Wheelock, John , 1754-1817
Biography
John Wheelock was born on January 28, 1754, in Lebanon, Conn.He was the eldest son of Eleazar Wheelock who was the founder and first president of Dartmouth College; John Wheelock succeeded his father as the College’s second president.
Wheelock began his higher education at Yale, then followed his father to Hanover, NH when his father founded Dartmouth and completed his studies there, where he was a member of the College’s inaugural graduating class in 1771.
In 1776, Wheelock became a leader of the United Committees, a group of disgruntled New Hampshire citizens angry at their lack of representation in the state legislature and the distance of the state capital; in retaliation for these slights, Wheelock and others led twelve New Hampshire towns to secede from the state and attempt to join Vermont. The next year, 1777, as the Revolutionary War raged, Wheelock briefly served in New York and Vermont as a lieutenant colonel in Colonel Bedel's Regiment.
Upon his father's death in 1779, John Wheelock assumed the presidency of the College, despite the fact that he was neither an academic nor a minister.
During his almost forty years as Dartmouth's president (1779–1815), Wheelock oversaw the construction of Dartmouth Hall and the founding of Dartmouth Medical School, the fourth-oldest medical school in the country; he also maintained the College’s fiscal solvency throughout the Revolutionary War, mainly through the Vermont legislature’s grant of 23,000 acres (93 km²) in Wheelock, Vermont.
During the latter half of Wheelock's tenure, he became embroiled in a dispute with Dartmouth’s Board of Trustees. Wheelock proceeded to convince the governor of New Hampshire to fill the Board with supporters and turn Dartmouth College into a state-controlled Dartmouth University. The original, private Board resisted and eventually sued. The case, Dartmouth College v. Woodward, went through various judicial courts, before the United States Supreme Court decided in the Board's favor in 1819, the result of a brilliant peroration by Dartmouth alumnus Daniel Webster, class of 1801, who had, ironically, graduated under Wheelock's tenure. However, by this time, Wheelock, who had been forced out of the presidency in 1815 by failing health and poor relations with the Board, had died.
Found in 673 Collections and/or Records:
Moor's Charity School account
In English.
Moor's Charity School account
In English.
Moor's Charity School account
In English.
Moor's Charity School account
In English.
Moor's Charity School account
One-page brief statement in account with John Wheelock of the sums paid out by Wheelock for the support of Indian students in the school. Approved by Jedediah Morse.
Moor's Charity School account
Moor's Charity School in account with John Wheelock. Itemized account of sums paid out by Wheelock for the support of Indian students in the school. (Filed with this is Mss 813140).
Moor's Charity School account
Moor's Charity School in account with John Weelock includes an itemized account of sums paid out by Wheelock for the support of Indian students in the school.
Moor's Charity School account
Moor's Charity School in account with John Wheelock, itemized account of sums paid out by Wheelock for the support of Indian students in the school from March 23 to Dec. 29, 1813.
Moor's Charity School list of students
In English.
Moses Fisk letter
Three page letter from Moses Fisk of Nashville to J. Wheelock in which he urges the establishment of a mission amoung the Cherokees, who are the most advanced Indians on the continent.
Mrs. Ruth Baldwin letter
In English.
Mrs. Ruth Baldwin letter
In English.
Mrs. Ruth Patten letter
In English.
Mrs. Ruth Patten letter
Letter from Mrs. Ruth Patten of Hartford to J. Wheelock wishes him to pay bond.
Nathan Foster letter
In English.
Nathan Lakeman letter
In English.
Nathan Smith letter
Letter from Nathan Smith to the Honorable President and Board of Trustees for Dartmouth College, certifying that the writer proposes to resign his office of Professor at the next annual meeting of the Board of Trustees.
Nathan Smith mortgage deed
In English.
Nathaniel Chipman letter
Two page letter from Nathaniel Chipman of Philadelphia to J. Wheelock, advises the obtaining of a confirmatory act from the Legislature, recognizing the power, as a corporation, of Moore's School to hold property and c.
Nathaniel Whitaker letter
Whitaker writes to Wheelock from Salem expressing his desire to serve the College again.
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