- Edmund Burke Fairfield
Edmund Burke Fairfield (
August 7 ,1821 –November 7 ,1904 ) was a minister, educator and politician from theU. S. State ofMichigan and an educator fromNebraska .Early life
Fairfield was descended from a Frenchman by the name of Beauchamp, at some point the name was anglicised to Fairfield. He was born in Parkersburg,
Virginia (nowWest Virginia ) and his family toTroy, Ohio when he was a young boy. He received an early education atDenison University of Granville and in 1837 atMarietta College of Marietta and graduated fromOberlin College of Oberlin in 1842 where he had become a tutor.He spent two years as a Christian minister in
New Hampshire , and two in Boston as pastor of the Ruggles Street Baptist Church. He married his first wife, Lucia Ann Jennison, daughter of Dr. Charles Jennison and Betsy Mahan, on August 27, 1845 and had three children together. Then, in 1848, he became President of theMichigan Central College , renamedHillsdale College in 1853, and remained in this office until 1869. In 1857, Fairfield received LL.D. degree from Madison University (nowColgate University ) inNew York .Politics and further academics
Fairfield served as a Republican in the
Michigan Senate (14th district) from 1857-58. He was elected to serve asLieutenant Governor of Michigan under GovernorMoses Wisner from 1859 to 1861, and made a widely-published speech on the "Prohibition of Slavery in the Territories". He married his second wife Mary A. Baldwin on August 22, 1859 and had seven children together.In 1863, Fairfield received a D.D. degree from the
Indiana University . The following year he received an S.T.D. degree fromDenison University ofOhio . He received a number of honors in the academic world, before, in 1876, being elected Chancellor of the University of Nebraska.Retirement and death
He married his third wife Mary Allen Tibbitts on June 16, 1883 and had no children with her. In the theological field, Fairfield, having been a Baptist pastor, became convinced that the doctrines of Baptists were without sufficient foundation for him to remain a minister in any Baptist denomination. He delineated his views in his "Letters on Baptism" (1893). He died eleven years after its publication at the age of eighty-three in Oberlin.
External links
* [http://www.fairfieldfamily.com/photo_album/generations/geneight/html/edbf.html Biography of Edmund Burke Fairfield at the Fairfield Family site]
* [http://www.fairfieldfamily.com/database/html/fairf001.htm#i4927 Fairfield Family database]
* [http://www.oberlin.edu/external/EOG/PetersHall/Case1/Dedication.html Picture etc of Fairfield at the Oberlin College site]
* [http://www.preterism.org/Commentary/Baptism/Fairfield/index.htm etext of Fairfield's "Letters on Baptism"]
* [http://politicalgraveyard.com/bio/faircloth-farleigh.html#RO50TZHS8 Political Graveyard]
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