Joshua Bates (educator)

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Template:Short description Script error: No such module "about". Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Joshua Bates (March 20, 1776 – January 14, 1854) was an American educator and clergyman. He was the third president of Middlebury College.

Early life

Born in Cohasset, Massachusetts, he was the son of Zealous and Abigail Bates.Template:Sfn[1] Bates graduated from Harvard College in 1800.Template:Sfn[2] He became a special student in divinity at Phillips Academy, serving as well as an instructor at Phillips Andover Academy.Template:Sfn He was licensed to preach by the Andover Association in 1802.Template:Sfn

Minister at First Church in Dedham

Call

From 1803 to 1818 he was minister at the First Church and Parish in Dedham, Massachusetts.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn As the years went on, the mental and physical condition of Bate's predecessor, Rev. Jason Haven, continued to decline.Template:Sfn He was frequently so beset with fevers, migraines, and coughing spells that he could not get out of bed.Template:Sfn The prospect of hiring an assistant or a replacement was brought up time and again at parish meetings, but without a decision ever being made.Template:Sfn Finally, Bates was called to serve as associate pastor in April 1802.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Fisher Ames served on the search committee, helping to explain why a Federalist minister was called to serve a congregation that was Democratic Republican by a ratio of 3 to 1.Template:Sfn

Three months later, Haven died.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn On December 30, 1802, the parish met and debated whether or not Bates should be afforded the traditional lifetime contract.Template:Sfn Nathaniel Ames, noting how unpopular Haven had become over the years, advocated for a trial period first.Template:Sfn Fisher Ames made an eloquent speech of support and this was enough to issue a call.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn As a result, several members, including Nathaniel, left the church and became Episcopalians.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Ministry

Bates was ordained on March 16, 1803 "before a very crowded, but a remarkably civil and brilliant assembly."Template:Sfn The opposition to Bates was so intense that it seems some, including the newspapers, expected there to be some sort of protest at his ordination, but nothing ever materialized.Template:Sfn

During his pastorate, the Lord's Supper was administered every six weeks.Template:Sfn On the Thursdays preceding, he would preach the Preparatory Lecture.Template:Sfn Students in the nearby school were marched to the meetinghouse to listen to the lecture, and Bates would visit the school on Mondays to quiz students on the catechism.Template:Sfn

Towards the end of his tenure in Dedham, the entire choir resigned, en masse.Template:Sfn It is not clear why from the records, but Bates missed them and worked to get them back.Template:Sfn He also demonstrated a sense of superiority over his own flock.Template:Sfn By 1808, even Fisher Ames would have enough with Bates and would join Dedham's Anglican church.Template:Sfn

He asked to be dismissed from the church at a parish meeting in November 1817 to accept the presidency of Middlebury College.Template:Sfn[3]Template:Sfn It is assumed that, due to his differing political beliefs and his politically tinged sermons, that many in the congregation were glad to let him go.Template:Sfn

The church called for a council of churches to dissolve the bond between themselves and their pastor, but the parish refused to go along.Template:Sfn They did, however, vote to simply dismiss him.Template:Sfn A council was held anyway on February 4, 1818.Template:Sfn His last sermon was delivered February 5,[3] the pastorate was terminated on the 20th, and Bates left Dedham on 28 February.Template:Sfn Bates Court in Dedham is named after him.Template:R

Political views

Politically, he was an ardent Federalist while Dedham and the church were strongly anti-Federalist.Template:Sfn Though he was not as liberal as some had hoped, his sermons often were intolerant of those whose politics who differed from his own and were not well received.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He believed Thomas Jefferson to be an infidel and that his followers were, at best, doubtful Christians.Template:Sfn He was a "high-toned Calvinist school," and he was not particularly charitable towards those of other denominations.Template:Sfn

Just after midnight on the Fourth of July, 1809, a group of Republicans dragged the old town cannon to just below Bates' bedroom window.Template:Sfn They stuffed it with sod from his lawn and were about to set it off when Bates appeared in his nightshirt.Template:Sfn Not recognizing him immediately, one celebrant yelled "Get out of the way, you old bugger, or you'll get your brains blown out!"Template:Sfn Bates and his bucket of water convinced the crowd to leave, but they soon returned.Template:Sfn They fired the cannon, which was more than 150 years old, and awoke Bates again to the sound of shattering windowpanes.Template:Sfn

When news of victory in the War of 1812 reached Dedham, the old town cannon was dragged to the First Church green to celebrate.Template:Sfn Bates opposed the firing, so he went there with a bucket of water to douse the fuse before it could be lit.Template:Sfn Pitt Butterfield, a republican and captain of the artilierists, "faced the church militant and in language more forcible than elegant gave the other party to understand that any interference with the loading or firing of the field piece would result in a fight then and there and that the broadcloth of a priest would not protect a meddling and domineering politician."Template:Sfn Bates backed off.Template:Sfn The cannon was fired.Template:Sfn

Academic career

From 1818 to 1839, Bates was president of Middlebury College. During his tenure, Bates helped to stabilize the struggling institution and oversaw the construction of the Old Chapel, an icon of the college that is on the National Register of Historic Places. He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1834.[4] He was Chaplain of the United States House of Representatives for the twenty–sixth Congress.[5]Template:Efn In 1843 he became minister at Dudley, Massachusetts, where he remained until his death, aged 77.[2]

His family still lives on today, all over Massachusetts.

Notes

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References

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Works cited

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External links

Template:S-relTemplate:S-acaTemplate:S-endTemplate:Chaplains of the United States House of RepresentativesTemplate:Middlebury College presidentsTemplate:Authority control
Preceded byTemplate:S-bef/checkTemplate:Succession box/check Chaplain of the United States House of Representatives
February 4, 1840 – December 15, 1840 Template:S-ttl/check
Template:S-aft/check Succeeded by
Preceded byTemplate:S-bef/checkTemplate:Succession box/check 3rd President of Middlebury College
1818–1839 Template:S-ttl/check
Template:S-aft/check Succeeded by
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