22 September 1852 A.D. Birth: Episcopal Bishop Philander Chase, Missionary and Educator
22 September 1852 A.D. Birth:
Episcopal Bishop Philander Chase, Missionary and Educator
Editor.
“Biography of Philander Chase.” The
Papers of Philander Chase. 21 Jan 2001. http://www2.kenyon.edu/Khistory/chase/biography/biography.htmhttp://www2.kenyon.edu/Khistory/chase/biography/biography.htm.
Accessed 22 Sept 2015.
Biography
of Philander Chase
Philander Chase was born on December 14,
1775, in Cornish, New Hampshire to Dudley and Allace Corbett Chase. Dudley
Chase, a deacon and farmer, had helped establish the small town only a few
years earlier. Little is known of Philander Chase’s childhood, save a few tales
he published in his Reminiscences.
In 1791, having been dissuaded by his
father from his earlier aspirations of becoming a farmer, young Chase enrolled
in Dartmouth College. There he happened upon a copy of The Book of Common
Prayer which inspired him to leave behind his Congregational upbringing and
seek ordination as an Episcopal priest.
When Chase graduated in 1795, the
Episcopal Church in was still in its infancy in the United States, having split
from the Church of England during the American Revolution. No longer were young
men able to attend English seminaries, and since there were yet no American
Episcopal seminaries (the first would not be founded until 1817), Chase
traveled to Albany, New York, to study under the Reverend Thomas Ellison.
While in Albany, Chase married Mary Fay
of Stockbridge, Vermont, and their first son, George, was born. In 1798, Chase
was ordained a deacon and he spent the next year traveling throughout western
New York organizing parishes. When admitted to the priesthood in 1799, Chase
took charge of Christ Church in Poughkeepsie, New York.
In 1805, Chase accepted an invitation to
help establish the first Episcopal parish in New Orleans, Louisiana. He hoped
that the warmer climate would help alleviate his wife’s consumption
(tuberculosis). Mary’s health did not improve, however, and the Chases
desperately missed their children, whom they had left with relatives in
Vermont. Thus, in 1811, Chase returned to the New England to take over the
rectorship of Christ Church in Hartford, Connecticut, and to oversee his sons’
education.
Chase would not stay long in Hartford.
He soon felt the pull westward to preach on the frontier as he had years
earlier in western New York. In 1817, this urge, coupled with growing tensions
between he and John Henry Hobart, bishop of New York, compelled Chase to follow
the migration west. He settled in Worthington, Ohio, a small pioneer community
established in 1803 by a group of fellow New Englanders. There, Chase purchased a tract of land
for a farm and was appointed principal of Worthington Academy. It was also there,
in 1818, his wife Mary succumbed to her illness.
Shortly after this devastating loss,
Chase received the appointment of bishop of the newly-formed Diocese of Ohio.
This appointment was met with much disapproval by several fellow bishops and
Chase was not consecrated until February, 1819. That same year, Chase married
Sophia May Ingraham.
Life in Worthington was not easy for
Bishop Chase. He struggled to support his family, but his income from his farm
and from Worthington Academy did not suffice, and his position as bishop paid
him no salary. To better his financial situation, Chase accepted the presidency
of Cincinnati College in 1821.
Chase would return to Worthington after
about one year. He soon realized that the Diocese of Ohio was in dire need of
help. Despite his hard work, and unending travel (he logged over 1200 miles on
horseback between June, 1820, and June, 1821), Chase found it exceedingly
difficult to find trained clergy. Since its split from the Church of England,
the Episcopal Church paid little attention to its western expansion. Thus, with
no expectation of help from the East, Chase formulated a plan: he would found a
theological seminary in the West to train clergy for the West. Many other
bishops strongly objected to Chase’s plan, especially his rival, Bishop Hobart.
They believed that the General Theological Seminary in New York (founded in
1817) was sufficient to train western clergy. In response, Chase wrote,
The few clergy we have may
keep us alive, under Providence, a little
longer; but when they die or move away, we have no means to supply their
places...We may think of the privileges at the east, of the means of
education there; but this is all; they are out of our reach. Besides, if
our young men were there, if we could find the money in our woods, or
drag it from our streams, to send and maintain them at the eastern seminaries,
who could insure us that they would not be enticed, by the superior
offers held out to them, to settle there, and leave us in our wants?
In short, unless we can have
some little means of educating our pious men here, and here being secure of
their affections, station them in our woods and among our scattered people, to
gather in and nourish our wandering lambs, we have no reason to hope in the
continuance of the Church in the west.
It was clear that Chase could not raise
the necessary funds for his theological seminary in America, so he ignored the
opposition from the East and traveled to England to solicit donations.
Accompanied only by a single letter of introduction (that of Henry Clay to the
Lord Gambier), Chase set sail in October, 1823. That single letter, along with
his determination, proved successful. By July, 1824, Chase had raised nearly
$30,000 dollars for his seminary. Donors included the Lords Gambier, Bexley,
and Kenyon, Lady Rosse, and Hannah More. In December, the Ohio legislature
incorporated Chase’s theological seminary, which he would name Kenyon College,
after one of its chief benefactors.
Chase initially set up Kenyon on his
farm in Worthington, but he soon determined that a new location was necessary
for his seminary and college. With the help of Henry Curtis, a young Mount
Vernon lawyer, Chase purchased eight thousand acres of land in Knox County,
northeast of Worthington, which Chase named Gambier.
Work began immediately on Gambier Hill,
and in 1828, Kenyon College moved from Worthington to its new location. Chase
desired to create a self-sustaining community where his students would be
isolated from the vices of urban life. To this end, Chase established a
combination grist-sawmill (lumber from which built the College buildings), a
farm (which he worked), a post office (of which he was postmaster), and a
printing press (a gift from Lord and Lady Ackland). Moreover, his theological
seminary soon developed into a much larger educational institution, which also
included a traditional college, and a grammar school. Chase’s wife, Sophia,
proved nearly as vital to the functioning of Kenyon College as the Bishop
himself– she cooked for the students, nursed their illnesses, and did their
laundry, as well as managed the affairs during the Bishop’s frequent trips to
raise funds.
Problems arose as Chase struggled to
keep Kenyon funded and running smoothly. In doing so he became an increasingly
tyrannical leader. He argued that since he was bishop of Ohio and founder and
president of Kenyon College, he had absolute authority over all aspects of the
college and the seminary. This caused a bitter conflict between the trustees,
faculty, and the clergy. Some thought that Chase had misused monies donated to
the theological seminary for the establishment and maintenance of the college.
Others thought that the bishop of the diocese should not have charge of the
college and the grammar school. Finally, in 1831, the Ohio Convention demanded
he relinquish some control. Chase, both frustrated and exhausted, instead
resigned the presidency of Kenyon College and the episcopacy of Ohio on
September 9, 1831.
Chase left Gambier with his family and
settled on a small farm twenty miles away (near Millersburg) which he aptly
named the Valley of Peace. The next spring Chase moved his family to Gilead,
Michigan, where he returned to the life of a simple farmer and itinerant
minister.
Chase’s simple life did not last long.
In 1835, without his knowledge, a group of Illinois parishes gathered to form
the Diocese of Illinois, and elected Chase its first bishop. Chase, seemingly
pleased to leave the simple life, eagerly accepted this position and again
looked to the East for aid for his new diocese. As before, Chase received
little help from the East, so he quickly formulated plans for a new theological
seminary to be established near Peoria. To England again Chase would go to
raise the necessary funds.
Upon his arrival, Chase was once again
greeted warmly by his English friends. His efforts to raise money were less
successful this second time around. Undaunted, Chase returned to American and
began a fundraising tour of the southern United States. This proved successful
enough to allow him to lay the cornerstone of Jubilee College in 1839. Chase
continued his travel and fundraising and left his cousin, Samuel, in charge of
the day-to-day operations of the new college. In 1840-1, the chapel at Jubilee
was finished.
As with Kenyon, Chase wanted Jubilee to
be a self-sufficient community. Chase’s sons, Henry, Philander, and Dudley,
managed the college farm and a large flock of sheep. Chase also built a sawmill
and a gristmill on Kickapoo Creek. Chase’s daughter, Mary, ran a small girls’ school.
Along with the seminary, there was also a college and a grammar school.
While Chase’s position within the church
improved (as senior bishop, he was appointed to presiding bishop in 1843), his
new college struggled to stay open. In 1849, fire destroyed the Jubilee saw and
grist mills, thus eliminating a significant source of income. Three years
later, its most important source of income would also be lost.
By 1852, Chase, now seventy-seven, had
lived a hard pioneer life and as a result, his health was failing. In
September, Chase was pulled from his carriage by his horse. He lingered for a
few days, but on September 20, Philander Chase died. Without Chase at the helm,
Jubilee had no chance of survival. It struggled on for a few more years and
finally closed its doors in 1862. Samuel Chase, after serving as chaplain
during the Civil War, attempted once more to open Jubilee, but was forced to
begin selling the lands in 1871.
Philander Chase spent
his life hacking through the frontier wilderness missionizing and educating, as
well as traveling throughout the country (and to England, twice) raising money
to support his endeavors. Chase also faced the death of his wife, Mary, and of
three of his children (two of whom did not see their first birthday), and he
endured constant attacks of his enemies, and a life of dire financial straits,
for both him, and his institutions.
Nevertheless, Chase was
able to overcome these hardships and achieve his goals of bringing religion and
education to the west thus establishing himself as a seminal figure in the
history of religion, education, and the American frontier.
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