Caldwell before any other man I have known." Before the
discipline of the University was settled upon its firm basis, which was
a work of years, an outbreak among the students gave an exhibition of
Dr. Caldwell. For some unusual delinquency, the Dr. had determined upon
discipline unusually severe. This caused great excitement. The
delinquents and their friends determined on resistance, and mistaking
the Doctor's disposition, proposed to intimidate him as their remedy in
the last resort. As he was returning from the chapel to his residence,
they met him at the mouth of the ravine near his dwelling, now filled,
and clamorously demanded some relaxation of his terms. He heard their
demands, and calmly refused, and resumed his course; in their
excitement, they swung their canes as if for an attack, and some of them
were athletic young men, and appeared to be closing round him, that he
should go no further till he relented. With an unruffled countenance he
moved on, saying - "Strike, young gentlemen, but remember the
consequences." Although, in physical strength, he was altogether in
their power, the young men felt that he was unconquerable and
irresistible, and gave up the contest. To many of the students it is
probable that he appeared rather the unconquerable President than the
amiable man. But others beside his family knew that kindness was his
nature, and severity the conviction of his judgment.
P. S.—Materials for
additional chapters are in readiness, but the size of the present volume
forbids their publication. These materials, together with a selection
from sermons by Hall, Caldwell, M'Gready, M'Pheeters and others, would
form an instructive volume. |