- John Andrews
Rev. John Andrews, D.D., a Colonial/American clergyman, professor, author and provost, was born in
Cecil County on Eastern Shore ofMaryland , onApril 4 ,1746 , the son of Moses and Letitia Cooke Andrews. He grew up on a 75 acre tract of land called "Lesson" (patented to his father March 10th, 1746) in Cecil Co. His great-grandfather (John Andrews) immigrated from the County ofRut land ,England to America in Anne Roundel/Calvert Counties of theProvince of Maryland under the patronage of LordCecilius Calvert, 2nd Baron Baltimore about the year 1654. Reverend Andrews is considered "America's First Scholar", for he dedicated his whole life to studying, teaching, writing, lecturing, preaching, creating and administrating colleges.He graduated from
The Academy and College of Philadelphia in 1764 and immediately taught grammar school inPhiladelphia . He studiedtheology under Rev. Thomas Barton(Rector of St James Church, Lancaster Pa) and was ordained to be a minister in theAnglican Church inLondon in 1767. Reverend Andrews was one of the leaders of the group which separated the American Episcopal Church from the Anglican Church, and later advocated the union of the Episcopal andMethodist churches. He was sent by the Society for Propagating the Gospel in Foreign Parts toLewes, Delaware , where he ministered at St. Peter's Church from 1767 through 1770. Within the years 1770 to 1775, he transferred toYork, Pennsylvania where he took charge of St. John's Church and St. John's Church in Car lisle, Pa., with missionary jurisdiction in Cumberland and York Counties, Pa.Sometime in 1775 he accepted charge of St. John's Church in
Queen Ann's County, Maryland , and remained there until the commencement of the Revolutionary War, when, not considering himself absolved from the oath of allegiance to England at the time of his admission to Holy Orders (although a decided American in politics), he did not think himself at liberty to cancel that obligation, and assume another to the United States. He therefore became disqualified for the public exercise of his profession and removed again to York, Pa. in 1776 and formed classical academy, which he conducted with distinguished reputation and success. It than became incorporated as The York Academy within St. John's Episcopal Church, York, Pa. which evolve to today'sYork College of Pennsylvania .he was a Boston merchant and a strong supporter of colonial independence. He refused to trade with England or any other part of Britain. he became very angry when British troops occupied Boston and closed the ports.
When the independence of the United States became firmly established and acknowledged, he resumed the exercise of his clerical functions and subsequently returned to Maryland in 1782, and became rector of the parish of St. Thomas Church, Garrison Forest, in
Baltimore County, Maryland up to April 1784, He was a member of the 1784 convention which separate from British rule and organized the Protestant Episcopal Church. His superior talents and acquirement in classical literature were so conspicuous that when the Protestant Episcopal Academy was instituted in Philadelphia in 1785, he was solicited by the unanimous vote of the trustees to accept the charge of the same. The honorary degree ofDoctor of Divinity was conferred on him byWashington College inChesterton, Maryland in 1785. He was principal of theThe Episcopal Academy , Philadelphia, 1785 to 1789, and was professor of Moral Philosophy in theUniversity of Pennsylvania , 1789 toUniversity of Pennsylvania , 1789 to 1813; also vice-Provost of the said university, 1789 to 1810, and Provost same, 1810 to 1813. In his day he was known to be one of the greatest classical scholars in the country and had enhanced skill and experience in teaching. One of his pupils, John MC Allister, described Andrews as "tall and dignified and courteous, honest in opinions, of good judgment, benevolent, cheerful and a fine conversationalist". Andrews was also a great admirer of the Constitution, which he recommended and illustrated with great force and ability in his lectures on politics.Up to the time of his death, he was Rector of St. James Church, Bristol, Pa., and assistant minister of Christ Church, Philadelphia. He married Elizabeth Calender, daughter of Robert Cal lender of Car lisle, Pa. There children were Robert, John, Letitia, Mary, Joesph, William Neill, George, Elizabeth Cal lender, Edward and Mary Bergen
He died of a sudden illness on
March 29 ,1813 . Buried amongBen Franklin and signers of theDeclaration of Independence in theChrist Church Burial Ground in Philadelphia. A portrait of him exists by the famousliner ,Thomas Sully . He wrote textbooks, including "A Com pend of Logic k" (1801), "Metamorphism" (1805), and "Elements of Rhetoric and Belles Letters" (1813).References
*"Who Was Who in America, Historical Volume 1607-1896." Chicago: Marquis Who's Who, 1967.
*"Universal Pronouncing Dictionary of Biography and Mythology,Vol.1" by J. Thomas, Philadelphia: Philippine and Co. 1870.
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