- Philip Vickers Fithian
Philip Vickers Fithian (1747-1776) was a peripatetic tutor, best known for his 1773 to 1774 journals and letters of when he tutored at a Virginian plantation.
Biography
Philip Fithian was born in Greenwich, Cumberland County,
New Jersey in 1747. His parents, Joseph and Hannah (Vickers)Fithian, were ordinary Delaware Valley grain growers. As the eldest of seven children, Fithian was destined to inherit the family farm and spend the rest of his life working it in the way that Joseph had taught him. A lifelongPresbyterian , Fithian had a conversion experience during a local evangelical revival in 1766. The experience led him to consider a career as a Presbyterian clergyman. After convincing his father of the values of an advanced education, he enrolled at the local Presbyterian academy run byDeerfield Presbyterian minister Enoch Green.At the age of twenty-three Fithian left his home in Cohansey, New Jersey to go to the
College of New Jersey in Princeton. He spent two years at Princeton and graduated in 1772. During his final year of studies, both of Fithian's parents died (the cause of death is unknown), leaving him to care for his six siblings. Fithian returned home to do advanced ministerial studies with Green at Deerfield rather than accept an invitation from College of New Jersey presidentJohn Witherspoon to stay and study with him at Princeton.After a year at home and at the advice of Witherspoon, Fithian decided to postpone his ministerial ordination in order to accept a position as a tutor to the family of
Robert Carter III at his "Nomini Hall" plantation on theNorthern Neck ofVirginia . [Edward P. Alexander, Preface to the Journal and Letters of Philip Vickers Fithian, page 1] During his trip to Virginia, Fithian recorded the famous diary that today serves as one of our most valuable sources on early Virginia life. His diary offers his observations on Virginia'sslavery , plantation life, education, entertainment, and religion.In 1775 and 1776 Fithian was sent to the
Shenandoah Valley in Virginia and theSusquehanna River Valley in Pennsylvania as a missionary to theScots-Irish Presbyterian settlements in the region. On October 25th, 1775, Philip married Elizabeth Beatty, the daughter of noted Presbyterian clergyman Charles Beatty. Shortly after his wedding he completed his missionary tour of the backcountry and then joined a New Jersey state militia regiment as a chaplain. Fithian witnessed theBattle of Long Island and theBattle of Harlem Heights before he died nearFort Washington on 8 October 1776. [ [http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?ammem/lhbtn:@field(DOCID+@lit(lhbtn30673div5)) Philip Vickers Fithian, journal and letters, 1767-1774, student at Princeton college, 1770-72, tutor at Nomini Hall in Virginia, 1773-74; ] ]Philip Fithian is remembered to have been highly critical of the deleterious treatment inflicted upon African-American slaves by many of the Virginian plantation owners. [Peter Kolchin, "American Slavery", Penguin History, paperback edition, 51]
Bibliography
John Fea, "The Way of Improvement Leads Home: Philip Vickers Fithian and the Rural Enlightenment in Early America" Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2008 (http://www.upenn.edu/pennpress/book/14442.html)
Hunter Dickinson Farish, ed., "Journal and Letters of Philip Vickers Fithian: A Plantation Tutor of the Old Dominion, 1773-1774" Charlottesville, VA: University of Virginia Press, 1947
References
External links
* [http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?ammem/lhbtn:@field(DOCID+@lit(lhbtn30673)): Information from the Library of Congress]
* [http://www.common-place.org/vol-08/no-02/fea/] Presbyterians in Love
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